WHO says pandemic ‘nowhere near over’ as France, Germany post record cases
January 21
T HE highly
transmissible Omicron strain has spread unabated around the world, pushing some
governments to impose fresh measures while speeding up the rollout of vaccine
booster shots.
“This pandemic is
nowhere near over,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters Tuesday
from the agency’s headquarters in Geneva.
Europe is at the
epicentre of alarming new outbreaks, with Germany’s cases soaring past 100,000
and France reporting nearly half a million cases on Tuesday.
The UN health chief
warned against dismissing Omicron as mild, as the dominant Covid strain
continues to flare new outbreaks from Latin America to East Asia after it was
first detected in southern Africa in November.
“Omicron may be less
severe, on average, but the narrative that it is a mild disease is misleading,”
he said.
European surge
Five millions cases
were reported in Europe last week and the WHO has predicted Omicron could
infect half of all Europeans by March, filling hospitals across the continent.
Germany on Tuesday recorded
112,323 coronavirus cases and 239 deaths, officials said, with Omicron found in
more than 70 per cent of the infections.
The surge has pushed
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to seek compulsory vaccinations to ramp up the
immunity of the population in Europe’s biggest economy.
Other European
countries are also battling soaring Omicron rates, with neighbouring France
recently averaging around 300,000 cases daily.
The latest data issued
by Public Health France showed that there were 464,769 new cases in the last
24-hour period, a record number.
The record cases come
days after the two-year anniversary of the announcement of the first person
dying of a virus in China only later identified as Covid.
Since 11 January 2020,
known fatalities in the pandemic have soared to more than 5.5 million.
Hopes for Europe’s
tourism recovery remain bleak with the World Tourism Organization saying
Tuesday that foreign arrivals will not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024
at the earliest, despite a rise of 19 per cent last year compared to 2020.
‘Quasi-emergency’
Elsewhere in the world,
Brazil registered a new record number of daily cases of more than 137,000 on
Tuesday.
The country suffered a
devastating second wave last year with deaths topping 4,000 a day, pushing its
death toll to the second highest in the world behind the United States.
President Jair
Bolsonaro, an avowed vaccine sceptic who has downplayed Omicron, is
increasingly under fire for his handling of the pandemic, and he is on course
to lose the country’s October presidential election, according to polls.
In Asia, Japan was set
to tighten restrictions across the country, including Tokyo, as it battles
record infections fuelled by Omicron while China partially relaxed transport
restrictions in the megacity of Xi’an where millions have been confined to
their homes for weeks.
Japanese experts on
Wednesday backed placing 13 regions “under quasi-emergency measures from 21
January to 13 February” Daishiro Yamagiwa, minister in charge of coronavirus
affairs, told reporters.
Inter-city train routes
in Xi’an
China’s resumption of
some inter-city train routes in Xi’an from Tuesday comes just before the Lunar
New Year holiday later this month, traditionally a period of mass travel.
It also comes as
Beijing battles multiple clusters that are testing its enforcement of a strict
“zero-Covid” approach ahead of next month’s Winter Olympics.
Hamsters and big cats
Focus is increasingly
turning to animals and how the virus interacts with them, after at least two
countries reported Covid-19 cases in creatures big and small potentially passed
between them and humans.
A study published
Tuesday in South Africa said big cats caged in zoos are at risk from catching
Covid from their keepers.
Researchers found clues
pointing to the infection of three lions and two pumas by their handlers at a
zoo in Johannesburg, some of whom were asymptomatic.
In Hong Kong, hamsters
were bearing the brunt of the semi-autonomous Chinese city’s similarly strict
approach to Covid, with officials appearing to blame them for two human cases.
The financial hub’s
government faced growing outrage Wednesday over its decision to cull 2,000
small animals in pet shops after several hamsters in a store allegedly tested
positive for Covid-19.
“Internationally, there
is no evidence yet to show pets can transmit the coronavirus to humans,” Health
Secretary Sophia Chan told a press conference.
“But... we will take
precautionary measures against any vector of transmission.” SOURCE: AFP
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