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France to ease restrictions; Austrian parliament approves mandatory vaccination – as it happened

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 Updated 
Thu 20 Jan 2022 19.31 ESTFirst published on Wed 19 Jan 2022 20.14 EST
Key events
People walking in Paris. France has announced Covid measures will be relaxed at the beginning of February.
People walking in Paris. France has announced Covid measures will be relaxed at the beginning of February. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock
People walking in Paris. France has announced Covid measures will be relaxed at the beginning of February. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock

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French PM announces easing of restrictions

Covid-19 restrictions could be loosened in France from February onwards, the prime minister has said, shortly after the country’s Covid vaccination pass comes into effect.

Jean Castex said on Thursday the pass will come into effect on 24 January, provided it gets approved by the constitutional council.

From 2 February, guidance recommending employees work from home three days a week would be dropped, with remote working arrangements now at the discretion of individual workers and their bosses.

Nightclubs would reopen from 16 February.

Castex said that the general Covid situation in the country was becoming more favourable. He added that the Covid pass could even be suspended if the Covid situation improved dramatically.

  • The heading of this post, and the blog’s main headline, were amended on 21 January 2022 to remove incorrect suggestions that France has been in lockdown.
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Key events

That’s it from me, Samantha Lock, for today’s Covid blog.

Please join me on our latest live feed here where I’ll be focusing a little more on the coronavirus crisis across Asia, Australia and the Pacific.

You can also keep up with the top headlines here.

Summary of key developments

Here’s a round-up of all the latest international developments for the past 24 hours:

Europe:

  • The Irish government has been given the green light to lift the majority of the state’s Covid restrictions.
  • In France, Covid-19 restrictions will be loosened from February onwards, the prime minister has said, shortly after country’s Covid vaccination pass comes into effect. Jean Castex said on Thursday the pass will come into effect on 24 January, provided it is approved by the Constitutional Council.
  • Austria announced it will introduce a national vaccine lottery to encourage holdouts to get shots and has extended Covid lockdown measures for another ten days. MPs voted to approve a Covid-19 vaccine mandate which will apply to all residents of Austria aged 18 and over.
  • England will soon scrap virtually all Covid measures, the health secretary confirmed.
  • Germany reported another record rise of 133,536 daily new cases. It is the second consecutive day the European country has broken a pandemic record, with 234 deaths also reported, according to recently updated figures from the Robert Koch Institute.

Australia and New Zealand:

  • Australia’s drugs regulator has for the first time approved oral treatments for Covid-19 which should help address supply shortages of other treatments.
  • Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Association has also given provisional approval to the protein-based Novavax Covid-19 vaccine.
  • New Zealand’s prime minister Jacinda Ardern has said restrictions will be tightened if there is a community transmission of Omicron.
  • The state of Western Australia has cancelled plans to reopen its borders on 5 February, citing health risks from a surge in Omicroncases elsewhere in the country, as the tally of coronavirus cases since the pandemic began topped two million.

Asia:

  • Taiwan will mandate the use of passes for proof of Covid vaccination to enter entertainment venues.
  • Thailand will resume its ‘Test & Go’ quarantine waiver for vaccinated arrivals starting on 1 February, the country’s coronavirus taskforce said on Thursday.
  • Japan recorded a daily rise of 41,377 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday, shattering the record it set a day earlier by about 10,000 as the government puts more prefectures under a quasi-state of emergency.
  • Hong Kong will likely suspend face-to-face teaching in secondary schools from 24 January, local media reports.
  • China’s capital Beijing has ramped up efforts to curb Covid-19 infections, ordering checks among cold-chain firms and urging residents to cut unnecessary gatherings.

United States:

  • US president Joe Biden has admitted that more should have been done in terms of Covid-19 testing availability earlier in the pandemic.
  • The US is set to require Covid vaccines for essential workers crossing borders.

Africa:

  • Cases of Covid have sharply declined in Africa and deaths are declining for the first time since the emergence of the Omicron variant, the World Health Organization has said.
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Here’s a quick snap from the US Centres of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“Rates of Covid-19 cases are high and continuing to increase in many parts of the US. The 7-day average of daily new cases is 744,616, a 5% decrease from the previous week,” the agency said.

A Covid data tracker as seen below shows the levels of community transmission across the country.

Rates of #COVID19 cases are high & continuing to increase in many parts of the U.S. The 7-day average of daily new cases is 744,616, a 5% decrease from the previous week.
Get vaccinated as soon as you can & get a booster shot when you're eligible.
More: https://t.co/NxsP3CEhdF. pic.twitter.com/kzy0YIzPKj

— CDC (@CDCgov) January 20, 2022
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The US is set to require Covid vaccines for essential workers crossing borders.

The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is announcing Thursday it is requiring that non-US essential workers such as truck drivers and nurses who are crossing land borders be fully vaccinated against Covid-19, effective Saturday, Reuters reports.

The Biden administration first announced in October that effective 8 November it would again allow non-essential foreign visitors to travel from Canada and Mexico into the US across land borders if they were vaccinated.

The US land borders with Canada and Mexico had been closed to non-essential travel for 20 months because of Covid-19 concerns.

DHS is announcing on Thursday it is extending those requirements to essential workers who are not US citizens or lawful permanent residents.

Starting Saturday DHS “will require that non-US individuals entering the United States via land ports of entry or ferry terminals along our Northern and Southern borders be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 and prepared to show related proof of vaccination,” said DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

Hello it’s Samantha Lock back with you on the blog as my colleague Tom Ambrose calls it a night in London.

As I’m reporting to you from Sydney here’s a snapshot of how Covid is unfolding across Australia.

The state of NSW has marked its deadliest day with 46 Covid deaths while 20 deaths have been recorded in Victoria.

The reopening of Australia’s most isolated state Western Australia has been suspended indefinitely to allow West Australians to get booster shots, as the more transmissible Omicron variant rips through the nation.

The Irish government has been given the green light to lift the majority of the state’s Covid restrictions.

It is understood that the National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet) has recommended restrictions around hospitality can be lifted, including the 8pm curfew, PA Media reported.

The recommendations also say that live venues and sport venues can return to full capacity and that Covid passes only be required for international travel. The wearing of face masks is recommended to continue on public transport and in retail settings.

The Restaurants Association of Ireland has urged the Government in light of the recommendations to allow all hospitality businesses to trade as normal from Friday. Government ministers will meet on Friday to assess the advice before Taoiseach Micheal Martin will make an announcement.

Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe told RTE it is reasonable to expect that the state will be able to exit regulations at a faster pace than would have looked likely a number of weeks ago. He said:

What we have done at all points in this pandemic is been guided by public health advice.

We have looked to deploy timings that get the balance right between the needs to our economy and society and that of public health, and that is what we will continue to do.

In the United States, Kentucky congressman who has been critical of pandemic mask and vaccine mandates said he has tested positive for Covid.

Thomas Massie, a Republican from northern Kentucky, tweeted on Thursday that he is not vaccinated but his symptoms have been mild and he believes he is “over it.” Massie said on Twitter he would not be voting, meeting anyone in person or making public appearances until next week.

Massie added that people who find themselves sick with the virus should seek a doctor’s advice, “because every case is unique and some cases are very serious.”

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., talks to reporters before leaving Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, March 27, 2020. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP

The five-term congressman has been outspoken about his opposition to mandates for masking and vaccinations since early in the pandemic. Last week, he wrote on social media that his congressional office would “not comply” with Washington DC’s vaccine mandate for restaurants.

“We will get our food from Virginia or we will bring it to work,” he tweeted. “Shame has befallen our nation’s capital.” Earlier this year he called the House’s mask rule “unscientific and unconstitutional.”

He has asserted that he has an immunity to the disease because he also tested positive for it in 2020.

Brazil registers 168,495 new Covid cases, 350 more deaths

Brazil has had 168,495 new cases of the novel coronavirus reported in the past 24 hours, and 350 deaths from Covid, the health ministry said on Thursday.

The South American country has now registered 23,585,243 cases since the pandemic began, while the official death toll has risen to 622,205, according to ministry data.

Brazil’s Covid toll is the world’s third deadliest after the United States and Russia, according to a Reuters tally.

A health worker collects a swab sample from a woman to test for the coronavirus disease. Photograph: Diego Vara/Reuters

The state of Western Australia has cancelled plans to reopen its borders on 5 February, citing health risks from a surge in Omicron cases elsewhere in the country, as the tally of coronavirus cases since the pandemic began topped two million.

WA Premier Mark McGowan made the shock announcement late Thursday saying it would be “reckless and irresponsible” to open up now given the rapid spread of the variant.

Instead, re-opening would be delayed indefinitely or at least until the percentage of triple dose vaccinations reached 80%. It is currently around 26%.

“If we proceeded with the original plan, we would be deliberately seeding thousands upon thousands of Covid cases into WA and at this point in time that is not what I am going to do,” McGowan told reporters.

The state of 2.7 million has for months been effectively closed off to the rest of the country and the outside world, taking advantage of its natural isolation to keep cases low.

Fraud and errors in Scottish Covid business support schemes cost the public purse at least £16 million, auditors have told MSPs.

Between 1% and 2% of the two main schemes - which paid out a total of £1.6 billion - are thought to have been lost to fraud and error, the Press Association reported.

Holyrood’s Public Audit Committee heard from Audit Scotland officials on Thursday, following their analysis of the Scottish Government’s yearly consolidated accounts.

Auditor General Stephen Boyle said the Government had accepted a higher level of risk than usual given the urgent need to deliver support during the pandemic. He said:

Headline level, the Government’s own assessment is that between 1% and 2% of that spending will be attributable to fraud and error. So somewhere between £16 million and £32 million of that is likely to have been spent not in accordance with the associated laws.

In our judgement, £16 million to £32 million of course is a hugely significant amount of public spending that hasn’t been spent properly. But in the overall materiality of the Government’s accounts, we’ve already mentioned this morning of £50 billion, we’re satisfied that the accounts are fairly stated.

Committee member Willie Coffey asked about efforts to recover money which was distributed due to fraud or error.

Audit Scotland audit director Michael Oliphant said between 14% and 30% of business support applications had been rejected, which suggested there was a “good control framework” in place.

Also in Canada, the province of Ontario has blunted transmission of the Omicron coronavirus variant and will gradually relax restrictions on businesses from late January, premier Doug Ford said.

The health care system is starting to stabilise in the wake of limitations imposed on 5 January, Ford told a news conference, saying Omicron cases should peak later this month.

“We can be confident that the worst is behind us and that we are now in a position to cautiously and gradually ease public health measures,” Ford said.

The province will allow restaurants, malls, and cinemas to operate with a 50% capacity limit from 31 January, before removing more curbs in February and March, Reuters reported.

“While February will continue to present its own challenges, given current trends these are challenges we are confident we can manage,” Ford said.

In neighbouring Quebec, premier Francois Legault said he would maintain restrictions to help protect the health care system even though Omicron cases had peaked.

“I understand we are all tired, but lives are at stake. I’m currently under a lot of pressure to remove measures, but my duty is to be responsible to protect the lives of Quebecers,” he told a news conference.

Ontario and Quebec together account for around 61% of Canada’s population of 38.2 million people.

Canadian consumers should soon see higher prices and some empty shelves in supermarkets and other retail outlets because of disruptions stemming from a Covid vaccine mandate for cross-border truckers, top trucking executives warned this week.

The mandate, imposed by Ottawa to help curb the spread of the virus, has cost six Canadian trucking companies about 10% of their international drivers, and many are hiking wages to lure new operators during what they said is the worst labour shortage they have experienced.

Within the next two weeks, consumers will see “there’s not as many choices on the shelves,” said Dan Einwechter, chairman and chief executive officer of Challenger Motor Freight Inc in Cambridge, Ontario.

“Eventually the prices will be passed on from the sellers of those products, because we’re passing on our increases to them,” he said.

Hello. Tom Ambrose here to bring you all the latest Covid news and headlines over the next four hours or so.

Let’s start with the news that it could be a slow return to business across the UK as chilly weather and ongoing fears about the spread of Omicron keep many workers, shoppers and diners at home, despite the change in guidance.

The many workplaces who have told staff to work from home until a review in late January are also unlikely to make a swift change in plan.

See the full story here.

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