Cyprus has recorded its first cases of a COVID-19 variant first detected in India, its health ministry said on Wednesday, adding it involved individuals who were swiftly isolated and quarantined after arriving on the island.
Authorities said the variant was found in four people who tested positive for COVID-19, while the South African variant was found in two individuals.
They had arrived from India, Pakistan, the Philippines and Nepal, countries from which people need special permission to travel to Cyprus, with testing before or upon arrival and a compulsory two-week quarantine.
The individuals were placed in compulsory quarantine and isolation and had no contact with other people, the ministry said, reporting on the results of specialised tests on cases 'mostly' recorded in April.
Cyprus has recorded 348 deaths from COVID-19, and 71,398 infections. COVID-19 cases spiked in March and April, triggering a third lockdown.
Numbers are now markedly lower following widespread testing and an inoculation programme to vaccinate 65 per cent of the population by the end of June.
Hamas is seeking guarantees that a new US ceasefire proposal for Gaza would lead to the war's end, a source close to the group said on Thursday, as medics said Israeli strikes across the territory had killed scores more people.
The Pentagon said on Wednesday that US strikes 10 days ago had degraded Iran's nuclear programme by up to two years, suggesting the US military operation likely achieved its goals despite a far more cautious initial assessment that leaked to the public.
Hundreds of firefighters battled a blaze Thursday on Crete island, which burnt swathes of forest and olive groves and forced the evacuation of over 1,000 people, officials said, underscoring the region's vulnerability to destructive wildfires.
Five people were injured, including a seven-year-old boy and a nine-year-old girl, in a Russian attack on the southern Ukraine port of Odesa overnight, Ukrainian authorities said on Thursday.