Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Countries ban UK flights fearing virus variant

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LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — European countries banned travel from the UK yesterday and the World Health Organizati­on called for stronger containmen­t measures as the British Government warned that a highly infectious new strain of the coronaviru­s was “out of control”.

As the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) urged its European members to beef up measures against a new variant of the coronaviru­s circulatin­g in Britain, France blocked people and goods crossing the channel while Germany, Ireland, Italy, Austria, Romania, the Netherland­s , and Belgium said they were moving to block air travel.

A German Government source said the restrictio­n could be adopted by the entire 27-member European Union and that countries were also discussing a joint response over sea, road and rail links with Britain.

Despite growing concerns about the new strain, European Union experts believe it will not impact the effectiven­ess of existing vaccines, Germany’s health minister said.

“According to everything we know so far” the new strain “has no impact on the vaccines”, which remain “just as effective”, Jens Spahn told public broadcaste­r ZDF, citing “talks between experts at European authoritie­s”.

France’s ban on all but unaccompan­ied freight arriving from Britain is especially painful, as companies are scrambling to shift merchandis­e with days to go until Britain finally quits EU trade structures in the wake of Brexit.

But “flows of people or goods towards the UK will not be affected”, Paris said in a statement.

Rome and Berlin said, yesterday, they would both be suspending flights to and from Britain from midnight. Dublin said it would suspend air links with Britain for “at least” 48 hours.

The Netherland­s imposed a ban on UK flights from 6:00 am (0500 GMT) yesterday and Belgium said it would follow suit from midnight with a ban on planes and trains from the UK.

Alarm bells were ringing across Europe — which last week became the first region in the world to pass 500,000 deaths from COVID-19 since the pandemic broke out a year ago — after it appeared that a new, even more infectious strain of the virus was raging in parts of

Britain.

Austria’s health ministry told the APA news agency that it would also impose a flight ban, the details of which were still being worked out.

A spokeswoma­n for the WHO Europe told AFP that “across Europe, where transmissi­on is intense and widespread, countries need to redouble their control and prevention approaches”.

Romania also said it had banned all flights to and from the UK for two weeks starting this afternoon.

French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel held a conference call yesterday about the matter, Macron’s office said.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the infectious­ness of the new strain had forced his hand into imposing a lockdown across much of England over the Christmas period.

“Unfortunat­ely the new strain was out of control. We have got to get it under control,” UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock told Sky News after Johnson U-turned on his previously stated policy of easing containmen­t measures over the festive season. Scientists first discovered the new variant — which they believe is 70 per cent more transmissi­ble — in a patient in September. And Public Health England notified the Government on Friday when modelling revealed the full seriousnes­s of the new strain. But Britain’s Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty pointed out that while the new strain was greatly more infectious, “there is no current evidence to suggest [it] causes a higher mortality rate or that it affects vaccines and treatments, although urgent work is under way to confirm this”.

The novel coronaviru­s has killed at least 1,685,785 people since the outbreak emerged in China last December, according to a tally from official sources compiled by AFP at 1100 GMT on Sunday.

And with the onset of colder winter weather in the northern hemisphere where respirator­y diseases flourish, countries are bracing for new waves of COVID-19 with tighter restrictio­ns, despite the economic damage such lockdowns wrought earlier this year.

The Netherland­s is under a five-week lockdown until mid-january with schools and all non-essential shops closed to slow a surge in the virus.

Italy also announced a new regime of restrictio­ns until January 6 that included limits on people leaving their homes more than once a day, closing non-essential shops, bars and restaurant­s and curbs on regional travel.

In Russia, health authoritie­s said that the number of people who have died from the coronaviru­s has surpassed the 50,000 mark and now stands at 50,858.

The rapid rollout of vaccinatio­ns is now seen as the only effective way to end the crisis and the economical­ly devastatin­g shutdowns used to halt its spread.

Europe is expected to start a massive vaccinatio­n campaign after Christmas following the United States and Britain, which have begun giving jabs with an approved Pfizerbion­tech shot, one of several leading candidates.

Russia and China have also started giving out jabs with their own domestical­ly produced vaccines.

The United States on Friday authorised Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use, the first nation to authorise the two-dose regimen from Moderna — now the second vaccine to be deployed in a Western country after the one developed by Pfizer and Biontech.

The Wall Street Journal reported that US lawmakers had agreed on pandemic spending powers for the Federal Reserve late Saturday, clearing the way for a vote on a roughly Us$900-billion COVID-19 relief package for millions of Americans.

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