EU approves Novovax coronavirus vaccine: COVID live news – Al Jazeera English

The European Union has approved the Novovax vaccine for use, the fifth jab so far,  as nations in the region battle with surge in new cases.

The 27 nation bloc has so far already approved the Pfizer, Moderna, Astrazeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines.

Israel has added the United States to its “no-fly” list, citing concerns over the spread of the new Omicron coronavirus variant.

Acting on health ministry recommendations, Israeli cabinet ministers voted on Monday to put the United States, Italy, Belgium, Germany, Hungary, Morocco, Portugal, Canada, Switzerland and Turkey on the no-fly roster.

In Europe, Germany has ruled out a Christmas lockdown but warned a fifth COVID-19 wave could no longer be stopped amid the spread of Omicron.

Here are the latest updates:

8 mins ago (15:44 GMT)

Double ski world champion Liensberger tests positive for COVID

Austria’s double world ski chCOVID-19 she will not compete at this week’s World Cup meet at Courchevel.

The 24-year-old world champion in parallel giant slalom and slalom joins Swiss star Lara Gut-Behrami in being sidelined due to positive tests.

“As I tested positive for coronavirus I will be unable to ski at Courchevel (two giant slaloms on Tuesday and Wednesday),” she said.

Katharina Liensberger of Austria during a giant slalom training run [File: Erich Schlegel-USA TODAY Sports/Reuters]

31 mins ago (15:22 GMT)

Scotland records over 6000 new cases

Scotland has recorded its highest test positivity rate since January this year, with 6,734 new coronavirus cases counted in the last 24 hours.

In Monday’s figures, the test positivity rate stood at 15.2 per cent, up from 13.9 per cent on Sunday.


59 mins ago (14:53 GMT)

French health regulator approves Pfizer for 5-11 year olds

France’s Haute Autorite de Sante (HAS) health regulator approved the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for all children aged 5-11.

The vaccine, which will be administered in a paediatric formulation when it becomes widely available, showed high efficacy among children, said Lise Alter, one of the doctors charged with the risk evaluation of new drugs.

FILE PHOTO: A medical worker administers a dose of a coronavirus disease vaccine to a child at a vaccination centre in Les Pavillons-sous-Bois, near Paris, France [Sarah Meyssonnier/Reuters]

2 hours ago (14:10 GMT)

‘Not a need for panic’ over Omicron: vaccinologist

Speaking to Al Jazeera from Haifa, vaccinologist Ali Fattom said there was little need to “panic” over the Omicron virus as existing vaccines were showing very good protection even against the new strain.

“The only problem we have is losing some efficacy, but not really the whole thing,” he said.

“There are still some specific specific immunity that covers Omicron, and therefore I think that while you raise the immune response, you are going to get coverage for Omicron. So there is no issue with the with having this panic.”


2 hours ago (13:45 GMT)

Initial booster data shows good results on new variant: Moderna

Moderna says a booster dose of its COVID-19 vaccine should offer protection against the rapidly spreading omicron variant.

The company said lab tests showed the half-dose booster shot increased by 37 times the level of so-called neutralising antibodies able to fight omicron.

And a full-dose booster was even stronger, triggering an 83-fold jump in antibody levels, although with an increase in the usual side effects, the company said.

Despite half-dose shots are being used for most Moderna boosters, a full-dose third shot has been recommended for people with weakened immune systems [File: Rogelio V. Solis/AP Photo]

3 hours ago (13:20 GMT)

EU approves 5th COVID-19 vaccine for bloc, one by Novavax

The European Union’s drugs regulator gave the green light to a fifth COVID-19 vaccine for use in the 27-nation bloc, granting conditional marketing authorization to the two-dose vaccine made by US biotech company Novavax.

The European Medicines Agency decision to grant conditional marketing authorisation for the vaccine for people aged 18 and over, which must be confirmed by the EU’s executive commission, comes as many European nations are battling surges in infections and amid concerns about the spread of the new omicron variant.


4 hours ago (12:00 GMT)

Dubai airport fully operational for first time since pandemic

Dubai airport, one of the world’s busiest travel hubs, is fully operational for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic erupted in March 2020, officials said Monday.

The opening of sections closed as the COVID-19 crisis took hold comes as the United Arab Emirates records a rise of infections amid fears of the new Omicron variant.

“Following the opening of the final phase… (the) airport is 100 percent operational with all terminals, concourses, lounges, restaurants, and retail outlets now open,” said a statement carried by the UAE’s official WAM news agency.

Last year, Dubai International Airport reported a 70 percent drop in traffic, from more than 86 million travellers in 2019 to 25.9 million in 2020.


4 hours ago (11:27 GMT)

S.Korea’s Moon urges more beds for coronavirus patients in a serious state

South Korea’s hospitals must dedicate more beds and resources for the treatment of coronavirus patients, President Moon Jae-in said, as serious infections hovered near record highs.

“Over the past year, we have prepared for an increase in patients by nearly doubling the number of coronavirus treatment beds and expanding home treatment, but it was not enough,” Moon’s spokesperson, Park Kyung-mee, quoted him as saying.

Over the weekend, the occupancy rate of beds in intensive care for COVID-19 patients stood at nearly 88 percent in Seoul, and more than 79 percent for the country as a whole, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said.

That figure is above the threshold of 75 percent that health authorities had said would trigger emergency measures.


5 hours ago (11:00 GMT)

Spanish Tennis Madrid OpenRafael Nadal of Spain celebrates a point during the Madrid Open tennis match against Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland in Madrid, Spain, Friday, May 10, 2019. [File: Bernat Armangue/AP Photo]

Tennis player Nadal tests positive for COVID-19 after Abu Dhabi event

Rafa Nadal has tested positive for COVID-19 upon arrival in Spain after making his comeback from injury in an exhibition event in Abu Dhabi last week, the Spaniard said.

“I am having some unpleasant moments but I hope that I will improve little by little. I am now homebound and have reported the result to those who have been in contact with me,” Nadal said in a statement.


5 hours ago (10:46 GMT)

Ireland does not expect to impose additional COVID restrictions: deputy PM

The Irish government does not expect to have to impose stricter COVID-19 restrictions in the coming weeks, deputy prime minister Leo Varadkar said, days after the government ordered bars and restaurants to close at 8pm.

“If we have to, we will do whatever is necessary … but we don’t anticipate that will be necessary,” Varadkar told Irish broadcaster RTE.

He said he was “hoping and expecting” that expected high infection rates from the Omicron variant of the coronavirus would not translate into hospitalisations to the same extent as previous waves.


6 hours ago (10:21 GMT)

UK’s Omicron deaths rise to 12, no guarantees on Christmas restrictions

Twelve people in Britain have died with the Omicron variant of the coronavirus, with another 104 people hospitalized, Britain’s Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab said.

Asked whether the government would impose further restrictions before Christmas, Raab told Times Radio: “I just can’t make hard and fast guarantees.”

“In assessing the situation we rely very heavily on the real data coming through and it will take a little bit more time to assess this critical issue of the severity of Omicron,” he said.

People walk across Westminster Bridge, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in London, Britain, December 15, 2021. [Henry Nicholls/Reuters]

6 hours ago (09:52 GMT)

Coronavirus cluster linked to US base in Japan grows to at least 180

A cluster of coronavirus infections linked to a US military base in Japan has grown to at least 180, Japan’s government said, raising fears over the spread of the virus in the community.

A Japanese worker at Camp Hansen on the southern island of Okinawa was found positive with the Omicron variant last Friday, Japanese officials said.

The cluster linked to the base now had 180 cases, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told a regular news conference, though it was not clear how many were of the highly contagious Omicron variant.

“The Japanese government is urging again the US side to ensure all workers at the US military bases in Japan abide by the instructions and take strong measures if there are any violations,” Matsuno said.


6 hours ago (09:34 GMT)

Ramaphosa back at work after COVID-19: presidency

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa wears a face mask as he looks on during a visit with Ivory Coast’s Prime Minister Patrick Achi at the port in Abidjan, Ivory Coast December 3, 2021. [Luc Gnago/Reuters]

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has returned to work after finishing a week of self-isolation due to testing positive for COVID-19, his office said.

Ramaphosa, who was given Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine in February, tested positive for COVID-19 on December 12 and received treatment for mild symptoms.

“The President has returned to duty and will chair the final cabinet meeting for 2021 on Wednesday,” the presidency said in a statement.


7 hours ago (08:31 GMT)

Thai agency approves Pfizer vaccine for use in children aged 5-11

Thailand’s Food and Drug Administration said it has approved the use of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children between the age of five and 11.

The Comirnaty vaccine, which is the first to be approved in Thailand for that age group, will be given in two 10 microgram doses, 21 days apart, the drug regulator said in a statement.


8 hours ago (08:13 GMT)

Israel to ban travel to US, Canada over Omicron variant

Israeli ministers agreed to ban travel to the United States, Canada and eight other countries amid the rapid, global spread of the Omicron variant.

The rare move to red-list the US comes amid rising coronavirus infections in Israel and marks a change to pandemic practices between the two nations with close diplomatic relations. The US will join a growing list of European countries and other destinations to which Israelis are barred from travelling, and from which returning travellers must remain in quarantine.

A parliamentary committee is expected to give the measure final approval. Once authorised, the travel ban will take effect at midnight on Wednesday morning.

Israel on Sunday approved barring entry to foreign nationals and the use of controversial technology for contact tracing as part of its efforts to clamp down on a new coronavirus variant [Ariel Schalit/AP Photo]

9 hours ago (07:19 GMT)

Germany tightens restrictions on UK travellers

Travellers from the United Kingdom entering Germany must have a negative test and quarantine for two weeks, regardless of whether they have been vaccinated.

The Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases (RKI) – a federal health agency – announced the new rules as it classified the UK as a virus variant area of concern, the highest COVID-19 risk level.

German nationals and residents will still be allowed to enter from the UK.


9 hours ago (06:48 GMT)

EU drug regulator to decide on Novavax vaccine

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) said its human medicines committee would hold an extraordinary meeting to decide on whether to approve a COVID jab by Novavax, and “will communicate the outcome”.

Novavax’s jab, a protein-based vaccine of the kind used around the world to protect against many childhood illnesses, would be the fifth coronavirus shot authorised for the European Union.

Novavax says its vaccine showed 90.4 percent efficacy against COVID-19 in a North American trial.

Chief Executive Stanley Erck said the firm “looks forward to providing an additional vaccine option in Europe, built on a proven, well-understood technology platform”.


9 hours ago (06:45 GMT)

Sydney resists calls to restore tough curbs

Despite the threat from the more transmissible Omicron variant, life returned to near normal in Sydney last week, with almost all tough curbs lifted ahead of Christmas, as vaccination rates rank among the world’s highest.

“There will always be new variants of this virus,” said Dominic Perrottet, the premier of the most populous state of New South Wales.

“The pandemic is not going away and we need to learn to live alongside it,” he told reporters. “We need to also move away from fear and move to hope and confidence.”


9 hours ago (06:44 GMT)

Thailand reports first local Omicron case

Thailand is considering reinstating mandatory quarantine for foreign visitors due to concerns over the spread of Omicron, as the health ministry reported the country’s first case of local transmission of the coronavirus variant.

The Public Health Ministry will propose scrapping a quarantine waiver for vaccinated visitors and revert to hotel quarantine and a “sandbox” programme, which allows free movement in specific locations, its minister Anutin Charnvirakul said.

The proposal was driven by worries over the spread of Omicron, Anutin told the Inside Thailand television show, adding it will be made to the government’s COVID-19 taskforce “soon”.

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