Africa hit by fourth wave of COVID-19, says WHO

Matshidiso Moeti

Matshidiso Moeti, World Health Organisation (WHO) Regional Director for Africa

Africa is being hit by the fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, driven by the Omicron variant, after recording the fastest weekly surge in new cases since May 2020.

“Africa is now officially in the fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, which is partly due to the Omicron variant,’’ World Health Organisation (WHO) Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti said.

She spoke at the end-of-year press conference in Brazzaville on Tuesday.

Brazzaville, the capital of the Republic of the Congo, hosts WHO Regional Office for Africa.

“Africa had seen a rise of 83 per cent in new COVID-19 cases for the week ending Dec. 12, driven by the Delta and the Omicron variants, which was the fastest surge recorded since May 2020,” Moeti said.

More than 2,700 Omicron cases have been reported in 59 countries, including 11 African countries that account for about 33 per cent of the total cases.

According to the WHO, Africa’s share is steadily dropping, while South Africa no longer leads the world in Omicron cases.

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Moeti warned that Africa’s vaccine challenges were being compounded by the travel bans on southern African nations over detection of the Omicron variant, as the vaccine coverage in Africa remained disappointingly low.

“Just six countries have hit the year-end target of fully vaccinating 40 per cent of their citizens, with only 20 countries managing to achieve 10 per cent coverage,’’ said Moeti.

She said Africa might not reach the 70 per cent vaccination coverage target until August 2024.

“Blanket travel bans have little impact on the course of an epidemic but have a massive socio-economic effect,’’ said Moeti.

She called on countries to urgently reconsider their travel bans on African countries.

“Coming after two years of COVID-19, these new travel restrictions are jeopardising the health of millions of Africans.’’

Moeti added that WHO’s COVID-19 strategy for the coming year would be to continue to focus on boosting vaccine coverage and surveillance to up case detection and to track new variants of concern.

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