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Hong Kong Lifts Quarantine on Downtown Hotel

Hong Kong lifts weeklong quarantine for 280 at hotel where Mexican swine flu patient stayed

Mexico couple doesn't let flu epidemic get in the way of their nuptials.

Authorities in Hong Kong released some 280 people from a weeklong quarantine at an upscale hotel late Friday, with guests towing suitcases and beaming after the lockdown imposed after Asia's first swine flu case was traced there.

The Mexican swine flu patient who prompted the quarantine was also released from a Hong Kong hospital Friday after a weeklong stay.

Newly free guests of the Metropark Hotel walked to waiting buses, divided from waiting reporters by a security cordon — though some shouted out and others spoke out by phone or e-mail.

"I'm happy! I love Hong Kong people!" shouted one of the guests, a South Korean businessman, before breaking into song and hugging a policeman as he stepped out. He did not give his name.

Authorities in the Chinese territory imposed the quarantine on all guests and employees at the hotel in the downtown Wanchai district last week after it was discovered the 25-year old Mexican swine flu carrier had stayed there.

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"It feels very good to get out," Indian businessman Kevin Ireland told The Associated Press by telephone. The 45-year-old New Delhi resident said he plans to check into another hotel and go out to dinner with friends.

Critics say the quarantine was a politically calculated overreaction, but the Hong Kong government has repeatedly defended the measure as necessary to contain the virus. Hong Kong is also wary of repeating the fallout of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, which killed 299 people here in 2003.

"I think most people felt that it was too much," said Ireland, expressing some annoyance about missing business meetings in India and running up a high mobile phone bill in Hong Kong.

But, he added, "I think finally the government must do what the government must do."

Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang greeted hotel staff after most guests dispersed.

"We all understand the boredom, the frustration they experienced during the quarantine period," Tsang told reporters. "We are thankful for the sacrifice they have made for the sake of public health."

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