Iran detects first case of omicron variant

Iranian officials urged people who got two doses of vaccine to get their third dose as soon as possible. (Reuters)
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Updated 20 December 2021
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Iran detects first case of omicron variant

  • The announcement comes as the variant spreads around the globe less than a month after scientists alerted the World Health Organization to the concerning-looking version

TEHRAN: Iran has detected its first case of infection by the new omicron variant of the coronavirus, state TV reported Sunday.

The announcement comes as the variant spreads around the globe less than a month after scientists alerted the World Health Organization to the concerning-looking version. Iran has vaccinated some 60 percent of its population of roughly 85 million people with two doses of coronavirus vaccines.

The coronavirus has killed more than 131,000 people in Iran, the worst fatality rate in the Middle East. On Aug. 24 alone, 709 people died of the illness. The number of deaths has decreased in recent months due to the vaccination, experts say.

Iran accelerated vaccinations in recent weeks. More than 50 million Iranians have received their second shots, and 3.5 million have received the third shots.

Only 7 million Iranians had received vaccinations when President Ebrahin Raisi formed his administration in late August.

Iran generally uses the China-made Sinopharm vaccine, though the Russian Sputnik-V and the vaccine made by the British-Swedish pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca are also in use.

Iranian officials urged people who got two doses of vaccine to get their third dose as soon as possible.


Somali UN envoy slams Israeli recognition of Somaliland, rejects Palestinian displacement

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Somali UN envoy slams Israeli recognition of Somaliland, rejects Palestinian displacement

  • Abukar Dahir Osman: Such measures would infringe Somalia’s sovereignty, unity, territorial integrity
  • World ‘must stand together against any attempt to alter the demographic composition of the Palestinian territories’

NEW YORK: Somalia has strongly condemned Israel’s recognition of its northwestern region of Somaliland as independent, as well as alleged plans to forcibly transfer Palestinians to Somali territory.

Addressing the UN Security Council, Somali Ambassador Abukar Dahir Osman said such measures would blatantly infringe his country’s sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity, and risk entangling the Horn of Africa in the destabilizing dynamics of the Middle East conflict.

He warned that any effort to impose such political realities on the African continent would undermine core principles of international law and set a dangerous precedent.

Osman also categorically rejected any proposals for the forced displacement of Palestinians, whether within or beyond their territories, calling such actions a grave violation of international law amounting to ethnic cleansing.

“The international community must stand together against any attempt to alter the demographic composition of the Palestinian territories by force or coercion,” he said, adding that humanitarian operations in Gaza under the fragile ceasefire are under severe strain, underscoring the need for sustained international support and respect for international law.