The National - News

DIVISIONS IN SOUTH AFRICA OVER VACCINES WORSENED BY OMICRON

▶ Infections have risen sharply as social media posts call for anti-vaccinatio­n protests

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South Africans living in areas hit hardest by a new wave of coronaviru­s infections say the Omicron variant has reignited tension between those for and against vaccinatio­ns.

In Johannesbu­rg, the capital of Gauteng province, new infections have risen sharply in recent weeks, helping to push the country’s seven-day average from 227 on November 18 to more than 4,500 10 days later, Johns Hopkins University said.

Gauteng accounted for about 72 per cent of new cases on November 30, the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases said, but infections are increasing exponentia­lly in most other provinces.

Residents of South Africa’s most populous city told The National the surge in cases had struck a blow to the city’s economic recovery and cast a shadow over the festive season.

“You can certainly feel an air of uncertaint­y in the province and country at the moment,” said Roberto Pereira, 30, from the city’s Parkmore district.

Elsa Glenn van Rooyen, 42, who lives in the city’s upmarket Randburg district, was looking forward to the start of the South African summer when locals reconnect with family and friends.

“Omicron has rather put a dampener on things,” said the video editor.

“A new Covid wave is a huge blow to our flailing economy.

“The tourism industry will suffer especially, but many other industries too, especially with the travel restrictio­ns.”

The arrival of the new variant has also inflamed tension around the vaccinatio­n drive, Ms van Rooyen said.

In October, two men were arrested in Cape Town when an anti-vaccinatio­n and antimask demonstrat­ion turned violent.

On Monday, social media posts claimed anti-lockdown and vaccinatio­n marches had been planned in Durban on Friday, as well as a national shutdown in response to the Omicron variant on Thursday.

But Gauteng daily newspaper The Citizen debunked the posts.

The Omicron variant, detected on November 11, has more than 50 mutations and there are concerns it will be able to evade vaccines.

Despite Covid-19 shots being available to all adults in South Africa, scepticism about their safety and effectiven­ess is widespread and vaccinatio­n rates remain low.

Only about 24 per cent of South African adults had been fully vaccinated by November 30, according to Our World in Data, well below the government’s target of 70 per cent by the end of the year.

Last week, Reuters reported that the government had asked Johnson & Johnson and Pfizer to delay vaccine deliveries because the country has too much stock.

President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday said the government was discussing a vaccine mandate.

Dr Waasila Jassat, a Gauteng public-health specialist, told The National that the slow vaccinatio­n campaign was only one reason why new coronaviru­s variants have emerged in South Africa, where the Beta strain was also discovered.

“It is true that we are lagging behind in vaccinatio­n coverage. Lower vaccinatio­n means more opportunit­y for the virus to mutate,” Dr Jassat said.

“But remember, we had mutations even before we had any vaccinatio­n, and we know that viruses are just going to mutate, but I think low vaccinatio­n coverage does contribute.”

Dr Jassat’s team has been “deep sampling” the virus since the start of the epidemic, meaning they may be more likely to detect a variant more quickly than scientists in other countries.

When the variant was first identified last month, the US, EU, Israel, UK and a host of other countries quickly blocked travel from several southern African countries.

But Omicron has since been identified in at least 24 countries, including several in Europe, and South Africans feel they are being penalised unfairly for the nation’s scientific achievemen­ts.

Mitchell Said, 39, a resident of Killarney, Johannesbu­rg, has been in isolation since Sunday, when he was told that his son was in contact with a schoolmate who had tested positive.

He said the travel bans against African countries revealed “a colonial and racist mindset”.

“We’re almost being punished for the good work of being able to detect the variant and alert the world to it,” Mr Said said.

South Africa has been hit hard by coronaviru­s since the start of the pandemic.

Health experts also believe South Africa’s high incidence of HIV – 7.5 million people are believed to be living with it – could be another reason the virus mutated and spread.

Dr Jassat said that untreated HIV, which compromise­s the immune system, could be “a good breeding ground for creating Covid mutations”.

“Of course, it is thought that mutations are more likely to occur in people with immunocomp­romised states where the virus fails to shed for many months, and can mutate and we know our HIV prevalence is really high in South Africa,” she said.

Despite the gloom brought by the new variant, there was some reason to be hopeful.

Dr Jassat said many of the admissions she had seen in recent weeks “seem to be less severe” than with other variants.

New patients, she said, often reported flu-like symptoms but not a loss of taste or smell, which is among the defining symptoms of previous strains.

 ?? AP ?? Only about 24 per cent of South African adults had been fully vaccinated by November 30
AP Only about 24 per cent of South African adults had been fully vaccinated by November 30

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