Jumat, 02 April 2021

COVID-19: Pakistan, Kenya, Bangladesh and the Philippines added to England's travel 'red list' - Sky News

Pakistan, Kenya, Bangladesh and the Philippines have been added to England's coronavirus "red list".

The move, which will take effect from 4am on Friday, 9 April, is in response to concerns about new variants of COVID-19, like those first detected in South Africa and Brazil.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

PM's concern for France COVID situation

It means international visitors who have departed from or transited through those nations in the previous 10 days will be barred from entering.

British and Irish citizens and those with residence rights in the UK will be allowed to enter, but will have to arrive at a designated port and then pay to stay in a government-approved quarantine hotel for 10 days.

Once in quarantine, they will have to take a COVID test on the second and eighth days of their self-isolation.

Flights arriving from the four countries will not be banned, with British and Irish nationals and UK residents advised to use commercial routes if they wish to return.

More from Covid-19

The Department for Transport said: "The government has made it consistently clear it will take decisive action if necessary to contain the virus and has added these destinations to the red list to protect public health."

The decision is based on advice from the government-funded Joint Biosecurity Centre.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

February: What it's like staying in a quarantine hotel

According to the DfT, the data shows that the majority of cases of the South Africa variant detected in England have been linked to international travel and very few are thought to have come from Europe.

Overseas holidays are banned under England's coronavirus lockdown measures until 17 May at the earliest.

A new law came in on Monday threatening a fine of up to £5,000 for anyone who tries to leave England before 30 June without "good reason", although this could be lifted sooner if travel is allowed to resume.

Under plans discussed by ministers to resume foreign travel, holiday destinations could be ranked under a "traffic light system", with fewer restrictions for places with low coronavirus rates and high vaccination take-up.

Countries would be graded either green, amber or red, according to how well they are coping with the pandemic, reports suggest.

The additions mean a total of 39 countries are now on the "red list". They are:

• Angola
• Argentina
• Bangladesh
• Bolivia
• Botswana
• Brazil
• Burundi
• Cape Verde
• Chile
• Colombia
• Democratic Republic of the Congo
• Ecuador
• Eswatini
• Ethiopia
• French Guiana
• Guyana
• Kenya
• Lesotho
• Malawi
• Mozambique
• Namibia
• Oman
• Pakistan
• Panama
• Paraguay
• Peru
• The Philippines
• Qatar
• Rwanda
• Seychelles
• Somalia
• South Africa
• Suriname
• Tanzania
• United Arab Emirates
• Uruguay
• Venezuela
• Zambia
• Zimbabwe

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMifGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2NvdmlkLTE5LXRoZS1waGlsaXBwaW5lcy1wYWtpc3Rhbi1rZW55YS1hbmQtYmFuZ2xhZGVzaC1hZGRlZC10by1lbmdsYW5kcy10cmF2ZWwtcmVkLWxpc3QtMTIyNjM1MzjSAYABaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL2NvdmlkLTE5LXRoZS1waGlsaXBwaW5lcy1wYWtpc3Rhbi1rZW55YS1hbmQtYmFuZ2xhZGVzaC1hZGRlZC10by1lbmdsYW5kcy10cmF2ZWwtcmVkLWxpc3QtMTIyNjM1Mzg?oc=5

2021-04-02 09:41:33Z
52781480929535

Coronavirus: Dozens of MPs criticise 'divisive' Covid passports - BBC News

Women in mask outside restaurant
PA Media

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and senior Tory Iain Duncan Smith are among more than 70 MPs to launch a campaign opposing Covid passports in England.

Any demand to prove vaccination status to access jobs, businesses or services would be "divisive and discriminatory", the cross-party group said.

It comes as the Daily Telegraph reported that a series of pilot tests for Covid passports were being planned.

The government said no final decision had been made on Covid certificates.

A review is taking place into whether such a system could help to reopen the economy in England, with discussions also taking place across the devolved nations.

But the plan could "scupper things" for hospitality venues who are trying to reopen, Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, told BBC Breakfast.

She said: "It is a difficult process for us to implement... and yet today we have not had a consultation with the government about how we would do this in pubs."

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has previously said people could be asked to provide a vaccine certificate for entry into pubs in England, saying it "may be up to individual publicans".

Certification could involve people being either vaccinated, having had a recent negative test or having previously been infected, the PM said.

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said vaccine passports could also be used as a "tool in the short term" to reopen theatres and sports stadiums.

But a broad coalition of MPs and peers have now signed a pledge saying they "oppose the divisive and discriminatory use of Covid status certification to deny individuals access to general services, businesses or jobs".

The group contains some unlikely allies, with many of Mr Corbyn's former shadow cabinet joining the lockdown-sceptic Covid Research Group of Conservative MPs in backing the campaign.

Accusing the government of "creeping authoritarianism", Liberal Democrats leader Sir Ed Davey said: "As we start to get this virus properly under control we should start getting our freedoms back. Vaccine passports - essentially Covid ID cards - take us in the other direction."

Sir Graham Brady, who chairs the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, added: "With high levels of vaccination protecting the vulnerable and making transmission less likely, we should aim to return to normal life, not to put permanent restrictions in place."

Labour's Diane Abbott, Tory Esther McVey and Lib Dem Layla Moran
Reuters/BBC/Getty

Privacy campaigning organisation Big Brother Watch also signed the pledge and published a report arguing against the measure.

The group's director, Silkie Carlo, said: "We are in real danger of becoming a check-point society where anyone from bouncers to bosses could demand to see our papers. We cannot let this government create a two-tier nation of division, discrimination and injustice."

In the campaign group's report - entitled "Access Denied" - it said if certificates were brought it, in would be "the first policy for decades that could see segregation imposed throughout the population".

'Checkpoint Britain'

Baroness Shami Chakrabarti, another signatory of the pledge, described Covid passports for aspects of everyday life as "dangerous, discriminatory and counterproductive".

She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It's one thing to have a passport to travel internationally, that is a privilege, even a luxury, but participation in local community life is a fundamental right."

The Labour peer added: "To introduce two queues at the cinema, two queues at the football stadium going forward, is to introduce checkpoint Britain that so many of us just do not want.

"We should open up together because that's the kind of Britain we want going forward."

Baroness Chakrabarti, a former head of human rights organisation Liberty, said passports could see "policing power" given "to every bouncer or unscrupulous boss".

"It's a recipe for bullying, it's a recipe for corruption, it's a recipe for discrimination and it's not what we sacrificed so much for as a community over the past year," she said.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

The campaign comes after Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer this week said the use of Covid passports to decide whether people can enter pubs would go against the "British instinct".

A government spokeswoman said: "The review is considering a range of issues, including the ethical, equalities, privacy, legal and operational aspects and what limits, if any, should be placed on organisations using certification."

Meanwhile, the prime minister is to give an update on the Covid situation on Monday.

He is expected to confirm that data suggests the next stage of lockdown could ease in England on 12 April and that a traffic light system could be implemented for foreign travel, with countries being categorised as red, amber or green.

More than 31 million people have received the first dose of a coronavirus vaccine and more than 4.5 million have had a second dose, according to Thursday's daily figures.

The figures also show there were a further 51 deaths within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test, bringing the total to 126,764. Some 4,479 new cases have been recorded.

Around the BBC iPlayer banner
Around the BBC iPlayer footer

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiL2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk40gEzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk4?oc=5

2021-04-02 09:18:45Z
CBMiL2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk40gEzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk4

Backlash at Boris' vaccine passport plan: PM faces LOSING a crunch vote - Daily Mail

Backlash over Boris's vaccine passport plan: 41 Tories join Lib Dem and Labour MPs vowing to vote against the idea ahead of trial in theatres and stadiums which will later be extended to pubs

  • PM is on a collision course with more than 70 backbenchers who have signed a letter railing against the plans
  • Forty-one Tory MPs - enough to wipe out the Government's majority - have joined forces with 22 Labour MPs 
  • Commons vote likely hinges on Sir Keir Starmer, who this week suggested vaccine passports were un-British
  • Downing Street insists no plans have been confirmed and PM will make further announcements on Monday
Advertisement

Boris Johnson faces the biggest challenge of his premiership to date if he tries to ram through controversial plans for vaccine passports that have incensed MPs of all parties. 

The Prime Minister is on a collision course with 72 backbenchers who have signed a pledge railing against the 'divisive and discriminatory' certification scheme.

Forty-one Tory MPs - enough to wipe out the Government's majority - have joined forces with 22 Labour MPs and 10 Lib Dems to oppose the measures on grounds it infringes civil liberties.

It means a future crunch Commons vote likely hinges on Sir Keir Starmer, who this week said vaccine passports went against the 'British instinct' but refused to commit to whipping his MPs either way.

Downing Street insists no plans for domestic vaccine passports have been confirmed, but ministers have been seen to be pitch-rolling in recent weeks and the scheme is reportedly a 'done deal'.

Some companies are already pressing ahead, and the managing director of Royal Caribbean today said the cruise liner would be requiring guests to show documentation they have had their two doses. 

But pub landlords blasted vaccine passports as another 'burden' that could scupper their reopening, which for many struggling venues warn is already looking unlikely.  

Last night it emerged trials for vaccine passports could begin as soon as next month, with theatres, and stadiums are being lined up to pilot the controversial scheme under plans discussed by ministers.

As a rebellion against the plans gathered pace:

  • Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said Covid would eventually have to be managed in a similar way to serious seasonal viruses such as flu;
  • Cases continued to fall after pupils returned to school, in a boost for plans to press ahead with easing lockdown;
  • Another 51 deaths and 4,479 cases were reported;
  • An incredible 93 per cent of over-50s have now been vaccinated;
  • Ministers appeared set to introduce a 'traffic light' system to open up flights to countries with low Covid rates;
  • Police chiefs warned the public not to bend the rules this Easter weekend;
  • Emmanuel Macron was accused of acting like an arrogant king over France's new national lockdown.
Boris Johnson faces the biggest challenge to his premiership to date if he tries to ram through controversial plans for vaccine passports that have incensed MPs of all parties

Boris Johnson faces the biggest challenge to his premiership to date if he tries to ram through controversial plans for vaccine passports that have incensed MPs of all parties

Trials of vaccine passports could begin as soon as next month, the Mail can reveal. Pictured: A covid-safe pub lunch

Trials of vaccine passports could begin as soon as next month, the Mail can reveal. Pictured: A covid-safe pub lunch

How vaccination passports could work

 What would I get?

Officials are working on an update of the NHS app which would allow people to scan their vaccine status at the door of a venue. A paper version is being developed for those who do not use a smartphone.

Is it popular?

One poll found 68 per cent would support the idea for theatres or indoor concerts, with just 18 per cent opposed. But businesses have raised concerns, with the trade body UK Hospitality branding it 'unworkable'.

Do MPs back it?

Opposition is building, with a cross-party alliance of 72 MPs last night pledging to oppose the 'divisive and discriminatory' plan. Rebels include 40 Tories – enough to wipe out the Government's majority. Labour has yet to say how it will vote and ministers believe they could force it through without primary legislation.

What about pubs?

Boris Johnson suggested last week that it could be left to individual landlords to decide whether to require vaccine certificates.

Anywhere else?

Possibly in the workplace. But the CBI warns it could prove a 'legal minefield' and damage relations.

When will it happen?

Possibly as soon as next month in theatres and stadiums. However a full rollout will not take place until all adults have been jabbed. 

Advertisement

Pilot schemes will begin after work is completed on an updated version of the NHS Covid app which will let users prove they have been vaccinated.

Covid passports are being planned for events which could include the FA Cup final and other sporting events in May, according to the Telegraph.

The plan is a sign Mr Johnson will give vaccine passports the go-ahead on Monday, when he is due to report the interim results of a study led by Michael Gove. 

If it is put to a vote, it could set the stage for a spectacular Commons showdown that pits the Government against powerful Tory figures such as Sir Iain Duncan Smith as well as Labour backbenchers including John McDonnell and the party's former leader Jeremy Corbyn. 

The cross-party pledge states: 'We oppose the divisive and discriminatory use of Covid status certification to deny individuals access to general services, businesses or jobs.'  

Tory MP Sir Graham Brady, who chairs the 1922 Committee and is also a signatory to the pledge, insisted the aim should be to return to normal life.

He said: 'Covid-Status Certification would be divisive and discriminatory. With high levels of vaccination protecting the vulnerable and making transmission less likely, we should aim to return to normal life, not to put permanent restrictions in place.'

Former Tory ministers Esther McVey, Nus Ghani, Mark Harper and Harriett Baldwin are also threatening to join a Commons revolt. 

The Conservative rebels have unlikely bedfellows in the Labour left including Mr Corbyn, John McDonnell and Baroness Chakrabarti, who branded the scheme a 'tool of discrimination, oppression and bullying' that would bring about 'Checkpoint Britain'.

She told BBC Radio 4 this morning: 'It's dangerous, it's discriminatory, it's counter-productive. It seems to me, and many others, that on the one hand, if this level of intrusion into our lives were to be proportionate, then probably it's not safe to open up the economy.

'On the other hand, if it is safe to open up the economy, to come out of this lockdown and this crisis that we have been living under, if it is safe to do that, why create this tool of discrimination, oppression and bullying?'

Sir Keir has not made clear which way he will lean in any Commons vote. 

His support for the Government throughout the crisis has meant any Tory rebellion has not cost ministers votes.

But, amid pressure from his party to be more critical after a year in the job, he this week appeared queasy at the notion of vaccine passports. 

He told The Telegraph: 'My instinct is that… [if] we get the virus properly under control, the death rates are near zero, hospital admissions very, very low, that the British instinct in those circumstances will be against vaccine passports.

'I think that this idea that we sort of outsource this to individual landlords is just wrong in principle.' 

Sir Graham Brady
Sir Iain Duncan Smith
Esther McVey

Tory rebels: Sir Graham Brady, Sir Iain Duncan Smith and Esther McVey have all signed the pledge against vaccine passports

Jeremy Corbyn
Baroness Chakrabarti
Sir Ed Davey

And their unlikely allies: Jeremy Corbyn, Baroness Chakrabarti and Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey have all come out against the plans

The plan to test vaccination passports, revealed by the Mail, is a sign that Prime Minister Boris Johnson (pictured on April 1 in Middlesborough) will give vaccine passports the green light Easter Monday when he reports the findings of a study led by Michael Gov

The plan to test vaccination passports, revealed by the Mail, is a sign that Prime Minister Boris Johnson (pictured on April 1 in Middlesborough) will give vaccine passports the green light Easter Monday when he reports the findings of a study led by Michael Gove

Green light for holidays abroad? Traffic light system could allow trips to restart to 'safer' destinations 

By David Churchill for the Daily Mail 

There was hope for summer holidays last night after it emerged that a traffic-light system could allow flights abroad to resume.

Trips to Bahrain, the US, the Maldives, Israel and Malta could be the first available for Britons desperate to get abroad due to their high vaccination rates.

The scheme to enable quarantine-free travel to 'green' destinations is likely to be unveiled within days, Whitehall sources said.

Boris Johnson  is expected to reveal plans on Monday for a staged lifting of the ban on foreign holidays.

A second announcement setting out more detail of how the system would work could come within a week.

May 17 has been pencilled in as the earliest date when foreign travel might resume.

But a source suggested it was 'too early' to release a list of destinations given how quickly Covid data can change.

The scheme is likely to have at least three tiers, with only those travelling from 'green' countries exempt from quarantine, perhaps with a 15-minute lateral-flow test on return.

Advertisement

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey, who also put his name to the pledge, said he hoped to turn the tide on 'creeping authoritarianism' from Downing Street.

He said: 'As we start to get this virus properly under control we should start getting our freedoms back, vaccine passports - essentially Covid ID cards - take us in the other direction.' 

The campaign has been backed by Big Brother Watch, Liberty, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) and Privacy International.

The vaccine passports row exploded last month when ministers confirmed they were considering the idea – after a string of denials.

Mr Johnson then suggested to MPs that they could eventually be needed to visit the pub. He defended the idea, saying 'there's definitely going to be a world in which international travel will use vaccine passports'.

During a trip to Middlesbrough yesterday, he told reporters: 'You can see already that other countries, the aviation industry, are interested in those and there's a logic to that.' 

Well-connected Telegraph columnist Fraser Nelson believes it's a 'done deal'. 

The Government has insisted no final decisions have been taken on whether Covid-status certification could play a role in reopening the economy.

A spokeswoman said: 'The review is considering a range of issues, including the ethical, equalities, privacy, legal and operational aspects and what limits, if any, should be placed on organisations using certification.'

Meanwhile, UK Hospitality (UKH), the British Beer & Pub Association (BBPA) and the British Institute of Innkeepers (BII) - have also raised their concerns over the proposals, describing the measures as 'impractical burdens'.

They also objected to Government guidance asking every hospitality customer aged over 16 to give their contact details to staff or check in via the NHS Covid-19 app once restrictions are eased.

In a joint statement, the pub representatives said: 'Government has promised the country that we will be reopening but we are now being told that this will be with our hands tied behind our backs.

'Pubs will already be trading at a loss when they reopen with all the existing restrictions and Covid-secure measures in place.

'Adding further disproportionate and discriminatory measures threatens the very survival of thousands of businesses.

'It's unfair to single out our sector again with these added impractical burdens that will have economic consequences and risk our recovery.' 

The Covid-19 vaccination pilot scheme will begin after work on an updated NHS Covid app is completed, that will show a person's coronavirus vaccination status. Pictured: A person holds up a smart phone with a mock-up of a vaccine passport

The Covid-19 vaccination pilot scheme will begin after work on an updated NHS Covid app is completed, that will show a person's coronavirus vaccination status. Pictured: A person holds up a smart phone with a mock-up of a vaccine passport

Wetherspoon boss says vaccine passports would be 'the last straw' for pubs

Wetherspoon boss Tim Martin has said vaccine passports would be 'the last straw' for struggling pubs and force bar staff into a 'bitter civil liberties war' with customers.

Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Mr Martin said 'there is no justification for a passport system'.

The chairman of the pub chain said: 'For many pubs, hanging on for dear life and devastated by G-force changes of direction, a complex and controversial passport scheme would be the last straw.

'It would inevitably put pub staff in the frontline of a bitter civil liberties war, with some customers unwilling to be vaccinated or unable to have a jab for medical reasons.'

Advertisement

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, told BBC Breakfast: This would be an additional burden put on to the pubs. We are desperate to get back open again. We are desperate to do that.

'We will play our part in test and trace but the additional burden of the vaccine passport could really, really scupper things.

'It could make it feel that we are discriminating against sections of the population that have not been offered a vaccination or are unable to have one like pregnant women or a grandad who is probably going to forget his actual vaccine passport because he does not have it on his smartphone.

'It is a difficult process for us to implement in venue and yet today we have not had a consultation with the Government about how we would do this in pubs.' 

But cruise operators Royal Caribbean have embraced the plans and will be requiring passengers to have two jabs.

Managing director Ben Bouldin said: 'The numbers of vaccinations the UK is managing to achieve is really strong. 

'We recognise that not everyone will have been vaccinated through this summer but we know a good number of our guests would have been and we're asking to prove they've had their two vaccines and we'll be asking two weeks since their second vaccine. 

'And we're asking them to prove their vaccine appointment with them or a letter from their doctor. And if the Government continues to finds a successful green card, that would be helpful but we'll find a solution either way.' 

Elsewhere, the British Medical Association (BMA) has urged people to stick to lockdown rules during the Easter period.

Large crowds have been seen gathering in beauty spots in England over the past few days since outdoor social distancing rules were relaxed on Monday, while Scotland's stay at home order has been lifted as of Friday morning.

Dr Richard Jarvis, co-chair of the BMA public health medicine committee, said: 'After a year of lockdowns it is only natural that people will want to spend time with friends and family as they enjoy the Easter holiday period.

'While case rates have fallen, they still remain too high, especially in younger age groups which are yet to be vaccinated, for us to not follow the rules. No one should let down their guard.'

The Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said it had identified 30 cases of rare blood clot events associated with the AstraZeneca vaccine - out of 18.1 million doses administered up to and including March 24.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMidmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTQyOTgxMy9CYWNrbGFzaC1Cb3Jpcy12YWNjaW5lLXBhc3Nwb3J0LXBsYW4tUE0tZmFjZXMtTE9TSU5HLWNydW5jaC12b3RlLmh0bWzSAXpodHRwczovL3d3dy5kYWlseW1haWwuY28udWsvbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlLTk0Mjk4MTMvYW1wL0JhY2tsYXNoLUJvcmlzLXZhY2NpbmUtcGFzc3BvcnQtcGxhbi1QTS1mYWNlcy1MT1NJTkctY3J1bmNoLXZvdGUuaHRtbA?oc=5

2021-04-02 08:08:56Z
52781476262513

Coronavirus: Dozens of MPs criticise 'divisive' Covid passports - BBC News

Women in mask outside restaurant
PA Media

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and senior Tory Iain Duncan Smith are among more than 70 MPs to launch a campaign opposing Covid passports in England.

Any demand to prove vaccination status to access jobs, businesses or services would be "divisive and discriminatory", the cross-party group said.

It comes as the Daily Telegraph reported that a series of pilot tests for Covid passports were being planned.

The government said no final decision had been made on Covid certificates.

A review is taking place into whether such a system could help to reopen the economy in England, with discussions also taking place across the devolved nations.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has previously said people could be asked to provide a vaccine certificate for entry into pubs in England, saying it "may be up to individual publicans".

Certification could involve people being either vaccinated, having had a recent negative test or having previously been infected, the PM said.

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said vaccine passports could also be used as a "tool in the short term" to reopen theatres and sports stadiums.

But a broad coalition of MPs and peers have now signed a pledge saying they "oppose the divisive and discriminatory use of Covid status certification to deny individuals access to general services, businesses or jobs".

The group contains some unlikely allies, with many of Mr Corbyn's former shadow cabinet joining the lockdown-sceptic Covid Research Group of Conservative MPs in backing the campaign.

Accusing the government of "creeping authoritarianism", Liberal Democrats leader Sir Ed Davey said: "As we start to get this virus properly under control we should start getting our freedoms back. Vaccine passports - essentially Covid ID cards - take us in the other direction."

Sir Graham Brady, who chairs the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, added: "With high levels of vaccination protecting the vulnerable and making transmission less likely, we should aim to return to normal life, not to put permanent restrictions in place."

Labour's Diane Abbott, Tory Esther McVey and Lib Dem Layla Moran
Reuters/BBC/Getty

Privacy campaigning organisation Big Brother Watch also signed the pledge and published a report arguing against the measure.

The group's director, Silkie Carlo, said: "We are in real danger of becoming a check-point society where anyone from bouncers to bosses could demand to see our papers. We cannot let this government create a two-tier nation of division, discrimination and injustice."

In the campaign group's report - entitled "Access Denied" - it said if certificates were brought it, in would be "the first policy for decades that could see segregation imposed throughout the population".

'Checkpoint Britain'

Baroness Shami Chakrabarti, another signatory of the pledge, described Covid passports for aspects of everyday life as "dangerous, discriminatory and counterproductive".

She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It's one thing to have a passport to travel internationally, that is a privilege, even a luxury, but participation in local community life is a fundamental right."

The Labour peer added: "To introduce two queues at the cinema, two queues at the football stadium going forward, is to introduce checkpoint Britain that so many of us just do not want.

"We should open up together because that's the kind of Britain we want going forward."

Baroness Chakrabarti, a former head of human rights organisation Liberty, said passports could see "policing power" given "to every bouncer or unscrupulous boss".

"It's a recipe for bullying, it's a recipe for corruption, it's a recipe for discrimination and it's not what we sacrificed so much for as a community over the past year," she said.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

The campaign comes after Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer this week said the use of Covid passports to decide whether people can enter pubs would go against the "British instinct".

A government spokeswoman said: "The review is considering a range of issues, including the ethical, equalities, privacy, legal and operational aspects and what limits, if any, should be placed on organisations using certification."

Meanwhile, the prime minister is to give an update on the Covid situation on Monday.

He is expected to confirm that data suggests the next stage of lockdown could ease in England on 12 April and that a traffic light system could be implemented for foreign travel, with countries being categorised as red, amber or green.

More than 31 million people have received the first dose of a coronavirus vaccine and more than 4.5 million have had a second dose, according to Thursday's daily figures.

The figures also show there were a further 51 deaths within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test, bringing the total to 126,764. Some 4,479 new cases have been recorded.

Around the BBC iPlayer banner
Around the BBC iPlayer footer

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiL2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk40gEzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk4?oc=5

2021-04-02 07:24:55Z
CBMiL2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk40gEzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3VrLXBvbGl0aWNzLTU2NjA1NTk4

Kamis, 01 April 2021

UK reports 25 fresh cases of blood clots linked to AstraZeneca vaccine - Financial Times

The UK has received 30 reports of the rare blood clotting events that have been linked to the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine in recent weeks and have caused precautionary restrictions to be placed on its use in many European countries.

On Thursday evening, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency released information about 25 new cases of severe and very rare blood clotting events, on top of five it had reported earlier this month.

The MHRA also clarified that it had not seen any of the same reactions in individuals that had received the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine.

Concern has been growing about links between the AstraZeneca jab and a very specific and rare type of blood clotting event. The news that a growing number of them have been identified in the UK is likely to call into question the view that this is purely a phenomenon being seen in mainland Europe.

Reports of similar incidents have caused France, Sweden, Finland, Canada and most recently Germany to recommend that younger people, who are much more likely to be affected by the condition, avoid the shot. In Norway and Denmark, the vaccine is still suspended.

The main condition causing alarm is called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST), when blood forms clots in the veins that run from the brain, a potentially fatal complication.

In the cases of concern, this has been combined with an issue called thrombocytopenia where a patient also presents abnormally low levels of platelets, resulting in heavy bleeding.

In Norway, health officials have reported at least six such cases among 120,000 recipients of the jab, four of whom died. In Germany, 31 cases have been reported after 2.7m vaccinations, including 29 women aged between 20 and 63, and two men aged 36 and 57. Nine of them have died.

Up to and including March 24, the MHRA has received 22 reports of CVST and eight reports of other thrombosis events coupled with low platelets, out of a total of 18.1m doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine. This equates to roughly one case in every 600,000 recipients.

In the UK, 17 more reports of CVST have been made this week compared to the previous week.

Officials in the UK say there is insufficient evidence at the moment to make any changes to the vaccination policy. And even if a causal link were established, some UK-based experts said it would still make sense to continue with vaccinations as the blood clot incidents appeared to be extremely rare.

Johannes Oldenburg, professor of transfusion medicine at Bonn university, said he agreed with the UK’s decision, even though he believed the AstraZeneca shot was causing the symptoms.

“If I had a choice between immediate vaccination with AstraZeneca or waiting four weeks for Moderna, then I would choose the AstraZeneca vaccine, because the four weeks of protection far outweighs this risk,” he said.

Oxford university and AstraZeneca say their trials show the vaccine is safe and effective and that they are continuing to monitor for side effects as the shot is rolled out.

Dr June Raine, chief executive of the MHRA, reiterated that “the benefits of Covid-19 vaccine AstraZeneca in preventing Covid-19 infection and its complications continue to outweigh any risks and the public should continue to get their vaccine when invited to do so”.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiP2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50LzJlNTJhNWIwLTI5YjktNGM3ZS04Y2ZiLTk3YmY4ZWRlYTg2NdIBP2h0dHBzOi8vYW1wLmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50LzJlNTJhNWIwLTI5YjktNGM3ZS04Y2ZiLTk3YmY4ZWRlYTg2NQ?oc=5

2021-04-01 22:30:38Z
52781479332201

British police officer guilty of belonging to banned neo-Nazi terror group - BBC News - BBC News

Google verwendet Cookies und Daten für Folgendes:
  • Dienste anbieten und betreiben, z. B. Störungen prüfen und Maßnahmen gegen Spam, Betrug oder Missbrauch ergreifen
  • Daten zu Zielgruppeninteraktionen und Websitestatistiken erheben, um zu verstehen, wie unsere Dienste verwendet werden
Wenn Sie zustimmen, verwenden wir Cookies und Daten auch für Folgendes:
  • Qualität unserer Dienste verbessern und neue Dienste entwickeln
  • Werbung ausliefern und die Effektivität von Werbung messen
  • Personalisierte Inhalte anzeigen, abhängig von Ihren Einstellungen
  • Personalisierte oder allgemeine Werbung bei Google und im Web anzeigen, abhängig von Ihren Einstellungen
Die Auswahl nicht personalisierter Inhalte und Werbeanzeigen kann davon abhängen, welche Inhalte Sie sich gerade ansehen und wo Sie sich befinden (die Anzeigenbereitstellung basiert auf dem allgemeinen Standort). Personalisierte Inhalte und Werbeanzeigen können ebenfalls darauf basieren, darüber hinaus aber auch auf Aktivitäten wie Suchanfragen bei Google und Videos, die Sie sich bei YouTube ansehen. Zu personalisierten Inhalten und Werbeanzeigen gehören beispielsweise Dinge wie relevantere Ergebnisse und Empfehlungen, eine individuelle YouTube-Startseite und Werbung, die auf Ihre Interessen zugeschnitten ist.

Klicken Sie auf „Anpassen“, um sich Ihre Möglichkeiten anzusehen. Zu diesen gehören zum Beispiel Steuerelemente, um Cookies für die Personalisierung zu deaktivieren, oder Informationen zu Steuerelementen auf Browserebene, mit denen einige oder alle Cookies für andere Zwecke deaktiviert werden können. Besuchen Sie bei Bedarf jederzeit g.co/privacytools.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiK2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnlvdXR1YmUuY29tL3dhdGNoP3Y9VEhCRkxXeEl0ZzDSAQA?oc=5

2021-04-01 21:17:45Z
52781478630554

Richard Okorogheye: Mother of missing student says 'someone was waiting for him' - Sky News

The mother of a student who has been missing for more than a week believes he met someone online who "built his confidence and trust".

Richard Okorogheye, 19, left his family home in the Ladbroke Grove area of west London on the evening of Monday 22 March, boarded a bus, and later took a 20-mile taxi ride from the W2 area of the capital to Loughton.

CCTV images of him walking along a street in the Essex town in the early hours of 23 March have been released by the Metropolitan Police.

His mother Evidence Joel told Sky News correspondent Ivor Bennett on Thursday: "He's never mentioned such places, that's why I'm very surprised that police said he went to Loughton."

New image of Richard Okorogheye, who went missing from south London. Pic: Met Police
Image: Richard Okorogheye has been missing for over a week. Pic: Met Police
Richard Okorogheye, missing student. Pic: Metropolitan Police
Image: CCTV images of him on a street in Loughton in the early hours of 23 March. Pic: Met Police

She added: "I think he went to meet somebody. Definitely. Richard cannot go there. Especially at that time in the morning... someone was waiting for Richard."

Asked if she believed her son met someone online, she added: "I think so. Most definitely."

Ms Joel said he would often play on his PlayStation 5 and that she had heard him laughing and being "very happy" while talking to someone.

More from Richard Okorogheye

She continued: "Definitely, he was talking to someone. Someone that he trusted and was fond of. Maybe the person gave him confidence.

"Somehow knew his aspirations, his interests, so he confided in that person, built confidence and trust."

Ms Joel said she knew nothing specific about the person.

Police searching for Mr Okorogheye have said there does not appear to have been any activity on his phone since he disappeared.

Superintendent Danny Gosling said detectives had not picked up any activity on his mobile and that his "laptops and computers" were "at the lab" being examined for clues.

The search for missing student Richard Okorogheye has now moved to Epping Forest. Pic: Metropolitan Police
Image: A search is taking place in Epping Forest. Pic: Met Police

Mr Okorogheye was reported missing on Wednesday 24 March and a large search is now under way in Epping Forest in Essex.

Ms Joel said the police are now "responding very well" after she complained her initial report was not taken seriously enough.

She said: "At the beginning they ignored me. I was nobody. I was just a black woman being frantic and overreacting about an adult which is 19, which we all know, these are vulnerable adults. I wish they had reacted earlier."

Mr Okorogheye needs daily medication for his sickle cell disease, but it is not believed he took any with him when he went missing.

New CCTV image of Richard Okorogheye, who went missing from south London. Pic: Met Police
Image: A CCTV image of Richard Okorogheye on the evening of 22 March. Pic: Met Police

Ms Joel said on Thursday: "He hasn't got no jacket on, no medication. He could be dehydrated, we don't know. We don't know his condition at the moment. We don't know if he's alive. We don't know where he is."

Asked whether she believes her son is alive, she added: "I don't know what to believe. We can't find him. I don't know. Should I say I have hope? I don't know. I don't know what to think at the moment. My feelings are everywhere. I don't know. It's scary."

She added: "I don't know what he looks like, how he's feeling at the moment, if he's breathing. I don't know. I'm trying to be strong. It's very difficult.

"I'm holding on but it's very hard. It's very, very hard."

CCTV footage shows he was wearing all black clothing and had a black satchel bag with a white Adidas logo, worn across his lower back.

Ms Joel previously said her son had spoken of "struggling to cope" with university pressures and had been shielding during the COVID-19 lockdown.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3JpY2hhcmQtb2tvcm9naGV5ZS1tb3RoZXItb2YtbWlzc2luZy1zdHVkZW50LXNheXMtc29tZW9uZS13YXMtd2FpdGluZy1mb3ItaGltLTEyMjYzMjUw0gF1aHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL3JpY2hhcmQtb2tvcm9naGV5ZS1tb3RoZXItb2YtbWlzc2luZy1zdHVkZW50LXNheXMtc29tZW9uZS13YXMtd2FpdGluZy1mb3ItaGltLTEyMjYzMjUw?oc=5

2021-04-01 21:00:15Z
52781476157587