Hong Kong to shut all schools after COVID-19 cases spike
School students hold signs during a pro-democracy protest near their school in Hong Kong, June 12, 2020. (AFP Photo)


Hong Kong will close all schools after the territory reported a spike in locally transmitted coronavirus infections, the city's education minister said Friday.

The government has ordered all schools to close as of Monday, bringing forward the start of the summer holidays, Kevin Yeung said, after the city recorded an "exponential growth" of locally transmitted cases in the past few days.

The finance hub recorded 34 locally transmitted coronavirus cases on Thursday, the highest daily tally in more than three months.

Authorities had taken the move "for the general good of the community as well as the health of the students," Yeung said.

Those scheduled to take exams could still do so, he added, although they would have to wear masks and maintain social distancing.

Hong Kong's public high schools were closed in January amid the early stages of the virus outbreak and were gradually reopened from May after the territory successfully curbed new infections.

But new clusters have emerged in the past two days, including at an elderly care home that reported at least 32 cases.

At least 12 new infections in the last five days have been classified as unknown in origin, meaning authorities are struggling to work out how the disease is spreading.

Authorities announced Thursday a reintroduction of limits on how many people can gather in restaurants, bars and fitness centers.

A maximum of eight people can sit together at restaurants while bars, pubs and nightclubs are capped at four people per table.