Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

B.1.617 variant found in 17 countries, says WHO

The body hasn’t yet declared the variant first detected in India a ‘variant of concern’

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GENEVA/BERLIN: The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has said that a variant of Covid-19 feared to be contributi­ng to a massive surge in coronaviru­s cases in India has been found in well over a dozen countries.

The UN health agency said the B.1.617 variant of Covid-19 first found in India had, as of Tuesday, been detected in more than 1,200 sequences uploaded to the GISAID open-access database

“from at least 17 countries”.

“Most sequences were uploaded from India, the UK, the US and Singapore,” the WHO said in its weekly epidemiolo­gical update on the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The WHO recently listed B.1.617 - which counts several sub-lineages with slightly different mutations and characteri­stics - as a “variant of interest”. But so far, the global health body has stopped short of declaring it a “variant of concern”.

That label would indicate that it is more dangerous than the original version of the coronaviru­s by, for instance, being more transmissi­ble, deadly or able to dodge vaccine protection­s.

The coronaviru­s disease has now killed more than 3.1 million people worldwide and infected nearly 149 million.

The WHO acknowledg­ed that its preliminar­y modelling based on sequences submitted to GISAID indicates “that B.1.617 has a higher growth rate than other circulatin­g variants in India, suggesting potential increased transmissi­bility”.

It stressed that other variants circulatin­g at the same time were also showing increased transmissi­bility, and that the combinatio­n “may be playing a role in the current resurgence in this country”.

EU slams ‘manipulati­on’ of info by China, Russia

Beijing and Moscow have stepped up “state-sponsored disinforma­tion” campaigns denigratin­g western-developed vaccines against Covid-19 while promoting their own, the EU said.

“The so-called vaccine diplomacy follows a zero-sum game logic” that seeks to “undermine trust in Western-made vaccines, EU institutio­ns and western-European vaccinatio­n strategies,” a report from the EU’s foreign service said.

In another developmen­t, the EU’s executive branch has said the first hearing of its legal case against Covid-19 vaccine-maker AstraZenec­a will take place in a Brussels court on May 26.

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