New Covid Variant From Southern Africa; calls for travel bans

November 25, 2021
| Report Focus News

South Africa and a number of other Southern African countries are to be put on England’s travel red list over a new Covid variant.
Christmas travel plans stand jeopardised as the new variant of Covid-19 found in South Africa puts six countries on the U.K’s red list.

Flights from the Sadc region (Southern Africa) will be banned as officials review travel measures after scientists voice concern over a new variant of COVID-19

All flights from sadc countries are expected to be placed under England’s red list travel restrictions, after scientists raised the alarm over what is feared to be the worst Covid-19 variant yet identified.

Whitehall sources said the B.1.1.529 variant, which is feared to be more transmissible and has the potential to evade immunity, posed “a potentially significant threat to the vaccine programme which we have to protect at all costs”.

Hundreds of people who have recently returned from South Africa, where the variant was detected, and neighbouring countries are expected to be tracked down and offered tests in an effort to avoid the new variant entering the UK.

The variant, which was identified on Tuesday, initially caused concern because it carries an “extremely high number” of mutations meaning that the spike protein looks different from the version that vaccines were designed to target. The latest data, presented by South African scientists on Thursday, revealed that the variant also appears to be more transmissible and is already present in provinces throughout the country.
New Covid Variant From Southern Africa; calls for travel bans

As well as placing South Africa, Namibia, Lesotho, Botswana, Eswatini and Zimbabwe on England’s travel red list and banning flights from Friday, officials are reviewing a number of travel measures including whether there should be a limited reintroduction of the use of PCR tests for arrivals. Travellers who test positive will be strongly encouraged to take a PCR so that their results can be sequenced to test for variants.

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