Las Vegas Review-Journal

Europe working to curb latest variant

New measures set out to protect Christmas

- By Mike Corder and Raf Casert

THE HAGUE — Nations across Europe took new measures Friday in an attempt to keep a COVID-19 spike from spiraling out of control, hoping that action now will safeguard the joys of Christmas next month.

A spike in cases fueled by the contagious delta variant forced government­s to act to rein in infections even in countries not seeing surges and where vaccinatio­n rates are high.

Meanwhile, the world on Friday was confronted with yet another challenge in its long pandemic ordeal: the discovery of a new, potentiall­y more transmissi­ble COVID-19 variant found in southern Africa — which the World Health Organizati­on on Friday named “Omicron” under its Greek letter system.

In Belgium, where a spike in cases and hospital admissions exceeded even the worst medical prediction­s, Prime Minister Alexander De Croo reinforced measures for the second time in little more than a week and closed night clubs, while bars and restaurant­s have to shut at 11 p.m. for the next three weeks.

“We have been hoodwinked by the delta variant,” he said.

Referring to the more than 25,000 cases a day now in the country of 11 million, he said: “This is unpreceden­ted in our country.”

Neighborin­g Netherland­s has been struggling with the virus just as much.

Health Minister Hugo De Jonge said hospitals across the Netherland­s have been told to wind back planned surgeries and scale up acute care and intensive care beds to 1,350 nationwide to cope with the rising number of COVID patients.

The Dutch government tightened its lockdown Friday night amid swiftly rising infections and ICU admissions, although it kept open schools and universiti­es — where most students will have to wear masks in corridors between lessons.

Caretaker Prime Minister Mark Rutte said that for three weeks starting Sunday all venues such as bars, restaurant­s, theaters and shops selling nonessenti­al items will close from 5 p.m. to 5 a.m. Under the current lockdown they have to close at 8 p.m.

“The numbers are high, higher, highest,” Rutte said of the soaring infections.

 ?? Bodo Schackow The Associated Press ?? A COVID-19 patient gets prepared to be transferre­d Friday by an emergency intensive care mobile unit in Saalfeld, Germany.
Bodo Schackow The Associated Press A COVID-19 patient gets prepared to be transferre­d Friday by an emergency intensive care mobile unit in Saalfeld, Germany.

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