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Several Chinese cities are on high COVID alert as hundreds of millions of people travel around China ahead of the Lunar New Year celebration on February 1.
Many local governments advised residents not to travel unnecessarily during the holiday, just weeks before Beijing is set to host the Winter Olympic Games.
Governments around the world are also enforcing stricter measures to contain the spread of the highly contagious Omicron variant.
In the Philippines, unvaccinated commuters have been banned from accessing public transport, despite opposition.
Here are Monday’s updates:
Australian Open kicks off without men’s world number one
The Grand Slam season at the Australian Open kicked off without the men’s world number one and defending champion, Novak Djokovic, following the cancellation of his visa by Australian authorities on the basis of COVID vaccination requirements.
Around 50 people gathered for a peaceful rally outside the Melbourne Park complex in the shadows of Rod Laver Arena, protesting Djokovic’s deportation.
An Emirates plane carrying the tennis star from Australia landed in Dubai early on Monday. Djokovic was later seen on board a plane due to land in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, at 12:10 CET.
Read more here.
Malaysian Hindus mark festival under strict COVID curbs
Malaysian Hindus have begun marking the annual Thaipusam festival, which officially falls on Tuesday, with scaled back celebrations due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The sizeable minority celebrated its devotion to the deity Lord Murugan by heading to the Batu Caves temple complex, outside the capital Kuala Lumpur, and walking barefoot up 272 multi-coloured steps carrying offerings such as milk pots.
Celebrations were muted compared to the years prior to the pandemic, with officials limiting the number of attendees to a few thousands to reduce the health risk.
India’s main cities record sharp fall in infections
India’s capital Delhi and financial hub Mumbai have reported a big fall in COVID infections in the past two days, authorities have said.
Delhi and is expected to record fewer than 15,000 cases on Monday, for the first time since early January. In Mumbai, daily new infections fell below 10,000 on Sunday for the first time since early this month.
Both cities recorded low hospitalisation rates, with over 80 percent of COVID hospital beds remaining unoccupied since the fast-transmitting Omicron variant led to a massive surge in cases at the start of the year.
Nepal starts giving boosters
Nepal has begun giving COVID vaccine booster shots as daily cases jumped by 4,961 on Sunday, the biggest 24-hour increase in more than six months.
“The booster shots will be given to those people who have completed six months after getting a second vaccine dose,” the government said in a statement.
Nepal has double-vaccinated 39.9 percent of its 30 million people, in a campaign that began early last year.
The government has also banned large public gatherings and closed schools and colleges until the end of January to curb the rate of infection.
Vaccine mandate for Manila commuters
People who are not fully vaccinated against COVID have been banned from riding public transport in the Philippine capital – a move that sparked protests from labour and human rights groups.
The Department of Transportation’s “no vax, no ride” policy, which will last at least to the end of January, is an offshoot of President Rodrigo Duterte’s warning that unvaccinated Filipinos who defy orders to stay at home to ease community infections could face arrest.
The Philippines’ vaccination campaign has been dogged by public hesitancy and delays, while the Omicron variant has fuelled a recent spike in infections.
Japan to expedite boosters to tackle Omicron
Japan will bring forward COVID vaccination booster shots by two months, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has announced in Parliament, as infections soared nationwide.
Containing the pandemic is critical for Kishida, whose predecessor Yoshihide Suga stepped down last year after voter support crumbled as COVID surged.
Japan’s government is also discussing whether to impose a quasi-state of emergency in the capital, Tokyo, and surrounding areas.
China on high alert ahead of Lunar New Year
Several Chinese cities are on high COVID alert as hundreds of millions of people travel ahead of the Lunar New Year celebration on February 1.
At least five provinces and municipalities reported local Omicron infections, while 14 provincial areas found the variant among travellers from overseas.
Beijing’s first reported case of Omicron prompted stepped-up measures in the capital, just weeks before it hosts the Winter Olympics.
The number of cases in China reached the highest since March 2020 on Monday, despite a strict “zero COVID” policy that includes city lockdowns and travel curbs.