US and other countries tighten travel rules over Omicron

US and other countries tighten travel rules over Omicron

by Joseph Anthony
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Pedestrians wearing protective masks, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, make their way at the Ameyoko shopping district in Tokyo, Japan

Air travellers to the United States will face tougher COVID-19 testing rules to try to slow the spread of the Omicron variant and other countries tightened border controls as a European leader urged all concerned to โ€œprepare for the worstโ€.

A World Health Organization official said 24 countries may have reported cases of the variant so far but that some of the early indications were that most cases were mild, with none severe. Travel bans had consequences, he said, but there would be more mutations without other measures to contain its spread.
Staving off Omicron while scientists establish how easily it can spread and whether it can evade vaccine protection is a โ€œrace against timeโ€ the president of the European Unionโ€™s executive Commission said, emphasising the role of vaccines.
โ€œPrepare for the worst, hope for the best,โ€ Ursula von der Leyen told a news conference, adding that according to scientists, full vaccination and a booster shot provide the strongest possible protection.
Ghana, Nigeria, Norway, Saudia Arabia and South Korea were among the latest countries to report cases of the variant. Britain reported 22 cases so far, a number it said would certainly go up.
Australia said at least two people visited several places in Sydney while likely infectious and Denmark said an infected person had taken part in a large concert.
Japan, which had already barred all new foreign entrants, reported its second case of the new variant and said it would expand travel restrictions.
Such curbs have become more tangled as they have spread.
Hong Kong added Japan, Portugal and Sweden to its travel restrictions while Uzbekistan said it would suspend flights with Hong Kong as well as South Africa. Malaysia temporarily barred travellers from eight African countries and said Britain and the Netherlands could join the list.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said โ€œblanket travel bans will not prevent the international spread and they place a heavy burden on lives and livelihoodsโ€, while advising those unwell, at risk or 60 years and over and unvaccinated to postpone travel.
Global shares came off lows plumbed on Tuesday after remarks by the CEO of Moderna raised questions about the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines against Omicron.
Health officials have since offered reassurances and said it is very likely vaccines will still prevent people getting seriously ill.
European Medicines Agency Executive Director Emer Cooke said laboratory analyses should indicate over the next couple of weeks whether the blood of vaccinated people has sufficient antibodies to neutralise the new variant.
BioNTechโ€™s CEO said the vaccine it makes in a partnership with Pfizer was likely to offer strong protection against severe disease from Omicron. The European Union brought forward the start of its vaccine rollout for five-to-11-year-old children by a week to Dec 13.
Britain and the United States have both expanded their booster programmes in response to the new variant, which has highlighted the disparity between massive vaccination pushes in rich nations and sparse inoculation in the developing world.
Some 56 countries were reportedly implementing travel measures to guard against Omicron as of Nov. 28, the WHO said.
WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was concerned that several member states were โ€œintroducing blunt, blanket measuresโ€, which โ€œwill only worsen inequitiesโ€.
GLOBAL SPREAD
South Africa first reported the variant a week ago, but data from elsewhere already shows it was circulating before then although Nigeria said a case from October it had initially reported as Omicron had in fact been the Delta variant.
In Germany, which is battling a surge in COVID-19 infections and deaths, officials said four fully vaccinated people had tested positive for Omicron in the south but had moderate symptoms.
The United States is moving to require all air travellers entering the country to show a negative COVID-19 test performed within one day of departure, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Tuesday.
The new one-day testing requirement would apply to U.S. citizens as well as foreign nationals.
The CDC lists about 80 foreign destinations as having โ€œLevel Fourโ€, its highest level of COVID-19 transmission, and discourages Americans from travelling to those destinations.
In Asia, Japan said it would expand its entry ban to foreigners with resident status from 10 African countries.
Global airlines are preparing for more volatility.
Japanese airlines ANA and JAL said they were suspending new reservations for international flights to the country until the end of December.
โ€œIt feels a little bit like we are back to where we were a year ago and thatโ€™s not a great prospect for the industry and beyond,โ€ Deidre Fulton, a partner at consultancy MIDAS Aviation, said at an industry webinar.
REUTERS

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