The Herald (Zimbabwe)

WHO forecasts Covid-19 ceasefire, Europe lifts curbs

-

LONDON - The World Health Organizati­on yesterday offered Europe hope of a “long period of tranquilit­y” and even “enduring peace” in the war on coronaviru­s, with a growing list of nations lifting almost all Covid- 19 curbs.

WHO Europe director Hans Kluge spoke of “a ceasefire that could bring us enduring peace”, with high vaccinatio­n rates, the milder Omicron variant and the end of winter in sight.”

This context leaves us with the possibilit­y for a long period of tranquilit­y,” he told reporters. This was “not to say that ( the pandemic) is now all over”, but “there is a singular opportunit­y to take control of the transmissi­on”, he added.” Even with a more virulent variant ( than Omicron) it is possible to respond to new variants that will inevitably emerge -- without re- installing the kind of disruptive measures we needed before”, Kluge said.

He cautioned that the optimistic scenario required countries to pursue vaccinatio­n campaigns and surveillan­ce to detect new variants.

Sweden j oined the move towards scrapping most coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, setting February 9 as the date with the pandemic entering a “whole new phase”.

Stockholm will end 11pm closing for bars and restaurant­s, and limits on crowd numbers. Vaccine passes for indoor events will go and face masks will no longer be recommende­d on crowded public transport.

“The pandemic is not over, but we are entering a whole new phase,” Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson announced.

Her Health Minister Lena Hallengren said the government would remain “vigilant” about the pandemic’s progress.

Sweden made headlines early in the pandemic for choosing to not impose lockdowns. With over 16 000 fatalities so far, its death toll is in line with the European average, but is far higher than those of neighbouri­ng Norway, Finland and Denmark.

After Britain and Ireland, Copenhagen on Tuesday lifted most domestic Covid19 restrictio­ns, followed later in the day by Norway.

France on Wednesday loosened several restrictio­ns imposed to curb the latest Covid- 19 surge, with authoritie­s hoping a small decline in huge daily case numbers will soon ease pressure on overburden­ed hospitals.

And New Zealand is to start easing some of the toughest pandemic border restrictio­ns yet seen, but will not fully reopen until October.

“It’s time to move again,” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said yesterday unveiling a five- step plan to reconnect to the rest of the world. Hotel quarantine requiremen­ts for New Zealanders stranded overseas will be lifted this month.

Ardern had been under pressure to relax border policies that have been largely unchanged since the beginning of the Covid- 19 crisis almost two years ago.

“Families and friends need to reunite, our businesses need skills to grow, exporters need to travel to make new connection­s,” she said.

But Germany is still grappling with record infection numbers fuelled by Omicron and now recommendi­ng a fourth vaccine for at- risk groups, following in the footsteps of Israel and several European nations.

Germany’s STIKO vaccine commission said yester day that data showed “that protection against the currently circulatin­g Omicron variant wanes within a few months of the first booster vaccinatio­n”.

Israel last month became the first country to roll out fourth Covid- 19 shots, initially to the elderly and health care workers, and since to all vulnerable people over 18.

Denmark, Hungary and Spain are also offering fourth jabs to high- risk groups, as are others including Chile and Brazil.

The move has not been universall­y welcomed, with the WHO repeatedly warning wealthier nations they cannot boost their way out of the pandemic.

Coronaviru­s has killed at least 5,698,322 million people since the outbreak emerged in China in December 2019, according to a tally from official sources. – AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe