Hong Kong - A businessman trapped in a Hong Kong hotel where
Asia's first swine-flu patient was found spoke Saturday of escalating
tensions among the guests who have been quarantined there for seven
days.
The Hong Kong government took the radical step of sealing off the
Metropark Hotel in the city's Wan Chai district Friday night after
confirming that a Mexican man who stayed there had the virus. The
decision quarantined 240 guests and more than 100 staff.
Indian national Kevin Ireland, 45, said people had become agitated
after first being told by staff that they would be kept in the hotel
for only 24 hours and then learning from TV broadcasts that the
quarantine period was a full week.
'This morning, there was a Korean gentleman, and he was way off
the handle,' the father of two from New Delhi said, speaking from his
hotel room. 'He was screaming and shouting and throwing a tantrum.
There is a young couple from the UK. She has been crying incessantly.
'Then there is a South African couple with a 10-month-old baby and
their grandmother. The wife was taken away for tests and they are
really quite agitated.'
Ireland, who runs a business called Indo-Spanish Marketing
Services, said the atmosphere at the hotel changed dramatically in a
short time as agitation among the guests rose.
'On Friday night, we were all laughing and joking and trying to
make light of it,' he said. 'That was when we thought it was only for
24 hours. Now it seems real, and we've all got jobs to do, lives to
lead and responsibilities.'
The drama began as Ireland and two Spanish colleagues, visiting
Hong Kong for a trade fair, tried to leave the hotel for dinner
Friday evening.
'Suddenly, we saw a lot of policemen and other people in
protective gear in the lobby, and they said, 'No, you can't go out,
and we advise you to put on protective face masks,'' he said.
'They weren't letting people out, and they were keeping out people
who wanted to come back in,' he said. ''There were mutterings about
swine flu. There was no clear information until much later.'
A sign in the lobby said guests would be kept in the hotel for 24
hours, Ireland said but when he went to his room and switched on the
television, he found out otherwise.
The situation was made more tense by the attitude of police in the
hotel who, he said, were 'brusque and standoffish.' 'There are lots
of people here from Spain and other countries who just don't
understand them,' he added.
'They should be a little bit more gentle. At the end of the day,
we just happened to be in the wrong place. They need to be a little
bit more patient with people.'
Other concerns are also playing on his mind, he said.
'I haven't told my daughters because why I don't want to worry
them,' he said of his 7- and 12-year-old girls, 'but one of my doctor
friends told me to take it easy and not to fret. The problem is this
was only supposed to be a short trip, and I didn't bring books or
enough to wear.'
That concern is shared by other guests, who may go to a help desk
at the hotel where they can ask for necessities. Most people have
been asking for fresh underwear, Ireland said.
'Today our rooms weren't cleaned,' he added. 'There is no room
service. There is no change of linen, sheets or towels because they
have no access to clean linen from outside.'
Asked what guests thought of the quarantine measure, Ireland said:
'People think it is an overreaction. We have access to the internet
and news channels, and everyone is doing their own fact-finding.
'This swine flu is all over the place and it's only in Mexico
where it's really severe, but nowhere else have they put people into
isolation or quarantine like this.'
He attributed Hong Kong's caution to its experience in 2003 with
SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which killed 299 people
and infected about 1,800 in the city.
'On one level, it is good,' he said. They are more prepared than
most countries.'
But he also criticized authorities for keeping the Metropark's
guests in the dark.
'Dissemination of any kind of information is lacking,' he said.
'You ask people questions, and you get no response.'
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