Context: On 25 November 2021,
the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) in South Africa
publicly announced the detection of a new variant of the SARS-COV-2, the virus
that causes COVID-19, following genomic sequencing[1]. This variant,
lineage B.1.1.529, was detected as the Gauteng province was experiencing a
sudden increase in COVID-19 cases and was accordingly closely monitored by the
Health authorities in South Africa. The same variant was concurrently
detected in Botswana and in Hong-Kong, China.
The large number of
mutations displayed by lineage B.1.1.529 variant suggested potential for
increased transmissibility, evasion from immune responses from prior infection
and/ or vaccination, and impact on relative disease severity.
On 26th the WHO Technical
Advisory Group on SARS-CoV-2 Virus Evolution (TAG-VE) designated SARS-CoV-2
lineage B.1.1.529 a variant of concern, named Omicron.
By 5th November 2021, a
total of 635 Omicron cases have been detected and reported to GISAID[2] by 37
countries across all continents, including 228 cases detected in South
Africa and 143 cases detected in the United Kingdom.
As genomic sequencing
efforts have intensified globally, community transmission of Omicron has been
evidenced by reports of cases with no travel history, including in
the United Kingdom, the European Union (e.g: Germany, Norway, Danemark) and the
United States of America among others. These reports indicate that the Omicron
had spread and was already circulating globally by the time the variant was
first detected in South Africa.
In response to detection
of the Omicron variant, a number of countries have imposed immediate travel
bans as a precautionary measure. However, despite the widespread distribution
of Omicron cases globally, the majority of border closures solely target
flights to and from South Africa and neighbouring countries in Southern Africa,
some of which have no evidence of the Omicron variant and relatively low daily
COVID-19 case numbers.
Statement: The African Union
strongly commends the effective genomic surveillance systems in South Africa
and Botswana that have led to early detection of the Omicron variant on the
continent, and applauds scientists and public health authorities in both member
states for timely and transparent data sharing to alert the international
community in alignment with International Health Regulations (2005).
The African Union
acknowledges that more time and investigations are needed to adequately assess
the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of the Omicron variant.
Although COVID-19 case numbers and test positivity rates have sharply increased
in the Gauteng province since Omicron was first reported, early clinical data
from infected cases indicate that this has not translated into significant
increase in severe COVID-19 cases or in-hospitals deaths until now[3]. This
could however be due to the younger age profile of cases and/or the time lag
between increase in COVID-19 case numbers and increase in COVID-19 deaths.
The African Union
stresses that PHSM interventions to mitigate the risk of infections and control
the spread of COVID-19 should be targeted to limit impact on lives and
livelihoods, and informed by science and evidence. Current evidence,
which underscores global spread and community transmission of the Omicron
variant, does not support selective travel bans imposed on Southern African
countries.
These travel and entry
bans, which limit the free movement of people and goods, have an immediate and
significant negative impact in the region as they lead to:
·Adverse impact on the economy which will negatively affect the
lives and livelihoods of populations concerned
·Limited capacity to access essential medical supplies needed to
respond to the ongoing upsurge of cases in South Africa.
·Limited capacity for Southern African researchers and scientists
to access the reagents needed to monitor spread of the Omicron variant and to
investigate and characterize its impact on transmissibility, disease severity
and possible evasion from vaccines.
The African Union further emphasizes that penalizing Member
States for ensuring timely and transparent data dissemination in accordance
with international health regulations acts as a disincentive for information
sharing in the future, potentially posing a threat to health security on the
continent and globally.
Accordingly, the African
Union calls for the urgent rescinding of selective travel bans imposed on
African Union members states.
Equitable access to
vaccines is key to immunize populations, control transmission of the virus and
prevent the emergence of new variants. International efforts should
accordingly focus on increasing vaccination coverage on the continent.
Source:
African Union.
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