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SARS legacy haunts swine flu-hit Hong Kong
Hong Kong (AFP) May 3, 2009 The arrival of swine flu in Hong Kong has brought a shiver to the city as it recalls the 2003 SARS outbreak, when fear of the mysterious killer turned the bustling metropolis into a virtual ghost town. The first case of A(H1N1) in Asia was confirmed here on Friday in a visitor from the virus's Mexican epicentre, but even before that the hygiene mania of 2003 had returned. Protective masks once again cover faces in restaurants and on public transport, cellophane has reappeared on lift buttons, and shoppers have joined long checkout queues for bleach bottles to sterilise their homes. Lily Lok, a risk management consultant, said the concerns sparked by the swine flu threat led her to recall a SARS-crisis moment when 100 masked students faced her in a lecture hall. "As I walked into the hall, I saw a sea of white face masks. With no exception, everybody -- including the lecturer -- was wearing one," she told AFP. Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, which killed close to 300 people in Hong Kong, has left a heavy legacy in the city and visitors are often surprised that schoolchildren with just a slight cough happily don a face mask. Public buildings are seldom without an easy-to-use disinfectant dispenser and the subway is plastered with tips about good personal hygiene. The paranoia that dogged the city during SARS -- when the World Health Organization advised against any travel to the city -- is still palpable for those who lived through it. Paul Coffey, 30, who moved to Hong Kong the day SARS broke out, remembers witnessing the city's bustling nightlife hub suddenly becoming completely deserted. "My strangest recollection is of walking past Lan Kwai Fong one Saturday night and seeing that the main street was completely empty. And I mean that literally -- not a soul in sight," said the Australian entrepreneur. Ex-pat bankers shipped their families away and flights into Hong Kong were virtually empty. But the outbreak was not without its lighter moments and many in the brand-obsessed city even saw the crisis as an opportunity to show off. One rich housewife was pictured wearing a 750 Hong Kong dollar (97 US) Louis Vuitton-branded face mask, matching the one being worn by her poodle. "The vision of the well-dressed man driving his brand new BMW, on his own, with all the windows wound up ... and wearing a face mask ... is one that shall live with me forever," said Coffey. Cleaners scrubbed every corner of the city -- and the pavements are wonderfully clean to this day -- while banks re-covered their ATMs' touchpads with a new cellophane sheet every 30 minutes to avoid contamination. And although the government advised people to stay at home during the 2003 outbreak, Oscar Tan said he decided once to risk a night at a karaoke bar with a group of friends to kill the boredom. "It was a funny scene of everybody singing through their face masks, with a microphone wrapped in layers of cellophane," he said. Housewife Amy Tso said she would always remember "1:99" -- the bleach to water ratio that health officials recommended as anti-SARS cleaning solution -- since she had followed the instruction diligently during the SARS period to sterilise her flat. Last Thursday, she decided to re-start the practice again. "I thought I better do it to protect my family. It worked during SARS, so it should also work this time," she said. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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Mexico sees epidemic easing Mexico City (AFP) May 3, 2009 Mexico was increasingly optimistic Sunday its H1N1 flu epidemic was coming under control, after officials said stabilizing fatality figures suggested the virus was not as lethal as first feared. |
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