What Is ‘Eris’, the New COVID Variant? 

People sit at a community vaccination center , ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. (Reuters)
People sit at a community vaccination center , ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. (Reuters)
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What Is ‘Eris’, the New COVID Variant? 

People sit at a community vaccination center , ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. (Reuters)
People sit at a community vaccination center , ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. (Reuters)

COVID infections and hospitalizations are on the rise in the US, Europe and Asia. Health officials are pointing at the EG.5 "Eris" coronavirus, a subvariant of the Omicron lineage that originally emerged November of 2021.

What is the new ‘Eris’ variant?

The World Health Organization (WHO) classified EG.5, which has been nicknamed by some as "Eris", as a "variant of interest," indicating that it should be more closely watched than others because of mutations that might make it more contagious or severe.

Still, the WHO said at this time it does not seem to pose more of a threat to public health than other variants and that there "is no evidence of an increase in disease severity directly associated with EG.5."

How fast is ‘Eris’ spreading?

EG.5 had been found in more than 50 countries as of August 8, according to the WHO. It is the most common and fastest growing COVID-19 subvariant in the US, estimated to be responsible for around 17% of current COVID cases, according to the CDC.

COVID-19 related hospitalizations are up more than 40% off of recent lows hit in June, but are still more than 90% below peak levels hit during the January 2022 Omicron outbreak, according to CDC data.

The amount of virus identified in wastewater around the country and the number of weekly prescriptions for COVID treatment Paxlovid have all risen significantly over the past month, albeit from low levels.

When will the new booster be available?

Pfizer/BioNTech SE, Moderna and Novavax have all created new versions of their vaccines updated to target another Omicron sublineage - XBB.1.5 - to more closely resemble the various circulating strains of the virus.

EG.5 is similar to XBB.1.5 although the newer subvariant carries one mutation to its spike protein, the part of the virus targeted by the vaccine.

XBB.1.5 emerged in late 2022 and was still responsible for more than 10% of infections as of August 5, per CDC estimates. CDC Director Dr. Mandy Cohen said in a recent interview that she expects the new vaccines to be widely available in the US by the third or fourth week in September.

Cohen did not address the Eris variant specifically, but said "right now what we're seeing with the changes in the viruses, they're still susceptible to our vaccine, they're still susceptible to our medicines, they're still picked up by the tests. So all of our tools still work as the virus changes."



Tunisia Plastic Collectors Spread as Economic, Migration Woes Deepen

It's common to see people in Tunis weighed down by bags of plastic bottles along the roadside. FETHI BELAID / AFP
It's common to see people in Tunis weighed down by bags of plastic bottles along the roadside. FETHI BELAID / AFP
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Tunisia Plastic Collectors Spread as Economic, Migration Woes Deepen

It's common to see people in Tunis weighed down by bags of plastic bottles along the roadside. FETHI BELAID / AFP
It's common to see people in Tunis weighed down by bags of plastic bottles along the roadside. FETHI BELAID / AFP

A towel draped over his head, Hamza Jabbari sets bags of plastic bottles onto a scale. He is among Tunisia's "barbechas", informal plastic recyclers whose increasing numbers reflect the country's economic -- and migratory -- woes.

The 40-something-year-old said he starts the day off at dawn, hunching over bins and hunting for plastic before the rubbish trucks and other plastic collectors come.

"It's the most accessible work in Tunisia when there are no job offers," Jabbari said, weighing a day's haul in Bhar Lazreg, a working-class neighborhood north of the capital, Tunis.

The work is often grueling, with a kilogram of plastic bottles worth only 0.5 to 0.7 Tunisian dinar -- less than $0.25, AFP said.

In Tunis, it's common to see women weighed down by bags of plastic bottles along the roadside, or men weaving through traffic with towering loads strapped to their motorcycles.

"Everyone does it," said Jabbari.

'Supplementary job'

Hamza Chaouch, head of the National Chamber of Recyclable Waste Collectors, estimated that there were roughly 25,000 plastic collectors across Tunisia, with 40 percent of them in the capital.

Yet, with the job an informal one, there is no official count of how many plastic collectors operate in Tunisia.

One thing is certain: their number has increased in recent years, said Chaouch, who also runs a plastic collection center south of Tunis.

"It's because of the cost of living," he explained.

"At first, it was people with no income, but for the past two years, workers, retirees and cleaning women have also turned to this work as a supplementary job."

Around 16 percent of Tunisians lived under the poverty line as of 2021, the latest available official figures.

Unemployment currently hovers around 16 percent, with inflation at 5.4 percent.

The ranks of these recyclers have also grown with the arrival of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa -- often hoping to reach Europe but caught in limbo with both the EU and Tunis cracking down on Mediterranean crossings.

Tunisia is a key transit country for thousands of sub-Saharan migrants seeking to reach Europe by sea each year, with the Italian island of Lampedusa only 150 kilometers (90 miles) away.

Abdelkoudouss, a 24-year-old from Guinea, said he began collecting plastic to make ends meet but also to save up enough money to return home after failing two crossing attempts to Europe.

For the past two months, he has worked at a car wash, he said, but the low pay forced him to start recycling on the side.

"Life here is not easy," said Abdelkoudouss, adding he came to the capital after receiving "a lot of threats" amid tension between migrants and locals in Sfax, a coastal city in central Tunisia.

'Just trying to survive'

Thousands of migrants had set up camp on the outskirts of Sfax, before authorities began dismantling the makeshift neighborhoods this year.

Tensions flared in early 2023 when President Kais Saied said "hordes of sub-Saharan migrants" were threatening the country's demographic composition.

Saied's statement was widely circulated online and unleashed a wave of hostility that many migrants feel still lingers.

"There's a strong rivalry in this work," said Jabbari, glancing at a group of sub-Saharan African migrants nearby.

"These people have made life even more difficult for us. I can't collect enough plastic because of them."

Chaouch, the collection center manager, was even more blunt: "We don't accept sub-Saharans at our center. Priority goes to Tunisians."

In contrast, 79-year-old Abdallah Omri, who heads another center in Bhar Lazreg, said he "welcomes everyone".

"The people who do this work are just trying to survive, whether they're Tunisian, sub-Saharan or otherwise," he said.

"We're cleaning up the country and feeding families," he added proudly.