Travel restrictions due to omicron variant throw Winnipeggers' plans into chaos
CBC
Restrictions on travelers from several African countries and the arrival of the new omicron coronavirus variant in Canada have upended plans for many Winnipeggers.
"The uncertainty of what will happen is very nerve-wracking for those who have plans to go," said Titi Tijani, president of African Communities of Manitoba, Inc.
Tijani is from Nigeria. On Sunday, the Ontario government announced the first confirmed cases of omicron in Canada had been reported in travelers arriving from Nigeria at the Ottawa airport.
In response to the new variant of the virus that causes COVID-19, Canada banned travel of foreign nationals from seven countries in southern Africa and imposed testing requirements on citizens and permanent residents returning from those countries.
Although Nigeria is not among the seven countries, Tijani said many people are worried about whether they would be able to get home if they went there.
"Some people are going home for very important things like weddings, funerals, that have been planned for December and some people have already bought their tickets," she said.
Tijani planned to go to Nigeria in January, but hadn't yet bought her ticket, she said.
On Friday, Canada imposed restrictions on anyone who has travelled through South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Lesotho, Eswatini or Mozambique in the last 14 days.
Peggy Venter is a Canadian citizen born and raised in South Africa. She's in the country visiting her mom, who she hadn't seen for three years, and was forced to cut her trip short by a week after officials with Global Affairs Canada told her to book the earliest flight back to Canada.
She has a plane ticket for a flight on Monday, but still doesn't know how she will get back to Canada.
Her flight has a transfer at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam before heading to Calgary. On Friday, passengers on a flight from South Africa to Amsterdam weren't allowed to get off the plane for hours after the European Union imposed a travel ban.
"We booked our flights, but Amsterdam can still say, 'We're not going to accept this flight from South Africa,' and then we're stuck there and we have to come back again," Venter said.
"It's scary, but right now we're just hoping for the best, I guess."
The omicron variant has been labelled a variant of concern by the World Health Organization. Researchers are still determining whether omicron is more contagious or virulent than other variants.