The Guardian (USA)

Omicron variant found around world as more nations tighten travel rules

- Peter Beaumont

The Omicron variant of Covid-19 has been identified in new countries around the globe, including the US, west Africa, the Gulf and Asia, as American authoritie­s indicated they would further tighten border controls over concerns that the new strain may be more transmissi­ble.

Underscori­ng the fast spread of the variant, the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases in South Africa – where Omicron was first detected – said it had now been found in five out of nine provinces, and accounted for 74% of the virus genomes sequenced in November.

The institute added that South Africa’s daily reported cases of coronaviru­s doubled to 8,561 on Wednesday from the previous day. The rate of positivity, which means the number of positive results out of total tests, shot up to 16.5% on Wednesday from 10.2% a day before, NICD said. However the number of deaths and hospitalis­ations did not change much, its data showed.

As the World Health Organizati­on said the timeline for the new variant’s emergence was likely to change, experts at the global health body said they hoped to have better informatio­n “within days” on both the severity of disease provoked by Omicron and on its transmissi­bility.

The US, Ghana, Nigeria, Norway, Saudi Arabia and South Korea were among the latest countries to record cases on Wednesday.

Delivering a briefing at the WHO, epidemiolo­gist Maria van Kerkhove said one possible scenario was that the new variant, which was first reported in southern Africa, may be more transmissi­ble than the dominant Delta variant. She said it was not yet known if Omicron makes people more ill.

The WHO also repeated its warned that a “toxic mix” of low vaccinatio­n coverage and low testing rates was creating fertile breeding ground for new Covid-19 variants.

Dozens of countries have imposed stricter travel rules, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Wednesday it was requiring all air travellers entering the country to show a negative Covid-19 test performed within one day of departure.

Fifty-six countries were reportedly implementi­ng travel measures to guard against Omicron despite warnings by the WHO that “introducin­g blunt, blanket measures … will only worsen inequities”.

Ironically, van Kerkhove added, travel bans imposed on southern African countries had created problems in shipping samples of the new variant to health experts for analysis.

However, a report on Wednesday suggesting that retrospect­ive analysis in Nigeria had found evidence of Omicron as early as October – raising fears it had been circulatin­g weeks earlier than first thought – proved to be incorrect.

In fact, the genetic sequence iden

tified in October was for the prevalent Delta variant of the virus, Nigerian health authoritie­s said.

Saudi Arabia became the first Gulf state to identify an Omicron case on Wednesday. Authoritie­s in Riyadh said the variant had been identified in a traveller arriving from a north African country, without naming it.

In Asia, South Korea confirmed its first cases, and Japan asked internatio­nal airlines to stop taking new reservatio­ns for all flights arriving in the country until the end of December in a further tightening of already strict border controls. The transporta­tion ministry said the request was an emergency precaution.

The move by the world’s third-largest economy, coupled with its recent return to a ban on foreign visitors, is among the most stringent anywhere, and more in line with its cloistered neighbour China than with some other democracie­s in the region.

This week the World Health Organizati­on urged countries to avoid blanket travel bans.

Japan has confirmed a second case of the Omicron variant in a person who arrived from Peru, one day after it reported its first case in a Namibian diplomat.

Scientists are working franticall­y to determine how threatenin­g Omicron is. Much remains unknown about the new variant, including whether it is more contagious, whether it makes people more seriously ill, and whether it can thwart the vaccine.

Dr Anthony Fauci, the top US infectious disease expert, said more would be known about the variant in two to four weeks as scientists grow and test lab samples of the virus.

However, on Wednesday the WHO’s chief scientist, Soumya Swaminatha­n, said the agency believed the existing Covid-19 vaccines would work against the variant in preventing severe disease, echoing recent remarks by some vaccine manufactur­ers.

• A previous article with the headline “Omicron variant was in Nigeria weeks before South Africa raised alarm” was removed from the online archive on 1 December 2021 as it was based on incorrect informatio­n reported by a news agency. The URL of that page has been redirected to this article, which was launched in its place.

 ?? Photograph: Amr Nabil/AP ?? Passengers at King Abdulaziz Internatio­nal airport in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia. The country became the first Gulf state to identify an Omicron case on Wednesday.
Photograph: Amr Nabil/AP Passengers at King Abdulaziz Internatio­nal airport in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia. The country became the first Gulf state to identify an Omicron case on Wednesday.

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