U.S., Germany plan new restrictions as Omicron rattles investors
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[December 02, 2021]
By Joseph Nasr and Jeff Mason
BERLIN/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United
States and Germany joined countries around the globe planning stricter
COVID-19 restrictions on Thursday as the new Omicron variant rattled
markets, fearful it could choke a tentative economic recovery from the
pandemic.
Much remains unknown about Omicron, which was first found on Nov. 8 in
South Africa and has spread to at least two dozen countries, just as
parts of Europe are suffering a surge in infections of the better-known
Delta variant as winter sets in.
But South Africa said on Thursday it was seeing an increase in COVID-19
reinfections in patients contracting Omicron in a way that it did not
experience with previous variants.
"Previous infection used to protect against Delta but now with Omicron
that doesn't seem to be the case," said Professor Anne von Gottberg
during an online briefing organised by the World Health Organization.
Omicron could become the dominant COVID-19 variant in France by the end
of January, the country's top scientific adviser said on Thursday, after
both France and the United States reported their first cases.
In Germany, outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel and her successor, Olaf
Scholz, will discuss with regional leaders restricting the unvaccinated
from access to all but the most essential businesses, such as grocery
stores and pharmacies.
Eager to avoid lockdowns that could derail a fragile recovery of
Europe's biggest economy, they are expected to keep businesses open to
the almost 69% of the population that are fully vaccinated as well as
those who have recovered from the coronavirus.
In the United States, steps to fight COVID-19 this winter are set to be
unveiled later on Thursday, and sources briefed on the matter told
Reuters one step would be extending requirements for travellers to wear
masks through mid-March.
By early next week the United States will require inbound international
travellers to be tested for COVID-19 within a day of departure,
regardless of vaccination status.
And it will also require private health insurance companies to reimburse
customers for the cost of over-the-counter at-home COVID-19 tests, which
will benefit some 150 million Americans who have private health
insurance, a senior administration official told reporters.
"TRUE ENEMY"
The first known U.S. case was a fully vaccinated person in California
who returned to the United States from South Africa on Nov. 22 and
tested positive seven days later. The French case, in the greater Paris
region, was a passenger arriving from Nigeria.
French government adviser Jean-Francois Delfraissy told BFM television
the "true enemy" for now was still the Delta variant, spreading in a
fifth wave.
"We should see a progressive rise of the Omicron variant, which will
take over from Delta," possibly by the end of January, he said.
The French Omicron infection followed a case found in the French Indian
Ocean island of La Reunion last month.
BioNTech's CEO said the vaccine it makes in a partnership with Pfizer
was likely to offer strong protection against severe disease from
Omicron.
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Visitors wear masks to respect the COVID-19 protection rules at a
Christmas market on the Place Kleber square in Strasbourg, France
November 26, 2021. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
And GlaxoSmithKline said that a lab analysis of the
antibody-based COVID-19 therapy it is developing with U.S. partner
Vir had shown the drug is effective against the Omicron variant.
This contrasts with Regeneron's study of its COVID-19 antibody drug,
which it said could be less effective against Omicron. Moderna's top
boss raised similar concerns about the company's vaccine.
Indications suggesting Omicron may be markedly more contagious than
previous variants have rattled financial markets, fearful that new
restrictions could choke a tentative recovery from the economic
impact of the pandemic.
"UNKNOWN"
European shares fell on Thursday, tracking a slide in U.S. equities
overnight due to fears around the Omicron coronavirus variant and
the possibility of sooner-than-expected interest rate hikes.
The continent-wide STOXX 600 .STOXX was down 0.9% in morning trade,
after falling as much as 1.3% in the session. The move marks a sharp
reversal of gains on Wednesday.
OPEC+ ministers are likely to discuss pausing a planned oil output
hike in January during ministerial talks on Thursday, an OPEC+
source said, amid uncertainly about the impact of the pandemic on
global crude demand.
About 56 countries were reportedly implementing travel measures to
guard against Omicron as of Nov. 28, the WHO said.
The United States has barred nearly all foreigners who have been in
one of eight southern African countries.
Japan reversed a ban on new inbound flight reservations, revealing
confusion between government agencies and the public over the
country's COVID strategy.
The European Union brought forward the start of its vaccine rollout
for 5-to-11-year-olds to Dec. 13, as the president of the European
Union's executive body said there was a "race against time" to stave
off the new variant.
The WHO is deploying a surge team to South Africa's Gauteng
province, epicentre of the Omicron outbreak, to help with
surveillance and contact tracing, it said on Thursday.
More than 263.1 million people have been reported to be infected by
the coronavirus globally since the first cases were identified in
China in December 2019 and 5,480,116 have died, according to a
Reuters tally.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing Stephen Coates, Nick Macfie
and Ingrid Melander; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Barbara
Lewis)
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