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Friday, December 31, 2021

Covid-19, Omicron and New Year's Eve Live Updates - The New York Times

As the Omicron variant drives known coronavirus cases to their highest levels of the pandemic in many parts of the world, major cities where caseloads are rising swiftly have scaled down or canceled New Year’s Eve events for a second consecutive year.

The United States on Thursday shattered its record for new daily coronavirus cases for the second day straight.

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, recommends having small gatherings with family and friends at homes where people are vaccinated with booster shots, citing a low risk for infection.

Here’s a look at how Omicron has forced some cities to change their plans for Dec. 31:

New York City

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a downsizing of the celebration in Times Square to at most 15,000 guests, nearly a quarter of the usual amount, who will be allowed in at 3 p.m. at the earliest. Attendees will be required to wear masks and show proof of full vaccination.

Los Angeles

Several Los Angeles County holiday events have been canceled, including the New Year’s countdown in Grand Park, which will now be streamed.

Boston

All First Night Boston events have been moved outdoors, and vaccinations, booster shots and rapid tests will be available at the festivities.

Atlanta

The city’s Peach Drop, an outdoor celebration that typically draws thousands, was canceled.

San Francisco

With staffing shortages of municipal workers brought on by Omicron infections, the city canceled its New Year’s Eve fireworks show.

Seattle

There will be no spectators allowed at the Space Needle’s fireworks show. People can watch on a livestream instead.

London

Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, announced last week that the New Year’s Eve event in Trafalgar Square was canceled, saying, “The safety of Londoners must come first.”

Paris

Paris has canceled its celebration, which was to include fireworks over the Champs-Élysées. Large public parties are also banned. Additionally, wearing masks outdoors is mandatory, beginning Friday.

Rome

Celebrations have been scrapped in several Italian cities, including Rome and Venice. Outdoor events have been banned, and nightclubs will be closed through January.

Berlin

Berlin’s annual New Year’s Eve party at the Brandenburg Gate will go on, but without an audience. The performances will be live on television. Gatherings are limited to a maximum of 10 people.

Tokyo

Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo typically attracts tens of thousands of people for one of the biggest New Year celebrations in the world. This year, like last year, the revelry has been called off. Public drinking has been banned in Shibuya on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.

New Delhi

The Delhi Disaster Management Authority has banned all social, political and cultural gatherings, including Christmas and New Year celebrations, according to The Economic Times newspaper.

Cape Town

Cape Town is still allowing New Year’s Eve gatherings, but several restrictions are in place. Masks are required in public areas and nightclubs are closed.

Casablanca

The authorities banned New Year’s Eve celebrations throughout Morocco, including in Casablanca, its most populous city. There will be a curfew from midnight to 6 a.m.

Kampala

There is a ban on New Year’s Eve fireworks across Uganda, including in Kampala, the capital. Nighttime religious services are also prohibited.

Madrid

Large public festivities have been canceled across much of Spain. One exception is Madrid, where a crowd of up to 7,000 people is allowed to gather at the central Puerta del Sol square.

Mexico City

Mexico’s capital canceled its typically giant celebrations.

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New Year's Eve hours for Walmart, Dillard’s, plus Costco, Sam's Club closed New Year's Day - USA TODAY

South Africa lifts curfew as it says COVID-19 fourth wave peaks - Reuters

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CAPE TOWN, Dec 30 (Reuters) - South Africa has lifted a midnight to 4 a.m. curfew on people's movement with immediate effect, believing the country has passed the peak of its fourth COVID-19 wave driven by the Omicron variant, a government statement said on Thursday.

The country made the changes based on the trajectory of the pandemic, levels of vaccination in the country and available capacity in the health sector, according to a press release issued by Mondli Gungubele, a minister in the presidency.

South Africa is currently at the lowest of its five-stage COVID-19 alert levels.

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"All indicators suggest the country may have passed the peak of the fourth wave at a national level," a statement from the special cabinet meeting held earlier on Thursday said.

Data from the Department of Health showed a 29.7% decrease in the number of new cases detected in the week ending Dec. 25 compared to the number of cases found in the previous week, at 127,753, the governmentsaid.

South Africa, with close to 3.5 million infections and 91,000 deaths, has been the worst-hit country in Africa during the pandemic on both counts.

Besides lifting the restrictions on public movement, the government said gatherings will be restricted to no more than 1,000 people indoors, and no more than 2,000 people outdoors.

It also ruled that alcohol shops with licenses to operate beyond 11 p.m. (2100GMT) may revert back to full license conditions, a welcome boon for traders and businesses hard hit by the pandemic and looking to recover during the festive season.

"While the Omicron variant is highly transmissible, there has been lower rates of hospitalisation than in previous waves," cabinet said, adding that the wearing of masks in public places remained mandatory. Failure to wear a mask in South Africa when required remains a criminal offence.

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Thursday, December 30, 2021

Penn State Health asks people not to go to emergency department for routine COVID-19 test - WGAL Susquehanna Valley Pa.

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  1. Penn State Health asks people not to go to emergency department for routine COVID-19 test  WGAL Susquehanna Valley Pa.
  2. Hospitals Urge Patients Not To Come To ERs For COVID Tests  WCCO - CBS Minnesota
  3. NC Piedmont Triad Hospitals encourage people seeking COVID-19 testing to not visit emergency departments  WXII12 Winston-Salem
  4. Health system asks people not to go to ER for COVID-19 test  wgaltv
  5. Ochsner updates on recent spike in Omicron cases  KATC Lafayette News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News


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Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Covid: Warning over patchy lateral flow test supply - BBC News

A sign outside of a London pharmacy reads: Quote of the day: No lateral flow tests
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Pharmacists are warning of patchy supplies of rapid Covid tests following changes to self-isolation rules.

They said demand for lateral flow tests increased after changes allowed people with Covid to leave isolation after seven days - if they test negative.

The Association Of Independent Multiple Pharmacies said staff and customers were stressed over the lack of supply.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said test availability is refreshed throughout the day.

"During periods of exceptional demand there may be temporary pauses in ordering or receiving tests, to ensure we manage distribution across the system and support changing requirements for [lateral flow] and PCR tests," a spokesperson added.

Labour said the situation was a "total shambles" and the government should help people "trying to do the right thing" by ordering tests.

A record 117,093 cases were reported in England on Tuesday, but UK patient numbers remain below January's peak.

So far, the surge in cases driven by Omicron has not led to a similarly sharp rise in hospital admissions, even taking into account the lag between infection and hospital treatment.

Partial data from the UK nations means a full national picture will only be available again in the first week of January.

The warnings about the supply of rapid lateral flow Covid tests come after several changes to self-isolation rules.

Those who test positive for Covid can now leave home after seven days - as long as they test negative via lateral flow devices on day six and seven.

And close contacts of positive cases, including those in the same household, can go about their daily lives as normal with a daily negative lateral flow test.

Leyla Hannbeck, chief executive of the Association Of Independent Multiple Pharmacies, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme there had been a very high demand for lateral flow tests since the changes.

"Every five minutes, approximately, somebody comes into the pharmacy and asks for tests," she said.

"But unfortunately because of the issues around supply being patchy and inconsistent it means that those who come forward for the test don't always get it, which is very stressful not just for the pharmacy but also for the patients."

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The UKHSA said that the delivery capacity for lateral flow testing kits has doubled to 900,000 a day since 18 December, due to unprecedented demand.

Lateral flow tests are also available to order online for delivery through Royal Mail - but many people have reported problems placing orders, with the website often saying "sorry, there are no home delivery slots left for rapid lateral flow tests right now".

The UKHSA has said reduced postal schedules could impact deliveries - work and pensions minister Chloe Smith said people should "persevere" in their efforts to secure Covid tests.

Separately, record demand for Covid PCR tests - used to confirm a positive lateral flow result - has left some people waiting up to five days for results in Scotland.

There were no appointments available for PCR tests in England or Northern Ireland as of 10:45 GMT on Wednesday - with people advised to try again later.

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Why do people need lateral flow tests?

A lateral flow test
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Free-to-order rapid tests are seen as a crucial way to keep safe as Covid cases surge. Countries like the US have scrambled to follow the UK's lead in providing mass lateral flow tests free of charge.

They are useful in showing whether a person is infectious - providing trustworthy results in just 30 minutes. They are used:

  • To allow people with Covid to leave isolation after seven days - by testing negative on day six and seven
  • By those in close contact with Covid cases to avoid isolation through daily rapid testing
  • To reassure people without symptoms they are not infectious before seeing vulnerable relatives or attending new year gatherings
  • In secondary schools, which require regular rapid testing, as well as some workplaces
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There have been calls by some scientists and business leaders for the government to follow the example of US health officials and reduce the isolation period in England for people with asymptomatic Covid, to five days.

But a government spokesperson said the current isolation period - which was recently lowered from 10 to seven days - remained "critical for limiting the spread of the virus".

They said: "There are no further changes to the isolation period planned at this time, but we keep all rules under review based on the latest health data".

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents NHS trusts, said some trust bosses thought self-isolating staff would be a "bigger problem" than the number of people being treated for Covid.

And he told the BBC that while there may come a point where Covid is treated like a common cold, that should not be the case for people who work in the NHS, as they dealt with potentially "very, very vulnerable" people.

Chart showing that the number of daily cases is rising rapidly in the UK. Updated 28 DEC
Chart showing that the number of daily deaths has levelled off. Updated 28 Dec

Unlike Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the government has decided against introducing new Covid measures in England ahead of the new year.

England saw another 1,374 Covid hospital admissions on 26 December - the highest number since February.

Not all the patients in hospital will have been admitted for Covid - latest data suggests about three in 10 have the virus but were admitted to hospital for something else.

In other developments:

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Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Russian court shuts down human rights group Memorial International - CNN

Moscow (CNN)Russia's Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered the closure of Memorial International, one of the country's most respected human rights organizations, wiping out three decades of work to expose the abuses and atrocities of the Stalinist era.

The court ruled that Memorial International had fallen afoul of Russia's "foreign agent" law. But the group said the real reason for the shutdown was that authorities did not approve of its work.
The ruling is the latest blow to Russia's hollowed-out civil society organizations, which have gradually fallen victim to Putin's authoritarian regime.
Videos posted on social media showed Memorial supporters shouting, "Shame, shame!" in the court's hallways and at the entrance to the building shortly after the ruling. Seven people were detained outside the courthouse following the proceedings, according to independent monitoring group OVD-Info. The organization said three of them are believed to be instigators whose sole aim was to cause havoc, not support Memorial.
Memorial International's lawyer, Tatiana Glushkova, confirmed the ruling to CNN and said the group would appeal the decision. "The real reason for Memorial's closure is that the prosecutor's office doesn't like Memorial's work rehabilitating the victims of Soviet terror," Glushkova told CNN.
The Prosecutor General's Office of Russia requested Memorial International be liquidated in November. The group was accused of repeatedly breaking the law for failing to mark all its publications with a compulsory "foreign agent" warning. The Justice Ministry had designated the group a foreign agent in 2016, using a law targeting organizations receiving international funding.
A Memorial supporter is seen with law enforcement officers outside the Russian Supreme Court.
Memorial's representatives argued there were no legal grounds for the group's closure, and critics say the Russian government targeted Memorial for political reasons.
Oleg Orlov, a member of Memorial International's board, said the court's decision was "purely ideological" and "a demonstrative, blatant, illegal decision."
"Allegedly, we do not assess the Soviet Union and Soviet history the right way. But this is our assessment, we have the right to do it," Orlov told CNN.
The group was founded in the late 1980s as the Soviet Union collapsed, dedicated to studying and exposing abuses of the Stalinist era and supporting victims and their families. One of the group's co-founders was Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei Sakharov, who went on to be the first honorary chairman of the Memorial Society.
Amnesty International called the decision "a grave insult to victims of the Russian Gulag."
"International Memorial is a highly respected human rights organization that has worked tirelessly to document the atrocities and political repression carried out under the rule of Joseph Stalin and other Soviet leaders," the rights group said in a statement. "By closing down the organization, Russian authorities trample on the memory of millions of victims lost to the Gulag."
Memorial International's sister organization, the Memorial Human Rights Center, is facing a similar challenge. Prosecutors in Moscow charged the group with justifying terrorism and extremism in its publications. A case on its closure is before the Moscow City Court and its next hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.
The Memorial Human Rights Center is a separate legal entity that focuses on oppression in modern Russia. It was labeled a foreign agent in 2014, according to Human Rights Watch.
The Supreme Court's decision was not unexpected. Russian President Vladimir Putin, in a speech earlier this month, accused Memorial of supporting groups that are blacklisted as "as terrorist and extremist organizations."
"Its violations were blatant," he said. However, Putin did add that Memorial was "indisputably" one of Russia's most "reputable" NGOs.
Journalists gather in front of a screen broadcasting an earlier supreme court hearing in the Memorial case on December 14.
Human rights groups and advocates for democracy have come under increasing attack in recent years.
Thousands of protesters were detained earlier this year for taking part in several demonstrations supporting Alexey Navalny, the country's best-known opposition to Putin.
Demonstrations during the first few months of 2021 were met with a strong crackdown by police, including widespread arrests and an alleged disproportionate use of force.
But experts worry that shuttering Memorial could be a harbinger of worse to come for any groups that fall afoul of the Kremlin.
"It is difficult to overstate the urgency of ensuring that the two Memorial entities can continue their crucial work protecting human rights," several rights groups, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, wrote in an open letter published in early December. "Memorial is at the very heart of Russia's civil society, and by targeting it, authorities are hoping to destroy Russia's civil society at large."
Jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny appears on screen via a video link from prison during a court hearing, at a court in the town of Petushki some 120 kilometers (75 miels) outside Moscow, on May 26.
Mary Lawlor, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, said in a statement earlier this month that a dissolution of Memorial would be "a new low for human rights defenders in Russia."
"Just as its creation marked the beginning of openness in Russia, its closure might signal an end to this period," Lawlor said.
"Their criticism of historical and contemporary human rights abuses has for many years made them the target of a government that is ever diminishing the space for public debate."

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India refuses to renew foreign funding OK to charity; religious protests - Reuters India

Nuns belonging to the global Missionaries of Charity, walk past a large banner of Mother Teresa ahead of her canonisation ceremony, in Kolkata, India September 3, 2016. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri

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NEW DELHI, Dec 27 (Reuters) - The Indian government on Monday "refused" to renew a permission that is vital for Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity (MoC) to be able to secure foreign funds, cutting off a key source the charity has depended on to run its programs for the impoverished.

Nobel-laureate Mother Teresa, a Roman Catholic nun who died in 1997, founded the MoC in 1950. The charity has more than 3,000 nuns worldwide who run hospices, community kitchens, schools, leper colonies and homes for abandoned children.

The government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi refused permission to the charity under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) on Saturday after it received some "adverse inputs", a government statement said.

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"While considering the MoC's renewal application, some adverse inputs were noticed," the home ministry said, without providing details.

The ministry also rejected an earlier allegation of the West Bengal state chief minister Mamata Banerjee that the bank accounts of the charity were frozen.

Later, the MoC in a statement confirmed their FCRA application was not renewed and that it has asked its centres not to operate any foreign contributions accounts until the matter is resolved.

The move comes as hardline Hindu outfits affiliated to Modi's party have accused the MoC of leading religious conversion programmes under the guise of charity by offering poor Hindus and tribal communities food, medicine, money, free education and shelter. MoC has rejected these allegations.

Earlier, chief minister Banerjee of West Bengal, where MoC has its headquarters, wrote in a tweet that she was shocked to hear that at Christmas, the Union Ministry had frozen all the bank accounts of the MoC in India.

"Their 22,000 patients & employees have been left without food & medicines. While the law is paramount, humanitarian efforts must not be compromised," said Banerjee, an opposition leader and vocal critic of the Modi government.

The federal government said the accounts of MoC were frozen by the bank based on the request of the charity itself.

Vicar General Dominic Gomes of the Archdiocese of Calcutta said the freeze of the accounts was "a cruel Christmas gift to the poorest of the poor".

The row comes days after hardline Hindu vigilante groups disrupted Christmas church services in parts of India, including in some states ruled by Modi's party ahead of local elections in the coming months.

ATTACKS ON MINORITIES

Since Modi came to power in 2014, right-wing Hindu groups have consolidated their position across states and launched attacks on minorities, claiming they are trying to prevent religious conversions.

Christians and other critics note Christians represent only 2.3% of India's 1.37 billion people, while Hindus are the overwhelming majority. They repudiate the excuse given by some Hindu groups of preventing conversions as a reason for violence against Christians.

The Hindu newspaper on Monday reported disruption of Christmas celebrations at the weekend and last week, including the vandalising of a life-size statue of Jesus Christ at Ambala in Haryana, a northern state governed by Modi's nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

It said activists burnt a model of Santa Claus and chanted anti-Christmas slogans outside a church in Varanasi, Modi's parliamentary constituency and Hinduism's holiest city.

Elias Vaz, national vice-president of the All India Catholic Union, condemned the latest incidents.

"The strength of India is in its diversity and the people who have done this at Christmas are the real anti-nationals," Vaz said.

Contacted by telephone, the federal and state governments declined to comment on the protests.

Several Indian states have passed or are considering anti-conversion laws that challenge the constitutionally protected right to freedom of belief in the country.

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Reporting by Manoj Kumar, Saurabh Sharma, Subrata Nagchoudhury and Rupam Jain, editing by Barbara Lewis and Bernadette Baum

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NYC restaurateurs have mixed reactions to the COVID-19 vaccine mandate - New York Post

As New York imposed a law ordering businesses to require employee vaccinations, the response from Big Apple restaurateurs was as diverse as the city’s cuisine. 

Veteran restaurateur Stratis Morfogen, who owns Brooklyn Dumpling Shop and is executive managing director of Brooklyn Chop House, was decidedly defiant as the law went into effect on Monday. 

“Gov Hochul and X Mayor DiLAUSIO come and arrest me!” Morfogen posted on Instagram. “Not going to follow your mandate on threatening my family of employees to get the jab or lose your job!” 

Morfogen told Side Dish he’s no anti-vaxxer, but he nevertheless plans to ignore the mandate because he believes it violates his employees’ constitutional rights. Instead, he is taking additional steps — like swabbing his employees every day before they begin their shifts. If they test positive, they don’t work. 

“Showing a vax card gives people a false sense of security, as vaxxed people often are asymptomatic superspreaders and don’t know it until they test positive,” Morfogen claimed. 

Last week, Danny Meyer startled some of his fellow restaurateurs when he announced that he had told staffers at his Union Square Hospitality Group — which operates such upscale venues as Union Square Cafe, Gramercy Tavern and Blue Smoke — to get COVID-19 vaccine boosters, effective immediately.

Union Square Hospitality Group CEO Danny Meyer is requiring his employees to receive the COVID-19 vaccine booster.
Union Square Hospitality Group CEO Danny Meyer is requiring his employees to receive the COVID-19 vaccine booster.
Photo by Clint Spaulding/Getty Images for Bloomberg

“Hospitality is a team sport — it’s kind of like putting on a play on Broadway or playing a basketball game,” Meyer told CNBC. “If you can’t field a full healthy team, you’re going to have to hit pause.” 

Not to be outdone, the Upper West Side’s Mermaid Inn will have a mobile vaccine van on site this Thursday, a spokesman told Side Dish. 

The Mermaid Inn in Manhattan will host a mobile vaccine site outside of the restaurant.
The Mermaid Inn in Manhattan will host a mobile vaccine site outside of the restaurant.
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“We came across this service when searching for a way to make our mandated employee vaccine more accessible to our staff and their friends and families,” said Cindy Smith, Mermaid Inn’s co-owner.

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Fears of political violence rise as Somalia's president and prime minister jockey for power - CNN

(CNN)Somali President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed Farmajo has suspended the powers of the prime minister amid an ongoing tussle for power, triggering calls for calm from the US and UK, and raising concerns of political violence.

Somalia's presidential office said in a statement Monday that Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble was accused "in an ongoing investigation on corruption and abuse of public land."
"The duty and powers of the Prime Minister remain suspended pending the conclusion of the ongoing investigations," the statement added.
While Farmajo accused Roble of looting public land owned by the Somali National Army (SNA), he also said Roble had been "tampering" with the investigation by pressuring the country's defense minister, who is leading the probe.
The Prime Minister's office responded on Twitter, saying the president's actions were a "violation of the constitution and other laws."
"The Prime Minister is carrying out his constitutionally mandated day-to-day duties as usual, and is fully committed to fulfilling his national responsibility to conduct an acceptable electoral process that culminates in a peaceful transition of power," the premier's office added.
Monday's exchange marks the latest escalation in an ongoing spat over delayed elections in Somalia. In competing statements on Sunday, the President and Prime Minister accused each other of holding up the long-delayed parliamentary elections.
In a tweet on Monday, former Somali president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud condemned what he described as a "military coup" by the president.
"The Somali people are awake and watchful. We urge the protection of the democratic rule of law in the country, and call upon all to back the Prime Minister in his efforts to implement elections in the country," Mohamud added.
The US Embassy in Somalia has strongly urged the country's leaders to take "immediate steps to de-escalate tensions in Mogadishu" and to "refrain from provocative actions."
Meanwhile Britain's ambassador to Somalia, Kate Foster, also called for a de-escalation of tensions on Monday, adding that "violence is unacceptable."

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Monday, December 27, 2021

Live updates: Israel allowing boosters after 3 months - Associated Press

JERUSALEM — Israel’s Health Ministry says it will allow people with two doses of the coronavirus vaccine to get a booster shot after three months, rather than the five-month waiting period it previously allowed.

The government said in a statement Monday that it shortened the timeframe to boost immunity as the swiftly-moving omicron variant spreads around the globe.

The new rule would apply to vaccines made by Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca.

There was still no decision on whether to roll out a second tranche of booster shots to its population as the country grappled with rising infections.

Israel began trials of a fourth dose of coronavirus vaccine on Monday in what is believed to be the first study of its kind.

___

HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY ABOUT THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC:

— Omicron spreads global gloom over New Year’s celebrations

— Delta flight to Shanghai turned back because of COVID rules.

— Variant disrupts holiday travel but not shopping

— France sees over 100,000 daily infections for the first time

___

Follow AP’s pandemic coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic

___

HERE’S WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING TODAY:

PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia Public Health officials are urging people who suspect they might have mild cases of COVID-19 to stay out of the emergency room.

Department officials in a news release Monday said they’ve been hearing from emergency room doctors that they’re being overwhelmed by people seeking COVID-19 tests, many because of mild symptoms or known exposures.

“The number of people testing positive for COVID is now far higher than at any point in the last two years, and emergency departments are packed with people with COVID symptoms,” Health Commissioner Cheryl Bettigole said in a news release Monday.

She urged people who are experiencing symptoms and having trouble finding COVID testing, to act like they are positive and quarantine.

The health department has recorded a two-week average of almost 1,500 new cases per day and a two-week positivity rate of 15.9%. The department gave out 24,000 free rapid testing kits before the holiday — close to 50,000 rapid tests —and was seeing record-breaking numbers of tests being submitted to the department in the days before Christmas.

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CHICAGO — Illinois is helping local health departments with staffing at local health department mass vaccination sites. The move comes as the state is seeing its highest surge in COVID-19 cases during the entire pandemic.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced Monday that Illinois is adding at least 100 people to help at local health department mass vaccination sites to meet growing demand.

Starting next week, the state will also open its community-based testing sites six days a week.

The state is averaging 500 new hospital admissions daily for COVID-19, which is double from about a month ago.

Illinois Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike says the majority of those hospitalized are unvaccinated.

___

JACKSON, Miss. —The Mississippi State Department of Health is reporting more than 7,000 new COVID-19 cases over a five-day period.

The department posted new numbers Monday, covering cases confirmed from Wednesday through Sunday.

The state is seeing a significant increase in cases compared to just a few weeks ago. During the two weeks from Nov. 23 to Dec. 6, Mississippi confirmed 5,185 new cases of COVID-19.

In the Jackson area on Monday, parking lots were full at medical clinics that offer COVID-19 testing. A long line of cars waited at a north Jackson church with a mobile test site in the parking lot.

___

ATLANTA — COVID-19′s omicron wave is rapidly pushing up the number of patients infected with the virus in Georgia hospitals.

The biggest impacts in terms of infections and hospitalizations are being seen in the Atlanta area.

The number of patients hospitalized statewide with the virus has climbed by more than 50% in a week, nearing 1,900 on Monday. The state Department of Public Health says the seven-day average of COVID-19 cases in Georgia rose to nearly 8,700 a day on Monday. That’s nearing the peaks that Georgia saw in infection numbers in early January and in late August and early September.

The crush is being seen in Atlanta-area emergency rooms. At midafternoon Monday, of Atlanta-area hospitals that care for all adults, 18 emergency rooms were turning away ambulances, while only 10 were accepting ambulances, according to state data.

Katherine Watson, spokesperson for the five-hospital Northside system, said that COVID-19 patients accounted for 25% of the system’s total adult inpatient population as of Monday.

___

PARIS — France’s Prime Minister Jean Castex announced new COVID-19 measures in efforts to curb the spread of the virus, yet stopped short of imposing strict restrictions ahead of New Year’s Eve.

Starting from next week, big events will be limited to 2,000 people indoors and 5,000 people outdoors. People will be requested to sit down during concerts and customers won’t be allowed to stand up in bars, Castex detailed.

Eating and drinking will be banned in cinemas, theatres, sport facilities and public transports, including on long-distance lines. Working from home will be mandatory at least three days per week for employees whose job makes it possible, he added.

Castex said that schools will open as scheduled on Jan. 3 and political rallies won’t be concerned by the new rules for democratic reasons ahead of April’s presidential election.

The measures come after France recorded more than 100,000 virus infections in a single day for the first time in the pandemic.

Castex stressed that hospitals’ intensive care units are not saturated due to over 90% of France’s adults being fully vaccinated — in sharp contrast with the situation last year.

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LONDON — British Health Secretary Sajid Javid said Monday no further coronavirus restrictions will be introduced in England before the new year, but urged people to stay cautious and celebrate outside if possible.

COVID-19 data has been patchy over the Christmas holiday, but the latest official figures showed 98,515 new infections were recorded in England on Monday and 143 people died with the virus. The National Health Service in England reported that there were 1,281 coronavirus hospital admissions on Christmas Day, up more than 70% compared to the previous week.

The four parts of the U.K. have taken different approaches to coronavirus restrictions as the omicron variant spread rapidly in the country. While nightclubs were ordered closed and limits on gatherings were imposed in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales, officials have resisted tightening restrictions in England.

Javid said about 90% of cases across England were the omicron variant.

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Monday pledged the full support of the federal government to states facing surges in COVID-19 cases from the more-transmissible omicron variant and a run on at-home tests.

Joining a regular meeting between his coronavirus response team and the National Governors Association, Biden said, “My message is: if you need something, say something, and we are going to have your back any way we can.”

Biden acknowledged long lines and chaotic scenes as Americans sought out testing amid the case surge and as they looked to safely gather with family and friends over the holiday.

He referenced his administration’s plan to make 500 million rapid tests available to Americans beginning next month through an as-yet-to-be-developed website.

A White House official said the new tests would come from new manufacturing capacity and wouldn’t interfere with existing supply chains.

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WASHINGTON — Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert, said Monday that the U.S. should “seriously” consider a vaccination mandate for domestic travel.

Speaking to MSNBC, Fauci, who serves as President Joe Biden’s chief science adviser on the COVID-19 response, said “When you make vaccination a requirement, that’s another incentive to get more people vaccinated.”

The U.S. currently mandates that most foreign nationals traveling to the U.S. be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, but has not instituted one for domestic travel.

The administration has at times considered a domestic vaccination requirement, or one requiring either vaccination or proof of negative test, but two officials said Biden’s science advisers have yet to formally make the recommendation to the president. The officials noted they have not been eager to mandate vaccination for domestic air travel because they expected it to immediately face legal challenges, mitigating its potential effectiveness as a tool to drive up vaccinations.

Biden’s employer vaccination requirements have been mired in legal wrangling, with the Supreme Court set to hear arguments in early January in cases seeking to overturn them.

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ATHENS — In Greece, authorities announced additional restrictions after the highest number of daily confirmed infections, at 9,284, was announced since the start of the pandemic.

Health Minister Thanos Plevris announced that starting Jan. 3: the mandatory use of high-protection or double masks will be imposed at supermarkets and on public transport, entertainment venues will close at midnight, capacity will be cut to 10% at soccer stadiums, remote work and schedule changes will be expanded at the public sector and nursing home visits will only be permitted for people carrying a negative PCR test result.

“The omicron variant is now apparent across the country, especially in greater Athens where there has been a considerable rise in cases,” Plevris said.

He added that the new restrictions would take effect after the New Year due to concerns that if were imposed earlier, they would lead to an increase in private gatherings.

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