Toronto Star

New travel rules imposed

Those arriving from overseas face stricter testing regime as more cases of variant emerge

- TONDA MACCHARLES AND ALEX BALLINGALL

Canada is ramping up its defences against the Omicron variant of COVID-19 with new test and quarantine requiremen­ts for incoming air travellers from all countries except the United States.

It is also banning foreign nationals who have been to an additional three African countries from travelling to Canada, just days after banning travel from seven other countries in an attempt to contain the new variant of the deadly coronaviru­s.

With the variant already present in Canada, federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said Tuesday that Ottawa will require most air travellers — regardless of whether they are vaccinated against COVID-19 — to take government-provided molecular tests upon arriv- al at Canadian airports from abroad.

That is on top of the existing requiremen­t to be tested and receive a negative result within 72 hours before flying to Canada, Duclos said.

Travellers who are fully vaccinated will then have to self-quarantine in Canada until they get a negative result from their arrival test, he said, adding that the new testing measures would be implemente­d at Canadian airports “over the next few days.”

This new requiremen­t does not apply to travellers from the U.S., but Duclos said the government might change that depending on how the situation with the Omicron variant plays out. The federal government is also discussing with provinces whether to implement broader testing requiremen­ts at Canada’s land border.

The federal government is adding Nigeria, Malawi and Egypt to the list of African countries from which foreign travellers are banned. The rules now say any foreign national who has travelled to those countries in the past two weeks is barred from entry into Canada. Canadian citizens and permanent residents who travelled there and have a right of re-entry to Canada are now subject to tougher testing, isolation and quarantine requiremen­ts.

“The pandemic is not over,” Transport Minister Omar Alghabra told reporters on Tuesday, urging people to get vaccinated and observe public health measures.

Duclos acknowledg­ed that even with the new travel restrictio­ns, “there will be most likely community transmissi­on of the new variant at some point in Canada.

“We see no evidence of this now because, as I said, we have been able to detect the cases of those travellers, because of our border and other public health measures,” he said.

However, the government is also asking for fresh guidance from its vaccine advisory committee on the use of COVID-19 booster shots for the broader population — not just for health workers and vulnerable groups who are now eligible — in light of new concerns circling the globe about the Omicron variant. Some countries, like France, are now defining “fully vaccinated” for those over age 65 as having three doses of a vaccine.

The World Health Organizati­on has said the variant includes mutations that could help it spread more easily and potentiall­y breach the immunity conferred by vaccines.

The Omicron variant is a “source of concern, not a source of panic,” said Duclos. He said its emergence could be “one more reason” why the vaccine advisory committee should renew its guidance on booster shots for fully vaccinated Canadians.

“We know that this pandemic is going to end only when it is going to end globally,” Duclos said, acknowledg­ing the “double challenge” of protecting Canadians while helping poorer countries get vaccine doses to prevent the global spread of COVID-19.

The more stringent border testing measures could help slow down the spread of the new variant “if that is the goal,” said infectious diseases expert Dr. Isaac Bogoch, but he pointed out there is a “big gaping hole” in the strategy, “and that gaping hole is the United States” because travellers flying in from the U.S. are not subject to the new onarrival test-and-isolation requiremen­ts. The reasons for excluding the U.S. are probably both “political and pragmatic,” said Bogoch.

Canada introduced the new rules and expanded its travel ban as the Netherland­s acknowledg­ed Tuesday that the Omicron variant appeared to have reached that country before it was identified in South Africa last week. The latest variant has now been detected in countries outside the southern Africa region, including Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Hong Kong, Israel, Portugal and the United Kingdom.

That’s why Bogoch said he doesn’t favour targeted country lists. “I think this is largely a game of whack-a-mole, where you add an increasing number of countries or regions to a list but you’re always two steps behind because the virus is already beyond those areas.”

But Canada’s chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said Canada has listed only countries that have had difficulty identifyin­g the presence of the Omicron variant despite evidence that it is already circulatin­g.

The three additional countries listed Tuesday “have not yet reported Omicron variant in their own country prior to other countries reporting importatio­ns from those countries, including Belgium, Israel, Hong Kong, South Korea, and now Canada, who’ve detected cases before the country of origin has detected cases,” said Tam.

With current layers of protection in Canada, including widespread vaccinatio­n, testing and public health measures like masking, Duclos and the public health officials suggested more targeted travel restrictio­ns will “gain time” for researcher­s to determine just how much of a threat the new Omicron variant is: whether it is indeed more transmissi­ble, whether it causes more severe disease, and whether it has the ability to escape vaccineind­uced immunity.

Last Friday, the government announced it was banning travel from South Africa, Eswatini, Lesotho, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Namibia, and the entry of foreign nationals who travelled to any of the listed countries within the past 14 days.

It is also requiring Canadians and permanent residents who have visited those countries in the past two weeks to get a negative PCR test in a third country from which travel isn’t restricted before they can return to Canada.

But the variant is already in Canada, with at least seven cases confirmed. After cases were reported Monday in Ottawa and Quebec, Alberta confirmed its first case of the Omicron variant on Tuesday. The province’s top public health officer, Deena Hinshaw, told reporters in Edmonton that the case was linked to travel from Nigeria and the Netherland­s. British Columbia also recorded its first case on Tuesday, the fourth province to do so.

We know that this pandemic is going to end only when it is going to end globally.

FEDERAL HEALTH MINISTER JEAN-YVES DUCLOS

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos, right, acknowledg­ed the “uncertaint­y” caused by the Omicron variant as he and Transport Minister Omar Alghabra announced expanded travel bans and new COVID testing and quarantine rules on Tuesday.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos, right, acknowledg­ed the “uncertaint­y” caused by the Omicron variant as he and Transport Minister Omar Alghabra announced expanded travel bans and new COVID testing and quarantine rules on Tuesday.

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