A genomics team led by the
KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform (
KRISP) at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal discovered the new variant. It was uncovered by
whole genome sequencing. Several genomic sequences from this lineage were submitted to the
GISAID sequence database.EPI_ISL_678597.--> On 23 December 2020, UK health minister
Matt Hancock announced that two people who had travelled from
South Africa to the
UK were infected with the Beta variant (501.V2 variant). On 28 December, the variant had been detected in two people in
Switzerland and in one in
Finland. On 29 December, the strain had been detected in a visitor from South Africa to
Japan, and in one overseas traveller to
Queensland,
Australia. On 30 December the variant was detected in
Zambia. On 31 December, it was also detected in
France, in a passenger returning from South Africa. On 2 January 2021, the first case of this variant was detected in
South Korea.
Austria reported their first case of this variant, along with four cases of the
Alpha variant on 4 January. The
Republic of Botswana also detected their first case on 4 January. The
People's Republic of China reported the first case of this variant in southern
Guangdong province on 6 January. On 8 January 2021, the
Republic of Ireland reported the detection of 3 cases, all linked to travel from South Africa. On the same day a case of reinfection with the new variant by a woman who had had COVID-19 was reported from
Brazil, the first such reinfection reported in the world.
Canada reported the first case of this variant in
Alberta on 9 January, and
Israel reported four cases, all of which were imported in people travelling from South Africa.
New Zealand reported the first case of this variant on 10 January. On 12 January,
Germany reported the detection of the mutation in six people from three different households. The same day, it was reported that the United Kingdom had a total of 29 cases, two of which were previously reported. The following day,
Belgium reported the first case in a person from
West Flanders with no travel history, Israel reported four further cases, and
Taiwan reported the first case in a
Swazi man in his 30s who had tested positive for COVID-19 on 1 January. On 14 January,
Germany detected a further case and the following day, Canada reported a second case of the mutation which was detected in the Canadian province of
British Columbia. A further case was reported in Germany the same day.
Denmark and
Réunion reported their first cases on 16 January as Israel discovered a further four cases. On 17 January, Israel reported another four cases bringing their total number of cases of this variant to 20. Two further cases were reported in
The Netherlands on 18 January bringing the country's total to three.
Ghana reported its first case of the variant on 19 January. On 23 January,
Panama detected its first case of the strain in a person from Zimbabwe, who had travelled from South Africa. Also on 23 January,
Belgium reported at least 15 cases of the variant in Ostend, while 6 cases were confirmed in the Comoros. On 26 January, the Republic of Ireland reported the detection of 6 further cases. The United States reported its first cases of the variant on 28 January 2021, in the state of
South Carolina. On 27 January, Israel reported 3 more cases which were the first cases of the variant from samples that were collected in the community randomly, without knowing the source of infection. Preliminary data reported by Africa CDC on 29 January indicated that the variant had reached
Ghana. On 31 January, Israel reported its first case of reinfection with the new variant by a man who returned from
Turkey. On 1 February 2021, the United Kingdom
Secretary of State for Health and Social Care reported the random detection of 11 cases of the variant where there was no connection to international travel. The same day, the Canadian province of Ontario reported the first case of the variant in the
Peel Region, with a similar absence of travel history and no contact with anyone who had recently been abroad. On 8 February, the Republic of Ireland reported the detection of 2 further cases. On 8 February 2021,
Austria detected the greatest outbreak of Beta variant in Europe so far. A total of 293 confirmed cases and 200 suspected cases have been identified through sequencing, most of them will be confirmed in all probability. All of the cases were found in the Tirol region, where nearly 9% of the positive PCR tests were identified as the Beta variant by sequencing. The active cases were estimated at around 140. After a week of public discussion and political pressure about a possible quarantine of Tirol, the government of Austria abstained from isolating the areas of concern, instead making a formal plea to reduce movement in and out of the region and go for testing after visiting Tirol. Tirolean officials stated their intention to relax the lockdown rules in Tirol in keeping with the rest of Austria. On 22 February, the Israeli Health Ministry stated that the variant had been genetically sequenced in just under 1% of 3,000 community samples. Later on, Israel reported a total of 444 cases of the variant, making it the highest infection rate in the world outside South Africa. On 25 February, the Republic of Ireland reported the detection of 4 further cases. By late February, Turkey had 49 cases of the Beta variant. On 3 March 2021, the
Philippines confirmed its first 6 new cases of the South African variant, with 3 patients from
Pasay with no travel history, and 3 with travel histories from
Qatar and
UAE. On 5 March 2021,
Romania reported its first two cases of the South African variant, coming from two patients in
Bucharest and
Pitești. On 23 March 2021,
Lithuania confirmed its first 2 new cases of the South African strain, 1 in
Kaunas county and 1 in
Vilnius. There are 10 more suspected cases of it. The infected people said, that they didn't travel anywhere. On 26 March there were 3 more cases confirmed, which means that virus is successfully spreading inside. On 1 April 2021,
Malaysia detected its first cases of South African variant. The health ministry reported two cases believed to originate from the Jalan Lima cluster, involving an employee based at the
Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA), with other reported cases sparsely detected within
Selangor. As of 1 April, a total of nine cases involving the variant is reported. By 2 May, a total of 48 cases has been detected in least 5 clusters and from contact tracing, of which 20 were found in two clusters in
Perak and
Kelantan. On 12 April 2021 Turkey had 285 cases in 11 provinces. == Extinction ==