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Showing posts from January, 2021

Monday briefing: Aung San Suu Kyi held in coup

Myanmar military also detains senior government figures … NHS will take months to return to normal … Charlene White on being ‘authentically me’ Good morning and welcome to this Monday briefing with me, Alison Rourke. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/36wT6LL

Thames Water discharging raw sewage into Buckinghamshire river

River Chess Association say untreated sewage is causing untold harm to infant trout and other habitats Thames Water has been discharging untreated sewage into a chalk stream in Buckinghamshire, causing what campaigners say is untold harm to infant trout and habitats in the river. The discharges into the River Chess in Chesham occurred days after the head of the environment agency told MPs that this should never happen, although he later qualified his remarks to allow for some exceptional circumstances. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3pFGsSb

UK government use of Henry VIII clauses to be challenged in court

Good Law Project seeks judicial review over move to change state aid rules after Brexit without a vote in parliament A government move to change state aid rules after Brexit without a vote in parliament is being challenged in court, with a legal campaign group warning the manoeuvre could lead to a similar lack of scrutiny in areas such as workers’ rights and environmental protections. The Good Law Project is seeking a judicial review of the decision to get rid of EU rules about state aid incorporated into UK legislation after Brexit through the use of so-called Henry VIII powers . Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3ak0F9Q

Captain Sir Tom Moore admitted to hospital with coronavirus

Fundraiser aged 100, knighted after raising £38.9m for the NHS, is being treated for pneumonia Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Captain Sir Tom Moore has tested positive for Covid-19 and has been admitted to hospital where he is being treated for pneumonia, his daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore has said in a statement. The 100-year-old, who raised millions of pounds for the NHS, was taken to Bedford hospital on Sunday, after being treated for pneumonia for some time and testing positive for Covid-19 last week. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oBG3Pe

Deaths among Rome's rough sleepers surge as shelters turn many away due to Covid

About 3,000 homeless people in Italian capital sleep on the streets every night Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage More people are sleeping on the streets in Rome after being turned away from shelters due to coronavirus restrictions, while the number of homeless people dying from the cold has surged this winter. There are about 8,000 homeless people in the Italian capital, of whom 3,000 have no shelter for the night, according to figures provided by the Catholic charity Community of Sant’Egidio. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3agaGEU

Government faces more pressure to extend £20-a-week Covid top-up

Keep universal credit top-up and scrap benefits cap, says all-party committee on poverty Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage The government has come under renewed pressure from Tory backbenchers to extend the £20-a-week Covid top-up to universal credit as part of a range of measures to increase the level of pandemic welfare support. A report published on Monday by the all-party parliamentary group on poverty – co-chaired by Conservative MP Kevin Hollinrake – asks for the top up, worth £1,050 a year, to be retained beyond April and for the benefit cap to be suspended. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oBInFZ

Charlene White on Loose Women, prejudice and the poppy row: ‘It still upsets me’

The broadcaster has just become co-host of the popular chatshow. She discusses impartiality, her pride in ITV – and being the first black woman to read News at 10 When Charlene White was small, she dreamed of becoming a courageous, wrong-righting lawyer. That was until she did a week’s work experience at Croydon crown court. “I realised it’s not like it is on the telly. I kept nodding off.” Plan B soon presented itself: “We devoured Trevor McDonald on the news every evening at home, so I thought: actually, maybe journalism is the way I impact the world.” White is speaking via a video call from a quiet corner of an ITV building. She has just finished recording an episode of Loose Women (referred to only as “Loose” by everyone at ITV), the daytime chatshow for which she was announced as the new main panellist a few weeks ago. Tonight, she will read the news on ITV News London’s evening bulletin. Since joining the channel from the BBC in 2008, she has become a familiar face on ITV’s na...

Ten years after the Arab spring, Yemen has little hope left

Racked by war, cholera and now coronavirus, the country faces the world’s worst famine in decades Ten years after the rage and hope of the Arab spring filled the public spaces of Sana’a, Yemen’s capital has become a curiously quiet place. Traders and customers alike shuffle through the streets of the old city, ground down by the repression of the Houthi rebel occupation and the economic hardship caused by the Saudi- and Emirati-led coalition blockade. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MIlHH3

'I document America's strange beauty': the photography of My Name is Earl's Jason Lee

He played a redemption-seeking redneck on TV, but lately the actor has found solace off-screen, travelling with his camera. He talks about slackers, the Mallrats sequel and breezing into one-horse towns Jason Lee knew he was in trouble when he stepped on the set. The year was 1992, Sonic Youth were at their peak and he was starring as a doomed skateboarder in their latest video. As a music obsessed, pro skateboarder with acting aspirations, he felt he had a point to prove. To add more pressure, it was for the song 100% – the band’s classic ode to a murdered Black Flag roadie – and the video was being co-directed by one of his skateboarding friends (some guy called Spike Jonze ). “I was really trying my hardest to focus,” says Lee. “I was like pretending to be Robert De Niro on the set, really trying to get into it and make it count and make it real and believable.” Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Mndp7p

Starwatch: red jewel of Antares in a pre-dawn pairing with the moon

Brightest star in the Scorpius constellation, a supergiant 68o times larger than our sun, draws close to waning crescent Those up before dawn should look south for a pretty pairing this week. On 6 February, the waning crescent moon will draw close to the beautiful red jewel of Antares, the brightest star in the constellation of Scorpius, the scorpion. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3pIfs4I

Jared Kushner nominated for Nobel peace prize

Kushner and his deputy, Avi Berkowitz, were nominated for their role in negotiating four normalisation deals between Israel and Arab nations Former White House senior adviser Jared Kushner and his deputy, Avi Berkowitz, have been nominated for the Nobel peace prize for their role in negotiating four normalisation deals between Israel and Arab nations known as the “Abraham Accords”. Kushner, who is Trump’s son-in-law, and Berkowitz, who was the Middle East envoy, were key figures in negotiating deals between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3j30Nyi

Conversations with kids about coronavirus – podcast

Children across the UK talk about how the pandemic has affected their lives Anushka Asthana talks to children across the country about what life has been like under lockdown. Eight-year-old Aryan (pictured) remembers starting to feel worried about the virus when he learned it was spreading to other countries. School was full of rumours, he tells Anushka, that Covid made you sick and gave you warts. Whenever you went to the toilet, you would hear Happy Birthday being sung at the sinks. Aryan is at home again, which means “loads of sheets of papers to print off” for home schooling, and he says he can’t wait to see his friends again. For 14-year old Becca in Glasgow, the first wave led to her mum being laid off from her job. It meant things were “a little bit harder but we found a way”. She says that if her Mum found it tough looking after her and her three brothers, she didn’t show it. Rory , 18, has just completed his first term at Durham University. He got Covid while he was there ...

Jacinda Ardern faces Waitangi Day reckoning with Māori as progress stalls

Three years after the prime minister asked Māori to hold her to account, many are disillusioned with her government In an oft-repeated story New Zealand’s prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, has recalled how growing up in the small, largely Māori town of Murupara, she would see children going to school hungry, and with no shoes on their feet. It was these scenes of entrenched inequality and poverty, often along racial lines, that drove a teenage Ardern into the Labour party, where she has dedicated herself to combating child poverty. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NK1JvQ

Covid could cost children £350bn in earnings through lost learning, says IFS

Report says children repeating a year of school should be considered as part of radical catch-up efforts Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Today’s children face losing £350bn in lifetime earnings unless the UK’s governments invest in radical catch-up efforts when the pandemic is over, according to a report by the Institute for Fiscal Studies. The IFS is urging policymakers to consider options including nearly nine million children repeating a year of schooling, the use of large-scale tuition in summer holidays and extended hours to make up for the classroom time lost during the Covid-19 lockdowns. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3rcQsT9

'I couldn't be prouder': Swampy and 16-year-old son in HS2 tunnel protest

Veteran campaigner and teenager join environmental activists to protest against rail project Veteran environmental activist Dan Hooper, known as Swampy , who is one of nine protesters in a tunnel in central London to raise the alarm about the environmental destruction they believe the high speed rail project HS2 will cause , is in the tunnel with his 16-year-old son, it has emerged. The activists have been in the tunnel close to Euston station since Tuesday to raise awareness of the climate emergency and to try to halt work on the HS2 project which is under way in the Euston area. They argue that many ancient woodlands will be destroyed by the project. HS2 says it is planting 7m new trees. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3r6dLhC

Coronavirus live news: EU wants 70% of adults vaccinated by end of summer; Israel extends Covid lockdown

EU aims to vaccinate 70% of adults by the end of summer ; WHO mission at ground-zero Wuhan market ; Israel extends lockdown as Covid variants offset vaccination drive Expert warns US to brace for virulent Covid strain UK Covid patients are dying due to unfounded fears about ventilators Biden likely to bypass Republicans on Covid stimulus aid after lowball offer See all our coronavirus coverage 12.30am GMT A leading infectious disease expert predicted on Sunday that the deadlier British variant of Covid-19 will become the dominant strain of the virus in the US and could hit the country like a hurricane. The worrying forecast came as the total of confirmed infections in the US passed the 26m mark, with the death toll advancing steadily towards the grim milestone of half a million after on Sunday surpassing the total of 440,000, by far the highest in the world according to data gathered by the Johns Hopkins University coronavirus research center . Related: ‘That hurricane is co...

NHS 'putting lives at risk' by not recording patients who miss Covid vaccination

Local health officials can tackle reasons for no-shows, but they need good data, says public health leader Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage The NHS has been warned it is putting lives at risk after the service admitted it was not collecting data on who was not accepting invitations to be vaccinated and why. Early research has shown vaccine take-up was twice as high among white people compared with black people in the first five weeks of the rollout, with lower rates among people with severe mental illness, dementia and learning disabilities. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/36vZym6

UK may help EU before domestic vaccination programme complete, says Liz Truss

Trade secretary had previously hinted supplies may not be diverted until UK population was vaccinated Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage The UK could help the EU and other nations with coronavirus vaccine supplies even before the domestic vaccination programme has been completed, the international trade secretary, Liz Truss, has said. As ministers sought to smooth relations with Brussels after the EU’s much-criticised and swiftly rescinded decision to impose a vaccine border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, Truss sought to stress the need for international cooperation. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3tct7mA

Daily record as 600,000 people in the UK receive Covid jabs on Saturday

In England, the Midlands leads the way, with London and the south-east recording fewest vaccinations Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Almost 600,000 people in the UK were vaccinated against Covid-19 on Saturday, a daily record for the vaccine programme. Uptake was particularly strong in England, with almost 540,000 people receiving their first vaccination. In Wales, just over 25,000 people got their initial jab, along with almost 23,000 in Scotland and just over 10,500 in Northern Ireland. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3cry8Sh

The History of Sketch Comedy review – Keegan-Michael Key's love letter to laughter

Podcast The comic actor’s exuberant 10-part history unpicks the nuts-and-bolts of what makes sketches funny, from overlooked past acts to SNL, and British favourites including the Two Ronnies “The sexy dangerous first cousin of standup,” Keegan-Michael Key calls sketch comedy, which feels like a stretch. But then, no one can accuse Key of understatement. His new audio series The History of Sketch Comedy brims with enthusiasm for an art form that, far from sexiness, is often sidelined as the runt of the comedy litter. No longer, if Key has his way. This 10-part podcast demonstrates not only the riches that strew the history of short-form comedy, but the art form’s pedigree as direct descendant of Greek theatre, court jesters and commedia dell’arte. I didn’t see that coming – but then, there’s plenty in Key’s series that few of us would associate with sketch comedy. The opening two episodes, on the ancient and medieval worlds, are highly digressive and largely untroubled by anything y...

Aung San Suu Kyi and other Myanmar figures detained in military raids, says ruling party

Country’s powerful military have previously threatened to ‘take action’ over alleged fraud in a November election Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s president and other senior ruling party figures have been detained by the military in early morning raids, a party spokesman said on Monday. Spokesman Myo Nyunt told Reuters that Suu Kyi, President Win Myint and other leaders had been “taken” early in the morning. “I want to tell our people not to respond rashly and I want them to act according to the law,” he said, adding he also expected to be detained. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39wkYl3

Rhod Gilbert: Stand Up to Infertility review – a very male taboo

The Welsh comedian explores a personal subject in this one-off documentary. But can he persuade other men to do the same? “I suffer a condition,” says Rhod Gilbert in Rhod Gilbert: Stand Up to Infertility (BBC Two), “called shit jizz.” Ninety eight per cent of his sperm don’t swim straight. That’s a lot of responsibility for the two per cent. I’m not saying there is a conspiracy to prevent men confronting this issue, but how typical that, when I typed those words, autocorrect changed it to “shit jazz”. Given that, as we learn, about 500m sperm are released each time the Welsh funnyman ejaculates, you would have thought the 10m straight shooters would be enough to impregnate his wife, Sian. The “you would have thought” in the last sentence confirms not only that I have no medical training, but suffer from the real curse of modern men: complacent oaf syndrome. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3tcZEce

Boxing clever: Britain’s top chefs reinvent fine dining at home

Restaurants stay afloat and customers enjoy haute cuisine delivered to the door: a passing fad, or will it endure post-Covid? Guide to the best UK restaurant meal kits See all our coronavirus coverage Last May Gary Usher was in a “pretty dark place”. His award-winning restaurants in the north-west of England had been closed for a couple of months and, he said, “I had pretty much given up. I was ready to go bankrupt”. By the end of the summer, top chef Adam Handling had lost four out of his 10 restaurants in London. “I had bills spilling in that I couldn’t afford to pay. It was heartbreaking,” he said. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3r7W7dc

Muslim boy, 4, was referred to Prevent over game of Fortnite

More than 600 children under six flagged by anti-extremism scheme A four-year-old boy’s referral to the government’s anti-extremism Prevent strategy after talking about the popular Fortnite video game at his after-school club has prompted fresh calls to abolish the controversial scheme. The boy, who is from the West Midlands and is a Muslim, was referred to Prevent in September 2019 after saying that his father had “guns and bombs in his shed”. However, transcripts of a conversation with a club worker reveal that the reference to weaponry was linked to Fortnite. The child’s mother believes that if her boy were white and not a Muslim he wouldn’t have been considered at risk of radicalisation. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MD7Ph6

'Everybody will get their mittens': maker of Bernie Sanders' mittens forges business partnership

Jen Ellis, a Vermont elementary school teacher, joins forces with the Vermont Teddy Bear Company to meet demand The teacher who created the recycled wool mittens that Bernie Sanders wore to the presidential inauguration and which triggered endless social media memes is now partnering with the Vermont Teddy Bear Company to meet soaring demand. Some of the proceeds will go to the Make-A-Wish Vermont charity. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2MzBAPT

A year after Johnson’s swaggering Greenwich speech: and 100,000 dead

The government says nobody could have done more: but it’s clear poor leadership on Covid has brought the UK to this pass It was announced last week, to nobody’s excitement, that Sir Kenneth Branagh will take the role of Boris Johnson in a Sky TV drama about the first weeks of the pandemic. If Branagh’s casting indicates that this is to be conceived as a Shakespearean tragedy, with Johnson in the lead, then it would seem doomed from the start. The classic tragic hero has just a single fatal character flaw that proves his undoing. With Johnson, where do you start? As an opening scene in that drama, it will, anyhow, be hard to beat the speech that the prime minister gave almost exactly a year ago – perhaps the last moment in which he fondly imagined that all the world lay before him. The speech, delivered in the grand surroundings of Christopher Wren’s Old Royal Naval College at Greenwich on 3 February 2020, set out his vision for a buccaneering global Britain, high on union flags and ...

Sunday with Simon Reeve: ‘I bought a robot vacuum cleaner in early lockdown’

The presenter on ghosts, guests and the fine art of recycling Lie-in or early to rise? Lie-in by desire, but early to rise through lack of choice. Our two dogs and nine-year-old are clacking, quacking and barking by 7.30am, so I’ll put in earplugs and ignore that people need food. Sunday adventure? We live in Dartmoor, so we’re spoilt for choice for hillsides, babbling books and streams. We don’t have big cats; just werewolves, escaped prisoners and ghosts. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39yIttV

Mighty Amazon looks all but unassailable as Covid continues

Jeff Bezos’s company is set for sales topping $100bn last quarter, and while rivals are nibbling, its position looks secure The earliest references to the “one-stop shop” emerged during the first decades of 20th century as the fast-growing US economy spurred rapid retail innovation. A single location for various products provides obvious benefits: removing the hassle of travelling around town to visit different stores. Jeff Bezos redefined that logic for the internet age, making Amazon a dominant (and perhaps ambivalent ) force first in selling books, and then in pretty much everything else. Before 2020 Amazon was a phenomenon, but the coronavirus pandemic has made it all but ubiquitous. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39vqxjN

Success of vaccine rollout pushes Tories ahead of Labour in the polls

Boris Johnson moves ahead of Keir Starmer as the person seen as the best prime minister The Conservatives have regained the lead against Labour in the latest Opinium poll for the Observer after a week in which the total number of deaths from Covid-19 passed 100,000. The figures – showing the Tories on 41%, up four percentage points compared with two weeks ago, and Labour down three points on 38% – are a blow to Labour and will raise questions about whether the party’s progress has stalled under Keir Starmer . Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3j73Fdt

Airlines ‘wrong to refuse refund on out-of-date flight vouchers’

Summer holidays abroad are unlikely to go ahead but legal experts say that expired vouchers must still be honoured Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Consumers unable to travel because of the pandemic have been told they can demand a cash refund for flight vouchers even if they have expired. Rolling lockdowns and limits on travel have meant that many passengers who had flights cancelled and were given vouchers for another journey have been unable to use them. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3r9xFIK

Nightingale units should be used to care for Covid survivors, say senior doctors

The new facilities, under-used throughout the crisis, could help to ease pressure on hospitals around the country, say medics Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage The role of the Nightingale field hospitals – which have remained largely empty even at peak periods of the pandemic – should be re-examined so they can be used more for patients recovering from Covid-19, according to senior doctors. The creation of the Nightingales in record time last spring was hailed as a rare success story in the early months of the virus. But a lack of staff and the difficulties of switching intensive care treatment to new settings has meant they have been under-used, even at the height of the crisis when the NHS has been at breaking point. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3ozSrj1

What a great shot! Vaccination selfies become the latest social media hit

A new trend has emerged – public figures posting ‘vaxxies’ showing the moment they received their jab Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage The latest social media trend involves no ice buckets, no filters and certainly no sea shanties. Now celebrities and politicians around the world are vying to post the best “vaxxies” – selfies of the moment they receive their Covid-19 vaccination. While vaxxies send out a strong message that the vaccines are safe, they are also an undeniable photo opportunity. The image of Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis being vaccinated with his shirt off went viral last week. With its unreconstructed masculinity, some compared it to photos of a bare-chested Vladimir Putin bare chested out hunting. Mitsotakis became something of a Twitter heartthrob as a result, with one user writing “Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis doing whatever it takes to sell his people on the #COVID19 vaccine.” Others fretted about the prospec...

‘We were so scared’: Four people who faced the horror of Aids in the 80s

TV drama It’s a Sin looked back at a dark era for the gay community. Here, some of those who remember it tell of the real-life agony – and the hope It can take a long time for society to see the past clearly. In the case of the HIV/Aids epidemic of the early 1980s, it has taken almost 40 years. But now, thanks to Russell T Davies’s moving five-part Channel 4 drama series, It’s a Sin , we are all able to look at a vivid, troubling and yet ultimately uplifting picture of those dark and deadly days. To younger audiences, it may be shocking to learn just how excluded and hidden the gay community was from mainstream life. Homosexuality had only been legal since 1967, the age of consent was still 21 and same-sex civil marriage was a quarter of a century away. It was routine, as It’s a Sin reminds us, for gay men and lesbians to conceal their sexual identities from their families and employers. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oDBsMp

A taste of home: Claudia Roden’s majestic Book of Jewish Food

It took 16 years to write and is more an ‘encyclopaedia of Jewish life’ than cookbook In matters of culture my late mother, Claire, took her lead from the great Times columnist Bernard Levin and described herself as a “pantry Jew”. She understood herself not through religious faith because, like me, she had none, but through the crumbly chopped liver she sometimes made. She liked to cook gefilte fish, both boiled and fried, following her grandmother’s recipe. The boiled, I hated. Once cooled, the fishy jelly had the texture of phlegm and the mixture of white fish, matzo meal and a little sugar tasted of carelessness. But the deep-fried, an idiosyncrasy of the Anglo-Jewish community, was entirely different. I loved the outer crunch and the fluffy interior, and knew that it would be even more delicious if I were allowed to eat it hot, straight from the bubbling oil, but I was not. Claire insisted it had to be eaten cold and could not explain why, other than to say it was “better that...

My kids and parents rely on me. Is it selfish to put myself first? | Dear Mariella

You must prioritise your own wellbeing – it’s what your two adopted children and your elderly parents depend on The dilemma My husband and I have two adopted children with complex and lifelong learning disabilities who attend a specialist school. I left my job to stay at home with them as their needs were much greater than we ever anticipated, but I have struggled . I feel I have lost my own sense of being and identity. I am exhausted, on antidepressants and suffer with anxiety, PTSD and chronic depression. I also have elderly parents with a history of illness. I do have some joy in the form of gardening, which has given me a purpose, a sanctuary, and brings me beauty and hope. We have a small garden, and I want to expand it into a larger business, which may even support the children in the future, much like a care farm. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3owSQT1

Donald Trump's impeachment defence in disarray as lead lawyers quit – reports

Butch Bowers clashed with Trump over strategy, according to reports, and leaves along with Deborah Barberi and three others Donald Trump has abruptly parted ways with the two lead lawyers working on his defence for his Senate impeachment trial, a source familiar with the situation said, leaving the former US president’s legal strategy in disarray. Butch Bowers and Deborah Barberi, two South Carolina lawyers, are no longer on Trump’s team, the source said, describing the move as a “mutual decision”. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/36swzzJ

Family of Indonesian plane crash victims sue Boeing for ‘dangerous’ aircraft

The lawsuit filed by the family of three victims alleges the Boeing 737-500 aircraft was defective in one or more ways An Indonesian family whose relatives died onboard the Sriwijaya Air flight that crashed into the Java Sea have filed legal action against Boeing, alleging that the aircraft was “defective and unreasonably dangerous”. The Sriwijaya flight SJ-182 plummeted within minutes of taking off from Jakarta’s main airport earlier this month, with 62 people on board. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3tmci8W

Britain launches new visa for millions of Hongkongers fleeing China's crackdown

Scheme allows Hong Kong residents with a BNO passport to live and work in the UK with a pathway to citizenship after five years A new visa scheme offering millions of Hong Kong residents a pathway to British citizenship will go live on Sunday as the UK opens its doors to those wanting to escape China’s crackdown on dissent. From Sunday afternoon, anyone with a British national overseas (BNO) passport and their dependents will be able to apply online for a visa allowing them to live and work in the UK. After five years they can then apply for citizenship. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3ailFxE

Hilton Valentine, founding guitarist in the Animals, dies aged 77

Singer Eric Burdon pays tribute to the North Shields born guitarist who ‘didn’t just play but lived’ the band’s classic The House of the Rising Sun Hilton Valentine, founding guitarist of the 60s group the Animals, has died aged 77. Valentine’s death was confirmed by the band’s label ABKCO Music, who wrote in a statement on Twitter on Saturdy night: “Our deepest sympathies go out to Hilton Valentine’s family and friends on his passing this morning, at the age of 77.” Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2La1rh6

Rugby Australia makes surprise offer to host Lions series against South Africa

Rugby Australia chairman Hamish McLennan confirms offer Covid-19 means tour is unlikely to go ahead in South Africa Hopes that the British & Irish Lions Tests against South Africa could take place this summer, and with fans in attendance, look a little brighter with Rugby Australia making an unexpected offer to host the series. The South African variant of Covid-19 means the tour is unlikely to go ahead in that country, especially with fans, and there has been speculation that the games may be played at stadiums in the UK and Ireland instead, even in the absence of supporters. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NSVciD

Coronavirus live news: Germany threatens legal action over vaccine delays; NSW marks 14 days of no cases

Germany delivers stark warning to vaccine companies ; South Australia reopens its border to Sydney travellers ; New South Wales warns virus could re-emerge Australian state of New South Wales marks 14 days with no cases Scores of foreigners breach lockdown rules at Austrian ski resort From lockdowns to pool parties: how Covid rules vary around the world See all our coronavirus coverage 12.48am GMT Health authorities in the Australian state of Victoria are investigating an “indeterminate” test result. Victoria notched up its 25th day in a row without a community transmission coronavirus case on Sunday, but one test has not yet been confirmed as negative. The state’s health department said it would provide more information on the potential case later on Sunday. There were 10,681 tests undertaken in Victoria on Saturday. DHHS received a notification of an indeterminate result last night. Follow up tests are underway and precautionary public health actions are being taken. ...

Mighty Amazon looks all but unassailable as Covid continues

Jeff Bezos’s company is set for sales topping $100bn last quarter, and while rivals are nibbling, its position looks secure The earliest references to the “one-stop shop” emerged during the first decades of 20th century as the fast-growing US economy spurred rapid retail innovation. A single location for various products provides obvious benefits: removing the hassle of travelling around town to visit different stores. Jeff Bezos redefined that logic for the internet age, making Amazon a dominant (and perhaps ambivalent ) force first in selling books, and then in pretty much everything else. Before 2020 Amazon was a phenomenon, but the coronavirus pandemic has made it all but ubiquitous. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39vqxjN

Rashford is latest player to receive abuse as FA vows action against online racism

FA will work with government and social media platforms Rashford: abuse is ‘humanity and social media at its worst’ The Football Association has vowed to work with the government and social media platforms to eradicate racist abuse after a succession of incidents. The Chelsea defender Reece James, West Brom’s Romaine Sawyers and the Manchester United duo Axel Tuanzebe and Anthony Martial were all targeted this week and on Saturday night Marcus Rashford said he had received offensive messages after United’s draw at Arsenal. Rashford chose not to share screenshots of the messages he had been sent as “it would be irresponsible to do so … I have beautiful children of all colours following me and they don’t need to read it.” Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3clTWic

UK to apply to join free trade pact with nations on other side of world

Liz Truss to seek to join 11-nation trans-Pacific partnership, whose nearest member is 3,000 miles away The British government is to formally apply to join a mammoth free-trade pact that includes Australia, Canada, Japan and New Zealand now that it has left the EU. Liz Truss, the international trade secretary, will ask to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) when she speaks to ministers in Japan and New Zealand on Monday. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t9d493

On your marks: 12 activewear outfits for men - in pictures

Lockdown has made exercising the new going out, even if it’s only to your local park. Here’s our pick of sports kit, from high-tech performance gear to at-home workout sweats. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t9gwAx

UK vaccine strategy 'paying off' as latest trials boost stockpiles

Pre-ordering of Janssen and Novavax means Britain has procured 247m successfully trialled jabs Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Britain has cemented its status as one of the world’s leading buyers of effective Covid vaccines after two more pharmaceutical companies reported positive trial results – potentially growing the UK stockpile by 90m doses. The US drugmaker Johnson & Johnson announced on Friday that its vaccine – which requires only one dose – is effective . This followed Thursday’s news that the Novavax vaccine, which will be manufactured in the UK, performed well in phase 3 trials. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3r9pXON

Billie Piper: ‘I know about dysfunctional relationships – what it costs to be a woman’

After 25 years in the limelight, the actor says she is finally finding her voice as an actor, writer and now director. Does life imitate art? The first thing Billie Piper says to me is, “It’s in your lined paper book, Eugene, I already sent it to them,” because she’s trying to home school her children while also roaming around her house to escape them and find a better phone signal. We’re already on to our third kind of tech in an attempt to video chat. “I’m just so strung out,” she says, sitting down, remarking that she looks awful with no makeup on, long blond hair yanked into a ponytail. She laughs at the bleakness: to hell with all this. The Piper household – her two sons, Winston, 12, and Eugene, eight, her musician boyfriend Johnny Lloyd and their toddler daughter, Tallulah – are enjoying the pandemic as little as the rest of us. “We’re OK. We’re just cracking on. Everyone’s going through it and other people have some terrible situations,” she says, first trying to be positive...

Learn to say 'I don't know': teachers' tips for parents weary of lockdown 2 schooling

With Zoom in the kitchen and even more work to do, frazzled families are finding the second lockdown tougher Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Boris Johnson has said England’s schools won’t be going back before March , and for most parents that means no letup to worksheets and Zooming in their own kitchens and sitting rooms. The second lockdown has brought new and harder challenges for families, with expectations rising about the amount of work children should be doing at home. The latest government guidance states that even children as young as five must have three hours of remote education every day , and that should include recorded teaching or live lessons as well as independent work. Gavin Williamson, the education secretary, piled on extra pressure by telling parents to complain to the inspectorate , Ofsted, if they are not happy with the amount of home learning their child’s school is providing. As a result, some schools have increased the workl...

Try before you binge! How to find your new favourite TV show

It’s not always best to begin at the beginning: from Mad Men to Seinfeld here are the later episodes you should watch first Never trust a pilot. When you watch the first episode of any TV show, you are watching an act of desperation. A pilot episode has to lay out the premise, introduce the characters, differentiate itself from its peers and convince an audience of semi-attentive viewers to keep watching. Plus, don’t forget, it’s a complete fumble. Chances are it was written before it was cast, so the writer had no idea of the chemistry of the performers. The music might be off, or the direction, or a million other things. Related: The Guide: Staying In – sign up for our home entertainment tips Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3coyWHJ

Excremental growth: UK sniffs a pandemic puppy poo problem

A rise in dog ownership and pressure on council services mean Britons are having to watch their step It is not a problem to be sniffed at. A year into the coronavirus crisis, local media, council newsletters, social network users and disgruntled environmental health experts across the UK are warning that the country is in the grip of a dog mess emergency – and that new puppy owners are shirking their responsibilities to clean up after their lockdown pets. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2YpRnUd

Ad ban for debt advice firms highlights problem of misleading claims

People can be drawn in by lead generators who pass on details to firms offering paid-for help Banned adverts for two debt advice firms represent just the tip of the iceberg in terms of how people are misled, a leading advice charity has warned. The Advertising Standards Authority this week upheld complaints against two firms, National Direct Service and Fidelitas Group Ltd , about misleading claims they made about their services in paid-for search ads and on their websites. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/36mfreU

Myanmar military vows to abide by constitution amid coup fears

Armed forces release statement saying remarks by general about political system were misinterpreted Myanmar’s armed forces have said they will protect and abide by the country’s constitution and act according to law, amid concerns in the country that the military might attempt to seize power. In an official statement on Saturday, the military said recent remarks by its top general about abolishing the constitution were misinterpreted by media and some organisations. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3pyUW6r

From lockdowns to pool parties: how Covid rules vary around the world

Countries have adopted different rules on business activity, education, socialising and travel Curfews and lockdowns Restrictions have largely been relaxed in most of Brazil’s 26 states, although several continue to limit opening hours for bars, restaurants and shops. A round-the-clock curfew was imposed this week in Brazil’s biggest state, Amazonas, after hospitals were overwhelmed . Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2L55paI

'I suffered anxiety': Monzo founder on the pressures of running a digital bank

Tom Blomfield on mental health, the Covid-19 crisis – and the myth of superhero tech bosses Tom Blomfield was not prepared for the stress that the Covid-19 crisis would unleash on the banking sector and his own mental health. The 35-year-old Monzo founder was already struggling to meet the daily demands of running a digital bank that had grown to nearly 5 million customers and had become a success story for Britain’s fintech sector. Constant worries about wooing investors, generating revenue, and increasingly critical news coverage that the burgeoning bank was attracting, were clearly taking their toll. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oxe0k6

Why an everyday English field is my tranquillity base

Our writer’s special spot in a timeless corner of southern England holds a sense of deep peace and isolation Last January I started a new part-time job on a landscape scheme in the medieval hunting forest of Cranborne Chase, a designated area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB) that straddles the borders of Wiltshire, Dorset, Hampshire and a sliver of Somerset. By day it was all chalk, sheep and beech trees, big skies and isolated villages; at night the bright ribbon of the Milky Way arched above, soft moonlight bathing the fields, earning the AONB a Dark Sky Reserve designation . I’d stand in the garden in midsummer blackness, watching the dusty dart of the unromantically named C/2020 F3 Comet (AKA Neowise) while it was visible in the northern hemisphere, and unlocking an old obsession with constellations, our solar system and the Apollo missions. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oqAraE

‘Doing a great job’: Johnson hails parents for efforts in lockdown

PM pens letter recognising ‘unique challenges’ faced by those looking after children during the pandemic Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Keeping children entertained can be an arduous task at the best of times, let alone when families are stuck at home for days on end as a result of the Covid lockdown. In recognition of the “unique challenges” faced by parents, carers and guardians during the pandemic – including juggling home schooling with the pressures of work – Boris Johnson has penned an open letter to them praising their efforts, as well as offering his thanks. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oxF56T

My husband died a year ago. Here's what he taught us about life and love

A year after her husband Joe Hammond’s death from motor neurone disease, his widow reflects on grief, parenting through loss, and survival How do you decide upon a day to die? For my husband Joe and me, that meant finding out when the doctors we needed were available, then we took note of our two sons’ school holidays and, finally, we looked at the carer rota for that month. Who could we trust with Joe’s death as much as we had trusted them with his life? The next step was a meeting with the relevant doctors; what incredible women they had been throughout our whole, surreal journey . They asked us how we imagined the process might unfold, during which Joe would receive a huge amount of morphine to sedate him enough that his ventilator could be removed. We were bemused. What were the options? Apparently, some people choose to watch television and the programme of choice is Countdown . This gave Joe and me the giggles. We said we thought we’d manage without more conundrums than we alr...

Blind date: 'He noticed a subtle yawn from me'

Iona, 23, journalist, and Francesco, 25, musician What were you hoping for? Someone chatty, attractive and funny. Ideally, a spark. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39u91w7

Tim Dowling: I know what I weigh. Our new scales are wildly out

I realise that the last time my fixed notion of what I weighed was affirmed by actual measurement was at a doctor’s appointment five years ago On my third pass through the kitchen in the morning, I see a recently delivered box sitting on the floor. I consider the possibility that it might be for me. The package is addressed to my wife, but there’s still a slim chance I am the final intended recipient. I lift the box: it’s heavy. For the moment, I can take the investigation no further – my wife is not at home. At some point in the afternoon, I look out the window of my office shed towards the house and see my wife standing in the kitchen. I cross the garden. My wife does not look up when I enter – she is staring intently at her feet. The box is on the table between us, empty. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2YpU4Fa

Kill Switch review: how the Senate filibuster props up Republican power

As Mitch McConnell goes into battle for the minority once again, Adam Jentleson’s book is perfectly timed For nearly a month, Mitch McConnell and his Senate Republicans have waged the parliamentary equivalent of a guerrilla war. Having lost the Georgia runoffs and with them the Senate, McConnell has still managed to stymie formal reorganization of the chamber. In an already sulfurous political landscape, the filibuster – the need for super-majorities of 60 votes to pass legislation – looms once again as a flashpoint. Related: ‘The perfect target’: Russia cultivated Trump as asset for 40 years – ex-KGB spy Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3oxLM8E

'Half-friends is not a concept': UK should decide who its allies are, says Macron

‘History and geography don’t change – I don’t think British destiny is different to ours,’ says French president Emmanuel Macron has warned that Boris Johnson’s government has to decide who its allies are, insisting that “half-friends is not a concept”. “What politics does Great Britain wish to choose? It cannot be the best ally of the US, the best ally of the EU and the new Singapore … It has to choose a model,” the French president said, in an interview with the Guardian and a small group of other media. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/36oPsnb

Japanese woman hid mother's body in freezer for 10 years over fear of being evicted

The 48-year-old reportedly told police she was worried she would be forced to move out of the flat she shared with her mother A Japanese woman who said she hid her mother’s corpse in a freezer in her apartment for a decade told police she feared eviction if the death was discovered, according to reports. Yumi Yoshino, 48, was held “on suspicion of abandoning and hiding a female body” found on Wednesday inside the freezer in a Tokyo apartment, police said. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/36n1D40

Australian Open gets green light for 30,000 a day as WA loosens border restrictions

WA premier Mark McGowan says travellers from Queensland and Victoria will no longer have to quarantine upon arrival Follow today’s coronavirus liveblog Australia’s coronavirus vaccine rollout hit as EU gives itself power to block exports Australia’s Covid vaccines rollout: everything you need to know ‘Immunological unicorn’: the Australian lab growing coronavirus – and its startling discovery Crowds at this year’s Australian Open will be capped at half the pre-Covid average, after Victoria’s top health official signed off on allowing up to 30,000 spectators to attend the start of the tournament next month. On Saturday, Victoria’s sports minister, Martin Pakula, confirmed the government had agreed to a plan that would allow daily crowd capacity of 30,000 for the first eight days of the tournament, reducing to 25,000 per day from the start of the tournament quarter-finals. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2L7RReE

Cori Bush says she's moving office away from GOP extremist over safety concerns

Democratic congresswoman said Marjorie Taylor Greene and her staff refused to wear masks and berated her The Democratic representative Cori Bush said she is moving her office away from that of Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene due to safety concerns after Greene and her staff berated her and refused to wear masks. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t7P6Lt

Saudi state companies sue ex-spy chief in Canada over alleged $3bn fraud

Saad Aljabri, once a top aide to the former heir to the throne, has said he will fight the ‘recycled corruption allegations’ Saudi state-owned companies have sued the country’s former intelligence chief in a Canadian court, alleging he stole billions of dollars, according to documents obtained by the news agency Agence France-Presse. The 10 subsidiaries of Tahakom Investment Co – which is owned by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund – said in the civil suit filed in Ontario superior court that Saad Aljabri committed a “massive fraud” totalling at least US$3.47bn. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39uhb7O

US children will 'hopefully' get vaccines in late spring or early summer, says Fauci

Covid-19 vaccines not yet approved for children, but they are a key step in pursuit of widespread immunity Children in the US will “hopefully” start to be vaccinated against Covid-19 by late spring or early summer, Dr Anthony Fauci said on Friday. Related: Black Americans receiving Covid vaccines at lower rates than whites Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2NRDrAp

Australia's coronavirus vaccine rollout hit as EU gives itself power to block exports

Australia left off list of nations exempt from European Union’s new Covid vaccine export restrictions Follow today’s coronavirus live blog ‘Immunological unicorn’: the Australian lab growing coronavirus – and its startling discovery Australia’s Covid vaccines rollout: everything you need to know Europe’s dramatic decision to impose export controls on vaccine manufacturers could impact the rollout of the jab in Australia, after the country was left off a list of nations exempt from the new restrictions. Overnight on Friday the European Union set off a global diplomatic row when it went ahead with a threat to impose sweeping powers allowing it to block Covid-19 vaccine shipments from the bloc . Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3r9sIj3

Third night of protests in Poland after abortion ban takes effect

Thousands join rallies in Warsaw and other cities after delayed ban finally becomes law Thousands have protested for a third consecutive night in Warsaw and other parts of Poland after the country’s rightwing government implemented a court ruling imposing a near-total ban on abortion . Protesters have defied coronavirus restrictions and sub-zero temperatures to rally after the controversial judgment was given legal force on Wednesday. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2L0dPA0

Confused about GameStop? Five things to watch to help you pretend to understand the stock market

You don’t have to be a redditer or a big investor to enjoy these Hollywood blockbusters that double as the perfect educational resource The GameStop debacle has put the stock market on everyone’s radar this week – even those who rarely pay it any attention. Many are depicting the incident as a David-and-Goliath battle between small investors gathering on Reddit message-boards and Wall Street powerbrokers finding themselves unexpectedly on the back foot at their own game. Billions of dollars are in the balance. Along with such major news events, though, come the instant internet experts. Let’s face it: most of us understand diddly squat about the stock market and rely on Hollywood to inform us about an industry that it portrays as a place in which, to quote from the tyrannical, fictional Gordan Gekko: “lunch is for wimps”. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t5lyxW

Nancy Sinatra: 'I'll never forgive Trump voters. I hope the anger doesn't kill me'

She may be 80 and cut off by Covid, but she’s still ready to walk all over Donald Trump. As her greatest songs are reissued, she reflects on the sexual politics of the 60s, her friendship with Elvis and her hopes for peace in the US Nancy Sinatra has one of the most famous surnames in America, but she has struggled to feel proudly American of late. It’s a couple of weeks away from the inauguration of Joe Biden, and the singer and film star is recalling Donald Trump’s preparations for his own inauguration in 2017: his first dance with his wife Melania would be to her father’s signature hit, My Way. Sinatra was disgusted. Her father was no fan of Trump: according to Frank’s former manager, he told Trump to “go fuck himself” after the billionaire refused to meet Frank’s fee for a 1990 performance at an Atlantic City casino. Nancy, in a since deleted tweet to Trump, wrote: “Just remember the first line of the song.” My Way begins: “And now the end is near.” Continue reading... from Th...

She survived in the wild against all odds. I took her class to learn how

Woniya Thibeault, the runner up on Netflix’s Alone , is offering an eight-week survival course, teaching more than how to skin a deer and tie a knot Left to fend for herself on Arctic land, with only 10 pieces of gear – among them a sleeping bag, a pot, and a bow and arrows – Woniya Thibeault didn’t just want to survive. She wanted to find joy in the process of surviving. Scattered miles apart in the same rugged wilderness were nine other contestants looking to outlast one another and win big on the History Channel’s popular survival reality series Alone . In it, contestants compete to stick it out in the wilderness for the longest time with limited resources – all have the option to tap out if it gets too much. The prize money – $500,000 – would have changed Thibeault’s life, but winning wasn’t her top priority. She was there for the experience. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3qZXdHT

Eyes wide for the RSPB's Big Garden Birdwatch – a photo essay

The UK’s largest citizen science project runs from 29-31 January with more people than ever expected to take part thanks to birdwatching’s lockdown boom For much of the past 12 months, while we haven’t been able to venture further than the local park or the end of our garden path, many of us have taken vicarious pleasure in following the flight paths of migrating birds, which are still free to spread their wings. The Arctic tern, for example, makes a UK stopover on its annual migration as it chases the sun between the Arctic and Antarctic summers. Birdsong floating through our windows and into our homes has been one of the most joyful and uplifting sounds of 2020. And from Friday, the RSPB is asking us to stay tuned and join it for the Big Garden Birdwatch (BGBW), the largest citizen science project in the UK. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3op0uih

Pollutionwatch: how smart braking could help cut electric car emissions

Extra battery weight of electric cars means ways must be found to cut particulate emissions You would think that battery electric cars, having no exhaust pipes, would emit less air pollution than diesel and petrol vehicles. A controversial study in 2016 said particle pollution from electric cars would be worse. Due to battery weight, electric cars are about 200-300kg heavier than comparable-size cars that burn oil-based fuel. More weight means more particle pollution from the wear of brakes, tyres and roads. This could offset the absence of an exhaust. New analysis by the University of Birmingham, suggests that regenerative braking, where the electric motor slows the car, should mean electric vehicles are less polluting in urban areas. A study in Los Angeles found that brakes on electric cars are used for about one-eighth of the time of those on oil-fuelled cars. However, the extra weight of electric cars means they are likely to emit more particle pollution on high-speed motorw...

Biden's pandemic problem: Politics Weekly Extra podcast

Jonathan Freedland speaks to the Pulitzer prize-winning author and journalist Laurie Garrett about what Joe Biden needs to do to get a grip on the Covid crisis in the US When Joe Biden entered the Oval Office as president, he got to work trying to figure out how to mitigate the coronavirus situation in the US , and what exactly he was up against. Jonathan speaks to the pandemic planning expert, Pulitzer prize-winning author and journalist Laurie Garrett about how she knew a crisis like this was coming but why no one in government chose to act. They also discuss what the Biden administration needs to do next. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t6AewR

Behind closed bedroom doors, a teenage mental health crisis is brewing | Gaby Hinsliff

Britain’s schools shutdown risks creating a generation of angry, withdrawn young people. Who will pick up the pieces? It’s never been exactly easy to get a teenager up in the morning. But behind many of our children’s closed bedroom doors, something is now unravelling. During last spring and summer, parents of older children worried about them galivanting off for rebellious lockdown-busting parties. In the dark depths of January, the fear is more for kids with all the stuffing knocked out of them; teenagers spending the whole day huddled miserably under duvets, refusing to complete online lessons, or mentally checking out. Illicit teenage parties were, of course, a health risk. But sad, withdrawn, angry kids who would rather roll over than face another day in lockdown represent a whole new medical crisis in the making. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3psJuJy

Biden's pandemic problem: Politics Weekly Extra podcast

Jonathan Freedland speaks to the Pulitzer prize-winning author and journalist Laurie Garrett about what Joe Biden needs to do to get a grip on the Covid crisis in the US When Joe Biden entered the Oval Office as president, he got to work trying to figure out how to mitigate the coronavirus situation in the US , and what exactly he was up against. Jonathan speaks to the pandemic planning expert, Pulitzer prize-winning author and journalist Laurie Garrett about how she knew a crisis like this was coming but why no one in government chose to act. They also discuss what the Biden administration needs to do next. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t6AewR

What's up with WhatsApp? Why millions of users are shifting to new platforms – podcast

A routine update to WhatsApp’s privacy policy resulted in a public relations fiasco earlier this month, when viral posts questioning the changes prompted users to try out alternative apps. Kate O’Flaherty breaks down what’s next for WhatsApp With a user base of 2 billion people, WhatsApp’s dominance has long seemed indisputable. But in recent weeks, millions have suddenly flocked to competitors such as Signal and Telegram. It all began with an ill-phrased notification to WhatsApp users, informing them of modifications to the app’s privacy policy. Freelance journalist Kate O’Flaherty tells Anushka Asthana why alternative messaging platforms suddenly seem so attractive to users , and how WhatsApp has reacted. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3puhtBj

Highest price ever for a Botticelli painting paid in New York auction

Sandro Botticelli’s Young Man Holding a Roundel, a small portrait of long-haired nobleman, sells for $92.2m A small painting by Sandro Botticelli has been sold at Sotheby’s in New York for $92.2m, an auction record for the Renaissance master . The work, Young Man Holding a Roundel, from about 1475, depicts a nobleman holding a round painting of a saint. It is one of just three portraits in private hands by the artist best known for The Birth of Venus and Primavera. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2YoIAlf

Britain launches visa scheme for Hong Kong citizens

In response to Chinese crackdown, those with British National (Overseas) status will be able to move to and eventually settle in UK Boris Johnson has hailed a new visa scheme that offers qualifying Hong Kong citizens a route to British citizenship, a programme launched in response to China’s new security laws in the former colony. The scheme, first announced in 2020, opens on Sunday and allows those with British National (Overseas) status to live, study and work in Britain for five years and eventually apply for citizenship. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3r15CLf

GameStop fun turns serious for Reddit's WallStreetBets

Analysis: financial risk is often an in-joke for the anarchic group of traders – but no one is laughing now GameStop shares plunge after ban by Robinhood app In normal times, everything on WallStreetBets, the anarchic community of online day traders that has propelled shares of the US video game retailer GameStop up 2,200% this year , is simultaneously a joke and wholly serious. The group, made up of more than 4.5 million members of the social media site Reddit, has been well known in certain corners of the financial community for years thanks to its unique approach to equity markets. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3orw7b2

Councils flag concerns about 'excessive profits' at children's homes

Local Government Association calls for financial oversight of privately run facilities Councils have called for financial oversight of England’s privately-run children’s care homes after research showed some of the biggest private equity-owned providers were collectively making hundreds of millions a year in profits. The Local Government Association (LGA) also warned that the increasing indebtedness of some of the largest private providers risked triggering a Southern Cross-style financial collapse , potentially leaving vulnerable children without a home. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3acxx43

Ocasio-Cortez rejects support from Ted Cruz: 'You almost had me murdered'

Congresswoman tells senator who rejected Biden’s victory: ‘If you want to help, you can resign’ The Democratic representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has rejected a message of support from Ted Cruz, adding the Texas senator “almost had me murdered three weeks ago”. Cruz on Thursday had endorsed Ocasio-Cortez’s call on Twitter for a congressional hearing about the decision by the online trading platform Robinhood to restrict trading in GameStop shares. But while welcoming the chance to work across party lines on the issue, Ocasio-Cortez had harsh words for Cruz. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Yn7YYP

UK’s financial regulator urges banks to rethink branch closures

Financial Conduct Authority concerned vulnerable customers may be left without access to services The UK’s financial regulator has called on banks to reconsider branch closures amid fears that vulnerable customers could be left without access to services. The Financial Conduct Authority said that during lockdown branch closures should be paused or delayed if banks were unable to carefully assess the needs of customers and what alternative arrangements they could provide. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t5x78n

Coronavirus live news: Novavax effective against UK variant but less so against South African one

Trials showed jab was 89% effective in UK and 60% in South Africa; Paris to suspend jabs over shortage; Vietnam reports nine new cases. Follow latest updates Novavax Covid vaccine shown to be nearly 90% effective in UK trial AstraZeneca may have to renegotiate vaccine contracts, say experts Oxford vaccine spat could lead to divergence in Covid strategies People of colour must get fair access to vaccines, Fauci says See all our coronavirus coverage 12.44am GMT In New Zealand , the minister of Covid-19 response Chris Hipkins said there are no new cases of the virus in the community today, and this “does provide reassurance” for the upcoming long weekend and Waitangi next week. “There is no reason people’s travel plans should change,” the minister said. 12.42am GMT More detail on the Novavax announcement can be found in the company’s statement here . The Guardian’s reportage, from Sarah Boseley and Nicola Davis , is here. Related: Novavax Covid vaccine shown to be nearl...

Facebook removes Save Our Rights UK Covid denial videos

Social media site pulls videos by group that Tory MP told to persist with its anti-lockdown activities Videos published by a “coronavirus denier” group that was told by the Conservative MP Sir Desmond Swayne to persist with its anti-lockdown activities have been removed from Facebook after the social network concluded they posed a risk of “imminent physical harm”. More than 60,000 people followed the Save Our Rights UK group, which drew wider attention on Thursday after it emerged Swayne had used a November interview to make baseless claims that NHS figures had been manipulated to exaggerate the scale of the coronavirus crisis. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3a5ETWY

Novavax Covid vaccine shown to be nearly 90% effective in UK trial

UK vaccines taskforce has bought 60m doses after study found ‘spectacular results’ Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Another vaccine against Covid, trialled in the UK and bought by the government, has been shown to be nearly 90% effective and work against the UK and South African variants of the virus. The UK vaccines taskforce has bought 60m doses of the Novavax vaccine, one of seven in its portfolio, and it will be manufactured on Teesside in the UK. If it is given emergency authorisation by the UK regulator, it could boost the country’s immunisation programme and solve the potential problems over the supply of the other two vaccines currently in use. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3qYCPag

Study reveals depth of BAME health inequality in England

Impact in some ethnic minority groups equivalent to being 20 years older than actual age, study says The health impact of belonging to some ethnic minority groups is equivalent to being 20 years older than your actual age, England’s largest ever study of health inequalities in BAME communities has found. Not only are people from these groups often poorer and more likely to suffer from underlying health conditions, they are also more likely to report worse treatment when visiting their GP surgery, and insufficient support from local services, such as housing and social care. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t2QNK2

'I was appalled to be tarred as misogynist': Variety critic hits back at Carey Mulligan's sexism accusations

Exclusive: Dennis Harvey, the critic whose review of Promising Young Woman prompted outrage from its star and an apology from his editors, has spoken out Dennis Harvey, the veteran film critic whose review of Promising Young Woman has sparked a furore across the industry , has hit back at accusations of misogyny amid calls for Variety to fire him. Harvey’s review was published more than a year ago, following the film’s premiere at the Sundance film festival. Largely positive, it nonetheless queried the central casting, saying that while “a fine actress” Mulligan “seems a bit of an odd choice as this admittedly many-layered apparent femme fatale”. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/39s9vmF

Primary schools: pandemic causing 'significant' learning loss in England

Study highlights how poorest pupils are bearing the brunt of lockdowns and school closures Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Primary school pupils in England have suffered “significant” learning loss during lockdown and school closures, according to new findings that highlight how disadvantaged pupils have been affected most by the pandemic. The work by the National Foundation for Education Research (NFER) was greeted by experts with dismay at the extent of the learning lost by children aged six and seven following the disruption to their schooling in 2020. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3ouRhVP