Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

New COVID-19 variant sparks border concerns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2021 10:54 AM
  • New COVID-19 variant sparks border concerns

TTAWA - Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole has called for the government to immediately strengthen border screening in the face of a highly mutated new variant of COVID-19.

The World Health Organization will meet Friday to discuss variant B.1.1.529, which originated in South Africa.

Several nations around the world have already moved to stop air travel from southern Africa.

O'Toole has called on the Canadian government to issue travel advisories, banning non-essential travel to and from South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Lesotho and Eswatini.

The Conservatives also want to see mandatory screening at all international airports from affected counties, regardless of vaccination status and mandatory quarantine for all travellers from those countries.

The party was critical when the government delayed closing Canada's borders at the outset of the pandemic in 2020, and O'Toole said the government should not delay now.

"With reports of the spread of a new COVID-19 variant, we have a small window of opportunity to act, and we must move now," O'Toole said in a statement Friday morning.

Alberta and Ontario's premiers have also called for all travellers originating from those countries to be banned from Canada until more is known about the variant.

There are no direct flights from South Africa to Canada.

Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos and Transportation Minister Omar Alghabra are expectedto hold a news conference with Canada's chief public health officer Friday afternoon to discuss the new variant.

"We are currently in discussions in monitoring what’s happening and discussions about what measures we can implement," Alghabra told reporters Friday.

Canada currently requires a negative molecular COVID-19 test to enter the country, even for fully vaccinated travellers. As of Tuesday, all travellers will need to have two doses of a WHO-approved vaccine to travel to or within Canada.

Not much is known about the new variant, according to the WHO's COVID-19 technical lead Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove.

"Researchers are getting together to understand where these mutations are, and what that potentially may mean for our diagnostics or therapeutics in our vaccines," she said at a briefing Thursday.

The WHO's team will discern whether the variant should be considered a threat, and therefore a variant of concern.

In question period Friday, Conservative MPs asked government ministers repeatedly about the plan to protect Canadians from a potentially dangerous new variant.

"We’ll not hesitate to take action to protect Canadians," said Associate Minister of Health Carolyn Bennett.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Coroner Calls Inquest Into Suicide Of Indigenous Teen Near Group Home

Ontario Coroner Calls Inquest Into Suicide Of Indigenous Teen Near Group Home
A provincial coroner has announced an inquiry into the death of an Indigenous teen who killed himself near his southern Ontario group home and went undiscovered for seven months.

Ontario Coroner Calls Inquest Into Suicide Of Indigenous Teen Near Group Home

Federal Minister, B.C. Premier Try For Meetings With Chiefs Over Blockades

The federal and British Columbia governments are working to arrange meetings with Indigenous leaders in an effort to halt blockades of rail lines that have choked Canada's economy.

Federal Minister, B.C. Premier Try For Meetings With Chiefs Over Blockades

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told
A former member of an ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jewish group north of Montreal has told a courtroom that he graduated from an unlicensed religious school without ever hearing the words "science" or "geography."

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

Canada's economy slowed "sharply" in the final quarter of 2019, the parliamentary budget office said Thursday in its February economic and fiscal report.

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement
The Supreme Court of Canada will revisit the decisions of courts in British Columbia and Ontario that said the federal law allowing prolonged solitary confinement in prison was unconstitutional.

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan

The New Democrats are asking the provinces to support their promised universal pharmacare legislation, hoping to win premiers over by calling on Ottawa to increase federal health transfers.

Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan