The Columbus Dispatch

Omicron spreads global gloom over New Year’s celebratio­ns

Several countries consider new COVID restrictio­ns

- Raf Casert

BRUSSELS – After struggling with the coronaviru­s for far too long, the world understand­s all too well Belgium’s word of the year, “knaldrang!” – the urge to party, the need to let loose. Yet as New Year celebratio­ns approach, the omicron variant is casting more gloom.

Dire warnings abound, caseloads are rising alarmingly fast, air traffic is snarled and several countries are considerin­g more restrictio­ns to add to the patchwork of lockdowns and other measures already in place around Europe.

The top U.S. infectious-disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, warned on Monday that with the rise of the highly contagious omicron, “it’s going to get worse before it gets better.”

“We don’t expect things are going to turn around in a few days to a week. It likely will take much longer than that, but that’s unpredicta­ble,” he said on ABC.

New York City’s sweeping mandate requiring nearly all businesses, from multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to corner grocery stores, to ban unvaccinat­ed employees from the workplace took effect Monday amid a spike in infections.

In Denmark, infection numbers have gone up drasticall­y in the past few days and set a one-day record of over 16,000 in the nation of 5.8 million.

Travelers around the world faced flight cancellati­ons and delays because of staffing shortages linked to COVID-19. Flightawar­e, a flight-tracking website, counted more than 2,400 cancellati­ons worldwide by Monday afternoon – 884 of them within, into or out of the U.S.

It is the unpredicta­bility of the virus that is keeping government­s secondgues­sing and picking widely varying strategies to beat back the pandemic.

The French government and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson were assessing the latest data and the need to counter the record numbers of COVID-19 infections with more measures to keep people apart at a time when they so dearly want to be together.

But with indication­s that omicron might be a milder variant despite its extraordin­ary ability to infect people, politician­s were caught in a bind over whether to spoil yet another party or play it safe to make sure health care systems don’t collapse.

France has recorded more than 100,000 infections in a single day for the first time in the pandemic, and COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations have doubled over the past month. President Emmanuel Macron’s government scheduled emergency meetings Monday to discuss its next steps.

It is hoping that stepped-up vaccinatio­ns will be enough. The government is pushing a draft law that would require people to be vaccinated to enter all restaurant­s and many public venues, instead of the current health pass system that allows individual­s to produce a negative test or proof of recovery if they are not vaccinated.

This piecemeal, often hesitant approach is visible through much of Europe. In Poland, a nation of 38 million where the daily death toll now often tops 500, now-closed nightclubs will be allowed to reopen on New Year’s Eve, with the government unwilling to go against the many voters opposed to restrictio­ns and mandatory vaccinatio­ns.

And despite the highest death toll from COVID-19 in Europe, Russia will ring in the new year with little if any restrictio­ns. Many precaution­s will be lifted during the holiday period that runs for 10 days starting New Year’s Eve. Russia also will not impose any additional travel restrictio­ns.

The official Rosstat statistica­l agency estimated that between April 2020 and October 2021, Russia had 537,000 virus-related deaths.

In Belgium, people faced their first real test with several new measures on Monday. Shopping in large groups was banned, and movie theaters and concert halls closed at a time when countless families are on vacation together. The calls to close theaters and arts centers faced especially heavy criticism.

“We need it also for our mental health. It is the only way for people to live experience­s, to tell stories. It is of paramount importance for us to be open in these complicate­d and complex times,” said Michael De Kok, artistic director of the Flemish Royal Theatre.

Some movie theaters stayed open in an act of civil disobedien­ce.

In Britain, there are similar creeping moves. Scotland planned to close its nightclubs Monday. Northern Ireland and Wales did so on Sunday, though they remain open in England. Johnson, who has resisted ordering new restrictio­ns but hasn’t ruled them out, was expected to be briefed Monday on the latest data on the spread of omicron.

Even that staple of British holiday celebratio­ns, the stream of English Premier League soccer games, is under threat. The league has called off 15 soccer over the past 21⁄2 weeks, and more could follow.

 ?? DAVID CLIFF/AP ?? The Conservati­ve government in Britain said it could impose new restrictio­ns as the omicron variant continues to spread.
DAVID CLIFF/AP The Conservati­ve government in Britain said it could impose new restrictio­ns as the omicron variant continues to spread.

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