‘So huge and quick’: World passes 300 million COVID cases as Omicron breaks records

The total number of COVID-19 cases registered worldwide since the start of the pandemic passed 300 million on Friday, with the Omicron variant’s rapid spread setting new infection records in dozens of countries over the last week.

In the past seven days, 34 countries have recorded their all-time highest number of weekly cases, including 18 nations in Europe and seven in Africa, according to an AFP count based on official figures.

While far more contagious than previous variants, Omicron appears to cause less severe illness than its predecessors.

Even as it spurred the world to record 13.5 million cases in the last week alone, a 64% increase over the previous week, the global average of deaths dropped three percent.

France’s public health authority said Friday that the risk of hospitalization was about 70% lower for Omicron, citing data from the US, the UK, Canada and Israel.

However with a global average of two million confirmed new cases daily, experts warn the sheer numbers threaten to overwhelm health systems.

World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that Omicron should not be categorized as mild, as it “is hospitalizing people and it is killing people.”

“In fact, the tsunami of cases is so huge and quick, that it is overwhelming health systems around the world.”

A Sri Lankan school student receives her first COVID-19 vaccine from a health worker in Colombo, Sri Lanka, January 7, 2022. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)

Here to stay

Omicron’s dizzying spread since being detected six weeks ago has prompted many nations to push harder for more vaccinations and some to clamp down with restrictions.

Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Friday that access to the country’s bars and restaurants will be limited to those who are fully vaccinated or have recovered from the virus, and can also provide a negative test result.

However, people who have received a booster shot will be exempted from the test requirement.

In neighboring Austria, Chancellor Karl Nehammer meanwhile tested positive for COVID-19.

“No cause for worry, I’m fine,” he said. “I continue to plead: get vaccinated.”

In the United States, challenges against vaccine mandates imposed by the administration of President Joseph Biden were heard by the Supreme Court on Friday.

The mandates, requiring vaccinations at businesses that employ 100 people, have come under attack from some Republican lawmakers and business owners as an infringement on individual rights and an abuse of government power.

But Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan asked: “Why isn’t this necessary to abate the grave risk?”

“It is by far the greatest public health danger that this country has faced in the last century,” she said.

A COVID-19 testing site in Los Angeles, January 4, 2022. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

As cases skyrocket in the US — which also broke its daily caseload record this week — Biden said that the virus “as we are dealing with it now is not here to stay.”

“But having COVID in the environment — here and in the world — is probably here to stay.”

In France, President Emmanuel Macron stood by controversial comments in which he vowed to “piss off” unvaccinated people until they get the inoculation.

“People can get upset about a way of speaking that seems colloquial, but I fully stand by it,” he said, adding: “I’m upset about the situation we’re in.”

Men’s tennis world number one Novak Djokovic has been at the center of his own controversy after being dramatically refused entry to play in Australia due to his vaccine status.

From inside a Melbourne immigration detention facility pending an appeal, Djokovic posted on Instagram his thanks to “people around the world for your continuous support.”

Hyderabad, India, January 7, 2022. (AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.)

‘Superspreader’

In India, Omicron-led rising case numbers have brought fears of a return to the country’s darkest pandemic days last year, when thousands were dying of the virus every day.

Gautam Menon, a professor at India’s Ashoka University who has worked on COVID-19 infection modeling, told AFP that “this could potentially stress out health care systems to levels comparable to or worse than the second wave.”

However Calcutta’s High Court rejected a bid to cancel a major Hindu festival, despite fears the virus could spread rapidly among the 500,000 expected attendees.

“People from all states in the country will attend the religious festival and take a holy dip,” environmentalist Subhash Dutta told AFP.

“They may carry variant viruses and this religious festival may end up being the biggest superspreader in the coming days.”

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