The World Health Organisation (WHO) said, yesterday, that the Omicron
coronavirus variant carried a very high risk of infection as more countries
closed borders, casting a shadow over economic recovery from the two-year
pandemic. A three-day special session of the World Health Assembly (WHA) kicked
off on Monday to discuss pandemic preparedness and response, amid concerns about
the spread of the new Omicron variant. The WHA normally meets in May but a
special session was called for in a decision adopted by the WHO member states. A
draft resolution currently under review stops short of calling for the
establishment of a “pandemic treaty” or a “legally binding instrument”, which
proponents say would beef up the international response to pandemics. The WHO,
therefore, advised its 194-member nations that any surge in infections could
have severe consequences, but said no deaths had yet been linked to the new
variant. “Omicron has an unprecedented number of spike mutations, some of which
are concerning for their potential impact on the trajectory of the pandemic,”
the WHO
said. “The overall global risk related to the new variant of concern Omicron is
assessed as very high. Further research was needed to understand Omicron’s
potential to escape protection against immunity induced by vaccines and previous
infections, it added. An infectious disease expert from South Africa, where
scientists first identified Omicron, said it was too early to say whether
symptoms were more severe than previous variants, but it did appear to be more
transmissible. Scientists have said it could take weeks to understand the
severity of Omicron. Prof. Salim Abdool Karim also said existing vaccines were
probably effective at stopping Omicron from causing severe illness. South
African cases were likely to exceed 10,000 a day this week, rocketing up from
barely 300 a day two weeks ago, Karim added. The WHO has backed international
efforts to forge a treaty setting out global responses to pandemics, as member
states began a three-day conference. WHO chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said
the fair distribution of vaccines must be a central part of any such agreement.
“Vaccine equity is not charity, it’s in every country’s best interest,’’ Tedros
said in his opening remarks yesterday. A legally binding treaty would in his
view provide the best foundation for jointly combating future pandemics, in
spite of whatever compromises had to be made to make such an agreement happen.
“Now is the time for all countries to make their choice to invest in a
healthier, safer and fairer future,’’ he said. Tedros lamented that so far 80
per cent of vaccine doses had been sent to the world’s 20 wealthiest nations. In
a separate statement released earlier, the WHO said donations of COVID-19
vaccines to developing countries must be better organised, pointing out that
currently many doses were handed out ad-hoc and with a dwindling shelf life. In
Africa, just 6.6 per cent of the population were fully vaccinated against the
Coronavirus, according to the African Centre for Infectious Diseases (Africa
CDC). Recall that The Guardian had last week exclusively reported that barely a
paltry three per cent of the eligible population in the country have been fully
vaccinated, while just about six million of the population have taken a jab of
the vaccine. The WHO had warned against countries hastily imposing travel curbs.
However, bans have been introduced in recent days including by the United
Kingdom, the European Union and the United States. THE President, African
Development Bank Group (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, yesterday announced the
postponement of 2021 Africa Investment Forum scheduled to hold between December
1 and 3 in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire. In a statement issued yesterday, Adesina
stated that the decision to put the forum on hold till further notice was
reached after due consultations with the government of Côte d’Ivoire and the
Board of Directors of the bank. According to him, the postponement became
imminent in view of the rising global travel restrictions due to the COVID-19
Omicron variant. He said: “The Africa Investment Forum (AIF) is the premier
investment marketplace for Africa. Several billion dollars of investment
projects were scheduled for investment boardrooms with project sponsors and
investors at this edition of the Africa Investment Forum. “Unfortunately, with
rising global travel restrictions due to the COVID-19 Omicron variant, and
heightened concerns for health and safety, it is necessary, regrettably, to
postpone the event. The health and safety of everyone comes first. We sincerely
regret all inconveniences to our esteemed and expected heads of state and
government, participants, project sponsors, investors and government
delegations.” The forum provides for a virtual segment where about 2,000
delegates meet for a healthy conversation on the options before Africa just as
250 participants will be present physically for deal-focus boardroom meetings
and other engagements that could potentially change the fate of the African
market, creating jobs for thousands of people and open vista of new
wealth-creating opportunities. AS Canada on Sunday announced it has detected its
first case of the Omicron strain of COVID-19 in two persons who had recently
arrived from Nigeria, the Federal Government, yesterday, said there has not been
any detected case of the Omicron variant in the country. It has, however, warned
that the dreaded variant may be on its way to Nigeria in view of the number of
countries that have currently reported the detection of this variant. Meanwhile,
with effect from Friday, December 3, passengers arriving Nigeria would be
required to do a PCR test 48 hours before departing and also do day two and day
seven PCR tests on arrival, while they will be required to self-isolate for
seven days. Also, passengers that are going out of Nigeria will be required to
either show proof of COVID-19 vaccination or provide a negative PCR test taken
48 hours before departure and these conditions will apply to diplomats as well.
In addition, the Federal Government yesterday reminded all Federal Government
employees that starting from Wednesday, December 1, they would be required to
show evidence of being vaccinated against COVID-19, or a negative PCR result
done within 72 hours before being allowed into their offices. National Incident
Manager, Dr Mukhtar Muhammad, who announced these at the briefing of the
Presidential Steering Committee (PSC) on COVID-19 in Abuja, observed that this
was in reaction to the global concern about the new COVID-19 variant discovered
in Botswana and announced by South Africa last week. He said: “As of today,
there has not been any detected case and the PSC has continued to review our
risk of this latest information and take every necessary step to stop it from
being imported into the country. We have taken far-reaching proactive measures
to minimise and mitigate this possibility. Consequently, the PSC will be issuing
a travel guideline document today (Tuesday), but let me highlight the contents
of this travel guideline. The PSC will ensure that there is enforcement of
passengers who arrive and refuse to take test through suspension of their
passports and prosecution, or both. Furthermore, we’ll be increasing our
surveillance at the ports of entry into the country, intensify testing and
contact tracing, and optimise sequencing capacity.” Muhammad noted that one of
the reasons driving COVID-19 and the emergence of variants of concern, is the
promotion of vaccine nationalism, which refers to the pervasive inequality at
global level that makes rich countries to be able to procure vaccines for their
own citizens through direct agreements with pharmaceutical companies, while low
and middle countries are lagging behind. “The slower and delayed vaccination
rollout in low and middle income countries has left many of the citizens
vulnerable to COVID-19 variants. It leads to new surges of infection and also
slows rates of recovery. Whereas most of the developed countries have already
vaccinated over 60 per cent and above of their populations, most developing
countries are below five per cent.” Also speaking, Executive Director of the
National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA), Dr Faisal Shuaib, noted
that to ease access to COVID-19 vaccines by government employees, it has
commenced office-to-office vaccination in federal Ministries, Departments and
Agencies (MDAs) so that employees who are yet to be vaccinated will find a
vaccination site around their offices to register and get vaccinated and also
prevent the excuse of having to leave their place of employment to a distant
vaccination site. He observed that from time to time, civil servants will be
picked at random to check or assess their COVID-19 antibody titles to detect
persons who may have fraudulently acquired the vaccination cards without
vaccination. Shuaib warned that anyone who has been found to have fraudulently
obtained the vaccination card without vaccination would be handed over to law
enforcement authorities. Shuaib stated that as at yesterday, 6,504,043 eligible
persons have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in Nigeria, while
3,586,812 persons have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. He said: “So far,
we have over 30 million doses of the vaccines at hand, while another 60 million
has been committed before the first quarter of 2022. “We have been monitoring
how states have been intensifying the ramp up of COVID-19 vaccination. We have
ranked them according to performance. As of today, the top five states are: Ogun
(first), Nasarawa (second), Oyo (third), Osun (fourth) and Ekiti (fifth).
Earlier, chairman of PSC and Secretary to the Government of the Federation
(SGF), Boss Mustapha, reiterated that the vaccine mandate would come into effect
fully tomorrow. He implored every Federal Government worker and in essence, all
Nigerians and residents to get vaccinated. Mustapha noted that with the
developments around the world, people will not be able to travel without their
verified vaccination cards. Mustapha further said that the PSC was aware of some
travellers who circumvent travel protocols by providing fake COVID-19 test
results, permit to travel certificates or declaring fake vaccination status at
points of entry. He added that “the weight of the law is heavy and will come
hard on these people.” The United Nations World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) has
said Africa recorded 74 per cent drop in tourism in 2021 due to COVID-19 as
global tourism sector will likely experience two trillion dollars in lost
revenue. According to the latest forecast by UNWTO yesterday, the same amount
was lost in 2020, making it one of the sectors hit hardest by the health crisis.
The UN tourism body called the sector’s recovery “fragile” and “slow.” Despite
recent improvements, the report warned that demand for travel could be further
affected by uneven vaccination rates around the world and new COVID-19 strains,
which had prompted new travel restrictions in some countries. According to the
latest UNWTO data, international tourist arrivals are expected to remain 70-75
per cent below 2019 levels in 2021, a similar decline as in 2020. Although a 58
per cent increase in tourist arrivals was registered in July-September, 2021
compared to the same period in 2020, this remained 64 per cent below 2019
levels, the UN body stated. In this article
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