Senin, 11 Januari 2021

Covid: UK at 'perilous moment' in pandemic, says PM - BBC News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson at Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol
PA Media

The UK is facing a "perilous moment" in the pandemic and must guard against complacency, the PM has said, as he announced a total of 2.4 million vaccinations have been given so far.

Visiting a vaccination centre in Bristol, Boris Johnson said: "We have a really tough fight on our hands."

It comes as seven mass jab centres have opened in England.

And England's chief medical officer has warned the next few weeks will be "the worst" of the pandemic for the NHS.

Prof Chris Whitty has urged people to minimise unnecessary social contacts.

Mr Johnson also announced that around 2 million people have received a Covid vaccine across the UK, which means around 400,000 people have had two doses.

He said "roughly" 40% of over-80s have been vaccinated, and 23% of elderly residents in care homes.

But the prime minister warned the vaccination programme was a "race against time" because of the pressure the NHS was under.

And he said it was "a very perilous moment because everyone can sense the vaccine is coming in - my worry is that will breed false complacency".

Asked whether the government would introduce stricter lockdown rules, Mr Johnson said ministers would keep restrictions "under constant review", adding: "Where we have to tighten the rules we will."

Meanwhile, the Test and Trace scheme in England has revised one of its definitions of a "close contact" - the people who need to be reached if they have been near to someone who has tested positive for Covid.

The definition now refers to a close contact as anyone who has been within two metres of someone for more than 15 minutes, whether in a single period or cumulatively over the course of one day.

Previously the definition was just a single period of at least 15 minutes.

The government is aiming to offer vaccinations to around 15 million people in the UK - the over-70s, older care home residents and staff, frontline healthcare workers and the clinically extremely vulnerable - by mid-February.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock will set out the government's vaccine delivery plan at a news conference later.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

Under the national lockdown, people in England must stay at home and can go out only for limited reasons such as food shopping, exercise, or work if they cannot do so from home.

Similar lockdown measures are in place across much of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Two vaccines - Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca - are currently being administered in the UK.

On Friday a third coronavirus vaccine - made by US company Moderna - was approved for use, although supplies are not expected to arrive until spring.

Banner Image Reading Around the BBC - Blue
Footer - Blue

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiJmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLTU1NjIxMjI40gEqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLTU1NjIxMjI4?oc=5

2021-01-11 14:37:00Z
52781298186655

COVID-19: 2.4 million coronavirus jabs given out in UK, says Boris Johnson - Sky News

2.4 million coronavirus jabs have been administered across the UK, the prime minister has said.

Speaking from a vaccination centre in Bristol, Boris Johnson said: "Today, I think I can confirm that we've done roughly 40% of the 80-year-olds in this country already.

"We've done about 23% of the elderly residents of care homes."

He continued: "As I speak to you today, we've done about two million people, maybe a bit more, about 2.4 million jabs all in, I think, across the whole of the UK."

Mr Johnson added the NHS would be "ramping that up massively" in a bid to reach the government's target of offering a first dose of a COVID vaccine to 15 million of the most vulnerable by 15 February.

Downing Street earlier revealed the prime minister's father, Stanley Johnson, appears to be among the early wave of people to get two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine before a change in policy.

Now, people have to wait longer for their second dose, as the government aims to get a first dose into as many people as possible, as quickly as possible.

More from UK

The prime minister's press secretary, Allegra Stratton, said: "It's not something I've spoken to Stanley Johnson about, but way of explanation in the early days of the vaccination programme it was the case that GPs were doing two jabs, a first one followed a few weeks later by a second one.

"It appears that Stanley Johnson was one of those people who was in that first wave.

"It's been true of a number of individuals around the country and Stanley Johnson appears to be one of them."

Downing Street also said the government would continue to keep England's lockdown measures under review.

Asked whether ministers were planning to bring in even tighter restrictions, a Number 10 spokesman said: "As you would expect and as we have done throughout pandemic, we look through the latest data and statistical information.

"We continue to look at that data and to monitor it and keep our measures under review."

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2NvdmlkLTE5LTItNC1taWxsaW9uLWNvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWphYnMtZ2l2ZW4tb3V0LWluLXVrLXNheXMtYm9yaXMtam9obnNvbi0xMjE4NTA3MNIBcGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9jb3ZpZC0xOS0yLTQtbWlsbGlvbi1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1qYWJzLWdpdmVuLW91dC1pbi11ay1zYXlzLWJvcmlzLWpvaG5zb24tMTIxODUwNzA?oc=5

2021-01-11 13:48:45Z
52781298186655

UK entering 'worst point' of pandemic, top health official warns, as cases rise and bodies pile up - CNN

"We're now at the worst point of this epidemic for the UK. In the future we will have the vaccine, but the numbers at the moment are higher than they were in the previous peak — by some distance," England's chief medical officer Chris Whitty told the BBC, adding that he expects the next few weeks to be the "most dangerous time."
The country, which has already suffered more deaths as a result of the disease than any European nation and recently became the fifth nation on earth to reach the grim milestone of three million cases, is on the verge of seeing its hospitals overwhelmed.
Whitty told the BBC on Monday that there were currently more than 30,000 patients in hospital, compared to 18,000 during the first peak of the virus in the UK in April.
"We're now at a situation where in the UK as a whole, around one in 50 people is infected, and in London it's around 1 in 30," Whitty said. "There is a very high chance that if you meet someone unnecessarily, they will have Covid."
His warning comes with the country barely a week into its third national lockdown. But fears are growing that Britons are increasingly giving up on complying with the rules, as case numbers continue to surge despite the extreme measures.
Whitty stressed that minimizing contact with others will stop the situation from getting worse.
"Every single unnecessary contact any of us have is a potential link in a chain of transmission that will lead eventually to a vulnerable person," he told the BBC. "So, the absolute key is for all of us to think do we really need to have this contact?"
A patient arrives by ambulance at the Royal London hospital on January 8, 2021 in London, England.
Whitty's intervention comes as the number of daily deaths in the UK remain very high, a point grimly illustrated by the fact that in one county in southern England, bodies are being stored at a temporary facility as morgues there are at capacity.
The temporary facility in Surrey, south of London, can hold an extra 800 bodies, on top of the 600 that can be held in morgues.
A spokesperson for the Surrey Local Resilience Forum told the UK's PA news agency: "To put some perspective on this, during the first wave, they had 700 bodies go through that (temporary) facility ... The first wave lasted approximately 12 weeks from mid-March to mid-May ... Since December 21, after just two and a half weeks, they have had 300 bodies go through it."
The UK has been ahead of the curve on approving Covid-19 vaccinations and on Monday the government is expected to outline how it will hit its target of vaccinating 13 million people by February 15.
A large part of the program will be handled by vaccination centers around the country -- the first of which opens on Monday -- and an army of volunteers who have been trained to administer the vaccine.
And even the good news that two million people have been vaccinated has been soured by reported shortages of the vaccine in some hospitals. It is unclear why the shortages are happening; the government has faced criticism for how it plans to prioritize handing out the doses it does have.
If Whitty's worst fears become reality, then the National Health Service will be under enormous strain as it attempts to cope with unprecedented hospital admissions, deal with dead bodies, vaccinate the most vulnerable citizens while also carrying out the normal procedures.
The government will be hoping that Whitty's stark warnings force citizens into complying with the measures to stop the spread of the virus.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNubi5jb20vMjAyMS8wMS8xMS9ldXJvcGUvY2hyaXMtd2hpdHR5LXVrLWNvcm9uYXZpcnVzLXBhbmRlbWljLXdvcnN0LXdlZWtzLXlldC1pbnRsLWdici9pbmRleC5odG1s0gFyaHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAuY25uLmNvbS9jbm4vMjAyMS8wMS8xMS9ldXJvcGUvY2hyaXMtd2hpdHR5LXVrLWNvcm9uYXZpcnVzLXBhbmRlbWljLXdvcnN0LXdlZWtzLXlldC1pbnRsLWdici9pbmRleC5odG1s?oc=5

2021-01-11 12:24:00Z
52781297552400

Covid: 'Most dangerous time' of the pandemic, says Whitty - BBC News

A woman gives her details before getting a Covid jab in Newcastle
PA Media

The UK will go through the "most dangerous time" of the pandemic in the weeks before vaccine rollout has an impact, England's chief medical officer has warned.

Prof Chris Whitty urged people to minimise all unnecessary contact.

The next few weeks will be "the worst" of the pandemic for the NHS, he said.

Thousands more people are due to receive a vaccine this week as seven mass centres open across England.

NHS England said hundreds more GP-led and hospital services would also open later this week.

The government is aiming to vaccinate around 15 million people in the UK - the over-70s, healthcare workers and those required to shield - by mid-February.

Prof Whitty told BBC Breakfast: "This is everybody's problem. Any single unnecessary contact you have with someone is a potential link in a chain of transmission that will lead to a vulnerable person."

He said there were over 30,000 people in the NHS with Covid-19 as of Sunday - compared to about 18,000 at the peak last April.

He added that "anybody who is not shocked" by the number of people in hospital "has not understood this at all".

"This is an appalling situation," he said.

  • How does a vaccine get approved
  • How will the UK vaccinate millions of people?
  • NHS Covid-19 jab letters 'confusing over 80s'

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the proposals would be the "keystone of our exit out of the pandemic".

The government will also publish its first daily figures which will reveal how many people have been given the vaccine.

Mr Hancock said on Sunday about two million people in the UK had been vaccinated, with some 200,000 jabs administered in England daily.

The vaccine plan will be unveiled after the UK recorded more than 80,000 coronavirus deaths since the start of the pandemic.

In Surrey, which has one of the highest infection rates in the country, a temporary mortuary has been opened as hospital mortuaries have reached capacity.

Almost 200 bodies are being stored at the emergency site, which is a former military hospital, and other local authorities have told the BBC they expect to open similar facilities soon.

On Saturday scientists warned stricter lockdown measures might be needed in England and the health secretary has urged people to follow the spirit as well as the letter of the rules.

Mr Hancock told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show on Sunday "every time you try to flex the rules that could be fatal" and said staying at home was the "most important thing we can do collectively as a society".

Under the national lockdown, people in England must stay at home and can go out only for limited reasons such as food shopping, exercise, or work if they cannot do so from home. Similar measures are in place across much of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Ministers held two meetings on Sunday to discuss how to enforce the current lockdown measures more strictly and whether even tighter restrictions may be needed.

BBC political correspondent Iain Watson said no decisions on further restrictions were taken as there was a desire within government to wait until reliable data on the impact of the existing measures becomes available in 10 days before going any further.

However, he added there had been a discussion on better enforcement of existing regulations which included how to ensure shops and workplaces that have remained open were observing health and safety rules, including social distancing.

Map showing where England's vaccination centres and mass vaccination sites are, as well as the UK's hospital hubs
1px transparent line

The vaccination programme is described as the biggest in NHS history, with an aim of offering jabs to most care home residents by the end of January and the most vulnerable by mid-February.

Some 600,000 invites were due to be sent out over the weekend and this coming week to people aged 80 or older who live up to a 45-minute drive from one of the new regional centres.

The new sites, which NHS England said were chosen to give a geographical spread covering as many people as possible, are:

  • Millennium Point, Birmingham
  • Ashton Gate, Bristol
  • ExCel Centre, London
  • Manchester Tennis and Football Centre
  • Centre for Life, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
  • Robertson House, Stevenage
  • Epsom Downs Racecourse, Surrey

The NHS said people would not miss out on their vaccination if they do not use the letters to make an appointment at one of the centres, adding that local jabs would become available to people if they waited.

Two Labour MPs also raised concerns about the letters being delayed in getting out to people due to coronavirus affecting Royal Mail staff.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

The new centres will each be capable of delivering thousands of vaccinations each week and will be followed by "dozens more" large-scale sites, NHS England said.

There will be about 1,200 vaccination sites when more GP-led and hospital services open later this week, along with the first pharmacy-led pilot sites, it added.

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi said the government's vaccine delivery plan would "set out our ambitions for the coming weeks and months as we continue to expand our programme at breakneck speed".

"It's been phenomenal to see our extensive preparations come to fruition and from Monday the public will also be able to see exactly how we will ensure they and their loved ones get the vaccine as quickly as possible," he added.

Prof Stephen Powis, NHS England national medical director, said "increasing supplies" meant the NHS could "open even more vaccination services and protect even more people this week".

He also called on the public to help the NHS, saying: "Please don't contact the NHS to seek a vaccine, we will contact you. When we do contact you, please attend your booked appointments."

Chart showing priority groups
1px transparent line

Pharmaceutical firm Boots said its first vaccination site was due to open later this week to offer the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab to the people most vulnerable.

It said sites in Huddersfield and Gloucester were planned to open in the coming weeks.

And Scotland is starting its wider rollout of the Oxford vaccine at more than 1,100 locations from today.

Two vaccines - Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca - are currently being administered in the UK.

On Friday a third coronavirus vaccine - made by US company Moderna - was approved for use, although supplies are not expected to arrive until spring.

Banner Image Reading Around the BBC - Blue
Footer - Blue
Banner saying 'Get in touch'

Are you due to have a vaccination today? What has been your experience of receiving a vaccination? Email: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also get in touch in the following ways:

If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiJmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLTU1NjEyMjcw0gEqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLTU1NjEyMjcw?oc=5

2021-01-11 08:31:00Z
52781297552400

Minggu, 10 Januari 2021

Covid: Mass vaccination centres to open in England - BBC News

A woman gives her details before getting a Covid jab in Newcastle
PA Media

Thousands more people will receive a Covid-19 vaccine this week as seven mass centres open across England.

NHS England said hundreds more GP-led and hospital services would also open later this week.

The government is aiming to vaccinate 15 million people in the UK - the over-70s, healthcare workers and those required to shield - by mid-February.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock will set out the government's vaccine delivery plan at a press conference later.

He said the proposals would be the "keystone of our exit out of the pandemic".

The government will also publish its first daily figures which will reveal how many people have been given the vaccine.

Mr Hancock said on Sunday about two million people in the UK had been vaccinated, with some 200,000 jabs administered in England daily.

  • How does a vaccine get approved
  • How will the UK vaccinate millions of people?
  • NHS Covid-19 jab letters 'confusing over 80s'

The vaccine plan will be unveiled after the UK recorded more than 80,000 coronavirus deaths since the start of the pandemic.

In Surrey, which has one of the highest infection rates in the country, a temporary mortuary has been opened as hospital mortuaries have reached capacity.

Almost 200 bodies are being stored at the emergency site, which is a former military hospital, and other local authorities have told the BBC they expect to open similar facilities soon.

On Saturday scientists warned stricter lockdown measures might be needed in England and the health secretary has urged people to follow the spirit as well as the letter of the rules.

Mr Hancock told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show on Sunday "every time you try to flex the rules that could be fatal" and said staying at home was the "most important thing we can do collectively as a society".

Under the national lockdown, people in England must stay at home and can go out only for limited reasons such as food shopping, exercise, or work if they cannot do so from home. Similar measures are in place across much of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Ministers held two meetings on Sunday to discuss how to enforce the current lockdown measures more strictly and whether even tighter restrictions may be needed.

BBC political correspondent Iain Watson said no decisions on further restrictions were taken as there was a desire within government to wait until reliable data on the impact of the existing measures becomes available in 10 days before going any further.

However, he added there had been a discussion on better enforcement of existing regulations which included how to ensure shops and workplaces that have remained open were observing health and safety rules, including social distancing.

Map showing where England's vaccination centres and mass vaccination sites are, as well as the UK's hospital hubs
1px transparent line

The vaccination programme is described as the biggest in NHS history, with an aim of offering jabs to most care home residents by the end of January and the most vulnerable by mid-February.

Some 600,000 invites were due to be sent out over the weekend and this coming week to people aged 80 or older who live up to a 45-minute drive from one of the new regional centres.

The new sites, which NHS England said were chosen to give a geographical spread covering as many people as possible, are:

  • Millennium Point, Birmingham
  • Ashton Gate, Bristol
  • ExCel Centre, London
  • Manchester Tennis and Football Centre
  • Centre for Life, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
  • Robertson House, Stevenage
  • Epsom Downs Racecourse, Surrey

The NHS said people would not miss out on their vaccination if they do not use the letters to make an appointment at one of the centres, adding that local jabs would become available to people if they waited.

Two Labour MPs also raised concerns about the letters being delayed in getting out to people due to coronavirus affecting Royal Mail staff.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

The new centres will each be capable of delivering thousands of vaccinations each week and will be followed by "dozens more" large-scale sites, NHS England said.

There will be about 1,200 vaccination sites in total when more GP-led and hospital services open later this week, along with the first pharmacy-led pilot sites, it added.

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi said the government's vaccine delivery plan would "set out our ambitions for the coming weeks and months as we continue to expand our programme at breakneck speed".

"It's been phenomenal to see our extensive preparations come to fruition and from Monday the public will also be able to see exactly how we will ensure they and their loved ones get the vaccine as quickly as possible," he added.

Prof Stephen Powis, NHS England national medical director, said "increasing supplies" meant the NHS could "open even more vaccination services and protect even more people this week".

He also called on the public to help the NHS, saying: "Please don't contact the NHS to seek a vaccine, we will contact you. When we do contact you, please attend your booked appointments."

Chart showing priority groups
1px transparent line

Pharmaceutical firm Boots said its first vaccination site was due to open later this week to offer the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab to the people most vulnerable.

It said sites in Huddersfield and Gloucester were planned to open in the coming weeks.

And Scotland is starting its wider rollout of the Oxford vaccine at more than 1,100 locations from today.

Two vaccines - Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca - are currently being administered in the UK.

On Friday a third coronavirus vaccine - made by US company Moderna - was approved for use, although supplies are not expected to arrive until spring.

Banner Image Reading Around the BBC - Blue
Footer - Blue

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiJmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLTU1NjEyMjcw0gEqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLTU1NjEyMjcw?oc=5

2021-01-11 00:48:00Z
52781296864214

These senseless lockdown fines will only foster contempt among the public, writes ROSS CLARK - Daily Mail

These senseless lockdown fines will only foster contempt among the public, writes ROSS CLARK

We all know we are in the middle of a pandemic, that Covid-19 is spread by human contact, that the new strain of the virus is significantly more infectious, that cases are soaring and deaths are high – and that the NHS is in danger of being overwhelmed.

We know, too, that we all have a responsibility to keep contact with others to a bare minimum.

It is dangerous and wrong to hold parties, raves and other gatherings – and quite right for the police to use their powers to break them up.

We have a responsibility to keep our contact with others to an absolute minimum but over zealous enforcement is dangerous

We have a responsibility to keep our contact with others to an absolute minimum but over zealous enforcement is dangerous

If we want everyone to obey the lockdown rules it is vital that those rules have public consent

If we want everyone to obey the lockdown rules it is vital that those rules have public consent 

But there comes a point at which over-zealous enforcement of the rules becomes dangerous in itself.

If we want everyone to obey the lockdown rules it is vital that those rules have public consent.

Lose this and we find ourselves in a situation which tends to afflict all dictatorships after a while – where people pay lip service to laws but have such contempt for the rules that they are determined to break them at every opportunity.

Moreover, it destroys public trust even further when police are seen apparently making up the law as they go along.

As the National Police Chiefs’ Council has since acknowledged, there is nothing in the legislation passed last week that prevents someone driving five miles to take a socially distanced walk in the country.

The irony is the only social interaction likely to spread Covid is between police officers and the people they are apprehending

The irony is the only social interaction likely to spread Covid is between police officers and the people they are apprehending 

That is exactly what the two women stopped at a Derbyshire reservoir last week had done – they went there, they said, because it was less crowded than the paths near their homes. The tea they had taken to drink on a bitter day apparently constituted a ‘picnic’ and they were fined £200 each on the vague grounds of breaking the ‘spirit’ of lockdown.

Nor is there anything in the legislation to prevent people leaving their home twice a day – the ‘offence’ over which an overly ‘keen’ Thames Valley policeman challenged drivers following the new national lockdown. The ‘once-a-day’ rule is a guideline, but it is not law. The Home Secretary Priti Patel and Health Secretary Matt Hancock surely know that, so why were they so keen yesterday to jump to the support of police officers who appear to have acted outside the powers that Parliament voted to give them?

The irony is that the only social interaction likely to spread Covid in any of these instances was between police officers and the people they were apprehending for perceived breaches of lockdown.

Do these crowds of police hanging around the streets possess some kind of immunity to the disease which the rest of us do not?

I am sure that the vast majority of officers around the country are not acting disproportionately, but are enforcing the rules with common sense – giving advice and verbal warnings to people who, in many cases, are simply confused by the ever-changing rules.

We should follow the lockdown rules but police forces must act proportionately

We should follow the lockdown rules but police forces must act proportionately

But it damages the reputation of the police as a whole when some start behaving like the Stasi. I wonder whether those individuals who’ve been interrogated by over-zealous boys in blue in recent days will be inclined to cooperate with officers in future if, for example, their assistance is required as witnesses to a real crime?

And I find it particularly worrying that several cases seem to have involved crowds of male officers surrounding women who are either alone or in pairs. It is as if years of equality training have gone out of the window and some officers suddenly think themselves entitled to pick on what they see as soft targets.

We all need to follow the rules of lockdown, but that will be made easier if police forces can retain our respect by acting proportionately, rather than jumping on the first person they can find an excuse to fine.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMif2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9kZWJhdGUvYXJ0aWNsZS05MTMyMzE1L1RoZXNlLXNlbnNlbGVzcy1sb2NrZG93bi1maW5lcy1mb3N0ZXItY29udGVtcHQtcHVibGljLXdyaXRlcy1ST1NTLUNMQVJLLmh0bWzSAYMBaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZGFpbHltYWlsLmNvLnVrL2RlYmF0ZS9hcnRpY2xlLTkxMzIzMTUvYW1wL1RoZXNlLXNlbnNlbGVzcy1sb2NrZG93bi1maW5lcy1mb3N0ZXItY29udGVtcHQtcHVibGljLXdyaXRlcy1ST1NTLUNMQVJLLmh0bWw?oc=5

2021-01-10 22:01:00Z
52781295497556

UK government warns public to “follow the rules” as calls grow for tougher lockdown - BBC News - BBC News

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiK2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnlvdXR1YmUuY29tL3dhdGNoP3Y9NkZZX1d0TEtjM2vSAQA?oc=5

2021-01-10 23:06:54Z
52781295840567