Opinion / Christopher Cermak
Trial and error
Two years into the pandemic, it’s striking just how knee-jerk and seemingly unprepared we still appear to be when things change and yet another new variant emerges. It’s also notable how quick we are to start apportioning blame while saving our own skins and battening down the (always leaky) hatches.
Borders are once again being closed, even as we acknowledge that any new variant has breached those borders in the time it took us to identify it, as did every one of its predecessors. This leaves southern Africa suddenly isolated and angry, with good reason. Politics is at play too. The idea that the UK poses any greater danger than Germany flies in the face of reason – both have reported a few cases of the new variant. And yet Switzerland was quick to impose a 10-day quarantine on arrivals from one country and not the other. Remainers might say that the UK had it coming but even Brexit doesn’t justify such contrasting treatment.
And then there’s the finger pointing. Wealthy nations are now being blamed for failing to help vaccinate the developing world. It’s an inequity that is morally distasteful and should be rectified, yes, but let’s not pretend that this would have stopped further mutations when we still continue to have tens of thousands of daily cases across Europe, offering the virus ample opportunity to refashion itself to better breach our defences. Clearly it knows nothing of politics and blame.
Yet we have made progress in one sense. Instead of “the South Africa variant”, as it would have been called a year ago, we have Omicron, which at least stops us from blaming countries directly. Still, if a new naming convention is the best improvement we can come up with in two years, we have an incredibly long way to go before learning to live with coronavirus for good.