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Police have arrested and charged two ex-Cathay staffers for allegedly violating the city’s anti-pandemic regulations. Photo: Felix Wong

Omicron: 2 ex-Cathay Pacific flight attendants arrested, charged with violating anti-pandemic regulations in Hong Kong

  • Government says pair ‘conducted unnecessary activities’ on December 25 and 27 during what was supposed to be period of home isolation under medical surveillance
  • They face six months’ prison for ‘failing to observe any condition specified by a health officer’ under Prevention and Control of Disease Regulation

Police have arrested and laid charges against two former Cathay Pacific flight attendants for alleged violations of home isolation rules that coincided with the arrival of the Omicron variant in Hong Kong.

The pair – who were believed to have been carrying the highly transmissible variant while allegedly interacting with others in public during what was meant to be a three-day self-isolation period – were released on bail on Monday, and will appear at Tuen Mun Court and Eastern Court, respectively, on February 9.

The first flight attendant, a 45-year-old man, returned to the city from New York on December 24, and went to the other flight attendant’s home in Tuen Mun for lunch on Christmas. The latter, a 44-year-old man, had just flown home from Chicago that day.

It is understood that the second flight attendant was the Cathay employee previously found to have visited the Moon Palace restaurant in the Festival Walk shopping centre in Kowloon Tong on December 27. A cluster sparked there has since grown to 16 Covid-19 cases.

The Moon Palace Omicron cluster now stands at 16 cases. Photo: Felix Wong

Both men subsequently tested positive for Omicron, and have since been discharged from hospital after completing treatment.

A government statement said the pair stood accused of having “conducted unnecessary activities” on December 25 and 27 during their medical surveillance period, in contravention of the Prevention and Control of Disease Regulation.

Violations of the regulation are punishable by a maximum sentence of six months in jail and a fine of up to HK$5,000.

The two flight attendants had returned to the city on cargo flights, meaning they did not have to undergo hotel quarantine, but were instead allowed to self-isolate at home under medical surveillance.

Lam vows probe into Cathay’s claims it did not abuse Hong Kong quarantine exemption

The airline was accused of taking advantage of the exemption for cargo crew to allow staff on passenger flights to dodge hotel quarantine as well, but the company’s chairman, Patrick Healy, said in an address to employees last week that he was “confident that this rostering practice was entirely in line with the government regulations”.

Transport officials, however, have argued the exemption was not applicable to passenger flight staff with overseas stopovers, and Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor has vowed to take legal action against Cathay if it is found to have exploited loopholes to bypass quarantine rules for its crews.

At least four Cathay aircrew members have so far been found to have broken home isolation rules and visited restaurants and bars while infected with Omicron.

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