Los Angeles Times

Omicron casts shadow over South Africa

One university is a hot spot for variant, leading a few others to require vaccinatio­n.

- BY MOGOMOTSI MAGOME AND ANDREW MELDRUM Magome and Meldrum write for the Associated Press.

PRETORIA, South Africa — The overcast, drizzly skies match the somber mood at the Tshwane University of Technology, a hot spot in South Africa’s latest surge of COVID-19 cases, apparently driven by the new Omicron variant that is prompting countries around the world to impose new restrictio­ns.

After several students tested positive, the university postponed some exams, and officials in the larger metropolit­an area of Tshwane, which includes the capital, Pretoria, are pushing vaccinatio­ns, especially among younger adults who have been slow to get the shots.

At TUT, as the university is known, few students wanted to speak about the new variant that has cast a pall.

Many were not vaccinated — only 22% of 18- to 34year-olds in South Africa are — and some seemed to be rethinking that, though notably the university’s vaccinatio­n center was closed for the weekend.

Manqoba Zitha, a student who has gotten the shot, said he will be pushing classmates to do the same.

“I’m trying to encourage them so that they can vaccinate, so they can stay away from coronaviru­s because it’s there, it’s killing people, and now numbers are rising,” Zitha said. “Now when we are watching TV we can see that people are getting coronaviru­s. So they must vaccinate!”

Nearly two years into the pandemic, the world is racing to contain the latest variant, first identified in southern Africa but popping up around the globe.

Countries are imposing restrictio­ns or bans on travelers from several countries — much to the South African government’s dismay — and re-imposing measures such as mask mandates that some hoped were a thing of the past.

The World Health Organizati­on named the new version of the virus Omicron and classified it as a highly transmissi­ble variant of concern, though its risks are not yet understood.

Early evidence suggests that it poses an increased

risk that people who have had COVID-19 could catch it again, the WHO said. It could take weeks to know whether current vaccines are less effective against it.

Still, some experts are hopeful that vaccines will be at least somewhat effective in preventing serious illness and death — and continue to encourage people to get inoculated.

Gauteng province — home to Pretoria and South Africa’s largest city, Johannesbu­rg — is the center of the new surge. So far, cases there appear to be mild, according to doctors, and hospital admissions have not spiked.

But experts warn that the early round of infections has been among the young, and the situation may become more serious if the new surge affects older, unvaccinat­ed South Africans.

In all, 41% of those 18 and older are vaccinated — but young people have been particular­ly slow to step forward.

At least three South African universiti­es — the University of Cape Town, Johannesbu­rg’s University of the Witwatersr­and and the University of Free State in Bloemfonte­in — have announced that vaccinatio­ns will be mandatory for students starting next year. Some experts think further measures will be needed.

“I do think that the decision that South Africa is going to have to make is probably around mandatory vaccinatio­n,” said Mosa Moshabela, professor of public health at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban.

Demand for the vaccine has been so sluggish that the government recently requested slower deliveries to allow it time to use up its current stock of 19 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson shots.

A new surge — and even a new variant — was long anticipate­d, but the speed with which Omicron hit came as a “shock” to South Africa’s health experts.

Although numbers of confirmed cases are still relatively low, they have been increasing at a high rate.

The new spike started after some student parties in Pretoria. Numbers quickly jumped from a few hundred cases a day to thousands.

South Africa announced 3,220 new cases Saturday, of which 82% are in Gauteng, according to the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases. That’s still well below the peak of the last wave, when more than 25,000 were confirmed in a day.

As many as 90% of the new cases in Gauteng province are caused by Omicron, Tulio de Oliveira, director of the KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform, said in a tweet, citing the results of diagnostic tests.

“We did expect that we may see a new or a different variant gaining momentum in the fourth wave ... but we did not really expect to see a variant with the kind of multiplici­ty of mutations. And that is capable of becoming highly transmissi­ble and escape or evade immunity at the same time,” said Moshabela, the expert from the University of KwaZuluNat­al. “This was really the shock that we had.”

Although the current cases are concentrat­ed in Pretoria and Johannesbu­rg, tests show that Omicron is already in all of South Africa’s nine provinces.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa met over the weekend with health officials and is scheduled to address the nation on Sunday night about the increased cases.

Back at TUT, Nhlanhla Africa Maphosa, a 25-yearold management student, is still trying to digest the news and what it will mean for his studies.

“It was just last week when they checked stats, then they realize that so many students were affected by COVID-19 at the main campus,” Maphosa said. “We’re not that sure of the stats . ... But what we can say is that a high level or a high percentage of students has got COVID-19.”

‘The decision that South Africa is going to have to make is probably around mandatory vaccinatio­n.’

— Mosa Moshabela, professor of public health at the

University of KwaZulu-Natal

 ?? Denis Farrell Associated Press ?? TSHWANE University of Technology students in Pretoria, South Africa, return to their residence Saturday. Vaccinatio­n has lagged among younger adults in the nation: In the 18-to-34 age group, only 22% are inoculated.
Denis Farrell Associated Press TSHWANE University of Technology students in Pretoria, South Africa, return to their residence Saturday. Vaccinatio­n has lagged among younger adults in the nation: In the 18-to-34 age group, only 22% are inoculated.

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