From the DW:
“Omicron: Which countries have
closed their borders?”
(Map of countries with confirmed
cases of COVID-19 omicron variant as of 30.11.2021)
Days after the new COVID-19
variant omicron was identified in South Africa, ever more countries are moving
to close their borders to stem its spread. What travel restrictions are in
place and can they be effective? B.1.1.529 is the scientific name of the new
coronavirus variant discovered last week in South Africa. It has since been
detected in several other countries, with Germany, Portugal, Great Britain,
Israel and Canada, for instance, all reporting omicron infections. There are
fears that the new mutant could be even more contagious than the currently
rampant delta variant and that vaccines may be less effective against it. As a
result, many countries are trying to stem the further spread of omicron with
travel curbs.
Europe Since last week, travel between many
European countries and southern Africa has been restricted. In Germany,
for example, authorities deemed South Africa and seven other countries in the
region — Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Mozambique, Eswatini, Malawi and Lesotho
— high-risk areas where the omicron virus variant is circulating. Airlines are
only allowed to fly back German citizens and those residing in Germany from there.
Both unvaccinated and vaccinated travelers coming from the region have to spend
14 days in quarantine regardless of whether they test negative for COVID-19.
The UK has resumed flight connections to South Africa after a
temporary halt because of the omicron variant. However, South Africa and
several neighboring countries are on a so-called red list. That means
passengers returning from these countries face mandatory hotel quarantine for
10 days at their own expense. Switzerland, too, has significantly
tightened travel restrictions. Regular flights from South Africa, Botswana,
Eswatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia and Zimbabwe have been suspended
indefinitely. In addition, people entering the country from southern Africa, as
well as from Hong Kong, Israel, Belgium, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands,
the United Kingdom, Egypt, Malawi and other countries have to show a negative
Corona test and spend 10 days in quarantine.
America US President Joe
Biden is under no illusion that the new variant can be stopped at borders. "Sooner
or later we are going to see new cases of this new variant here in the United
States and we're going to have to face this new threat just as we have faced
the ones that came before it," Biden said. Nevertheless, the US has also
blocked entry for foreign nationals from southern African states in order to at
least slow the virus' spread. In neighboring Canada, where the
first Omicron cases have already been detected, the government has imposed new
travel curbs regarding South Africa, Eswatini, Lesotho, Botswana, Zimbabwe,
Mozambique and Namibia. Only Canadian citizens from those countries and people
with permanent residency in Canada can currently enter the country. They also
have to comply with testing and quarantine regulations. Brazil has
imposed a ban on flights from six southern African countries. Mexico's
government, on the other hand, has ruled out new restrictions and border
closures due to the discovery of the omicron variant. There is "no
evidence" that the mutant is more dangerous and that vaccines are less
effective against it, authorities said.
Asia Several countries in
Asia have also moved to curb the spread of omicron. Japan in the east
and and Israel in the west, have implemented some of the toughest
measures, with both closing borders to all foreigners, regardless of where
they're coming from. Israeli travelers, for instance, have to isolate
themselves for at least three days upon entry into the country whether they are
vaccinated or unvaccinated, and no matter where they are arriving from. In
addition, Israel is reintroducing a controversial measure that involves
monitoring the mobile phones of those who fall ill. The Philippines,
which depends heavily on tourism, also plans to suspend measures to ease entry
for vaccinated tourists because of the new virus variant. South Korea
and Thailand are restricting flights from eight countries from December
and those who have already entered the country have to immediately quarantine.
Oceania Canberra planned
to allow foreign visitors with Australian visas to enter the country again from
December 1, after access was severely restricted since May last year. But plans
to relax entry rules have now been postponed for two weeks. The decision was
made on the recommendation of health authorities after the first cases of
omicron were also detected in Australia. Foreigners who have been
in South Africa, Lesotho, Eswatini, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Seychelles,
Mozambique or Malawi in the past 14 days are not allowed to enter Australia at
all. Similarly, New Zealand has classified these countries and Papua New
Guinea as high-risk areas because of the omicron variant.
Africa A number of African
countries, including Angola, Egypt, Mauritius and Rwanda, have
also joined the ranks of countries that have imposed travel restrictions on
South Africa and other nations on the continent. South African officials
described it as "regrettable, even sad," adding that the decisions
were "unjustified because they are not based on scientific evidence.''
How effective are travel
curbs? The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that there is a high
likelihood of further global spread of omicron but still advocates keeping
borders open. South Africa has criticized the travel restrictions as
"unnecessary." Meanwhile, studies suggest that travel
restrictions may well help curb the spread of new coronavirus variants. For
example, travel bans imposed in Australia at the beginning of the pandemic were
found to reduce the number of imported cases and delay the outbreak by one
month. A study from the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador
also concluded that a ban on outbound and incoming air travel was effective.
"Without proper control, an influx of infected travelers can easily become
the seed for a new exponential outbreak," it concluded. However,
travel restrictions alone are not a panacea either, as a paper in the journal
Science pointed out last year. It said that reducing community transmission
rates are more important than travel curbs. "I don't think travel
bans are the best way to combat the new variant,” Jinal Bhiman, senior
scientist at South Africa's National Institute for Communicable Diseases, told
DW. "After all, we saw with delta that by the time the variant is
identified, it's already there, it has spread. The first infections take place
much earlier."
^ I’m sure Omicron will soon be
everywhere. These bans will only slow it down, but hopefully that will be
enough time to figure out how transmissible and deadly it is or is not. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/omicron-which-countries-have-closed-their-borders/a-59979182
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