World Health Organisation (WHO) says cases of the new Omicron COVID-19 variant have been reported in at least 23 countries in five of the six WHO regions.
WHO Director-General, Tedros Ghebreyesus, disclosed on Wednesday in Geneva and said that the number of cases was expected to grow.
“WHO takes this development extremely seriously, and so should every country,” he told journalists listening in to the agency’s regular virtual briefing on COVID-19.
Read Also: US Confirms First Omicron Case In Traveler Returning From South Africa
He said;
But it should not surprise us. This is what viruses do. And it’s what this virus will continue to do, as long as we allow it to continue spreading.
Preliminary evidence suggests Omicron may have “potential immune escape” and or possibly higher transmissibility, when compared to previous variants of concern, according to WHO’s latest weekly epidemiological update on COVID-19, also released on Wednesday.
He said experts were learning more about the variant, “but there’s still more to learn about its effect on transmission, severity of disease, and the effectiveness of tests, therapeutics and vaccines.”
Read Also: NCDC Confirms Three Cases Of Omicron Variant In Nigeria
The WHO chief urged countries to take “rational, proportional risk-reduction measures”, including those aimed at delaying or reducing spread, such as screening passengers or implementing quarantines for international travellers.
However, he stressed that “blanket travel bans would not prevent international spread of Omicron and they place a heavy burden on lives and livelihoods.”
Ghebreyesus emphasised the need to continue public health measures against coronavirus spread and ensure high-risk and vulnerable people are fully vaccinated.
Read Also: South Africa Detects New COVID-19 Variant With Many Mutations
He warned that the current “toxic mix” of low vaccine coverage, and very low testing are a recipe for breeding and amplifying variants.
The WHO chief stated;
We need to use the tools we already have to prevent transmission and save lives from Delta. And if we do that, we will also prevent transmission and save lives from Omicron. But if countries and individuals don’t do what they need to do to stop transmission of Delta, they won’t stop Omicron either.
As of Tuesday, there were more than 261 million confirmed cases of the COVID-19 globally, and 5.2 million deaths, with the Delta variant continuing to dominate.
Read Also: South Africa’s President Calls For Lifting Of Travel Bans Over Deadly Omicron COVID-19 Variant
Meanwhile, the director-general said agreement by countries to launch a process to develop a new global accord on pandemic prevention and response was cause for hope.
Mr Ghebreyesus welcomed the consensus decision reached during a special session of the World Health Assembly (WHA), the UN agency’s top decision-making body, attended by representatives from its 194 member-states.
The three-day meeting began on Monday with the sole goal of considering the benefits of creating a new international agreement on pandemic prevention preparedness and how best to avoid the pitfalls that have marred an effective response to COVID-19.
This marked only the second time the assembly has met in a special session since WHO was founded in 1948.
“The adoption of this decision is cause for celebration, and cause for hope, which we will need,” he said in his closing remarks, though noting the road ahead was long.
Mr Ghebreyesus expressed;
There are still differences of opinion about what a new accord could or should contain. But you have proven to each other and the world that differences can be overcome, and common ground can be found.
The decision will establish an Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB) that will negotiate and draft any convention, agreement or international instrument.
A first meeting will take place no later than March 1, 2022, and public hearings will also be held to inform deliberations.
INB will deliver a progress report to World Health Assembly in 2023 and submit its outcome for consideration the following year.