Daily News Briefing
Brief. Me - November 22, 2024 5:23 am
Covid-19: UK ‘not learning lessons of Australia quarantine’
BBC News says the UK’s rules on quarantine hotels for travellers arriving from Covid “red list” countries are less stringent than those enforced in Australia.
Australia’s system, introduced early last year, is seen as a gold standard internationally.
But as a result of repeated outbreaks among staff and guests, and the arrival of new variants, the rules in Australia have been tightened and are under review again.
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Pfizer vaccine found to give strong immune response to new Covid variants
The Guardian says people who have received two doses of the Pfizer vaccine have been found to have strong T-cell responses against the Kent and South African variants of Covid, suggesting that the vaccine will continue to protect against serious disease in the coming months.
In the first study to test immune responses against the variants circulating in populations, researchers found that although antibody responses against the new variants were blunted, they may still be high enough to protect most people from becoming infected, after a second dose of vaccine has been given.
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Myanmar junta says 23,000 inmates freed as protests continue
France24 says Myanmar’s military regime braced for a seventh straight day of street protests on Friday.
A torrent of anger and defiance has brought tens of thousands of people out in nationwide rallies demanding the country’s generals relinquish power.
With another day of mass rallies underway, state media announced the release of more than 23,000 inmates as part of a prison amnesty.
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Instagram’s crackdown on ‘hateful’ DMs speeds up the spiral of Anglocentric censorship on social media
RT News says the app founded to share cute photos is now using AI to censor “hate speech” in direct messages, enforcing an Anglo-American notion of banning the ever-increasing expanse of unapproved thoughts to the rest of the planet.
Anyone who sends direct messages containing “hate speech” or abuse shall henceforth be banned, Instagram announced on Wednesday. Previously, they only suspended such users for a period of time. While that sounds great on the surface – nobody wants hate or abuse – it leaves open the very real question of who gets to define that, and how.
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Jordan reports high adherence to COVID-19 protocols in schools as students return
Arab News says Jordan’s education ministry has reported high compliance to COVID-19 health protocols as more than 773,000 students went back to their classrooms this week, almost a year after all educational institutions were shut down.
Adherence to health and safety regulations related to the infectious coronavirus disease in schools was at 97.7 per cent during the first week of students’ gradual return to physical learning, education officials said, according to a report from state news agency Petra.
The attendance rate of in-class education at public schools reached 84.4 percent, compared with about 17 per cent of those who opted for distance learning.
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Brazil says Amazon COVID-19 variant three times more contagious
Aljazeera says a coronavirus variant identified in the Amazon might be three times more contagious but early analysis suggests vaccines are still effective against it, the country’s health minister said on Thursday, without providing evidence for the claims.
Under pressure as the variant hammers the jungle city of Manaus with a devastating second wave of infections, the Health Minister sought to reassure legislators that the surge of recent months was unexpected but coming under control.
He also told a Senate hearing that Brazil would vaccinate half its eligible population by June and the rest by the end of the year – an ambitious target as the country has barely guaranteed doses for half the population.
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US piles sanctions on Myanmar junta leaders, threatens with more action
TRT World says the US has slapped sanctions on the leaders of Myanmar’s junta, warning that more punishment could come even as the generals in Yangon ordered demonstrators to get back to work or face “effective actions.”
As Myanmar was preparing for a seventh consecutive day of anti-coup rallies, the US announced on Thursday it was blocking any US assets and transactions with 10 current or former military officials held responsible for the February 1 coup.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said, “we are also prepared to take additional action should Burma’s military not change course,” as anti-coup rallies continued in the country following the ouster of the government of Aung San Suu Kyi.
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Prosecutors: There’s ‘Clear, Overwhelming’ Evidence Trump Incited Insurrection
VOA says Impeachment prosecutors contended Thursday that there was “clear and overwhelming” evidence that former President Donald Trump incited insurrection by sending a mob of his supporters to the U.S. Capitol last month to confront lawmakers as they were certifying that he had lost the November election to Joe Biden.
In closing arguments, the lead impeachment manager, Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, told the 100 senators acting as jurors at Trump’s impeachment trial that they should use “common sense on what happened here.”
“It is a bedrock principle that no one can incite a riot” in the American democracy, Raskin said.
UK WEATHER FORECAST
SUNRISE 07:22
SUNSET 17:12
TODAY
Today will be cold and breezy although cloud will tend to break, leaving some bright or sunny spells. A chance of a few snow showers over north-eastern parts of the UK.
TONIGHT
Any lingering snow showers should ease in the north-east overnight, and it will be dry for most with clear spells. Northern Ireland will see more in the way of cloud, with snow arriving later on.
Tweets
Covid cases continue to fall in England
+ Number of people testing positive falls by a quarter
+ Hospital and death rates also dropping
Read more: https://t.co/dvn0ycIY70
BBC news barred from airing in China pic.twitter.com/SGeUaiWhqv
FROM WTX NEWS
https://wtxnews.com/2021/02/11/britney-media-misogyny-were-complicit/
https://wtxnews.com/2021/02/10/bucket-list-travel-top-20-places/
RENAISSANCE
Nobody puts baby in a corner
Large fire breaks out in Dartmoor national park
A huge fire has broken out on Dartmoor in Devon, visible from many miles away.
Photographs and footage showed a wide swathe of orange flames burning quickly, and the night sky was illuminated by the flames.
Fire crews rushed to tackle the blaze, which erupted despite temperatures being at or below freezing. – The Independent
Germany to reinstate border controls over coronavirus variant
Germany is to close its borders with the Czech Republic and the Austrian Tyrol region — both zones with high infection rates of contagious COVID-19 variants.
Horst Seehofer told the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper that the measure will come into force on Sunday evening, with some exceptions which are currently under discussion.
The Tyrol and the Czech regions bordering Germany will be classified on the list of territories highly affected by virus mutations, Seehofer said.
Travellers coming from certain areas of Austria or the Czech Republic will have to provide proof of a negative coronavirus test in order to enter Germany, a requirement that will present a hurdle for thousands of cross-border workers. – Euronews
Biden indicates that masks will be worn through next year
President Biden visited the National Institutes of Health complex on Thursday and he spoke about the U.S. vaccine supply and his goals for the rollout, but he also indicated that mask-wearing will likely be a reality for the next year.
He told reporters that even though he was standing on stage about 10 feet from Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins, he would continue to wear his mask. He said that wearing the mask “though the next year” can save a significant number of lives.
Health officials have stressed that even with effective vaccines, many of the same safety protocols will have to remain in place until there is clear herd immunity. But if and when that is achieved seems to be anyone’s guess. – Fox News
Morocco PM denounces Polisario ‘media war’
Morocco’s Premier Saad-Eddine El-Othmani has rejected as propaganda a claim made this week by pro-independence rebels fighting over disputed Western Sahara that they had killed three of the kingdom’s soldiers.
The Algeria-backed Polisario Front said on Tuesday it had killed three Moroccan soldiers in the southern Ouarkziz area in the Akka region the previous day in a raid on a garrison that saw it overrun then destroyed.
The Moroccan prime minister on Wednesday rejected the claim in a tweet. – Arab News
Tokyo 2020 Olympics chief Yoshiro Mori resigns over sexist comments
Mori is a former prime minister known for embarrassing gaffes who led one of Japan’s least popular governments ever.
The 83-year-old drew a storm of criticism from sports stars and politicians last week after he said that women “have difficulty” speaking concisely, “which is annoying”.
It was the latest in a long series of public missteps that have peppered his career – from continuing to play golf after a deadly marine accident to publicly sneering at a popular figure skater’s performance. – CNA
Rare Nasa photos reveal Amazon ‘gold rivers’
Stunning rare photographs published by Nasa have revealed the extent of gold mining – much of it thought to be illegal – in Peru’s Amazon rainforest.
The “rivers of gold” captured in the images are actually pits believed to have been dug by unlicensed miners, the space agency says.
The pits, usually hidden from view, were illuminated by reflected sunlight.
An astronaut on the International Space Station (ISS) captured the unusual photographs in December.
The images are further evidence of the scale of destructive gold mining in the Madre de Dios region in south-eastern Peru. – BBC World
Business news
KPMG UK appoints first female leaders in 150 years – BBC Business
Expats stranded by pandemic face heavy tax toll – FT News
Disney+ signs up 95 million subscribers in just over a year – Sky Business
U.S. House committee approves another $14 billion for pandemic-hit airlines – Reuters
UK economy suffered record annual slump in 2020 – BBC News
Sports News
Chelsea lacked ‘courage’ in FA Cup win over Barnsley, says Tuchel – Read on
Australian Open: Serena Williams, Naomi Osaka, Aryna Sabalenka advance – Read on
India v England: Injured Jofra Archer to miss second Test – Read on
FA Cup draw: Everton host Man City, Leicester face Man Utd in quarter-finals – Read on
Cultura
Shia LaBeouf denies abuse accusations – Read on
Britney Spears’ father loses bid to retain some rights over $60m estate – Read on
Kate Winslet climbed into car boot to help guide a young actress through sex scene – Read on
Taylor Swift’s fans go wild as they spot ‘secret code’ in Fearless announcement – Read on
YOUR QUESTIONS answered
what happened at the capitol?
On January 6, 2021, a mob of rioters supporting United States President Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn his defeat in the 2020 presidential election stormed the U.S. Capitol, breaching security and occupying parts of the building for several hours.
After attending a rally organized by Trump, thousands of his supporters marched down Pennsylvania Avenue before many stormed the United States Capitol in an effort to disrupt the electoral college vote count during a joint session of Congress and prevent the formalization of President-elect Joe Biden’s election victory.
After breaching police perimeters, they occupied, vandalized, and ransacked parts of the building for several hours. The insurrection led to the evacuation and lockdown of the Capitol building and five deaths. – Read on
what does brexit mean?
Brexit was the withdrawal of the United Kingdom (UK) from the European Union (EU) and the European Atomic Energy Community (EAEC or Euratom) at the end of 31 January 2020 CET.
To date, the UK is the first and only country formally to leave the EU, after 47 years of membership within the bloc, after having first joined its predecessor, the European Communities (EC), on 1 January 1973.
It continued to participate in the European Union Customs Union and European Single Market during a transition period that ended on 31 December 2020 at 23:00 GMT. – Read on
covid-19 meaning
The COVID-19 pandemic, also known as the coronavirus pandemic, is an ongoing pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2).
It was first identified in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. The World Health Organization declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern in January 2020 and a pandemic in March 2020.
As of 11 January 2021, more than 90.3 million cases have been confirmed, with more than 1.93 million deaths attributed to COVID-19.
coronavirus definition
Meaning of “coronavirus” and related terminology “coronavirus” means severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)
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Get the latest NHS information and advice about coronavirus (COVID-19)