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Home Oman News

WHO says Covid-19 pandemic is 'far from over'

18 مارس، 2022
in Oman News
WHO says Covid-19 pandemic is 'far from over'

GENEVA: A World Health Organization spokesperson said on Friday that the end of the Covid-19 pandemic was a long way off, citing a rise in cases in its latest weekly data.

The UN health agency has previously said that the acute phase of the pandemic could end this year but it would depend on how quickly we meet its target to vaccinate 70 per cent of the population in each country, among other factors.

Asked by a journalist at a Geneva media briefing about the timing of the pandemic’s end, Margaret Harris said it was “far from over”. “We are definitely in the middle of the pandemic,” she added.

After more than a month of decline, Covid cases started to increase around the world last week, the WHO said, with lockdowns in Asia and China’s Jilin province battling to contain an outbreak.

A combination of factors was causing the increases, including the highly transmissible Omicron variant and its cousin the BA.2 sub-variant, and the lifting of public health and social measures, the WHO said.

CHINA EASES LOCKDOWN

China’s southern tech powerhouse Shenzhen has partially eased lockdown measures, after President Xi Jinping stressed the need to “minimise the impact” of the coronavirus pandemic on the nation’s economy.

The city of 17.5 million, under full lockdown since Sunday, resumed work, factory operations and public transport in four districts and a special economic zone, Shenzhen’s government said.

Those areas have “achieved dynamic zero-Covid in the community”, it added.

China reported 4,365 new infections nationwide on Friday, according to National Health Commission data, as the country battles an Omicron surge, its worst coronavirus outbreak since early 2020.

Millions remain under lockdown across the country, many under hyper-local restrictions aimed at smothering clusters without shutting entire cities.

Officials also encouraged the use of rapid antigen tests, made available to the public for the first time last week, urging citizens to take more responsibility for their own health.

China has stuck to a zero-Covid strategy since the pandemic began, through targeted lockdowns, mass testing and travel restrictions — an approach that has left it increasingly isolated in a world adjusting to the pandemic.

However, frequent virus shutdowns affecting major port and industrial cities have dampened the country’s economic growth, leading to Beijing announcing earlier this month the weakest GDP target in decades — 5.5 per cent.

The new measures in Shenzhen were introduced to balance “epidemic prevention and control with economic and social development”, said a notice from the city’s virus response command centre.

Across the border from Shenzhen, Hong Kong is recording some of the highest death rates in the world from Omicron, especially among its unvaccinated elderly people.

Health officials revealed on Friday that only 50.7 per cent of people in China aged over 80 had been double-vaccinated, while just under 20 per cent had received a third booster jab.

“The epidemic in Hong Kong has taught us a particularly profound lesson,” said National Health Commission Vice-Minister Wang Hesheng at a briefing.

“It is… an example that if the elderly vaccination rate is low, the mortality rate of severe cases will be high.”

China is yet to report any deaths from the latest outbreak, with under a dozen severe cases recorded despite the rising caseload.

Wang insisted that the recent nationwide Omicron surge was caused by “imported sources from abroad” and blamed officials’ “slack and numbed mindset” for some regions’ lack of effectiveness in containing the outbreaks.

Officials have been sacked in areas where outbreaks have been detected, in a sign of the political imperative attached to virus controls in the world’s most-populous nation. — Reuters/AFP

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