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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

World enters third year of Covid

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Sydney: The world began ushering in 2022 on Friday after another tumultuous and pandemic-ridden year capped by new restrictions, soaring case numbers, and a slight glimmer of hope for better times ahead.


The past 12 months saw a new US president and a new Adele album, the first spectator-free Olympics, and dreams of democracy from Afghanistan to Myanmar and Hong Kong crushed by authoritarian regimes.


But it was the pandemic — now entering its third year — that again dominated life for most of humankind.


More than 5.4 million people have died since the coronavirus was first reported in central China in December 2019.


Countless more have been sickened — subjected to outbreaks, lockdowns, lock-ins and an alphabet spaghetti of PCR, LFT and RAT tests.


The year 2021 started with hope, as life-saving vaccines were rolled out to around 60 per cent of the world’s population, although many of its poor still have limited access and some of its rich believe the jabs are part of some ill-defined plot.


As the year drew to a close, the emergence of the Omicron variant pushed the number of daily new Covid-19 cases past one million for the first time.


France became the latest country to announce Omicron was now its dominant coronavirus strain on Friday.


In Britain, the United States, and even Australia — long a refuge from the pandemic — the variant’s prominence is driving record new cases.


Parts of the Pacific nation of Kiribati became the first to welcome in the new year from 1000 GMT.


But from Seoul to San Francisco, celebrations have again been cancelled or curtailed as infections rise.


In Sydney, which in normal times bills itself as the “New Year’s Eve capital of the world”, the vast harbour where people gathered to watch the city’s famous fireworks was notably uncrowded.


With tourists still unable to enter the country and many residents fearful of the rapid spread of Omicron, tens of thousands were estimated to have attended, rather than the one million-plus who normally flock to the foreshore.


Still, the city saw New Year’s Eve in with a bang — igniting six tonnes of technicoloured fireworks that lit up the Opera House and floating barges, turning the Harbour Bridge rainbow-like.


In Rio, celebrations on Copacabana Beach will go ahead in a scaled back format — though crowds of revellers are still expected. — AFP


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