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Covid: New heavily mutated variant B.1.1.529 (Omicron) in South Africa raises concern

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We're back in familiar territory - growing concern about a new variant of coronavirus.

The latest is the most heavily mutated version discovered so far - and it has such a long list of mutations that it was described by one scientist as "horrific", while another told me it was the worst variant they'd seen.

It is early days and the confirmed cases are still mostly concentrated in one province in South Africa, but there are hints it may have spread further.

Immediately there are questions around how quickly the new variant spreads, its ability to bypass some of the protection given by vaccines and what should be done about it.

There is a lot of speculation, but very few clear answers.

So, what do we know?

The variant is called B.1.1.529 and is likely to be given a Greek code-name (like the Alpha and Delta variants) by the World Health Organization on Friday.


It is also incredibly heavily mutated. Prof Tulio de Oliveira, the director of the Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation in South Africa, said there was an "unusual constellation of mutations" and that it was "very different" to other variants that have circulated.

"This variant did surprise us, it has a big jump on evolution [and] many more mutations that we expected," he said.

In a media briefing Prof de Oliveira said there were 50 mutations overall and more than 30 on the spike protein, which is the target of most vaccines and the key the virus uses to unlock the doorway into our body's cells.

Zooming in even further to the receptor binding domain (that's the part of the virus that makes first contact with our body's cells), it has 10 mutations compared to just two for the Delta variant that swept the world.

This level of mutation has most likely come from a single patient who was unable to beat the virus.

A lot of mutation doesn't automatically mean: bad. It is important to know what those mutations are actually doing.

But the concern is this virus is now radically different to the original that emerged in Wuhan, China. That means vaccines, which were designed using the original strain, may not be as effective.

Some of the mutations have been seen before in other variants, which gives some insight their likely role in this variant.

For example N501Y seems to make it easier for a coronavirus to spread. There are others in there that make it harder for antibodies to recognise the virus and might make vaccines less effective, but there are others that are completely new.

Prof Richard Lessells, from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa, said: "They give us concern this virus might have enhanced transmissibility, enhanced ability to spread from person to person, but might also be able to get around parts of the immune system."

There have been many examples of variants that have seemed scary on paper, but came to nothing. The Beta variant was at the top of people's concerns at the beginning of the year because it was the best at escaping the immune system. But in the end it was the faster-spreading Delta that took over the world.

Prof Ravi Gupta, from the University of Cambridge, said: "Beta was all immune escape and nothing else, Delta had infectivity and modest immune escape, this potentially has both to high degrees."

Scientific studies in the laboratory will yield give a clearer picture, but answers will come more quickly from monitoring the virus in the real world.

It is still early to draw clear conclusions, but there are already signs that are causing worry.

There have been 77 fully confirmed cases in Gauteng province in South Africa, four cases in Botswana and one in Hong Kong (which is directly linked to travel from South Africa).

However, there are clues the variant has spread even more widely.

This variant seems to give quirky results (known as an S-gene dropout) in the standard tests and that can be used to track the variant without doing a full genetic analysis.

That suggests 90% of cases in Gauteng may already be this variant and it "may already be present in most provinces" in South Africa.

But this does not tell us whether it spreads faster than Delta, is any more severe or to what extent it can evade the immune protection that comes from vaccination.

It also does not tell us how well the variant will spread in countries with much higher vaccination rates than the 24% of South Africa that is fully vaccinated, although large numbers of people in the country have had Covid.

So for now we are left with a variant that raises significant concerns despite huge holes in our knowledge, and is one that needs to be watched closely and asks deep questions about what to do and when. The lesson of the pandemic is you can't always wait until you have all the answers.

BBC
 
The WHO is expected today to give the new variant a name from the Greek alphabet as per tradition. (also BBC)
 
“All air travel to countries with new COVID variant should be suspended”
European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen
 
Yes, lost some money today. :(

I don't think the rout will be as bad as in 2020 for the simple reason the shock factor is lesser in 2021 than in 2020. Still a great buying opportunity.

I think any plans to raise rates are firmly on the back foot. With Oil tumbling, energy prices should drop thus inflation tamed to a degree. This is the theory.
 
EU nations should impose an emergency flight ban on countries where a new coronavirus variant has been found, the European Commission has said, as Belgium confirmed a case.

The variant, currently known as B.1.1.529, has also been identified in South Africa, Botswana, Hong Kong and Israel.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is meeting to discuss the development.

Scientists say they still have much to learn about the virus's new mutations.

The WHO has said it will take a few weeks to understand the impact of the new variant, as experts work to determine how transmissible it is.

The variant is yet to be given a more memorable name, like Delta or Beta. The WHO is expected to name it on Friday, and announce whether it is a variant of concern or just a variant of interest.

It is very different to the other variants that have emerged so far. Scientists have said it is the most heavily mutated version yet, which means Covid vaccines, which were designed using the original strain from Wuhan, may not be as effective.

Stock markets across the world fall sharply on Friday, amid investor fears over the potential economic impact.

In London, the FTSE 100 share index dropped by nearly 3%, while markets in Germany and France also declined following falls in Asia.

Where have cases been detected so far?

The WHO says so far fewer than 100 sample sequences have been reported. Cases have mainly been confirmed in South Africa, but have also been detected in Hong Kong, Israel, Botswana and Belgium.

UK Health Secretary Sajid Javid said on Friday that the variant is "highly likely" to have spread to other countries.

Most of the cases in South Africa have been from its most populated province, Gauteng, of which Johannesburg is the capital city.

Only about 24% of South Africa's population is fully vaccinated, which could spur a rapid spread of cases there, Dr Mike Tildesley, a member of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Modelling group (Spi-M), told the BBC on Friday.

In Hong Kong, the infections were found in a person who had arrived from South Africa, and a guest in the same quarantine hotel who tested positive a few days later, the Department of Health revealed. Both were fully vaccinated.

Europe has identified its first case of the variant in Belgium. The case emerged in an unvaccinated young woman who had recently travelled from Egypt via Turkey and developed mild flu symptoms 11 days later.

Israel's Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said on Friday it is "on the verge of a state of emergency" regarding the new variant, and that he would "act fast, strong and now".

One case was detected in a person who returned from Malawi, according to Israeli media reports quoting the country's health ministry. Another two suspected infections were yet to be confirmed with test results. All three are said to have been fully vaccinated.

What are different countries doing to stop the spread?

The WHO has warned against countries hastily imposing travel restrictions, saying they should look to a "risk-based and scientific approach."

Nevertheless, an increasing number of nations including the UK and the Netherlands have temporarily halted flights from these southern African countries:

South Africa
Botswana
Namibia
Zimbabwe
Eswatini (formerly Swaziland)
Lesotho

The Head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has called for all EU nations to put on the "emergency brake" and stop flights from the region.

"It is now important that all of us in Europe act very swiftly, decisively and united," she said on Friday.

The EU is already struggling to cope with fresh waves of the virus, and several countries have re-imposed lockdowns and restrictions.

Singapore, Italy, France and Israel are among those who have also placed Mozambique on their red lists.

The Czech Republic will ban anyone who has spent more than 12 hours in those nations and also Zambia from entering as of Saturday.

Japan has announced that from Saturday, travellers from much of southern Africa will need to quarantine for 10 days and take a total of four tests during that time.

"The key to crisis management is to prepare for the worst," the Japan Times newspaper quoted chief cabinet secretary Hirokazu Matsuno as saying.

Germany, which is currently going through a fourth wave of infections because of the Delta variant, will allow only Germans to fly into Germany from South Africa as of Friday night. The head of the country's RKI public health institute, Lothar Wieler, said he was very worried about the new variant.

Meanwhile, the German air force on Friday began airlifting patients within the country for the first time during the pandemic, flying people from Bavaria to Münster-Osnabrück in the west, where there are more intensive care beds free.

India has ordered more rigorous screening and testing for travellers arriving from South Africa, Botswana and Hong Kong, local media is reporting.

Reactions from South Africa
The flight bans threaten to separate families over the festive season.

Ruth Daines-Slack, 70, had booked to fly from Cape Town to the UK next week for Christmas and her mother's 100th birthday celebration. She told the BBC she is "beyond devastated" that she will no longer be able to make the trip, adding that the UK's travel ban is a "knee-jerk reaction".

The UK was one of the first nations to impose a flight ban, which South Africa's foreign ministry has criticised as a "rushed decision" made before the WHO has made any announcement on the variant.

BBC
 
WHO designates the new variant officially “of concern” and names it the Omicron variant.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/eu-states-agree-suspend-travel-southern-africa-due-new-covid-19-variant-2021-11-26/

European Union states have agreed to suspend travel from southern Africa after the detection of a new COVID-19 variant, the presidency of the EU said on Friday.

A committee of health experts from all 27 EU states "agreed on the need to activate the emergency break & impose temporary restriction on all travel into EU from southern Africa", the Slovenian presidency of the EU said on Twitter.

Restrictions will apply to Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe, European Commission spokesperson Eric Mamer said on Twitter.

An EU official said that EU governments have also been asked to discourage travel to those countries.

Each of the 27 EU country is free to apply the new measures when it prefers. Some are already applying restrictions.

EU officials said that no decision had yet been made on other countries in other parts of the world where cases were detected, which include Hong Kong, Israel and Belgium, an EU country.

The new coronavirus variant, first detected in South Africa, has caused global alarm as researchers seek to find out if it is vaccine-resistant.

Marc Van Ranst, the virologist who detected the new variant in Belgium, told Reuters that it was more likely that the infected woman had contracted the variant in Belgium rather than while travelling outside Europe.

She had been in Egypt earlier in November, but developed symptoms only 11 days after her return to Belgium. She is not vaccinated.

Switzerland imposed on Friday a requirement of 10-day quarantine and a negative test for travellers from Belgium, Israel and Hong Kong, in addition to travel bans on southern African countries .
 
Novavax says it is working on a vaccine that will provide protection against the new variant of #COVID19 found in South Africa.
 
4% of Africa is vaccinated.

No surprise this happened.

We aren't safe until everyone is vaccinated.
 
Novavax says it is working on a vaccine that will provide protection against the new variant of #COVID19 found in South Africa.

Yes, this is the view atm.

A brand new vaccine may be needed, the boosters and others wont work.

People need to wake up now. This is not a natural virus, it came out of a lab. There is plenty of evidence available now.

I havent taken the vaccines available & will not be taking this one too. People need to look after their immune system by exercising, eating healthy inc honey and stop stressing too much.
 
The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared a new coronavirus variant to be "of concern" and named it Omicron.

It had a large number of mutations, and early evidence suggested an increased reinfection risk, the WHO said.

It was first reported to the WHO from South Africa on 24 November, and has also been identified in Botswana, Belgium, Hong Kong and Israel.

A number of countries around the world have now decided to ban or restrict travel to and from southern Africa.

Travellers from South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Lesotho and Eswatini will not be able to enter the UK unless they are UK or Irish nationals, or UK residents.

US officials said flights from South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique and Malawi would be blocked, mirroring earlier moves taken by the EU. It will come into effect on Monday.
 
Two people in the UK have been found to be infected with the new Covid variant, Omicron, the health secretary has said.
Sajid Javid said the UK Health Security Agency had detected cases in Chelmsford and in Nottingham.
He said the two cases are linked.
The two individuals are self-isolating alongside their households while further tests and contact tracing takes place.

Source: BBC.
 
Millions are scheduled to travel for vacation in December including me. I hope this doesn’t destroy everything.
 
Evening Standard: Boris Johnson to hold press conference at 5PM UK time after new variant cases discovered.
 
Pakistan placed a complete ban on Saturday on travel from seven countries in the wake of the discovery of a new variant of the coronavirus, Omicron, first detected in South Africa, according to the notification issued by the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC).

The notification said travel had been restricted from six southern African countries, namely South Africa, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique, Botswana and Namibia, as well as Hong Kong.

These countries, the NCOC added, had been placed in category C — which includes nations from where people can travel to Pakistan only under specific NCOC guidelines — consequent to the emergence of the Omicron strain in South Africa and its spread to adjoining regions.

Hence, "a complete ban has been placed on direct [and] indirect inbound travel from these countries with immediate effect."

Earlier, Federal Planning and Development Minister Asad Umar announced the same in a tweet.

"Based on the emergence of the new covid variant, notification has been issued [to] restrict travel from 6 South African countries and Hong Kong," he said, adding that the "emergence of new variant makes it even more urgent to vaccinate all eligible citizens 12 years and older".

Protocols for travel 'on extreme emergency'

Travel from the seven countries to Pakistan would be allowed "on extreme emergency", provided that the travellers obtained the required exemptions and followed the needed health and testing protocols, according to the NCOC's notification.

The health and testing protocols, as outlined in the notification, include having a vaccination certificate, a negative polymerase chain reaction test taken within 72 hours before boarding the plane and undergoing a rapid antigen test at the airport after reaching Pakistan. In case of a negative test result, travellers will have to home quarantine themselves for three days and undergo another rapid antigen test conducted by the civil administration on the third day. Those with positive results will have to quarantine for 10 days and undergo a polymerase chain reaction test on the 10th day.

But to "facilitate stranded Pakistanis, travel from these countries till December 5 will be allowed without exemption, though the above-mentioned health and testing protocols will remain applicable," the notification said.

The NCOC also directed the Aviation Division, airport management, and the Airport Security Force to devise a mechanism for screening passengers travelling from the seven countries via indirect flights and share its details with all relevant departments by November 29.

The Omicron scare

The NCOC's decision to ban travel from southern African nations follows similar decisions by a host of other countries wary of the spread of the new variant, Omicron, which the World Health Organisation (WHO) has classified as a "highly transmissible" variant of concern — the same category that includes the predominant Delta variant, which is still a scourge driving higher cases of sickness and death in Europe and parts of the US.

The variant was first detected in South Africa this week, with scientists holding it responsible for a recent spike in Covid-19 infections in Gauteng, the country's most populous province.

The discovery of the new coronavirus variant sent a chill through much of the world on Friday as nations raced to halt air travel, markets fell sharply and scientists held emergency meetings to weigh the exact risks, which were largely unknown.

The United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Russia, European Union nations and a host of other countries have restricted travel for visitors from southern Africa.

However, medical experts and bodies, including the WHO, have warned against any overreaction before the variant is better understood.

DAWN
 
NEW DELHI, Nov 27 (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi told officials on Saturday to review plans to ease travel restrictions as concerns rise over the new Omicron variant of COVID-19.
 
South Africa 'punished' for detecting Omicron Covid variant: govt

South Africa has complained that it is being “punished” for detecting a new Covid-19 variant, Omicron, which the World Health Organisation has termed a “variant of concern” and is more transmissible than the dominant Delta strain, reports AFP.

The decision by a number of countries around the world to ban flights from southern Africa following the discovery of the variant “is akin to punishing South Africa for its advanced genomic sequencing and the ability to detect new variants quicker,” the foreign affairs ministry said in a statement.

“Excellent science should be applauded and not punished,” it said.
 
https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-all-close-contacts-of-positive-omicron-cases-must-self-isolate-regardless-of-vaccination-status-12480575

Boris Johnson has said that people who come into close contact with anyone who tests positive for coronavirus with the new Omicron variant will have to self-isolate, regardless of their jab status, as he delivered a press conference in Downing Street.

The prime minister warned the Omicron variant could reduce the effectiveness of vaccines, as he announced a strengthening of England's rules, after two infections of the new strain were identified in Nottingham and Brentwood in Essex. In an attempt to slow the spread, Mr Johnson announced "temporary and precautionary" measures to be reviewed in three weeks, alongside a "boost" to the booster vaccination campaign.

Mr Johnson said that day two PCR tests are back for all international travellers, saying: "Will require anyone who enters the UK to take a PCR test by the end of the second day after their arrival and to self-isolate until they have a negative result".

There will also be a ramping up of mask wearing in shops and indoor settings.

But, the prime minister said he is "confident" this festive period "will be considerably better than last Christmas".

When asked about this year's festivities, Mr Johnson said: "We continue to be in a strong position largely thanks to the speed of the vaccine rollout, another booster rollout and I think I'm going to stick with the formula I've used before, which is I'm pretty confident to absolutely confident this Christmas will be considerably better than last Christmas."

It comes after the UK Health Security Agency confirmed the two new cases in the UK, which are both believed to be connected and linked to travel to southern Africa, after genomic sequencing overnight.

The individuals and their households were ordered into self-isolation and targeted testing will take place in the areas where the cases were found.

Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia and Angola will face travel restrictions from Sunday, when they will join South Africa and five other neighbouring nations on England's red list.

Professor Chris Whitty added it is "inevitable" the Omicron variant will spread across the world over the next few days.

England's chief medical officer said while it is clear Omicron is highly transmissible, it is not yet clear how effective the vaccine will be as protection against it.

However, he said those who are vaccinated or receive the booster jab will be less likely to become seriously ill.

The UK's chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance also warned the UK may need to "face up" to the possibility of further action if the Omicron variant is very transmissible.

Sir Patrick told the Downing Street press conference: "I think we'll get more information on transmissibility, we'll get more information on the ability of the vaccines to protect against the virus, but that's going to take a little bit of time.

"At the moment, the models are more 'if it spreads very fast, of course it's going to spread very fast and go into a lot of places, and if it spreads less fast it's going to do so less'.

"But if it's very transmissible and does cause big escape, then clearly that's a major issue we have to face up to.

"But that isn't what we know at the moment, we need to get that information."
 
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This is really scary. There seems to be no way out.

Yes, there is. They way out starts with yourself. You cant let a virus impact your life in such a huge way. Also when 99% recovers from it, people should not get so hyper about it.

But when can you do when 99% follows the MSM.
 
Yes, there is. They way out starts with yourself. You cant let a virus impact your life in such a huge way. Also when 99% recovers from it, people should not get so hyper about it.

But when can you do when 99% follows the MSM.

I have seen the impact of this on colleagues that have had the virus and they are still suffering way after they have had the all clear.
 
I have seen the impact of this on colleagues that have had the virus and they are still suffering way after they have had the all clear.

This! Obviously not everyone will get sick, not everyone with better immune system will make it out alive, not everyone after recovering will be totally fine, but one thing is for certain and it is undeniable science, the more non immune bodies this virus has the more it will mutate and will infect even immuned bodies.
 
I have seen the impact of this on colleagues that have had the virus and they are still suffering way after they have had the all clear.

Well thats very interesting then, how old are they?
Like i said people with several health issues have serious issues when getting covid but by far the large majority doesnt have serious health issues.
 
Well thats very interesting then, how old are they?
Like i said people with several health issues have serious issues when getting covid but by far the large majority doesnt have serious health issues.

I know of 36 year old lady, was fit as a fiddle and had no known underlying health conditions. She sadly passed away after contracting covid leaving her husband with Two very young children.

This was pre vaccine days.

I personally know two other elderly gentleman (both in their 70's) who succumbed to covid.
No underlying health conditions.

I play football and one of the players contracted after being jabbjed twice in June. He was down for a month snd only now getting back to normal.

I'm double jabbed and got in August.
I play five aside three times a week, take my D3 and omega 3's daily, eat sensibly snd also have see a PT twice a week. Covid absokutrly knocked me out for ten days solid and I'm very grateful for the jabs as I do have an underlying health condition which affects my immunity.
 
I've said it before double vaccinated complied with every rule bodger told us

But this covid imo is a disease that's been blown out of all proportion , basically the global elite , media , governments have weaponised this virus for control and compliance .

If people haven't woken up to this nonsense more fool them.

Incidentally we have one country called afghanistan where covid seems to not be effecting the masses . None of the taliban have been dropping dead .
 
I know of 36 year old lady, was fit as a fiddle and had no known underlying health conditions. She sadly passed away after contracting covid leaving her husband with Two very young children.

This was pre vaccine days.

I personally know two other elderly gentleman (both in their 70's) who succumbed to covid.
No underlying health conditions.

I play football and one of the players contracted after being jabbjed twice in June. He was down for a month snd only now getting back to normal.

I'm double jabbed and got in August.
I play five aside three times a week, take my D3 and omega 3's daily, eat sensibly snd also have see a PT twice a week. Covid absokutrly knocked me out for ten days solid and I'm very grateful for the jabs as I do have an underlying health condition which affects my immunity.

As i said its tough for the ones affected by it but again the mass population under 80 years of age, do not have serious effects.

My point is after 2 years we need to move on.
 
As i said its tough for the ones affected by it but again the mass population under 80 years of age, do not have serious effects.

My point is after 2 years we need to move on.

I"ll be concerned if the hospitals start filling up again and more people start going on ventilators.
 
Well thats very interesting then, how old are they?
Like i said people with several health issues have serious issues when getting covid but by far the large majority doesnt have serious health issues.

One is Late 40s and one is mid 50s. I have a student that is 17 and she has suffered for nearly a year. A Solicitor friend said he felt his head was about to explode. May Allah keep everyone safe from this terrible illness.
 
I"ll be concerned if the hospitals start filling up again and more people start going on ventilators.

A teacher had a heart attack in school, and no ambulance arrived for an hour because they were none available. One of our students got hurt at break and no ambulance turned up at, his mum had to take to him hospital. The service is at breaking point already
 
A teacher had a heart attack in school, and no ambulance arrived for an hour because they were none available. One of our students got hurt at break and no ambulance turned up at, his mum had to take to him hospital. The service is at breaking point already

So why did they get rid of the nightingale hospitals that were never used .

Nhs at breaking point has nothing to do with covid , it's consecutive mismanagement by governments , nhs waste, lack of staff ,an ever increasing population and too many old people .

Majority of hospitals during lockdown were empty because everyone was stuck at home , that's why nhs staff had enough time to make tik tok videos .

I've snooped on my gp many times because they haven't been picking up the phone and lo and behold receptionists sitting down doing nothing .
 
So why did they get rid of the nightingale hospitals that were never used .

Nhs at breaking point has nothing to do with covid , it's consecutive mismanagement by governments , nhs waste, lack of staff ,an ever increasing population and too many old people .

Majority of hospitals during lockdown were empty because everyone was stuck at home , that's why nhs staff had enough time to make tik tok videos .

I've snooped on my gp many times because they haven't been picking up the phone and lo and behold receptionists sitting down doing nothing .

There may be elements of truth in what you say but when the complaints were made, they said they had no ambulances available. Our school is at breaking point with both staff and kids off. Earlier this evening, I was on the phone to one of our caretakers and he is off with Covid. He said like my Solicitor friend that he feels his head will explode. I am praying that everyone stays safe because what I am seeing is scary.
 
4% of Africa is vaccinated.

No surprise this happened.

We aren't safe until everyone is vaccinated.

Most 'vaccinated' country in the world..

According to Arieh Kovler, a political analyst and writer based in Jerusalem, one of the cases detected in Israel was a 32-year-old woman returning from South Africa who was triple vaccinated with Pfizer and had her third dose just two months ago.
Another was a hotel worker from Malawi who had been given her second dose of the AstraZeneca jab in mid-July, while a third infected person had her second Johnson & Johnson dose two months ago, he added..so much for being vaccinated.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...l-nu-coronavirus-variant-travel-b1964810.html
 
Israel is to ban the entry of all foreign travelers into the country in measure to contain the new Omicron COVID variant.
 
There may be elements of truth in what you say but when the complaints were made, they said they had no ambulances available. Our school is at breaking point with both staff and kids off. Earlier this evening, I was on the phone to one of our caretakers and he is off with Covid. He said like my Solicitor friend that he feels his head will explode. I am praying that everyone stays safe because what I am seeing is scary.

It's scary because 80 % of the population are double jabbed.

Most of the population have had one jab over 50 million .

Over 17 million have had the booster

Yet the cases rise , and people vaccinated are getting covid , being hospitalised and dying . We were told these jabs will save us yet we are heading for a third lock down even though the first 2 never worked and caused a lot of economic damage and problems for people.

I actually caught covid a few days after my second jab .

I don't want to believe the conspiracy theorists but I'm now doubting the official lines of this pandemic vaccines , face masks.
I simply cannot trust these governments , there is a global reset agenda and covid is being used weaponised to achieve this.

I'll tell you the idiocy you must wear a face mask in shops yet you don't have to in a pub , where is the logic?

The whole thing is a farce
 
Israel is to ban foreigners from entering the country for 14 days and use surveillance to halt the spread of the new Covid strain, local media report.

The ban is expected to come into effect at midnight on Sunday, following full cabinet approval.

Israel has so far confirmed one case of the potentially more infectious Omicron strain first detected in South Africa.

Many countries have since banned travel to South Africa and its neighbours.
 
It's scary because 80 % of the population are double jabbed.

Most of the population have had one jab over 50 million .

Over 17 million have had the booster

Yet the cases rise , and people vaccinated are getting covid , being hospitalised and dying . We were told these jabs will save us yet we are heading for a third lock down even though the first 2 never worked and caused a lot of economic damage and problems for people.

I actually caught covid a few days after my second jab .

I don't want to believe the conspiracy theorists but I'm now doubting the official lines of this pandemic vaccines , face masks.
I simply cannot trust these governments , there is a global reset agenda and covid is being used weaponised to achieve this.

I'll tell you the idiocy you must wear a face mask in shops yet you don't have to in a pub , where is the logic?

The whole thing is a farce

This, no one is denying covid but its time to ask questions, serious questions instead wearing masks etc!
 
It's scary because 80 % of the population are double jabbed.

Most of the population have had one jab over 50 million .

Over 17 million have had the booster

Yet the cases rise , and people vaccinated are getting covid , being hospitalised and dying . We were told these jabs will save us yet we are heading for a third lock down even though the first 2 never worked and caused a lot of economic damage and problems for people.

I actually caught covid a few days after my second jab .

I don't want to believe the conspiracy theorists but I'm now doubting the official lines of this pandemic vaccines , face masks.
I simply cannot trust these governments , there is a global reset agenda and covid is being used weaponised to achieve this.

I'll tell you the idiocy you must wear a face mask in shops yet you don't have to in a pub , where is the logic?

The whole thing is a farce

My friend you are expecting miracles from vaccines and that ain't happening. They give alot of protection and are helping to save lives but they can't give you a 100% protection at this point. The simple fact is that more would be dying and in hospitals if they weren't around.
You watch too many WhatsApp conspiracies and it will cost lives.
 
4% of Africa is vaccinated.

No surprise this happened.

We aren't safe until everyone is vaccinated.

How hard would it be to vaccinate Africa? Is it because of prohibitive costs, or because Africans don't trust western vaccines?
 
Another story hitting the news of a 40 year old fit man with no underlying conditions in coma and only has 50pct chance of surviving.

He was waiting for his second jab
 
My friend you are expecting miracles from vaccines and that ain't happening. They give alot of protection and are helping to save lives but they can't give you a 100% protection at this point. The simple fact is that more would be dying and in hospitals if they weren't around.
You watch too many WhatsApp conspiracies and it will cost lives.

Why bring in whatsApp theories? There are several specialists/people with knowledge who are against masks/lockdowns etc..

How far do we need to go in order to save people with serious medical issues, which means locking up the whole world?

People need to understand that 2 years is long enough.
 
Another story hitting the news of a 40 year old fit man with no underlying conditions in coma and only has 50pct chance of surviving.

He was waiting for his second jab

There will always be such individual/exceptional stories which make the news on their own.

I do think we need to consider the wider picture and the significant breakage of the link between cases/hospitalisations & deaths since the vaccines were rolled out though.
 
Another story hitting the news of a 40 year old fit man with no underlying conditions in coma and only has 50pct chance of surviving.

He was waiting for his second jab

So now we will report every single case out of a million?

Another example of how far people go to justify the hype.
 
So now we will report every single case out of a million?

Another example of how far people go to justify the hype.

Ok so I'm not supposed to post about a healthy person suffering on a Thread relating to covid? Also you were the one who asked if those that suffered had underlying issues...
 
There will always be such individual/exceptional stories which make the news on their own.

I do think we need to consider the wider picture and the significant breakage of the link between cases/hospitalisations & deaths since the vaccines were rolled out though.

and that's precisely why I posted this.
The man was a few days away from having his second jab snd his family are in bits because he should have had his jabs much sooner.
 
Ok so I'm not supposed to post about a healthy person suffering on a Thread relating to covid? Also you were the one who asked if those that suffered had underlying issues...

Well, as I said that is very exceptional and not common at all for healthy young person to be in such a serious condition due to covid.

You always have to put things into perspective.
If it was so dangerous, people would not be taking risks and visiting bars, restaurants, sport games etc.
 
Well, as I said that is very exceptional and not common at all for healthy young person to be in such a serious condition due to covid.

You always have to put things into perspective.
If it was so dangerous, people would not be taking risks and visiting bars, restaurants, sport games etc.

Mate I am only posting what I read and in context of what the thread is about...

If you recall my initial reply to you was that the real concern for the new variant will only be if the hospitals start filling up and more people start going onto ventilators....

I'm not here to scare anyone.
Whether people take the vaccine or not is upto them.
 
Covid: Sajid Javid defends 'swift action' on Omicron variant. Masks from Tuesday. [UK]

Face masks will be compulsory in shops and on public transport in England, and UK arrivals are expected to have to take PCR tests from Tuesday in response to the new Omicron variant.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the measures would help to ensure that people can "enjoy Christmas with our families".

Mr Javid said the government had acted "swiftly" and "in a proportionate way".

But a doctor who treated the variant said there had been unnecessary panic.

Meanwhile, adults aged 18 and over "will have an offer of a booster earlier than we had previously envisaged", the deputy chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccines and Immunisation told BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House.

Professor Anthony Harnden said: "There is a very good, strong argument for raising the antibody level in the whole of the community. So accelerating the booster programme both by extending the age range and by reducing the interval between the second dose and the booster dose, would be a sensible strategy."

The government has stopped short of issuing advice to work from home and extending vaccine passports in England, which are part of its Plan B for winter - a contingency plan if intervention on Covid is needed to protect the NHS.

Mr Javid told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that the government "could not have acted more swiftly".

"The reason we've set out these measures yesterday is to protect the progress we've made so we can all continue to enjoy Christmas with our families," he said.

He did not outline when PCR tests for overseas arrivals would be required, saying it would be "as soon as possible" but he needed agreement from all UK four nations. The government website said the change would be implemented from 04:00 GMT on Tuesday.

Mr Javid told Sky News the face mask rules would also be implemented on Tuesday, bringing England in line with the rest of the UK, but he hoped all the new measures could be lifted again "within weeks".

The South African doctor who treated early cases of the Omicron variant told the BBC countries could be "panicking unnecessarily" and the symptoms she had seen were "extremely mild".

Dr Angelique Coetzee, chair of the South African Medical Association, said she had first encountered the variant in patients who had fatigue, aches and pains, but no cough or change in sense of smell or taste. "We haven't admitted anyone," she said.

Prof Neil Ferguson - a key government adviser on the pandemic - said "it's likely we'll detect quite a lot more cases in the coming days" because the UK and the Netherlands have the largest number of flights from South Africa, where the variant is circulating.

Tests on passengers on two flights into Amsterdam found 61 cases of Covid, of which 13 were the Omicron variant.

Meanwhile, Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said "we may need to go further in restricting travel in the days to come", adding: "We need to be open-minded to doing anything to keep the population safe."

Some countries have imposed travel restrictions on the UK following the detection of Omicron cases, including Spain - which will require proof of vaccination from travellers from Wednesday - and Switzerland, which now requires proof of vaccination, a negative Covid test and 10 days' quarantine.

At a Downing Street news conference on Saturday, the prime minister called the new measures temporary and precautionary - and said they would be reviewed in three weeks, just before most schools break up for the Christmas holidays.

Labour has called for full implementation of Plan B and for improved sick pay to encourage self-isolation.


Source: BBC.

-----

A significant individual decision to make for under 40s in the UK now, RE the booster vaccine, which will soon become available to them.

I'm going to be giving it some serious thought....
 
Mate I am only posting what I read and in context of what the thread is about...

If you recall my initial reply to you was that the real concern for the new variant will only be if the hospitals start filling up and more people start going onto ventilators....

I'm not here to scare anyone.
Whether people take the vaccine or not is upto them.

I get your point. For me its more linked to the fact that vaccins are NOT the solution. Also its time we start looking at the broader things of this whole issue.
 
Covid: Sajid Javid defends 'swift action' on Omicron variant. Masks from Tuesday. [UK]

Face masks will be compulsory in shops and on public transport in England, and UK arrivals are expected to have to take PCR tests from Tuesday in response to the new Omicron variant.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the measures would help to ensure that people can "enjoy Christmas with our families".

Mr Javid said the government had acted "swiftly" and "in a proportionate way".

But a doctor who treated the variant said there had been unnecessary panic.

Meanwhile, adults aged 18 and over "will have an offer of a booster earlier than we had previously envisaged", the deputy chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccines and Immunisation told BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House.

Professor Anthony Harnden said: "There is a very good, strong argument for raising the antibody level in the whole of the community. So accelerating the booster programme both by extending the age range and by reducing the interval between the second dose and the booster dose, would be a sensible strategy."

The government has stopped short of issuing advice to work from home and extending vaccine passports in England, which are part of its Plan B for winter - a contingency plan if intervention on Covid is needed to protect the NHS.

Mr Javid told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that the government "could not have acted more swiftly".

"The reason we've set out these measures yesterday is to protect the progress we've made so we can all continue to enjoy Christmas with our families," he said.

He did not outline when PCR tests for overseas arrivals would be required, saying it would be "as soon as possible" but he needed agreement from all UK four nations. The government website said the change would be implemented from 04:00 GMT on Tuesday.

Mr Javid told Sky News the face mask rules would also be implemented on Tuesday, bringing England in line with the rest of the UK, but he hoped all the new measures could be lifted again "within weeks".

The South African doctor who treated early cases of the Omicron variant told the BBC countries could be "panicking unnecessarily" and the symptoms she had seen were "extremely mild".

Dr Angelique Coetzee, chair of the South African Medical Association, said she had first encountered the variant in patients who had fatigue, aches and pains, but no cough or change in sense of smell or taste. "We haven't admitted anyone," she said.

Prof Neil Ferguson - a key government adviser on the pandemic - said "it's likely we'll detect quite a lot more cases in the coming days" because the UK and the Netherlands have the largest number of flights from South Africa, where the variant is circulating.

Tests on passengers on two flights into Amsterdam found 61 cases of Covid, of which 13 were the Omicron variant.

Meanwhile, Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said "we may need to go further in restricting travel in the days to come", adding: "We need to be open-minded to doing anything to keep the population safe."

Some countries have imposed travel restrictions on the UK following the detection of Omicron cases, including Spain - which will require proof of vaccination from travellers from Wednesday - and Switzerland, which now requires proof of vaccination, a negative Covid test and 10 days' quarantine.

At a Downing Street news conference on Saturday, the prime minister called the new measures temporary and precautionary - and said they would be reviewed in three weeks, just before most schools break up for the Christmas holidays.

Labour has called for full implementation of Plan B and for improved sick pay to encourage self-isolation.


Source: BBC.

-----

A significant individual decision to make for under 40s in the UK now, RE the booster vaccine, which will soon become available to them.

I'm going to be giving it some serious thought....

Well after the booster the 3rd, 4th , 5th shot will be ready.
 
Why bring in whatsApp theories? There are several specialists/people with knowledge who are against masks/lockdowns etc..

How far do we need to go in order to save people with serious medical issues, which means locking up the whole world?

People need to understand that 2 years is long enough.

If they are not relatives then we should spend no effort at all, if they are your parents, or other relatives, we need to do everything we can. It's called the selfish gene
 
If they are not relatives then we should spend no effort at all, if they are your parents, or other relatives, we need to do everything we can. It's called the selfish gene

No its not. If my parents would be well in their 80s, the last thing I would want for them is to be on a ventilator with their bodies being turn around.

Death is part of life. You cant spend a normal life being afraid that you might catch a virus.
 
This affecting Europe, not really a big deal in America as of right now.
 
US has imposed travel restrictions so hopefully, this variant will stay away. In the case of the Delta though, nothing helped.

I feel all these Indian IT workers who went to India during the summer brought back the delta to the US using fake and forged negative tests. Hopefully we won’t see a repeat of that with this one.
 
Covid Omicron: No need to panic, South Africa minister says

South Africa's health minister says there is "absolutely no need to panic" over the new coronavirus variant Omicron, despite a surge in cases.

"We have been here before," Joe Phaahla added, referring to the Beta variant detected in South Africa last December.

South Africa also condemned the travel bans imposed on the country, saying they should be lifted immediately.

Omicron has been classed as a "variant of concern". Early evidence suggests it has a heightened re-infection risk.

The heavily mutated variant was detected in South Africa earlier this month and then reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) last Wednesday.

The variant is responsible for most of the infections found in South Africa's most populated province, Gauteng, over the last two weeks. The nuDoes southern Africa have enough vaccines?mber of cases of "appears to be increasing in almost all provinces" in the country, according to the WHO.

Does southern Africa have enough vaccines?
South Africans fear impact of new variant measures
Covid variants: Do we need new vaccines yet?
Africa Live: More on this and other stories from the continent

South Africa reported 2,800 new infections on Sunday, a rise from the daily average of 500 in the previous week.

Government adviser and epidemiologist Salim Abdool Karim said he expected the number of cases to reach more than 10,000 a day by the end of the week, and for hospitals to come under pressure in the next two to three weeks.

Dr Phaahla said he wanted to "reiterate that there is absolutely no need to panic" because this "is no new territory for us".

"We are now more than 20 months' experienced in terms of Covid-19, various variants and waves," he added at a media briefing. On Monday, Japan became the latest country to reinstate tough border restrictions, banning all foreigners from entering from 30 November.

The UK, EU and US are among those who earlier imposed travel bans on South Africa and other regional states.

The WHO has warned against countries hastily imposing travel curbs, saying they should look to a "risk-based and scientific approach".

The world body's Africa director Matshidiso Moeti said on Sunday: "With the Omicron variant now detected in several regions of the world, putting in place travel bans that target Africa attacks global solidarity."

However, Rwanda and Angola are among African states that have announced a restriction on flights to and from South Africa.

South Africa's foreign ministry spokesman Clayson Monyela described their decision as "quite regrettable, very unfortunate, and I will even say sad".

In a speech on Sunday, South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa said the bans would not be effective in preventing the spread of the variant.

"The only thing the prohibition on travel will do is to further damage the economies of the affected countries and undermine their ability to respond to, and recover from, the pandemic," he said.

Current regulations in South Africa make it mandatory to wear face coverings in public, and restrict indoor gatherings to 750 people and outdoor gatherings to 2,000.

Mr Ramaphosa said South Africa would not impose new restrictions, but would "undertake broad consultations on making vaccination mandatory for specific activities and locations".

There are no vaccine shortages in South Africa itself, and Mr Ramaphosa urged more people to get jabbed, saying that remained the best way to fight the virus.

Health experts said that Gauteng, which includes Johannesburg, had entered a fourth wave, and most hospital admissions were of unvaccinated people.

Omicron has now been detected in a number of countries around the world, including the UK, Germany, Australia and Israel.

In other developments:

China said it would offer 1bn doses of vaccines to African countries on top of the 200m it had already supplied
In the Netherlands, Omicron was detected in 13 people who arrived in Amsterdam on two flights from South Africa
Separately, Dutch police said they detained a couple who had escaped from a quarantine hotel. According to the Dutch newspaper Het Parool, the Spanish man and Portuguese woman were arrested on a plane that was about to depart to Spain
Israel banned all foreigners from entering the country for 14 days from midnight on Sunday
The UK called for an emergency meeting of the G7 group of nations on Monday to discuss the new variant
Voters in Switzerland backed the government's measures to tackle Covid, according to preliminary results.

Via : https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-59463879

Chief medical adviser to the US president, Dr Anthony Fauci, says it is too early to be "freaking out" about the Omicron coronavirus variant.

"It's going to take a couple of weeks to get a good handle on it," he said, in an appearance on CBS Mornings.

"When you look at it clinically, it appears to be spreading very readily and has a transmission advantage," he noted, adding it is still too early to know how the variant actually affects those who get infected.

Dr Fauci also pointed out that, given the variant has not yet been detected in the US, "lockdown is not being considered right now".

He called on Americans to get vaccinated or receive their booster shots in the mean time, and expressed hope that travel bans on southern African countries could buy the rest of the world more time.

"It's not the time to panic," he said.

"We should be concerned, and our concern should spur us to do the things that we know work. Rather than freaking out, rather than panicking, just do the right thing."
 
The new Omicron variant of COVID-19 is a "cause for concern and not for panic", Joe Biden has said.

The US president told reporters his decision to restrict travel from countries in southern Africa "gives us time" to take more action.

The new variant was initially reported to the World Health Organisation (WHO) by South African scientists last Wednesday.
 
This affecting Europe, not really a big deal in America as of right now.

It shouldn't be a big deal anywhere but we now live in world where majority are scared sheep who accept anything fed to them.

You wont hear this on CNN or BBC but this new variant isn't serious and more importantly it was discovered initially in a VACCINATED person. As the noble prize winning virologist warned, vaccines will create variants.

Those who are vaccinated will then have boosters, a new vaccine perhaps next year, more boosters..on and on.

Carry on living your lives, don't accept orders from fascist governments. If you are vunerable stay home & stop crying at others who want to live their life.
 
I feel all these Indian IT workers who went to India during the summer brought back the delta to the US using fake and forged negative tests. Hopefully we won’t see a repeat of that with this one.

What? Why would you forge the test it’s so easy to get one most IT guys try to make the papers as clean as possible due to the entry restrictions , also to tell you, I went to India in April and got covid.

Came back to states in July end, and here is the thing.. the immigration office India checked my test but the ones in America didn't even care instead they asked the most ridiculous questions.(same immigration kind)
 
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Covid 19 is nothing but a hoax at this point of time. People have the right to go out and earn their living and live their lives. This hoax is slowly taking away the fundamental right of free movement of humans.
 
Covid 19 is nothing but a hoax at this point of time. People have the right to go out and earn their living and live their lives. This hoax is slowly taking away the fundamental right of free movement of humans.

It's all about control and a reset agenda , taking away people's fundamental freedoms.

The west is transitioning now towards a dictatorial states.

Covid and the climate change have been weaponsised with this purpose

It's disheartening to see even on this forum really clever people are still not waking up and smelling the coffee.

I made a simple analogy of the rule you must where a mask in a shop by law , yet you don't have to in a pub or takeaway .
How does the virus differentiate between a shop and a boozer .

They are taking everyone for fools
 
FRANKFURT/BERLIN, Nov 30 (Reuters) - The chief executive of drugmaker Moderna (MRNA.O) set off fresh alarm bells in financial markets on Tuesday with a warning that existing COVID-19 vaccines would be less effective against the new Omicron variant than they have been against Delta.

However, European Medicines Agency (EMA) executive director Emer Cooke told the European Parliament that, even if the new variant becomes more widespread, existing vaccines will continue to provide protection. read more

Andrea Ammon, chair of the European Centre for Disease prevention and Control (ECDC), said the 42 cases of the variant so far confirmed in 10 European Union countries were mild or without symptoms, although in younger age groups. read more

Major European stock markets, spooked by fears that vaccine resistance may prolong the two-year-old pandemic, were down about 1% at around 1300 GMT.

U.S. stock index futures were down more than 1%.

Crude oil futures shed just under 3%, while Tokyo's Nikkei index closed down 1.6%

"There is no world, I think, where (the effectiveness) is the same level . . . we had with Delta," Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel told the Financial Times.

"I think it's going to be a material drop. I just don't know how much because we need to wait for the data. But all the scientists I've talked to . . . are like 'this is not going to be good'." read more

The University of Oxford said there was no evidence that current vaccines would not prevent severe disease from Omicron, but that it was ready to rapidly engineer an updated version of its shot, developed with AstraZeneca (AZN.L), if necessary. read more

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said "we think it's overwhelmingly likely" that booster shots would continue to protect against severe disease. read more

"The World Health Organization classified Omicron as a "variant of concern," due to the number of mutations that might help it spread or evade antibodies from prior infection or vaccination.
"The World Health Organization classified Omicron as a "variant of concern," due to the number of mutations that might help it spread or evade antibodies from prior infection or vaccination.
LAB TESTS

Moderna did not reply to a Reuters request for comment, or say when it expects to have data on the effectiveness of its vaccine on Omicron, which the World Health Organization (WHO) says carries a very high risk of infection surges.

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals said its COVID-19 antibody cocktail and other similar antiviral treatments could be less effective against the latest variant. read more

News of Omicron's emergence had wiped roughly $2 trillion off global stocks on Friday, after it was identified in southern Africa and announced on Nov. 25.

And yet Dutch authorities said the variant had been detected in the Netherlands as early as Nov. 19, before two flights arrived from South Africa that were known to have carried the virus. read more

Cooke said lab tests for "cross neutralisation" would take about two weeks. If there were a need to change COVID-19 vaccines, new ones could be approved within three or four months, she added.

"Vaccination will likely still keep you out of the hospital," said John Wherry, director of the Penn Institute for Immunology in Philadelphia.

Moderna and fellow drugmakers BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N) are already working on vaccines that specifically target Omicron. Moderna has also been testing a higher dose of its existing booster. read more

Uncertainty about the new variant has triggered border closures that have cast a shadow over a nascent economic recovery from the pandemic, just as parts of Europe see a fourth wave of infections as winter sets in.

Many of the travel restrictions have focused, to South Africa's fury, on banning flights to and from southern Africa.

Japan, the world's third largest economy, confirmed its first case of the new variant on Tuesday, in a traveller from Namibia. Australia found that a person with Omicron had visited a busy shopping centre in Sydney while probably infectious.

An upsurge in new coronavirus variants and poor access to vaccines in developing countries threaten a full recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.
An upsurge in new coronavirus variants and poor access to vaccines in developing countries threaten a full recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.
BORDER CONTROLS

Britain and the United States have both pushed their booster programmes in response to the new variant. England made face masks compulsory once again in shops and on public transport, and London said international arrivals would have to self-isolate until they get a negative result in a PCR test.

Greece said vaccination would be compulsory for the over-60s, the group seen as most vulnerable to COVID-19.

Australia on Monday delayed the reopening of its international borders by two weeks, less than 36 hours before foreign students and skilled migrants were to be allowed back.

But in Germany, a current hotspot of the previous significant variant, Delta, the seven-day average infection rate fell slightly for the first time in three weeks after new restrictions to slow transmission. read more

Neighbouring Austria, which imposed its fourth full lockdown last week in response to a surge in infections, also registered a drop.

The curbs on travellers from southern Africa have highlighted the inequality of vaccine distribution, which may have given the virus more opportunities to mutate.

The passenger liner Europa was docking in Cape Town on Tuesday in what was meant to be the official start of the first cruise ship season in South Africa's top tourist hub since the pandemic.

After Omicron was discovered while they were at sea, many passengers were expected to fly straight home. read more
 
It shouldn't be a big deal anywhere but we now live in world where majority are scared sheep who accept anything fed to them.

You wont hear this on CNN or BBC but this new variant isn't serious and more importantly it was discovered initially in a VACCINATED person. As the noble prize winning virologist warned, vaccines will create variants.

Those who are vaccinated will then have boosters, a new vaccine perhaps next year, more boosters..on and on.

Carry on living your lives, don't accept orders from fascist governments. If you are vunerable stay home & stop crying at others who want to live their life.

Vaccinated or not vaccinated, variant will be created, scientist had just stated the facts, nothing out of the ordinary, what vaccine does, is prevent one from getting seriously ill, obviously it will not be 100% effective, nothing is 100% in medical science.
 
Covid 19 is nothing but a hoax at this point of time. People have the right to go out and earn their living and live their lives. This hoax is slowly taking away the fundamental right of free movement of humans.

I am sure, same was said about the Spanish flu 1920's, up until COVID, you were free to move.
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-59481992

Booster jabs will be offered to everyone in England who is eligible by the end of January, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said.

All adults will be offered a booster jab three months after their second dose of the vaccine.

Mr Johnson said jabs would be prioritised according to age, with the NHS working down the list in five-year bands as was done previously.

Almost 18 million people in the UK have already had a booster jab.

Mr Johnson said vaccines will be given at 1,500 community pharmacy sites and extra hospital hubs in England, with 400 military personnel on-hand to help the NHS alongside "the fantastic jabs army of volunteers".

"There'll be temporary vaccination centres popping up like Christmas trees," he said at a Downing Street press conference.

He also urged people to wait to be contacted by the health service before booking their booster, saying: "Even if you have had your second jab over three months ago and you are now eligible, please don't try and book until the NHS says it is your turn."

Asked whether people should cancel Christmas parties and nativity plays, Mr Johnson said: "We don't want people to cancel such events and we think that overwhelmingly the best thing for kids is to be in schools."

He said instead, they were taking a "balanced and proportionate" approach, and while he thought it "extremely unlikely" that another lockdown would be required, he was ruling nothing out.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said getting vaccinated would "give ourselves the best chance of a Christmas with our loved ones".

The booster campaign was ramped up over fears of the Omicron variant, which may be more infectious.

A total of 22 cases of the new variant have so far been confirmed in the UK - 13 in England and nine in Scotland.

"I know the frustration that we all feel with this Omicron variant, the sense of exhaustion that we could be going through all this all over again," Mr Johnson said.

"But today... that's the wrong thing to feel because today our position is and always will be immeasurably better than it was a year ago."

NHS England chief executive Amanda Pritchard said she was aiming to free up capacity to allow hospitals, GP surgeries and pharmacies to give more booster jabs.

She said NHS staff were working at "breakneck speed" to expand the vaccine programme, which was already at its "most complex phase" and now faced the biggest change to eligibility so far.

In other developments:

  • Face masks must now be worn in shops and public transport in England
  • All nine of Scotland's Omicron cases have been linked to a single event on 20 November - days before the variant was officially reported by South Africa
  • Wales' health minister has said people should take the "threat" of socialising indoors with others at Christmas seriously
  • Stock markets around the world fell after the boss of Moderna cast doubts on the effectiveness of vaccines against Omicron
  • Omicron was present in Europe earlier than previously thought with a case identified in the Netherlands on 19 November, officials have said
  • MPs overwhelmingly endorsed the new regulations on face masks in England, with 434 voting in favour and 23 against.
 
Omicron variant could outcompete Delta, South African disease expert says.

JOHANNESBURG, Nov 30 (Reuters) - The Omicron coronavirus variant detected in southern Africa could be the most likely candidate to displace the highly contagious Delta variant, the director of South Africa's communicable disease institute said on Tuesday.

The discovery of Omicron has caused global alarm, with countries limiting travel from southern Africa for fear it could spread quickly even in vaccinated populations and the World Health Organization saying it carries a high risk of infection surges.

"We thought what will outcompete Delta? That has always been the question, in terms of transmissibility at least, ... perhaps this particular variant is the variant," Adrian Puren, acting executive director of South Africa's National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), told Reuters in an interview.

If Omicron proves even more transmissible than the Delta variant, it could lead to a sharp spike in infections that could put pressure on hospitals.

Puren said scientists should know within four weeks to what extent Omicron can evade the immunity generated by vaccines or prior infection, and whether it leads to worse clinical symptoms than other variants.

Anecdotal accounts by doctors who have treated South African COVID-19 patients say Omicron appears to be producing mild symptoms, including a dry cough, fever and night sweats, but experts have cautioned against drawing firm conclusions.

Puren said it was too early to say whether Omicron was displacing Delta in South Africa, since local scientists have only produced 87 sequences of Omicron so far.

But the fact that cases have started to rise rapidly, especially in the most populated Gauteng province, is a sign that some displacement might already be happening.

Delta drove a third wave of COVID-19 infections in South Africa that peaked at more than 26,000 cases per day in early July. Omicron is expected to trigger a fourth wave, with daily infections seen topping 10,000 by the end of the week from around 2,270 on Monday. read more

Anne von Gottberg, a clinical microbiologist at the NICD, said it looked like infections were rising throughout the country.

On Monday, an NICD presentation a flagged a large number of COVID-19 admissions among infants aged under two years as an area of concern. But von Gottberg cautioned against linking that with Omicron just yet.

"It looks like in fact some of those admissions might have started before the emergence of Omicron. We are also seeing that there was an increase in influenza cases just in the last month or so, and so we need to be really careful to look at the other respiratory infections," she said.

"We are looking at the data very, very carefully, but at the moment I'm not too sure that we can link it definitively to Omicron."

South Africa has been praised for alerting the global scientific community and WHO so quickly to Omicron -- a brave move given the damage that travel restrictions imposed by multiple countries including Britain will do to its important tourism sector.

The country has reported close to 3 million COVID-19 infections during the pandemic and over 89,000 deaths, the most on the African continent.

https://www.reuters.com/business/he...south-african-disease-expert-says-2021-11-30/
 
The Omicron variant could trigger a surge in COVID infections bigger than previous waves in the UK with a risk it may overwhelm the NHS, a key group of scientists have warned.

Experts on the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG), which advises the government, held an extraordinary meeting last week to consider the new COVID variant, known scientifically as B.1.1.529, following its detection in South Africa.

According to a note of their meeting, which was observed by both a key Department of Health official and England's deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam, the group concluded the introduction of Omicron to the UK "might have very serious consequences".

Another supermarket won't enforce mask rule; country finds Omicron case from month before first South Africa cases - COVID latest

The note of last Thursday's meeting, published online on Monday night, stated that "if introduced into the UK, B.1.1.529 would likely be capable of initiating a new wave of infections".

"We cannot exclude that this wave would be of a magnitude similar, or even larger, than previous waves," they added.

"Although data on disease severity associated with B.1.1.529 are not yet available, a large wave of infections will be accompanied by a wave of severe cases and the subgroup cannot rule out that this may be sufficient to overwhelm NHS capacity."

Boris Johnson says 'all guidance was followed' as Keir Starmer accuses him of breaking COVID rules with 'boozy party' last Christmas

A close up of a pint of Guinness and a face mask on a table in the Richmond pub in Liverpool watch a statement by the Prime Minister Boris Johnson, as parts of the North of England are bracing themselves for the most stringent Tier 3 controls, with Merseyside expected to have its pubs, gyms and casinos closed in a bid to suppress its infection rate.

Bookings cancelled and plans changed as 'chilling talk of Plan B' hits hospitality sector

NERVTAG called for "early and robust actions to prevent introduction and onward transmission".

This included action on early detection of Omicron cases in the UK, containment measures, an acceleration of the vaccine booster programme, a reassessment of the "optimal use" of antivirals, and preparations for modifications to existing vaccines and antibody treatments.

The group said that, although there was "current uncertainty" about the characteristics of Omicron, there were "sufficiently worrying signals" for them to provide their advice.

Their initial conclusions, shared with government officials, are based largely on what is known from cases in South Africa.

Sajid Javid says we may not have to wait three weeks before COVID measures are reviewed1:46

'We don't know enough about Omicron yet'

The NERVTAG meeting, held via telephone conference on Thursday afternoon, came the day after South African authorities first reported the discovery of the Omicron variant.

The UK government added six southern African countries, including South Africa, to its travel red list on Friday.

A further four countries were added over the weekend.

At a news conference on Saturday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it "does appear that Omicron spreads very rapidly and can be spread between people who are double vaccinated" and the current vaccines "might" be less effective against the variant.

Mr Johnson has reimposed compulsory mask-wearing in England in shops and on public transport, ordered people to self-isolate if they have been a contact of someone infected with the Omicron variant, reintroduced day two PCR testing for all people arriving into the UK from abroad, and extended the rollout of booster jabs.

But the prime minister has also said the UK is in an "immeasurably better" position to deal with COVID than it was a year ago.

There have now been 22 confirmed cases of the Omicron, with Health Secretary Sajid Javid telling Sky News that number would "certainly go up".
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The language is stark. The warning is grim. But read carefully what the government's advisory panel is saying and it makes total sense. And you will see there are plenty of caveats.

The identification of a heavily mutated variation of a deadly virus that is left to run through a population could have very serious consequences. Of course it could. But that does not mean it necessary will. And the NERVTAG scientists make that absolutely clear too.

Any coronavirus that spreads at scale is possible of causing a surge in infections and if these cause severe illness then the NHS will be at threat of being overwhelmed. But without the data, for now, these are worst case scenarios designed to prompt preventative action.

And that, the government says, is exactly what it has done. They were warned to take early robust action and they responded with travel restrictions, face masks and a boosted booster campaign.

The advisory group accepts the risks are uncertain because so little is known about Omicron. But given the devastating impact Delta has had, it would be unwise not to flag potential dangers and urge immediate action.

If, later on, Omicron is found to pose no significant threat then no serious damage has been done except of course the impact on the economies of the South African countries affected by the travel bans and the disruption to families who were preparing to travel to the region.

But, if it were the other way round, no warnings were sounded and zero interventions made - and the virus did turn out to be vaccine resistant and hugely transmissible causing severe illness - then we would have been left totally exposed.

However, Mr Javid also said "a lot more" is to be yet learned about Omicron with scientists still to determine whether it is any more dangerous than the Delta variant, which is the current dominant strain of coronavirus in the UK.

He added he did not "anticipate" any further restrictions being brought in due to the Omicron variant, beyond those the government has already introduced.

Government sources said they had already taken NERVTAG's advice on board with their action on masks, boosters, self-isolation rules, and travel restrictions.

They also said that NERVTAG's warning they could not rule out a new wave of infections overwhelming the NHS was not the same as it being a "likely" scenario.

The NERVTAG briefing does not call on the government to introduce further restrictions than are now in place at this stage.

Meanwhile, it was reported that leaked minutes of a meeting of the Scientific Group of Emergencies held on Monday said that officials should prepare now for a "potentially significant" wave of infections while data on Omicron is analysed.

The BBC said that minutes of the meeting added that it is "highly likely" that Omicron can escape immunity caused by previous infection or vaccination "to some extent".

A government spokesperson said: "As soon as we became aware of the Omicron variant we took rapid action to protect public health - including expanding the red list, introducing PCR testing for travellers, changing the rules on self-isolation for close contacts and mandating face coverings in shops and on public transport.

"On top of this we will be offering everyone over 18 a booster jab, as well as second jabs for 12-15 year olds, following advice from the JCVI.

"We continue to monitor the situation closely and will not hesitate to take further action if necessary."

Two of the three biggest vaccine manufacturers have tried to calm fears about the new strain.

Both the University of Oxford, which is behind AstraZeneca vaccine, and Pfizer-BioNtech have predicted existing jabs would continue to prevent severe disease.

On Monday, the chief executive of Moderna, Stephane Bancel, caused jitters after telling the Financial Times that existing vaccines would be much less effective at tackling Omicron than earlier strains - and that it would take months for pharmaceutical companies to manufacture new vaccines.

SKY
 
The UK Health Security Agency has identified another 10 confirmed cases of the Omicron COVID variant - seven more in England and three more in Scotland - bringing the total number of cases in the UK to 42.
 
COVID-19: Reinfections rise in South Africa but people becoming less sick - WHO deploys surge team amid Omicron outbreak

The Omicron variant is thought to be causing more reinfections in South Africa than the Beta and Delta variants did, Professor Anne von Gottberg warned.The World Health Organisation (WHO) is set to deploy a surge team to South Africa to help deal with the new Omicron COVID variant outbreak.

The team will be sent to Gauteng province to help with surveillance and contact tracing as experts warned the new variant could be causing an increase in COVID reinfections across the country.

WHO regional emergency director for Africa, Salam Gueye, also said it was providing technical assistance to boost the production and distribution of medical oxygen in Botswana - another country where Omicron has been detected.

The variant is thought to be causing more reinfections in South Africa than the Beta and Delta variants did, South African Professor Anne von Gottberg warned.A reinfection is classed as someone who tests positive for COVID at least 90 days after a previous infection.

Asked exactly how many more reinfections are being caused by Omicron, the professor said it is "difficult to quantify".

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19...omicron-outbreak-12484423?dcmp=snt-sf-twitter
 
U.S. President Joe Biden says international travellers to the U.S. will have to test negative for COVID within one day of departure “regardless of their vaccination status or nationality”
 
The finding suggests the new variant could cause a substantial wave of infections, even in populations with high levels of antibodies.

Researchers at the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) warn their finding has important public health implications.

They add: "Urgent questions remain regarding whether Omicron is also able to evade vaccine-induced immunity and the potential implications of reduced immunity to infection on protection against severe disease and death."

The scientists looked at almost 2.8 million confirmed cases of COVID19 in South Africa since March 2020 and found 35,670 were re-infections.

The risk of a re-infection was lower in the Beta and Delta waves than the first surge of cases in March 2020 that was caused by the Wuhan strain of the virus.

But significantly they found the risk of reinfection in the current Omicron wave is 2.4 times higher than in the first wave.

The results have been published as a pre-print on the MedRxiv server and have not been peer reviewed.

The researchers say: "We find evidence of a substantial and ongoing increase in the risk of reinfection that is temporally consistent with the timing of the emergence of the Omicron variant in South Africa, suggesting that its selection advantage is at least partially driven by an increased ability to infect previously infected individuals.

"Immune escape from prior infection, whether or not Omicron can also evade vaccine derived immunity, has important implications for public health globally."

Although only around a quarter of the population in South Africa is fully vaccinated, immunity from natural infection is high because the country has had several large waves of COVID.

Earlier Professor Anne von Gottberg, from the NICD, told a news briefing of the World Health Organisation that the Omicron variant didn't appear to be more transmissible than the previously dominant strain.

Instead the current surge in cases is being driven by the population's susceptibility to re-infection with Omicron, she said.

However, Professor von Gottberg added that there is early evidence that people who are being re-infected have mild symptoms. She called it "good news".

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/worl...ious-covid-infection/ar-AARoN5k?ocid=msedgntp
 
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