Over in Singapore, lengthy queues also materialised, despite the Government telling citizens they did not require masks unless they showed symptoms of illness.
A Twitter photo taken in the Philippines’ capital of Manila showed people crowding a hospital corridor to purchase masks. “They ran out of masks at [two pharmacies] so we’re here at St. Luke’s Medical Center, and the queue is so long we’re all filling up the hallway,” the user wrote.
One two-minute video showed the insane length of the queues, with some shoppers even bringing their own foldable chairs to sit on while waiting in line.
… and even outdoors. According to netizens, queues could easily last four hours long, with some people still walking away empty-handed.
The same scene unfolded in Choi Ming Mall in Hong Kong’s Tiu Keng Leng area earlier on Jan 24. Netizens said it was normal to have queues form rapidly anytime people discovered a store had stocks of face masks.
A Jan 28 video by Chinese political activist Badiucao showed a crowd in Jiujiang – a city near Wuhan currently under lockdown – pushing and shoving against a metal gate to buy face masks from factory personnel.
In some places, fights even broke out in queues as tensions flared between anxious customers.
Queues for the masks have gotten so incredibly long that videos of them have been uploaded on social media, such as this one from Wednesday (Jan 29).
As the Wuhan virus sweeps across China, citizens have begun wearing masks en masse to protect themselves, leading to a nationwide shortage of the product. In Shanghai, snaking queues at pharmacies started forming as early as Wednesday (Jan 22).