Surge in COVID cases worldwide makes for another low-key Christmas

Doctors and nurses share a Christmas Eve meal together in the COVID-19 intensive care unit at la Timone hospital in Marseille
Doctors and nurses share a Christmas Eve meal together in the COVID-19 intensive care unit at la Timone hospital in Marseille Copyright AP Photo/Daniel Cole
Copyright AP Photo/Daniel Cole
By AP
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A record number of cases, hospitalisations, and travel restrictions around the world have put a damper on Christmas celebrations for the second year in a row.

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Most Christians around the world celebrated their second COVID-19 Christmas as surging infections in many countries overwhelmed hospitals, cancelled flights and curbed religious observances on Saturday.

While some countries in Asia imposed restrictions to try to contain the highly contagious Omicron variant, governments in Europe and elsewhere preached common sense despite reporting record daily cases this week, advising their citizens to use masks and voluntarily limit the size of holiday gatherings.

The head of intensive care at a hospital in Marseille, France, said most of the COVID-19 patients are unvaccinated, while his staff members are exhausted or can't work because they are infected.

“We’re sick of this,” Dr Julien Carvelli, the ICU chief at Marseille's La Timone Hospital, as his team spent another Christmas Eve tending to COVID-19 patients on breathing machines. “We’re afraid we won’t have enough space.”

Thousands of people across England got a vaccine booster shot for Christmas as new cases in Britain hit another daily record of 122,186.

Dr Emily Lawson, the head of the National Health Service’s vaccination program, thanked volunteers for being on hand for the holiday.

Pope Francis used his Christmas address to pray for some of those vaccines to reach the poorest countries.

While wealthy countries have inoculated as much as 90 per cent of their adult populations, 8.9 per cent of Africa's people are fully jabbed, making it the world’s least-vaccinated continent.

“Grant health to the infirm and inspire all men and women of good will to seek the best ways possible to overcome the current health crisis and its effects,” Francis said from the loggia of St. Peter’s Basilica.

“Open hearts to ensure that necessary medical care – and vaccines in particular – are provided to those peoples who need them most.”

Ng Han Guan/Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
A child wearing a mask carries her skates past Christmas decorations at a mall in Beijing, ChinaNg Han Guan/Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

At a reception centre for asylum-seekers on the Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus, Patricia Etoh, a Catholic from Cameroon, said she did not have any special plans because it just did not feel like Christmas without her 6-year-old child, who she had to leave behind.

But she added, “we’re grateful, we’re alive, and when we’re alive, there’s hope.”

On the other side of the globe, hundreds of thousands of people in the Philippines, Asia’s largest Roman Catholic nation, spent Christmas without homes, electricity, or adequate food and water after a powerful typhoon left at least 375 people dead last week and devastated mostly central island provinces.

Governor Arthur Yap of hard-hit Bohol province, where more than 100 people died in the typhoon and about 150,000 houses were damaged or destroyed, asked foreign aid agencies to help provide temporary shelters and water-filtration systems to supplement Philippine government aid.

“There is overwhelming fear. There are no gifts, there were no Christmas Eve dinners. There is none of that today,” Yap said.

Yap stated he was happy that many Filipinos could celebrate Christmas more safely after COVID-19 cases dropped, but he pleaded, “please don’t forget us.”

In South Korea, social distancing rules required churches to limit worshippers to 70 per cent of seating capacity, and service attendees had to be fully vaccinated.

South Korea has been grappling with soaring infections and deaths since it significantly eased its virus curbs in early November as part of efforts to return to pre-pandemic normalcy.

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The country was eventually forced to restore its toughest distancing guidelines, including a four-person limit on social gatherings and a 9 pm curfew for restaurants and cafes.

Australia also had a Christmas with a surge of COVID-19 cases – its worst of the pandemic – which forced states to reinstate mask mandates and other measures.

Sunday Alamba/Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
Parishioners wearing face masks to protect against COVID-19, attend a morning Christmas Mass at Holy Cross Cathedral in Lagos, NigeriaSunday Alamba/Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Christmas celebrations were subdued in much of India, with more decorations than crowds.

Authorities reintroduced night-time curfews and restrictions on gatherings of more than five people in big cities like New Delhi and Mumbai. People attended midnight Mass in Mumbai and elsewhere, but in smaller numbers.

As the pandemic spread around the world the past two years, New Zealand used its isolation to its advantage.

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Border controls kept the worst of the virus at bay. By this Christmas, New Zealand had recorded 50 deaths in a population of 5.5 million.

New Zealanders enjoyed the holiday in the warmth of mid-summer with few restrictions.

Their country has one of the world’s most vaccinated populations, with 95 per cent of adults having had at least one dose. The country also is one of the few largely untouched by omicron.

But that success has come at a cost.

There were empty chairs at some family tables this holiday season because some New Zealanders living and working overseas were not able to return home due to isolation and quarantine requirements.

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On Fiji, many in the deeply religious nation will celebrate Christmas at traditional church services and family gatherings.

The Pacific island has an ongoing outbreak and a pandemic death toll of almost 700, but 92 per cent of the adult population is fully vaccinated.

Health Secretary James Fong, in a Christmas message, urged Fijians to “please celebrate wisely”.

In remote Macuata province, residents of four villages received a special Christmas gift – electricity was connected to their villages for the first time.

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