First Omicron Case Detected in Gaza
GAZA (Reuters) – The Palestinian health ministry said on Sunday it had identified the first case of the Omicron coronavirus variant in the Gaza Strip.
The carrier is a Gaza resident who was infected within the coastal territory, ministry official Majdi Dhair told a news conference.
Dhair said this meant the variant, first identified in southern Africa and Hong Kong last month, existed in Gaza and was now spreading among the population. The discovery poses a new challenge to the enclave’s under-developed health system.
Dhair told reporters, “We are ahead of difficult days. It is expected that the Omicron variant will spread fast.”
Gaza, with a population of 2.2 million people, has registered 189,837 COVID-19 infections and 1,691 deaths.
Dhair urged Gazans to get vaccinated, putting the percentage of those who had already received shots at around 40 percent.
In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, three cases of Omicron variant had been detected among Palestinians on December 16 and the number had since risen to 23 among the 3.1 million population, Palestinian health authorities said.
In a statement, Kamal al-Shakhra, ministry spokesman, said on Sunday the new infections were reported in the occupied West Bank.
The World Health Organization on Friday warned that the omicron variant was spreading significantly faster than the delta strain.