Omicron and Vaccines: What You Should Know

Omicron is unlikely to have completely outsmarted the vaccines, experts say, even with its unusual array of mutations.

There are a lot of unknowns, but they expect that the shots will still do what they do best: Keep people out of the hospital and out of the grave.

Omicron raised alarms when it was first identified during a sharp spike in cases in South Africa. The World Health Organization added it to its list of variants of concern last week.

The virus contains dozens of mutations, including several that are thought to make it more infectious and others that appear to help it evade the immune system.

“But I think it’s still very possible that vaccines will hold up against severe disease, even with those mutations,” said Dr. Carlos del Rio, a professor of medicine at Emory University and president-elect of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

That’s what has happened with every variant so far. With delta, he noted, “breakthrough” infections among vaccinated people have increased, but those cases are mostly mild.

Omicron seems to be better able than other variants to infect people who have already had COVID-19, according to early data from South Africa. But people with reinfections generally have not been seriously ill.

Experts are recommending boosters for people who can get them. U.S. officials have authorized them for everyone age 18 and older.

Open questions

Researchers will have more questions than answers about omicron for the next few weeks while they study the variant. They don’t yet know for sure how the virus stacks up against other variants in terms of how easily it infects or how sick it makes its victims.

Hospitalizations have increased in South Africa during the omicron surge, but it’s not clear if that’s because the virus causes more severe infections or because more people are getting infected. Most of the country is not vaccinated.

Scientists need to figure out whether the rise in infections is “vaccine failure or failure to vaccinate,” said Dr. Walter Orenstein, associate director of the Emory University Vaccine Center.

“If it’s vaccine failure, is it a problem of time since the last dose and waning immunity?” Orenstein said.

Though it does not yet seem to be necessary, some companies are working on modifying their vaccines to better protect against the new variant.

Moderna and the Pfizer-BioNTech partners say they can have a new vaccine ready in about three months. Johnson & Johnson says it is working on a new version but did not give a timeline. Oxford University told Reuters news agency that the vaccine it produces with AstraZeneca is still highly effective but that it can quickly update it if necessary.

Many companies have started developing modified vaccines against previous variants, but none has gone to regulators for approval.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration says it will not require drugmakers seeking approval for their updated vaccines to go through a process as lengthy as the one for the original versions. Much like with the annual flu vaccine, a few tests for safety and immune response will do.

Source: Voice of America

UJOSS trains journalists in human rights reporting

The Union of Journalists of South Sudan (UJOSS), with Support from UNMISS’ human rights division, on Wednesday, concluded a two-day training for 30 journalists from various Juba-based media houses in ethics and human rights reporting.

Speaking during the closing of the workshop yesterday, UJOSS President Patrick Oyet Charles said the training will enable journalists to update their skills in reporting human rights issues.

“Things change, laws change and situations change and therefore you need to always update yourselves,” Oyet advised. “As journalists, the biggest tool that we have is to build our capacity to always get better.”

The UJOSS preside also urged the partners to help the union with more funds to roll out similar pieces of training across the country.

“We also urge our partners to grant us more support so that we can move across the country as our colleagues in the states are asking us to reach out to them and do similar training,” Oyet appealed. “We are ready to do so and we hope before the year ends, we will visit at least two to three states to take capacity building to them.”

The Media Authority Director-General, Sapana Abuyi, thanked UJOSS for organizing the training and advised the journalists to always upgrade their skills.

“I thank UJOSS for organizing this important workshop and my advice to all journalists is to always attend such media training workshops because media is a profession that has a lot in it,” Abuyi said. “You must make sure that you keep your profession updated with the information that is there and you must always build your capacity.”

For his part, Denis Chenwi, UNMISS’ human rights officer, pledged that they will continue to partner with the UJOSS to develop the capacity of journalists.

“UNMISS believes this two-day training on ethics and human rights reporting has provided UJOSS the platform to equip journalists with the knowledge, skills, and networking opportunities to ensure greater professionalism and accuracy in human rights reporting while carrying out their duties,” Chenwi said.

He said the UNMISS human rights division and the office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights will continue to provide technical assistance and capacity-building support to UJOSS and its members.

“We are looking forward to organizing similar capacity-building activities both in Juba and in the States,” he added.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Families of Pieri plane crash victims welcome court decision to hear case

The families of the 10 passengers who perished in a plane crash at the Pieri Airstrip in Uror County of Jonglei State in March on Wednesday welcomed a ruling by the High Court in Juba to continue hearing their case against the ill-fated plane’s owner, Ayi Duang Ayi.

On March 2, a small aircraft (HK 4274) belonging to a local company, South Supreme Airline, crashed shortly after takeoff from an airstrip in Pieri town, killing all the 10 people on board.

James Lado Jada, the High Court judge presiding over the case on Wednesday ruled that the court decided to continue with legal proceedings and hear the case and that the parties can appeal.

“As the court, we decided to halt this legal argument and to continue the legal proceedings” Judge Lado ruled. “The court shall call for a sitting to formulate the dispute and hear the prosecution case. You as the parties have the right to appeal the court’s decision.”

The representatives of the victims’ families told Radio Tamazuj that they applauded the court for rejecting the demand by the defendants that the case is postponed until the investigations into the crash are completed and made public.

“Sending the black box to Peru has nothing to do with us as the families. We demand that we be compensated 170, 000 USD for each of the victims as is required internationally for any plane crash victim,” Makuei Puok, a relative to two of the crash victims said.

Another complainant, John Kel, who lost his wife in the crash said the airline was not genuine about the plane crash investigation.

“We have waited since March without compensation,” Kel said. “The airline company’s demand for the black box investigation is not genuine. So we are happy with the court decision.”

The court scheduled the first hearing of the case for 13 December.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Kiir names brother-in-law deputy spy chief

President Salva Kiir in a raft of decrees read last night on the state broadcaster, South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation (SSBC), named his brother-in-law, Major General Gregory Deng Kuac, as the new Deputy Director-General of the General Intelligence Bureau of the National Security Service (NSS).

“In exercise of powers conferred upon me under section 17/1 of the NSS Act 2014, I Salva Kiir Mayardit, president of the Republic of South Sudan and Supreme commander of all the regular forces do hereby issue this republican decree for the appointment of Maj. Gen. Gregory Deng Kuac as Deputy Director-General of the General Intelligence Bureau, NSS with effect from 1 December 2021,” the decree read in part.

Another presidential decree transferred Gen. Deng from the army, the SSPDF to the NSS.

Gen. Deng, famously known as Gregory Vasili, briefly served as the governor of the now-defunct Gogrial State from January to September 2017 and was in the past involved in land disputes in Juba some of which ended in court.

In a separate decree, President Kiir appointed SPLM-IO’s Gen. Martin Abucha Gama the minister of mining, replacing Henry Odwar who resigned the position in August.

Gen. Abucha has been serving as the executive director in the office of First Vice President Dr. Machar and representing the SPLA-IO in the Ceasefire Transitional Security Arrangement Monitoring and Verification Mechanism (CTSAMVM).

The president also elevated two diplomats, Dr. James Solomon Padiet and Aker Deng Majok, to Grade 3 ambassadors.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Marches of the Millions: Sudan doctors count 98 injured from tear gas and stun grenades

International representatives have condemned the ongoing use of unjustified force against peaceful demonstrators as wells as human rights violations, as the Central Committee of Sudan Doctors reported 98 cases of injuries, during the Marches of the Millions on Tuesday, when tens of thousands of people took to the streets in Khartoum, as well as other cities across Sudan on Tuesday to express their rejection of the military coup d’état of October 25, and the subsequent political agreement, signed by coup leader Gen Abdelfattah El Burhan and Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok.

In its field report yesterday, the committee said that 18 of the cases were hit by tear gas canisters in the head, face, and chest. The report indicated that one case of back injury was caused by a tear gas canister, which resulted in a fracture of the fifth vertebra. The report monitored 49 cases of injuries to the extremities of the body with tear gas canisters, and one case of multiple injuries to the body as a result of being hit with batons. The report also recorded 22 cases of breathing difficulties from tear gas.

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights to Freedom of Peaceful Assembly, Clément Nyaletsossi Voule, expressed his concern over the continued use of unjustified force against peaceful demonstrators demanding full civilian rule.

He said that he has received reports of serious injuries from stun grenades and tear gas canisters on Tuesday. He demanded that justice be guaranteed, and “an end to these illegal measures to suppress the protests”.

The Deputy Head of Mission at Delegation of the European Union to Sudan, Dániel Weiss, expressed his condemnation of human rights violations and violations of international humanitarian law, referring to a video clip circulated widely on social media showing the police forces storming a hospital, arresting one of the injured from inside the hospital and preventing him from receiving treatment.

The police press office said that police Lt Gen Anan Hamed Mohamed Omar, director general of the police forces, visited the policemen who were injured during Tuesday’s unrest at the Rabat University Hospital in Burri in Khartoum, without specifying the number of injured and their conditions.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Renewed Sudan-Ethiopia border clashes

Renewed border clashes between Sudanese army troops and Ethiopian forces in El Fashaga, east of the Atbara River, in El Gedaref continued on Wednesday. Sources indicate that the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) aims to regain control of the Shai Beit camp in El Fashaga El Soghra. It is reported that Shai Beit is among the last three Ethiopian camps in Sudan that the army is seeking to restore.

At least 20 members of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) have already died in clashes with Ethiopian forces and militiamen, who ambushed them in the border area of El Fashaga El Soghra in El Gedaref, the SAF said in a statement on Sunday. The SAF also asserts that it inflicted “heavy losses of life” on Ethiopian troops and militiamen who attacked them.

On Monday, the Chairman of the Sovereignty Council, Commander-in-Chief of the Sudan Armed Forces, Lt Gen Abdelfattah El Burhan, visited the forces stationed in the Barakat Noreen area, in the border town El Fashaga in El Gedaref. He renewed his assurances that “El Fashaga is Sudanese land” and pledged “not to concede one inch of Sudanese territory”.

Refugees

Sudan’s Refugee Commission announced that 8,828 Ethiopian refugees from Tigray had registered fingerprints in the reception centres in Hamdayet and Medina 8 by Tuesday, while the total number of Ethiopians from Tigray relocated to the permanent camps in Um Rakouba and El Tuneidibba rose to 42,880.

Over the past days, operations began to transport 668 of the 2,390 Ethiopian refugees who recently arrived from war-torn Tigray to the Basunda border area in El Gedaref, to the new Babakri camp in the state.

The authorities reported that 1,409 other refugees now present in other border areas will also be relocated to the Babakri camp in the next few days.

Source: Radio Dabanga