The African Union (AU) has condemned and called for the lifting of travel bans on Southern African countries, most notably South Africa, following the emergence of the Omicron variant of COVID-19.
The variant was detected and announced by South Africa’s National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD) in November and was declared a variant of concern by the World Health Organisation soon thereafter – leading to countries across the globe closing their borders to travellers from South Africa and the region.
In a statement on Tuesday, the AU highlighted that the travel bans have a multi-layered impact on countries from the Southern African region.
“These travel and entry bans…lead to: adverse impact on the economy which will negatively affect the lives and livelihoods of populations concerned. [They also lead to] limited capacity to access essential medical supplies needed to respond to the ongoing upsurge of cases in South Africa [and] limited capacity for Southern African researchers and scientists to access the reagents needed to monitor spread of the Omicron variant and to investigate and characterize its impact on transmissibility, disease severity and possible evasion from vaccines.”
The Union further raised concern that a targeted approach is being imposed on South Africa and its neighbouring countries despite “widespread distribution of Omicron cases globally”.
The continental body added that the imposition of a travel ban and its impact could deter countries from reporting on any variant that may arise in the future.
“[P]enalizing Member States for ensuring timely and transparent data dissemination in accordance with international health regulations acts as a disincentive for information sharing in the future, potentially posing a threat to health security on the continent and globally”.
The union called for more emphasis to be put on the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines on the continent.
“Equitable access to vaccines is key to immunize populations, control transmission of the virus and prevent the emergence of new variants. International efforts should accordingly focus on increasing vaccination coverage on the continent.”
Source: South African Government News Agency