The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Europe coronaviru­s deaths top 1.5 mln

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PARIS: Europe scrambled Thursday to regain control over a resurgent coronaviru­s as government­s urged adult boosters and jabs for young children in a sign of growing unease over a pandemic that has killed 1.5 million people on the continent.

Berlin, Paris and Lisbon were among capitals weighing tighter Covid restrictio­ns and broader vaccinatio­n campaigns as surging cases and the encroachin­g winter threaten to undo hard-won gains against the virus over the summer.

In the Czech Republic, President Milos Zeman returned to hospital just hours after being released to name a new prime minister as he tested positive for Covid-19.

With government­s already struggling to cope with the more infectious Delta variant, the discovery of a new and troubling strain in South Africa was a stark reminder that the fight against Covid-19 is far from won.

In Germany, outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel urged more stringent controls. France stepped up booster shots, and the European Union’s medicines agency gave the green light to a vaccine for fiveyear-olds. Even countries with relatively high rates of vaccinatio­n are now tightening Covid-19 measures that had only recently been relaxed.

Merkel implored the new government succeeding her to take quick, decisive measures as the country reported a record 351 Covid fatalities in the past 24 hours, taking the official death toll since the start of the pandemic past 100,000.

Warning that “every day counts”, Merkel urged her successor government for “more contact restrictio­ns”.

Germany has had to call on hospitals elsewhere in the EU for help as some clinics face overload.

The country last week began requiring people to prove they are vaccinated, have recovered from Covid-19 or recently tested negative before they can travel on public transport or enter workplaces.

In Paris, Health Minister Olivier Veran said Covid19 booster shots would be accessible to all adults starting this weekend.

From Jan 15, people over 18 would need to show proof of a top-up vaccine dose to maintain a valid Covid pass, which is required to enter restaurant­s, bars, gyms and other public venues.

Adding pressure, the EU Commission recommende­d that the bloc’s vaccinatio­n certificat­e should become invalid once the holder’s latest dose is more than nine months old.

Elsewhere in Europe, the streets of the Slovak capital Bratislava were deserted as a new partial Covid lockdown came into effect.

Even Portugal, which has an 86-percent vaccinatio­n rate, said it would impose work from home in the New Year and close bars and discothequ­es.

Belgium, which reimposed tougher curbs only last week, has seen an uptick far worse than projected, Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said.

The spiking cases see Europe re-emerge as the pandemic’s epicentre, with the continent battling sluggish vaccine uptake in some nations, the highly contagious Delta variant, colder weather sending people indoors and the easing of restrictio­ns.

An AFP tally of official figures showed Thursday that more than 1.5 million people have died from Covid-19 in Europe.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? People queue in front of a supermarke­t in Bratislava downtown. Slovakia declared a two-week lockdown following a spike in Covid-19 cases.
— AFP photo People queue in front of a supermarke­t in Bratislava downtown. Slovakia declared a two-week lockdown following a spike in Covid-19 cases.

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