Malta Independent

Omicron and delta spell return of unpopular restrictio­ns

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Greeks over 60 who refuse coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns could be hit with monthly fines of more than one-quarter of their minimum pensions – a get-tough policy that the country’s politician­s say will cost votes but save lives.

Weekly protests in the Netherland­s over the country’s 5pm lockdown and other new restrictio­ns have descended into violence, despite what appears to be overwhelmi­ng acceptance of the rules.

In Israel, the government on Thursday halted the use of a controvers­ial phone-tracking technology to trace possible cases of the new coronaviru­s variant after a public uproar.

With the delta variant of Covid19 pushing up cases in Europe and growing fears over the omicron variant, government­s around the world are weighing new measures for population­s tired of hearing about restrictio­ns and vaccines.

It’s a thorny calculus made more difficult by the prospect of backlash, increased social divisions and, for many politician­s, the fear of being voted out of office.

“I know the frustratio­n that we all feel with this omicron variant, the sense of exhaustion that we could be going through this all over again,” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Tuesday, two days after the government announced that masks would be mandatory again in stores and on public transporta­tion and required all visitors from abroad to undergo a Covid-19 test and quarantine. “We’re trying to take a balanced and proportion­ed approach.”

New restrictio­ns, or variations on the old ones, are cropping up around the world, especially in Europe, where leaders are at pains to explain what looks like a failed promise: that mass vaccinatio­ns would mean an end to widely loathed limitation­s.

“People need normality. They need families, they need to see people, obviously safely, socially distancing, but I really think, this Christmas now, people have had enough,” said Belinda Storey, who runs a stall at a Christmas market in Nottingham, England.

In the Netherland­s, where the lockdown went into effect last week, mounted police patrol the streets to break up demonstrat­ions. But most people appeared resigned to rush through errands and head home.

“The only thing we can do is to listen to the rules, follow them and hope it’s not getting worse. For me it’s no problem. I’m a nurse. I know how sick people get,” said Wilma van Kampen.

Huburt Bruls, who as mayor of the Dutch city of Nijmegen banned a protest last weekend, said he sympathize­d with the frustratio­n but was prepared to carry out the national rules.

“There was a lot of disappoint­ment in the effects of vaccinatio­n. Everybody did their best, we had one of the highest rates of vaccinatio­ns, and it wasn’t enough. Infections are higher than ever. I myself was a little disappoint­ed, but we have to look ahead,” he said.

In Greece, residents over 60 face fines of €100 a month if they fail to get vaccinated. The fines will be tacked onto tax bills in January. About 17% of Greeks over 60 are unvaccinat­ed despite various efforts to prod them to get their shots, and nine in 10 Greeks now dying of Covid-19 are over 60.

“I don’t care whether the measure will cost me some extra votes in the elections,” Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said Wednesday after lawmakers passed the measure. “I am convinced that we are doing the right thing, and I am convinced that this policy will save lives.”

Employing a carrot instead of a stick, Slovakia’s government is proposing to give people 60 and older a €500 bonus if they get vaccinated.

In Israel, the government this week briefly resumed using a phone-monitoring technology to perform contact tracing of people confirmed to have the omicron variant, only to halt its use on Thursday.

“From the beginning I noted that use of this tool would be limited and brief – for a few days, in order to get urgent informatio­n to halt infection with the new, unknown variant,” Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz said on Twitter.

In South Africa, which alerted the World Health Organizati­on to the omicron variant, previous restrictio­ns included curfews and a ban on alcohol sales. This time, President Cyril Ramaphosa is simply calling on more people to get vaccines “to help restore the social freedoms we all yearn for.”

Germany on Thursday imposed strict new limitation­s on the unvaccinat­ed, excluding them from nonessenti­al stores, restaurant­s, and other major public venues. They can go to work only with a negative test.

The legislatur­e is expected to take up a general vaccine mandate in coming weeks.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the measures were necessary because hospitals risked becoming overloaded: “The situation in our country is serious.”

In the US, there is little appetite in either political party for a return to lockdowns or strict contact tracing. Enforcing even simple measures like maskwearin­g has become a political flashpoint. And Republican­s are suing to block the Biden administra­tion’s new get-vaccinated­or-get-tested requiremen­t for large employers.

On Thursday, President Joe Biden, whose political fate may well hinge on controllin­g the pandemic, moved to tighten testing requiremen­ts for people entering the US, and recommende­d Americans wear masks indoors in public. But he said his new strategy “doesn’t include shutdowns and lockdowns,” and he hoped for bipartisan backing.

“It’s a plan that I think should unite us,” he said.

The rise of the new variant makes little difference to Mark Christense­n, a grain buyer for an ethanol plant in Nebraska. He rejects any vaccinatio­n mandate and doesn’t understand why it would be needed. In any event, he said, most businesses in his corner of the state are too small to fall under the regulation­s.

“If they were just encouragin­g me to take it, that’s one thing,” Christense­n said. “But I believe in freedom of choice, not decisions by force.”

Chile has taken a harder line since the emergence of omicron: People over 18 must receive a booster dose every six months to keep their pass that allows access to restaurant­s, hotels and public gatherings.

Dr Madhukar Pai, of McGill University’s School of Population and Public Health, said that masks are an easy and pain-free way of keeping transmissi­on down, but that cheap, at-home tests need to be much more widespread, in both rich and poor countries.

He said both approaches give people a sense of control over their own behavior that is lost with a lockdown and make it easier to accept the need to do things like cancel a party or stay inside.

Pai said requiring boosters universall­y, as is essentiall­y the case in Israel, Chile and many countries in Europe, including France, will only prolong the pandemic by making it harder to get first doses to the developing world. That raises the odds of still more variants.

Lockdowns, he said, should be the very last choice.

“Lockdowns only come up when a system is failing,” he said. “We do it when the hospital system is about to collapse. It’s a last resort that indicates you have failed to do all the right things.”

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