Jumat, 23 Juli 2021

Concern mounts for missing 11-year-old schoolgirl from Bolton - BBC News

Fatuma Kadir
GMP

The parents of a missing 11-year-old girl said they are in a "state of shock" as police stepped up their search for her.

Fatuma Kadir left her home in Bolton on Thursday and travelled from Manchester to London by train overnight.

Her parents Asheem and Misra urged her to let them know she was OK.

"We miss you, we want you to come home. We want to at least know you're safe. You're not in any trouble. Please contact us or the police," they said.

"We are in a state of shock. We want to know where she is, who she's with, but most of all, that she's safe. Fatuma, Please come home."

Fatuma Kadir's parents Asheem and Misra

Fatuma left home without her parents' knowledge and travelled to Bolton railway station, arriving at 20:20 BST.

She then came into contact with an unknown man and woman, who were believed to be worried about Fatuma, and travelled on the same train as her to Manchester Piccadilly, police have said.

She was then seen boarding a train from Manchester Piccadilly at 21:27 to Birmingham New Street before getting onto another train at 23:10 to London Euston, arriving at 01:13.

She left Euston station alone and went onto Eversholt Street towards Euston Road at 01:17.

Police believe she was at London Bridge Tube Station at 11:16 and may be in the area around Tower Bridge.

The force is also looking to trace the man and woman, who travelled on the same train as her from Bolton to Manchester Piccadilly.

CCTV footage of Fatuma Kadir
GMP

Detectives think they may know where Fatuma was going after arriving in London.

Fatuma, who is described as Asian and of slim build, was last seen wearing black Hijab with a blue headscarf and black dress.

Police say the woman, who is described as black, of slim build, was wearing a light blue tunic, black pants and black trainers with a white sole.

The woman's face was covered with a white face mask and she was carrying an orange carrier bag.

Fatuma Kadir
GMP

Det Ch Insp Paul Rollinson said: "We are understandably extremely concerned about the welfare of this young girl who was reported missing to us last night as it would seem extremely out of character."

He added that Fatuma may have travelled to the city to pursue her ambition of setting up a clothing business near London Tower Bridge or to go sightseeing.

Police said Fatuma had not spoken to friends or family about her plans to catch a train to the capital.

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2021-07-23 20:41:05Z
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Met Office storm warning for campsites and caravans - BBC News

Driver towing caravan in rain
Alamy

Holidaymakers travelling this weekend have been warned to expect flooding, thunderstorms and 55mph gusts of wind.

The Met Office issued yellow warnings - meaning there is a risk of some disruption - on Friday for storms in southern England and south Wales, as well as wind across the south coast.

Campsites may face high winds while cars towing caravans could face tricky driving conditions.

Some areas could see 35mm of rain in an hour overnight, with possible flooding.

The thunderstorms come after days of high temperatures, which prompted the Met Office to issue the first of its new style warnings for extreme heat.

As the heatwave breaks, strong, gusty winds are expected to develop throughout the afternoon and evening on Friday, when holidaymakers may be heading off on weekend trips.

Exposed coastal areas and hilly places are the most likely to experience gusts of between 45mph and 55mph.

As well as affecting caravans and tents, the high winds could cause delays to ferry services and coastal routes may be affected by sea spray and large waves, the Met Office said.

Thunderstorms are expected to move into southern England during Friday night, with frequent lightning and the possibility of large hailstones falling.

Met Office map showing yellow warnings for thunderstorms and wind
Met Office

Meanwhile, a wildfire alert was issued for Devon and Cornwall, with the risk expected to peak on Friday.

And Northern Ireland's amber warning for extreme heat continues until midnight on Friday.

The Environment Agency has one flood warning in place for Swanage Bay in Dorset, which is likely to see minor flooding from 19:30 BST on Friday. Natural Resources Wales has issued no flood warnings.

Tents at Latitude Festival
Getty Images

The weekend storms are expected to reach south Wales and the Midlands early on Saturday.

More slow moving storms are expected to develop by Saturday afternoon across southern England, with very heavy rainfall - of between 30 and 50mm in an hour - and a risk of flooding in some places.

Further heavy showers and thunderstorms are expected on Sunday across southern and eastern England, with the yellow warning stretching into East Anglia, possibly affecting Latitude Festival in Suffolk.

Up to 80 or 100mm of rainfall could build up in some locations over the course of the day, the Met Office says.

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2021-07-23 16:03:16Z
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Why are fully vaccinated people testing positive for Covid? - Financial Times

Phoenix Suns basketball star Chris Paul, UK health secretary Sajid Javid and US Olympic gymnast Kara Eaker have something in common: they have all tested positive for coronavirus despite being fully vaccinated.

No vaccine is 100 per cent effective, so what scientists call “breakthrough infections” were always expected. In most cases, the symptoms are mild.

However, as a new surge in Covid-19 cases has collided with a global vaccination campaign delivering more than 200m shots a week, more people are asking: “How protected am I?”

How many fully vaccinated people are testing positive?

While anecdotal accounts of breakthrough infections can make such cases feel widespread, the real numbers have remained small and were generally in line with expectations, experts said.

“There’s no such thing as a perfect vaccine . . . with Covid it’s no different,” said Professor William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University.

The yellow fever jab, for example, is widely understood to be the most effective live-virus vaccine ever invented, with a single dose generating long-lasting immunity in 98 per cent of those vaccinated. But even that means that on average 2 per cent of people will still get infected.

Phase 3 trials for most of the leading Covid-19 jabs showed an efficacy against symptomatic infection of more than 90 per cent. Real-world studies of effectiveness in the UK, Israel and Canada suggest that vaccines are displaying a slightly lower effectiveness outside of the trial environment, probably because of the spread of the more vaccine-resistant Delta variant. Estimates put protection against symptomatic infection, depending on the vaccine, at between 60-90 per cent.

According to Public Health England, about 17 per cent of the 105,598 Delta variant cases reported across England in the four weeks to July 19 were among fully vaccinated people. PHE counts people as fully vaccinated 14 days after their second dose.

Anthony Masters, a member of the UK’s Royal Statistical Society, said fully vaccinated people were likely to make up a “bigger proportion” of cases as vaccine coverage was extended, particularly in younger groups who face a higher exposure risk because of greater social mixing.

“If you get extremely high coverage across the different ages, it’s plausible that cases could become [in] majority among fully vaccinated people,” he said. About 55 per cent of the UK population had received both doses by July 21.

In Israel, where nearly 60 per cent of the population are fully vaccinated and coverage is spread more evenly across age cohorts, 52 per cent of around 6,000 people who tested positive in the week to July 21 were fully vaccinated.

Are some fully vaccinated people at more risk of falling ill than others?

Very few fully vaccinated people who test positive for Covid-19 are getting seriously ill. According to PHE’s real-world studies, the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine is still 96 per cent effective against hospitalisation, while the Oxford/AstraZeneca shot is 92 per cent effective.

But Natalie Dean, a biostatistics professor at Emory University in Atlanta, stressed that these figures were averages and that efficacy depended on people’s existing risk profiles. “Everything is relative when it comes to vaccines and risk,” she said.

A Financial Times analysis of global infection fatality rates, for example, suggests that a double-jabbed 80-year-old now faces about the same mortality risk as an unvaccinated 50-year-old.

Chart showing that vaccines have made Covid-19 far less lethal. A fully-vaccinated 80-year-old now has the same mortality risk as an unvaccinated 50-year-old

In England, where the vaccine rollout has been staggered from oldest to youngest and nine in 10 over-50s have been fully vaccinated, 30 per cent of the 1,788 people admitted to hospital due to the Delta variant in the four weeks to July 19 were fully vaccinated. About half of the 460 deaths in the country linked to the Delta strain since February were people who were also fully immunised.

“This is simply a reflection of vaccine uptake being very high among older people,” said Masters. “It’s perversely a marker of [a] successful rollout. If everyone [was] fully vaccinated, everyone who went to hospital or died would by definition be fully vaccinated.”

Around two-thirds of people who die on UK roads are wearing a seatbelt, but this is a consequence of usage rates of nearly 99 per cent, Masters said. He added that the same logic applied to severe disease and death in highly vaccinated populations.

Vanderbilt’s Schaffner added that people who experienced unpleasant but mild symptoms would probably have suffered severe disease, or even death, had they not been vaccinated. “Whenever my patients tell me they still had a mild illness despite vaccination, I always say I’m glad you’re still here to complain.”

Chart showing why a high proportion of double-jabbed people among hospitalisations does not mean the vaccines are failing. When a very high share of people are fully vaccinated, a large share of cases and hospitalisations will be double-jabbed people despite the vaccines working very well. When a lower share are fully vaccinated, the double-jabbed are a smaller share of cases and hospitalisations, but far more people end up in hospital overall

Can you test how protected you are?

Not yet. The easiest way to understand how much immunity the vaccine has generated in a person is to measure the presence of neutralising antibodies in the blood. But T cells and B cells, which supplement the body’s immune system, also play a role and scientists remain unclear about which benchmarks offer the best insight into the vaccine’s effectiveness.

Commercially available antibody tests only show whether an individual has Covid-linked antibodies or not, but immunity is best understood as a “scale or continuum”, explained Danny Altmann, an immunology professor at Imperial College London. “It’s not binary. You’re not safe or unsafe, protected or not protected. People all have varying degrees of protection from the vaccine.”

This range of immunity can be plotted with a test called a neutralisation assay, which analyses how many times antibodies taken from the blood can be diluted in a laboratory and still neutralise the virus.

At the extremes, immunocompromised people may only generate enough antibodies to weather a 100-fold dilution, Altmann said. In comparison, healthy young people may have enough for a 10,000-fold dilution and are “likely impervious” to infection.

If scientists were able to establish the midpoint between the two extremes, Altmann said “vaccine makers would be able to update vaccines quicker for new variants and policymakers could better determine which people are in most need of booster doses.”

What do imperfect vaccines mean for herd immunity?

Kit Yates, a mathematical biologist at Bath university, warned that the imperfect protection offered by the vaccine against infection meant herd immunity could be “impossible” without vaccine uptake of above 90 per cent.

“Leaky vaccines probably put herd immunity out of reach, especially when faced with [the] Delta [variant],” he said.

Chart showing that without vaccines, England’s daily Covid hospital admissions would already be above the winter peak

Adam Kucharski, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that with the UK anticipating in excess of 100,000 cases a day by late August, the implications of imperfect vaccines “will soon become clear”.

PHE estimates that on average the Covid-19 vaccines being used in the UK are between 91 and 97 per cent effective in preventing hospitalisation.

Kucharski warned that small differences could have a big effect on how much this wave of infections stretches the British healthcare system. “If you flip the number, you’re left with how ineffective the vaccines are and 9 per cent ineffective rather than 3 per cent ineffective means three times more hospitalisations.”

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2021-07-23 17:03:12Z
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COVID-19: Self-isolation exemption for food supply chain staff will not be extended to other businesses, says minister - Sky News

Emergency measures to exempt food supply chain workers from coronavirus self-isolation rules will not be extended to other businesses, the environment secretary has told Sky News.

On excluding other sectors such as hospitality, George Eustice said he understood it was frustrating, but stressed the need to "dampen the pace and velocity" at which the COVID-19 infection was spreading.

It comes after the government announced moves to protect food stocks in the face of mounting warnings about the impact of the so-called "pingdemic".

Latest coronavirus updates in the UK and around the world

Empty shelves in the Lidl
Image: Steps are being taken to protect food stocks in the face of the so-called 'pingdemic'

Under the plan to keep shelves stocked, daily coronavirus testing will be offered as an alternative to self-isolation to around 10,000 workers at 500 key sites in the food supply chain industry, including 170 supermarket depots.

However, supermarket store workers have been left off the list.

There will also be a limited relaxation of self-isolation rules in other key sectors of the economy and vital public services, including essential transport, the emergency services and energy industry.

More on Covid-19

Mr Eustice said: "We are obviously keeping everything under review.

"The reason we have made a special exception for food is for very obvious reasons.

"We need to make sure that we maintain our food supply. We will never take risks with our food supply.

"When it comes to other sectors, yes of course the fact they are also carrying high absence levels is causing some stress for them, making it more difficult.

"But you also have to bear in mind why we are doing this.

"We are trying to still dampen the pace and velocity at which this infection is spreading, because we have to keep a very close eye on those hospitalisations."

Pressed over whether the situation with coronavirus is likely to get worse before it gets better, the environment secretary said: "Absolutely."

He added: "It is likely to because hospitalisations do follow the infection rate by two to three weeks and so that's why we're doing this.

"I know it's frustrating for everybody but we do want to try to just dampen the curve of this infection until it turns and things start to go in the other direction, and then of course we can move to a different system for everyone."

A food and drink industry boss has welcomed the government's announcement of exemptions from the NHS app isolation requirements for food supply chain workers.

Ian Wright, chief executive of the Food and Drink Federation, said: "The last few days of uncertainty have been a period of great disruption for the food and drink supply chain.

"It is clear that the government has listened to industry's concerns and the recent announcement of exemptions from isolation, which includes food and drink manufacturers, is welcome."

But frustrations remain in the wider business community.

Confederation of British Industry director general Tony Danker said: "The current approach to self-isolation is closing down the economy rather than opening it up."

Businesses have already exhausted contingency plans to get in extra staff and are "at risk of grinding to a halt in the next few weeks", he said.

Hannah Essex, from the British Chambers of Commerce, said: "While the announcement of a process which may exempt select critical workers from self-isolation in England will be a relief to some businesses, it will leave many more still facing critical staff shortages and lost revenue as the number of people being asked to isolate remains high."

But the head of the British Medical Association Dr Chaand Nagpaul has criticised the exemption move, arguing the government "needs to wake up".

He said: "This is not a problem about excessive pinging of the NHS app, but is a direct result of lack of effective measures by government that is allowing the virus to let rip throughout the nation."

He added: "Exempting healthcare staff from self-isolation to get them back to work is a desperate and potentially unsafe policy that does not address the root problem. The safety of patients and staff must be paramount."

A negative lateral flow test next to advice from the NHS COVID app (file pic)
Image: Latest figures show a record number of people in England and Wales were 'pinged'

Changes are also being made in Scotland to self-isolation rules to allow essential staff in critical roles to return to work, where shortages are in danger of putting key services, such as health and social care, transport and food supplies at risk.

The temporary exemptions will only be granted for those who voluntarily agree not to self isolate, and they must be double jabbed and undergo daily testing.

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2021-07-23 09:02:32Z
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Food supply staff freed from Covid quarantine during pingdemic as isolation rules delay mooted - The Times

Ministers have ruled out extending the list of workers who are exempt from self-isolation rules and warned that the August 16 date for lifting quarantine for double-vaccinated people could be delayed.

George Eustice, the environment secretary, said he recognised the “stress” that staff shortages were causing for businesses after a record 618,903 people were pinged by the NHS Covid-19 tracing app last week.

However, he defended the government’s decision to limit the lifting of self-isolation requirements to food supply workers, saying ministers were keeping “a very close eye” on the number of hospital admissions.

He also suggested that the government could delay the August 16th date when all self-isolation rules are lifted for double-vaccinated people, saying the government had only announced the date to

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2021-07-23 08:00:00Z
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COVID-19: Self-isolation exemption for food supply chain staff will not be extended to other businesses, says minister - Sky News

Emergency measures to exempt food supply chain workers from coronavirus self-isolation rules will not be extended to other businesses, the environment secretary has told Sky News.

On excluding other sectors such as hospitality, George Eustice said he understood it was frustrating, but stressed the need to "dampen the pace and velocity" at which the COVID-19 infection was spreading.

It comes after the government announced moves to protect food stocks in the face of mounting warnings about the impact of the so-called "pingdemic".

Latest coronavirus updates in the UK and around the world

Empty shelves in the Lidl
Image: Steps are being taken to protect food stocks in the face of the so-called 'pingdemic'

Under the plan to keep shelves stocked, daily coronavirus testing will be offered as an alternative to self-isolation to around 10,000 workers at 500 key sites in the food supply chain industry, including 170 supermarket depots.

There will also be a limited relaxation of self-isolation rules in other key sectors of the economy and vital public services, including essential transport, the emergency services and energy industry.

Mr Eustice said: "We are obviously keeping everything under review.

More on Covid-19

"The reason we have made a special exception for food is for very obvious reasons.

"We need to make sure that we maintain our food supply. We will never take risks with our food supply.

"When it comes to other sectors, yes of course the fact they are also carrying high absence levels is causing some stress for them, making it more difficult.

"But you also have to bear in mind why we are doing this.

"We are trying to still dampen the pace and velocity at which this infection is spreading, because we have to keep a very close eye on those hospitalisations."

Pressed over whether the situation with coronavirus is likely to get worse before it gets better, the environment secretary said: "Absolutely."

He added: "It is likely to because hospitalisations do follow the infection rate by two to three weeks and so that's why we're doing this.

"I know it's frustrating for everybody but we do want to try to just dampen the curve of this infection until it turns and things start to go in the other direction, and then of course we can move to a different system for everyone."

A food and drink industry boss has welcomed the government's announcement of exemptions from the NHS app isolation requirements for food supply chain workers.

Ian Wright, chief executive of the Food and Drink Federation, said: "The last few days of uncertainty have been a period of great disruption for the food and drink supply chain.

"It is clear that the government has listened to industry's concerns and the recent announcement of exemptions from isolation, which includes food and drink manufacturers, is welcome.

"The devil is in the detail so we will continue to look into the guidance and further understand how the scheme will work."

But frustrations remain in the wider business community.

Confederation of British Industry director general Tony Danker said: "The current approach to self-isolation is closing down the economy rather than opening it up."

Businesses have already exhausted contingency plans to get in extra staff and are "at risk of grinding to a halt in the next few weeks", he said.

Hannah Essex, from the British Chambers of Commerce, said: "While the announcement of a process which may exempt select critical workers from self-isolation in England will be a relief to some businesses, it will leave many more still facing critical staff shortages and lost revenue as the number of people being asked to isolate remains high."

The government action comes as latest figures showed a record number of people in England and Wales were "pinged" as contacts by the app and told to self-isolate for up to 10 days.

A negative lateral flow test next to advice from the NHS COVID app (file pic)
Image: Latest figures show a record number of people in England and Wales were 'pinged'

NHS figures showed 618,903 alerts were sent to users of the coronavirus app in the week to 14 July, a period before England's restrictions were lifted and more social contact was allowed.

Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt said the government risks "losing social consent" for isolation if it does not immediately bring forward the relaxation of quarantine rules for the fully vaccinated.

People in England who are fully vaccinated will not have to self-isolate if identified as a contact from 16 August, nearly a month after restrictions on social mixing were lifted and at a time when cases have soared.

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2021-07-23 07:18:45Z
52781745244211

River Dee search: Body found in search for missing boy - BBC News

Police search river
Graham Gordon @HandbridgeLife

A body has been found in the search for a teenage boy who went missing while swimming in a river.

The 16-year-old was reported missing at about 14:30 BST on Thursday in the River Dee at Chester.

Shortly before 20:00 search teams found a body believed to be the boy in the river, Cheshire Fire and Rescue Service said.

Formal identification has not taken place but his family are being supported by trained officers.

The emergency services had been searching the river near Lower Park Road, with the river bank and Queen's Park suspension bridge closed as part of the search.

The body of another 16-year-old boy was recovered from the River Weaver near Frodsham on Tuesday after he was believed to have fallen in the water.

A 15-year-old boy's body was also recovered from a river near Derbyshire on Wednesday and a 61-year-old woman died after getting into trouble in the sea at a beach in North Devon.

It comes as emergency services warned of the invisible, deadly dangers associated with open water after six people drowned in English lakes and rivers over the weekend.

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2021-07-23 07:43:04Z
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