How Bad Is It?
Beijing has come clean, but the litmus test of China's new openness is Shanghai
Tapping the Source
Did Guangdong Beat the Bug? And if so, how?
Hong Kong
Mishandling of SARS is the latest symptom of the SAR's system failure
Viewpoint
Will SARS Transform China's Chiefs?

Photo Essay: On Assignment
TIME's photographers cover the SARS outbreak
How SARS Kills
The inner workings of the disease
Global Reach
More than 4,600 cases of SARS had been reported by last week
Virus on the Move
How SARS may have jumped the species barrier

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Hong Kong
System Failure
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Posted Monday, April 28, 2003; 22:50 HKT
When Betty Tung, wife of Hong Kong's beleaguered Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa, toured the city's SARS-slammed Lower Ngau Tau Kok housing estate to pass out hygiene kits, she dressed up for the occasion. Clad in a face mask, a protective cap, goggles, a plastic disposable gown, gloves and shoe guards, Mrs. Tung alarmed local residents. The protective suit was more elaborate than an ICU doctor would wear—if ICU doctors had ready access to that sort of gear—and local media had a field day criticizing her.


Photo Essay: SARS Outbreak
Mrs. Tung's misguided mission exemplifies the Hong Kong government's half-measured response to SARS. Medical staff are facing shortages of vital protective equipment even as more health-care workers are afflicted. Medical resources are stretched to the limit, but the government has been slow to consolidate the SARS patients scattered among more than 10 hospitals. "There is mismanagement within the Hospital Authority," says Dr. Lo Wing-lok, chairman of the Hong Kong Medical Association. It's not just a lack of hardware but also of will and common sense. Hong Kong authorities are screening airport passengers but have been slow to institute health checks along the busy border with Guangdong province. "This government is unwilling to take up matters with [Beijing]," says Allen Lee, a Hong Kong delegate to China's National People's Congress. "It's pathetic."

Hong Kongers are usually resigned to such incompetence. But last Friday, encouraged by the sacking of China's Health Minister and Beijing's mayor, legislator Albert Chan made a formal call for Tung's resignation. Whether or not Tung goes, his administration's credibility has already become a victim of SARS.



Shanghai SARS Cases a State Secret [April 24, 2003]
Despite government pronouncements, reports of disease in China's economic centerpiece are still being 'sanitized'

A Regional Affair [April 21, 2003]
As officials kept up the denials, China's SARS epidemic was spreading to regions ill-equipped to fight the bug  

Silent For Too Long [April 21, 2003]
Beijing is calling for an end to the SARS cover-up, but the damage to China's credibility has been done 

Essay: Where the Scrubbing Never Stops [April 21, 2003]
There are fewer jobs, concerts and karaoke. But Hong Kong can enjoy the swabbing

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FROM THE MAY 5, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, APRIL 28, 2003


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