Daily News Briefing
Brief. Me - November 24, 2024 5:49 pm
1.7mn more people in England told to shield from Covid-19 after checks by Oxford Uni algorithm
RT News says a new algorithm developed by researchers in England is advising another 1.7 million vulnerable people to ‘shield’ because they’re at higher risk from contracting Covid-19 – and some 820,000 will be bumped up the vaccination list.
The NHS is to send letters out to the cohort identified by scientists at the University of Oxford who are now being designated as more vulnerable to coronavirus.
Around 2.2 million people are currently advised to shield in England, many of whom were identified as being at particularly high risk from Covid because they suffer from specific cancers, have severe respiratory problems, or are on immunosuppression drugs.
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Cutting Covid top-up ‘will put 700,000 people into poverty’
The Guardian says government failure to maintain the £20 a week Covid top-up payment for universal credit will overwhelmingly hit the incomes of working and disabled people, and put more than 700,000 into poverty, according to a study by the Fabian Society.
Ministers have signalled that they will decide in early March whether to keep or scrap the temporary 12-month Covid payment – giving claimants just a month to plan for what could be a £1,050 a year cut in benefits.
The Fabians estimate that if the planned cuts to universal credit and tax credits go ahead it will put 760,000 people below the poverty line over the medium term.
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Rishi Sunak urged to charge-up green investments in UK’s Covid recovery
CityAM says from the net-zero transition to air pollution and electric vehicles, Chancellor Rishi Sunak is being urged to ramp up green investment as part of the Covid recovery.
MPs on Parliament’s Environmental Audit Committee have set out guidelines for how Sunak can introduce more ambitious environmental measures.
In the report, Conservative and Labour MPs criticise the government’s “ten point” climate change plan as ‘not going far enough’.
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French MPs approve bill to combat Islamist extremism
France24 says France’s National Assembly approved Tuesday a law to fight Islamist extremism and separatism in an attempt to tackle the root causes of jihadist violence – in response to a wave of attacks that has seen more than 250 people murdered since 2015.
The text would significantly expand the government’s powers to close religious organisations and places of worship if they are found to air “theories or ideas” that “provoke hate or violence”.
The legislation offers protection to moderate community leaders who are in danger of being toppled by an extremist “putsch”. It will also require all associations to commit in writing to uphold “republican values” – the liberal, Enlightenment values France holds dear – if they want to receive state subsidies.
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Italy’s Mount Etna spews lava as it erupts several times
TRT World says Mount Etna, one of the world’s most active volcanoes, has belched smoke and ashes in a new eruption, but Italian authorities said it posed no danger to the surrounding villages.
“We’ve seen worse,” the head of the INGV National Institute for Geophysics and Vulcanology in the nearby city of Catania, Stefano Branco, told Italian news agency AGI.
Estimating that the eruption from Etna’s southeastern crater began late on Tuesday afternoon, Branco insisted that the latest burst of activity was “not at all worrying”.
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Oman’s coronavirus-related ICU patients double in 2 weeks
Arab News says the number of patients in intensive care units, with cases related to the highly transmissible coronavirus disease, doubled during the past two weeks, daily Times of Oman reported.
“We had 20 patients in ICU and today it touched 41 cases. This is a significant and disturbing increase,” Minister of Health Ahmed Al-Saeedi said, adding that the spread of the coronavirus was alarming.
“The closure of North Sharqiyah Governorate was due to a 100 per cent increase in intensive care cases in Ibra Hospital,” the minister said.
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UN warns of Myanmar violence, as protesters create gridlock
Aljazeera says Tom Andrews, the UNs’ special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, has said he is “terrified” of an escalation in violence in Myanmar as thousands of people on Wednesday stepped up their campaign against the military coup.
Protesters are calling for big rallies on Wednesday to shatter the army’s claims that it has widespread backing for the February 1 coup and that many people supported its move to seize power from civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who was returned to office in a landslide in elections held in November.
The UN’s Andrews said that he had received reports of troop movements around the country and was worried the protesters were facing real danger.
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Republican groups censure party lawmakers who voted to Impeach, Convict Trump
VOA says State and local Republican groups in the United States are rebuking national lawmakers from their own party who voted to impeach or convict former President Donald Trump of inciting an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol last month.
The Senate acquitted Trump on Saturday of a single charge of having incited the deadly January 6 attack on the seat of the U.S. Congress as that body was meeting to certify that Democrat Joe Biden had defeated Trump in the November presidential election.
UK WEATHER FORECAST
SUNRISE 07:13
Sunset 17:22
TODAY
Much of the UK will have a breezy day with early rain clearing eastwards, leaving bright spells but with showers in places. Parts of the south will stay cloudier with more prolonged rain.
TONIGHT
Through this evening and tonight, outbreaks of rain will spread northwards across much of the UK, accompanied by strong winds. Turning drier over central and eastern England later.
Tweets
The closer we get to re-opening and getting back to normal, the more nervous I get. Like, I want to work and all that, but also- I like it here. Is this Stockholm syndrome?
EMMA STONE AS CRUELLA HER SERVE INCOMING pic.twitter.com/ZplDd9Gx59
FROM WTX NEWS
https://wtxnews.com/2021/02/16/staggering-rise-in-anti-asian-hate-crimes/
https://wtxnews.com/2021/02/16/mike-tyson-frank-bruno-documentary/
RENAISSANCE
They may take our lives, but they’ll never take our freedom!
Inflation: Cost of living up in January amid coronavirus curbs
Prices rose slightly in the UK in January as lockdown restrictions saw non-essential shops shut, official figures show.
Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index, rose 0.7% in the 12 months to January, up from 0.6% in December, the Office for National Statistics said.
Food prices pushed up costs, along with household goods.
The rise was slightly higher than many economists’ forecasts. – BBC News
I would vote to unify Albania and Kosovo, election winner Albin Kurti tells Euronews
Kosovo opposition leader and election winner Albin Kurti says that if a referendum was held on his country joining Albania, he would vote yes.
His comments came in an interview with Euronews just days after his Vetëvendosje party won its largest share of the vote in Kosovo so far, paving the way for Kurti to form a government.
Over 90% of Kosovo’s 1.8 million people are ethnic Albanians and the prospect of a union between the two nations is popular both in Kosovo and in Albania- BBC News
Several dead as millions endure record cold in US
A winter storm that left millions without power in record-breaking cold weather has claimed more lives, including three people found dead after a tornado hit a seaside town in North Carolina and four family members who perished in a Houston-area house fire while using a fireplace to stay warm.
The storm that overwhelmed power grids and immobilised the Southern Plains carried heavy snow and freezing rain into New England and the Deep South and left behind painfully low temperatures on Tuesday. – TRT World
Houthis spreading misleading information regarding Safer tanker: Minister
Claims of a breakthrough with Houthis regarding the Safer oil tanker in the Red Sea are misleading, according to a Yemeni minister.
“The Houthi militia are tampering with the issue and giving empty promises [to the UN] … [there was] no significant progress in the efforts to prevent an imminent environmental, economic and humanitarian catastrophe that threatens Yemen and the region,” Information Minister Muammar Al-Eryni said in a report from state news agency Saba. – Arab News
Biden says China to face repercussions on human rights abuses
China will pay a price for its human rights abuses, US President Joe Biden warned on Tuesday (Feb 16), responding to queries at a televised event on the Asian nation’s handling of Muslim minorities in its far western region of Xinjiang.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has drawn global criticism for holding the minority Uighurs in internment camps and other human rights abuses. – CNA
European Space Agency in bid to recruit more female and disabled astronauts
The European Space Agency is holding its first recruitment drive in 11 years and is highlighting its desire to achieve greater diversity.
The European equivalent of NASA is seeking to recruit more women astronauts this year, as well as people with disabilities who have always dreamed of going into space.
“We are looking towards the Moon … and Mars. We need very excellent astronauts for the future,” said the ESA’s Director General Jan Worner. “To go farther than we ever have before, we need to look wider than we ever have before.” – Euronews
Business news
Asda: How to buy a £6.8bn supermarket for £780m – BBC Business
How Joe Biden can help Britain modernise its role in the world – FT News
Bitcoin storms past $50,000 for first time as mainstream appeal grows – Sky Business
Analysis: Europe braces for pandemic reality to hit banks – Reuters
Sports News
Australian Open: Karolina Muchova shocks Ashleigh Barty to reach semi-finals – Read on
UK government must ‘urgently’ address Daniel Kinahan’s involvement in boxing, says MP – Read on
Referee locks heads with Ipswich player – Read on
Six Nations: Scotland’s Zander Fagerson to miss rest of tournament after red card- Read on
Cultura
Whoopi Goldberg pulls out of Sister Act after postponement – Read on
Caroline Flack: New documentary trailer shows footage of star in tears – Read on
Kourtney Kardashian confirms Travis Barker romance in sweet Instagram post – Read on
Ross Kemp ‘set to host own Tiger King-style documentary’ on UK screens – 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)