Hong Kong began a mass coronavirus testing programme on Tuesday, while the number of infections in the United States surpassed six million. The voluntary initiative in the southern Chinese city offers free tests to millions of Hong Kongers as authorities worldwide continue efforts to stamp out the virus, which has now killed about 850,000 and infected more than 25 million. But populations around the world are increasingly wary of coronavirus curbs and distrust is growing in governments’ handling of the pandemic, with protesters taking to the streets in major cities in recent days. German demonstrators against mask rules and other restrictions tried to storm parliament in the biggest of several European protests at the weekend. Suspicions about the state’s intentions have done much to undermine the testing programme in Hong Kong, where disillusionment with officials has been fuelled by China’s crushing of the city’s democracy movement. The project to stamp out a third wave of infections in the densely populated finance hub began in late June, when the city reimposed economically painful social distancing measures. But the programme has been hampered by a limited response due to the involvement of mainland Chinese testing labs and doctors – and swirling public fears of the harvesting of data and DNA. Since registration began on Saturday, 510,000 people have signed up to take the tests. Health experts advising the government, however, said as many as five million people might need to be tested for the measure to end the current wave. “I think it’s a waste of time,” local resident Emily Li told AFP. “The government can’t convince me in terms of the effectiveness of the testing programme.” The World Health Organisation on Monday urged governments to engage with people demonstrating against Covid-19 curbs and listen to their concerns, but stressed protesters needed to understand the virus was dangerous. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said it was important to “listen to what people are asking, what people are saying”. “We should engage in an honest dialogue”, but demonstrators have a responsibility to ensure protests are safe, he said. “The virus is real. It is dangerous. It moves fast and it kills. We have to do everything to protect ourselves and to protect others.” Mr Tedros took issue with the opinion that high death rates are not a major concern if fatalities are mainly among the elderly. “Accepting someone to die because of age is moral bankruptcy at its highest, and we shouldn’t allow our society to behave this way,” he said. A million new coronavirus infections have been detected worldwide roughly every four days since mid-July. In the US, which accounts for a quarter of the global caseload, a million infections have been recorded in three weeks. India on Sunday set the record for the highest single-day rise in cases, with 78,761. But there have been attempts to return to normality even as the virus continues to circulate, with French pupils back in classrooms on Tuesday as schools across Europe reopen their doors. Pupils in Belgium return the same day, while in Greece classes are set to resume next Monday with a maximum of 25 children in each. Youngsters in Germany went back last month and in England and Wales children are studying together again this week after a six-month closure. But strict anti-virus rules are in place at many learning institutions as communities go to great lengths to avoid any return to painful lockdowns. “The confinement period was hellish,” said Florence, 42, a mother-of-three in the southern French city of Nice. “We will not go through it again – it’s out of the question.”