Minggu, 08 Agustus 2021

COVID-19: UK reports another 27,429 coronavirus cases and 39 deaths - Sky News

Another 27,429 COVID-19 cases have been reported in the UK, according to the government's latest daily figures.

They also show a further 39 people have died within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test, taking the total figure to 130,320 since the start of the pandemic.

On Saturday, 28,612 new infections and 103 deaths were reported, and this time last week the figures were 24,470 cases and 65 deaths.

England's R number fell to between 0.8 and 1.1 in latest estimates this week, suggesting the pandemic could be shrinking.

It means on average every 10 people infected with the virus will go on to infect between eight and 11 others.

Last week, it was estimated at between 1.1 and 1.4.

The figures come as hopes of a summer getaway were given a boost on Sunday with an expansion of the government's green travel list - and the return of France to the regular amber category.

More on Covid-19

After a spell on the so-called "amber plus" list, France's move back to amber means fully vaccinated travellers returning to England, Scotland and Northern Ireland no longer need to quarantine.

India, Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are moving from red to amber, whilst Germany, Austria, Slovakia, Slovenia, Latvia, Romania and Norway are going green.

Meanwhile, data published from Public Health England earlier this week found that a third of patients currently in hospital have already received two doses of the vaccine.

To encourage more people to get vaccinated, a new government campaign is urging young people to get their jabs or risk missing out "on the good times".

Follow the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker.

SAGE government adviser Professor John Edmunds said further lockdowns may not be required despite a potential autumn wave of cases due to restrictions easing.

Professor Edmunds told Times Radio on Saturday he was "cautiously optimistic" that another lockdown would not be needed to bring cases under control.

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2021-08-08 15:15:16Z
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Owner of doomed alpaca Geronimo vows to film 'every moment' of his killing - Daily Mail

Staring down the barrel: Doomed alpaca Geronimo is seen today on farm as 'boltgun-wielding' vet under police protection could arrive at any moment to put him down - while owner vows to film execution and share video online

  • A High Court judge has ruled that Geronimo the alpaca has tuberculosis
  • Helen Macdonald, 50,  has called for her beloved pet to be spared
  • She said she will film 'every moment' of his killing and upload it to social media  

The owner of doomed alpaca Geronimo says she plans to film 'every moment' of his killing and upload it to social media.  

A High Court judge has ruled that the animal has tuberculosis on the basis of two positive tests, but his owner Helen Macdonald, 50, claims the tests were 'misused' and has called for her beloved pet to be spared. 

Veterinary nurse Ms Macdonald told the Sunday Times she wants 'the world to know the truth about what the UK government did' to the eight-year-old alpaca, who has been targeted for euthanasia since he arrived in Britain from New Zealand four years ago.

She said two police officers approached her about euthanasia arrangements, and one told her: 'We just want to have a chat about what your intentions are'.

Ms Macdonald said: 'This is about more than just Geronimo. This is about standing up to a government that thinks it can do whatever it wants.' 

No gunman has showed up at her farm where the doomed alpaca awaits his fate for a third day, and owner Helen Macdonald 'doesn't even know what day it is'.

Ms Macdonald has been waiting on tenterhooks for DEFRA to send an executioner to destroy her alpaca Geronimo, who has twice tested positive for bovine tuberculosis (bTB).

A warrant has been issued to kill the eight-year-old alpaca stud following a £50,000 High Court battle, but she has not been given any information about when they may turn up.

She said: 'It's awful, we're just so exhausted. We don't have time to do normal things we just manage to get the animals fed and put the washing on but were not getting any kind of respite. 

Geronimo the alpaca in Gloucestershire, August 8. A High Court judge has ruled that the animal has tuberculosis on the basis of two positive tests

Geronimo the alpaca in Gloucestershire, August 8. A High Court judge has ruled that the animal has tuberculosis on the basis of two positive tests

Helen Macdonald, 50, claims the tests were 'misused' and has called for her beloved pet to be spared

Helen Macdonald, 50, claims the tests were 'misused' and has called for her beloved pet to be spared 

'We're worried about being here on our own, they can turn up at any time.

'When there's lots of people around we feel safer - it's a very strange situation where you have a Government treating you like a criminal and you haven't done anything wrong.

'My mum is 84 years old tomorrow and she asked me last night if she was going to have effectively the firing squad here on her birthday.'

It comes after Cabinet Minister George Eustice defended the decision to put down Geronimo the alpaca – despite the owner telling him he will have 'blood on his hands'.  

Mr Eustice said his own farming family had suffered the 'soul destroying' slaughter of a cherished cow, Rose, due to bTB but he underlined the need to prevent the spread of the 'insidious' disease.

Writing in the Mail on Sunday, Mr Eustice said: 'There has been a great deal of focus on the case of Geronimo the alpaca this week.

'However, each week on average, we have to remove more than 500 cattle from herds due to infection in England alone. Behind every one of those cases is a farmer who has suffered loss and tragedy.

'Farmers understand that infected animals are a risk to the remainder of their herd, so while the loss of individual animals is always a tragedy, the farming communities have worked with our Government vets in this arduous but necessary endeavour.'

Mr Eustice said he first looked at Geronimo's case more than three years ago and has examined it several times since.

'Geronimo tested positive twice using a test called the 'Enferplex' test. It is the test that was requested by the British Alpaca Society at the time.'

The test is 'over 99% accurate with a 'false positive' in only 0.34% of cases', he said.

Helen Macdonald, 50, claims the tests were 'misused' and has called for her beloved pet to be spared

Helen Macdonald, 50, claims the tests were 'misused' and has called for her beloved pet to be spared

Police arrive at the property of Helen Macdonald to discuss the situation with Geronimo

Police arrive at the property of Helen Macdonald to discuss the situation with Geronimo

While it is accurate, it is not very sensitive - so in around 30% of cases it will not detect an infection even if the animal has bTB.

'Two consecutive positive test results is a very strong indicator of the presence of the disease,' he said.

Geronimo had four skin tests before he was exported from New Zealand, all of which were negative. The animal then had two blood tests and a skin test in the UK which were all positive.

Ms Macdonald, a vet and alpaca breeder, who has a farm in south Gloucestershire, has claimed the UK tests carried out on the New Zealand-born male alpaca were inaccurate.

She told the PA news agency on Friday: 'It's a total load of lies, the testing has never been validated.'

A High Court judge has ruled that the animal has tuberculosis on the basis of two positive tests

A High Court judge has ruled that the animal has tuberculosis on the basis of two positive tests

She said if Mr Eustice is 'willing to kill a healthy animal in front of the whole world without testing him properly first, then it's a sorry state of affairs'.

'And it will be for the world to see. Because if he sends some poor person down here with a gun to shoot Geronimo then it will get filmed by the world's media,' she added.

Writing for the first time on the issue that has split Britain, Mr Eustice tells how his own farming family had to kill a beloved cow who tested positive for TB.

He says Rose was 'a cow that my father said was one of the best he had ever seen. To make matters worse, she had sadly lost her calf the previous year. 

As a result, she had to be removed for slaughter having never had a living calf. It was soul-destroying.'

Mr Eustice says he has looked at Geronimo's case 'in detail' several times over the past three years. 

Explaining why he has decided not to call off the death sentence, he writes that the test used on Geronimo is 'over 99 per cent accurate with a 'false positive' in only 0.34 per cent of cases.

'However, it is not a very sensitive test. That is to say, in around 30 per cent of cases it won't detect an infection even when one is present. Two consecutive positive test results is a very strong indicator of the presence of the disease.'

The Environment Minister (pictured) admitted that it is 'soul-destroying' to have to kill animals, but insists it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease

The Environment Minister (pictured) admitted that it is 'soul-destroying' to have to kill animals, but insists it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease

The Minister also spoke of the dangers of bovine TB to livestock and in part blamed 'inaction' by Tony Blair's government for the situation. 

He writes: 'There are no easy answers when it comes to dealing with TB in cattle' and adds that each week on average more than 500 animals have to be culled due to infection in England. 

'Behind every one of those cases is a farmer who has suffered loss and tragedy,' he says.

Ms Macdonald, 50, has repeatedly appealed to Boris Johnson and Mr Eustice to halt the destruction order which means Geronimo – named after an Apache chief – must be put down within 30 days of it coming into effect last Thursday.

More than 90,000 people have signed a petition asking the Prime Minister to step in, and tomorrow hundreds of supporters are expected to attend a protest march in Whitehall.

But Downing Street has refused to grant a stay of execution. 

GEORGE EUSTICE: Each week we lose 500 cattle to TB and every one means a tragedy for farmers - including Geronimo's owner  

By George Eustice for the Mail On Sunday

My family have had a herd of pedigree South Devon Cattle for six generations. My ancestors were involved in the formation of the society that formally recognised the breed.

My grandfather attended agricultural shows as far afield as South Africa and Australia to judge cattle and, at the age of 26, my father was one of the youngest-ever cattle judges at the Royal Show.

While there are moments of joy and optimism in farming, every livestock farmer has to get used to their share of tragedy and loss.

A few years ago, our own herd suffered from several TB breakdowns. A shortage of grass meant that they had to take on some temporary grazing away from the farm and some of the cattle that returned tested positive for TB.

Writing in The Mail on Sunday, George Eustice (pictured) has defended the decision to put down Geronimo the alpaca and said it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease

Writing in The Mail on Sunday, George Eustice (pictured) has defended the decision to put down Geronimo the alpaca and said it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease

Among them was Rose, a cow that my father said was one of the best he had ever seen. To make matters worse, she had sadly lost her calf the previous year. 

As a result she had to be removed for slaughter having never had a living calf. It was soul-destroying.

Bovine TB (bTB) was a huge problem for our cattle industry during the last century and it took several decades in the post-war years to finally get it under control.

However, a combination of inaction during the Blair years, coupled with increased cattle movements in the wake of the foot and mouth crisis, led to a sharp rise in the incidence of the disease at the beginning of the millennium, and we have been wrestling with that over the past decade.

Bovine TB is an insidious disease. It is difficult to detect because it develops slowly and there are often no obvious symptoms. It can lurk in the environment for several months and it can become embedded in the badger population.

One of the lessons in the post-war years is that testing and removing infected livestock from herds is critical to eventual success.

There has been a great deal of focus on the case of Geronimo the alpaca last week. However, each week, on average, we have to remove more than 500 cattle from herds due to infection in England alone. 

Behind every one of those cases is a farmer who has suffered loss and tragedy. 

Farmers understand that infected animals are a risk to the remainder of their herd, so while the loss of individual animals is always a tragedy, the farming communities have worked with our Government vets in this arduous but necessary endeavour.

Ministers should always challenge and probe on the rationale for certain policy approaches and on individual cases, so I first looked in detail at the case of Geronimo over three years ago and on several occasions since.

There has been focus on Geronimo the alpaca (pictured with Helen McDonald). But each week, on average, we remove more than 500 cattle from herds due to infection in England alone

There has been focus on Geronimo the alpaca (pictured with Helen McDonald). But each week, on average, we remove more than 500 cattle from herds due to infection in England alone

Geronimo tested positive twice using a test called the 'Enferplex' test. It is the test that was requested by the British Alpaca Society at the time. When it comes to positive test results, it is over 99 per cent accurate with a 'false positive' in only 0.34 per cent of cases.

However, it is not a very sensitive test. That is to say, in around 30 per cent of cases it won't detect an infection even when one is present. Two consecutive positive test results is a very strong indicator of the presence of the disease.

I investigated the owner's assertion that a previous 'skin test' in New Zealand combined with using a 'primer' might have led to a false result, but the Enferplex test detects the protein of bTB itself, not an immune response, so that theory was discounted.

I also explored the claim that the skin test in New Zealand should have been relied upon, but the skin test can pick up around 25 per cent of cases in alpacas at best so is far less reliable than the test used in the UK.

There are no easy answers when it comes to dealing with TB in cattle, and we will always need to pursue a range of measures. However, last year British scientists made a major breakthrough with a new test that can differentiate between the disease and a vaccine.

This opens the prospect to us being able to vaccinate cattle in future, which will reduce the levels of infection, mean that fewer cattle need to be slaughtered and give us an exit strategy from the badger cull. 

Field trials started in earnest earlier this summer and we aim to be in a position to start vaccinating cattle in a few years' time.

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2021-08-08 09:34:09Z
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Wood Green stabbing: Man charged with social worker attack - BBC News

A police officer outside the building in Wood Green where the incident took place

A man has been charged with attempted murder after a social worker and two police officers were attacked.

The social worker was stabbed multiple times during a welfare visit to a home in Noel Park Road in Wood Green, north London, on Friday evening.

Sulai Bukhari, 33, of Noel Park Road, was also charged with two counts of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm.

He will appear at Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court on Monday.

The officers, who were also assaulted, have left hospital while the 61-year-old social worker's condition has been described as non-life changing.

Mr Bukhari was arrested on Friday at his home address and remains in police custody after being charged on Sunday morning.

Two other men arrested in connection with the same incident have been released under investigation, the Met Police said.

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2021-08-08 10:52:09Z
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Floods turn railway line into a canal with more torrential rain expected today - Daily Record

Flooding left a Scottish railway line looking like a canal on Saturday - with more torrential rain expected today, Sunday.

Yesterday saw railway lines under five feet of water, flooded streets - and led to at least one car being abandoned after it was submerged in water - when 30mm of rain fell in one hour.

And a yellow weather warning for thunderstorms remains in place for most of Scotland for all of Sunday, with the Met Office warning it may cause flooding and power cuts.

There are also number of speed restriction in places across Scotland including Glasgow, which was hit by 30mm rainfall in one hour.

On Glasgow’s Great Western Road, cars were seen driving through flood water while a couple was forced to abandon a car underneath Drumchapel railway bridge after it became submerged.

Claire, a local resident, said: "They walked through the water up to their waist. I went to get a train and all were cancelled so had to wade home in rain up to my calves."

Traffic Scotland has advised drivers in Glasgow to use caution due to surface water.

Network Rail said staff detected 5ft of floodwater in the twin tunnels at Dalmuir north west of Glasgow on the route from Yoker.
The line between Argyle Street and Bridgeton in Glasgow also closed due to track circuit failures from suspected flooding.

Network Rail Scotland tweeted at 9.52pm tonight, saying: "This picture shows the full extent of the flooding at Dalmuir’s twin tunnels. You can see the water has almost reached the tunnel roof.

There was five feet of floodwater in the tunnels
There was five feet of floodwater in the tunnels

"The pumps we have in the tunnel are running, but the sheer amount of rain (30mm in an hour) that's fallen means they're up against it!"

The rail body added: “We’re constantly monitoring the weather and the impact it’s having on the network in real-time, thanks to our dedicated forecasters and monitoring equipment.

For more stories from where you live, visit InYourArea.

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2021-08-08 02:34:57Z
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Sabtu, 07 Agustus 2021

Climate change: Time running out to stop catastrophe - Alok Sharma - BBC News

Alok Sharma being interviewed
PA Media

The world is "dangerously close" to running out of time to stop a climate change catastrophe, the UK government's climate chief Alok Sharma has said.

Mr Sharma - who is leading COP26, the climate summit hosted by the UK this year - said the effects were already clear with floods, fires and heatwaves.

"We can't afford to wait two years, five years, 10 years - this is the moment," he told the Observer.

But he did not condemn the government for allowing more fossil fuel projects.

And he defended his decision to travel to more than 30 countries in seven months.

Mr Sharma's interview with the Observer comes ahead of a major report being released on Monday from the United Nations' climate change researchers.

The report is set to be the strongest statement yet from the UN group on the science of climate change - and will likely give details about how the world's oceans, ice caps and land will change in the next decades.

Wildfires are currently raging in Greece, forcing thousands to evacuate their homes - and fires have also been burning in Turkey and California in the US. This summer, western Europe also saw its worst flooding in decades, which killed dozens of people.

Mr Sharma said if urgent action was not taken, the consequences would be "catastrophic".

"I don't think there's any other word for it," he said. "You're seeing on a daily basis what is happening across the world. Last year was the hottest on record, the last decade the hottest decade on record."

He added: "We're seeing the impacts across the world - in the UK or the terrible flooding we've seen across Europe and China, or forest fires, the record temperatures that we've seen in North America. Every day you will see a new high being recorded in one way or another across the world."

Mr Sharma said the report released on Monday is "going to be the starkest warning yet that human behaviour is alarmingly accelerating global warming".

"I don't think we're out of time but I think we're getting dangerously close to when we might be out of time. We will see [from the IPCC] a very, very clear warning that unless we act now, we will unfortunately be out of time."

Fossil fuel criticism

Glasgow is set to host the COP26 summit in November - which is the UN climate change conference.

The summit is seen as vital if climate change is to be brought under control, and leaders from 196 countries will meet to try and agree action.

But campaigners have accused the UK of hypocrisy, as there are plans to tap a new oil field off Shetland. The government has also said more oil and gas wells can be drilled in the North Sea, and there are plans for a new coal mine in Cumbria.

Earlier this year, the global energy watchdog the International Energy Agency said there cannot be any new investment in oil, gas or coal projects if we want to limit global warming to 1.5C. Experts say the impacts of climate change are far more severe when the increase is greater than 1.5C.

Mr Sharma refused to criticise the government's plan for the projects, saying: "Future [fossil fuel] licences are going to have to adhere to the fact we have committed to go to net zero by 2050 in legislation.

"There will be a climate check on any licences."

Mr Sharma's interview comes after he was criticised for flying abroad for meetings - and visiting more than 30 countries in seven months.

However, since then some environmental campaigners including Greenpeace have defended him, saying face-to-face meetings are important to persuade other nations to tackle climate change.

Mr Sharma told the Observer that in-person meetings were "incredibly vital and actually impactful".

"It makes a vital difference, to build those personal relationships which are going to be incredibly important as we look to build consensus," he said.

It also emerged in the Sunday Mirror that Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab did not self-isolate after returning from France, which was on the amber plus list meaning all arrivals must quarantine.

A government spokesman said it was Mr Raab's job to represent the UK abroad and he followed Covid guidelines on return.

There is an exemption for ministers to avoid quarantine when returning from abroad.

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2021-08-08 00:36:33Z
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Putting down Geronimo the alpaca is the right decision, cabinet minister says - Sky News

The decision to put down an alpaca who has tested positive for bovine tuberculosis is the right one, the environment secretary has said - despite its owner pleading with the government to intervene.

Geronimo, a six-year-old alpaca, has tested positive for the disease twice and the High Court has previously ruled he should be put down.

But his owner, Helen Macdonald, whose farm is in Wickwar, South Gloucestershire, disputes the test results and insisted she will "stand in the way of any gunman who comes to destroy Geronimo".

She asked Boris Johnson to step in to stop Geronimo from being sent to die - but minister George Eustice has said the government cannot accept her request.

Geronimo the alpaca
Image: Helen Macdonald has been fighting to save Geronimo's life since 2017

Writing in The Mail on Sunday, Mr Eustice said that while it is "soul-destroying" to have to kill animals, it is the right decision to stop the spread of bovine TB.

"While there are moments of joy and optimism in farming, every livestock farmer has to get used to their share of tragedy and loss," he wrote.

Mr Eustice, who is a former farmer, says he has looked at the alpaca's case several times over the past three years and that the test used on Geronimo is "over 99% accurate with a false positive in only 0.34% of cases".

More on Gloucestershire

"In around 30% of cases, it won't detect an infection even when one is present. Two consecutive positive test results is a very strong indicator of the presence of the disease," he said.

He also spoke about the dangers of the disease to livestock and blamed Tony Blair's government for "inaction".

George Eustice
Image: George Eustice has defended the government's decision to put the animal down

"Bovine TB was a huge problem for our cattle industry during the last century and it took several decades in the post-war years to finally get it under control," he said.

"However, a combination of inaction during the Blair years, coupled with increased cattle movements in the wake of the foot and mouth crisis, led to a sharp rise in the incidence of the disease at the beginning of the millennium, and we have been wrestling with that over the past decade."

The minister added that, while there has been focus on Geronimo's case, 500 animals are removed from herds in England each week due to the infection.

"Behind every one of those cases is a farmer who has suffered loss and tragedy," he added.

Geronimo the alpaca
Image: Geronimo the alpaca has tested positive for bovine TV twice

Earlier this week, Ms Macdonald said she would continue to dispute the test results.

"It's a total load of lies, the testing has never been validated," she said.

"He's still standing by such a ridiculous claim because they've made errors of judgment and they've been caught out.

"If he's willing to kill a healthy animal in front of the whole world without testing him properly first, then it's a sorry state of affairs.

"And it will be for the world to see. Because if he sends some poor person down here with a gun to shoot Geronimo then it will get filmed by the world's media."

Geronimo the alpaca
Image: Ms Macdonald took her case to the High Court, who sided with the government despite her claims that Geronimo's tests were false positives

More than 80,000 people have signed a petition asking the prime minister to step in, while nearly £19,000 has been donated towards legal costs.

Ms Macdonald has been embroiled in a legal battle with the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs since 2017, but the case has gained traction since a second death warrant came into effect on Thursday after a final High Court bid to save him failed.

Bovine TB is mainly a respiratory disease that is spread through nose to nose contact, and also through contact with saliva, urine, faeces and milk.

In 2018, there were 4,395 new herd incidents of the disease in Britain, and 44,656 animals were slaughtered due to bovine TB.

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2021-08-08 00:10:36Z
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COVID-19: UK reports 28,612 coronavirus-related cases and 103 deaths in past 24 hours - Sky News

The UK has recorded another 28,612 coronavirus cases in the latest 24-hour period.

A further 103 people have died within 28 days of a positive COVID-19 test, daily government figures show - taking the total figure to 130,281 since the start of the pandemic.

On Friday, 31,808 new infections and 92 deaths were recorded - which saw the UK top six million coronavirus cases since the pandemic began.

This time last week, on 31 July, 26,144 cases and 71 deaths were reported.

The latest figures come a day after England's R number fell to between 0.8 and 1.1, suggesting the pandemic could be shrinking.

Last week, it was estimated at between 1.1 and 1.4.

This latest R value, or reproduction number, means on average every 10 people infected with the virus will go on to infect between eight and 11 others.

More on Covid-19

Data published from Public Health England has found that a third of patients currently in hospital have already received two doses of the vaccine.

To encourage more people to get vaccinated, a new government campaign is urging young people to get their jabs or risk missing out "on the good times".

Sussex University is offering cash prizes to students who can prove they have been fully vaccinated in an effort to drive vaccine uptake.

All students at the university are being entered into a draw and 10 of them can win £5,000 if they can prove they are double-jabbed or exempt.

Meanwhile, SAGE government adviser Professor John Edmunds said further lockdowns may not be required despite a potential autumn wave of COVID-19 cases due to restrictions easing.

Professor Edmunds told Times Radio he was "cautiously optimistic" that another lockdown would not be needed to bring cases under control again.

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But he added there is a need to be "very cautious" about the situation at the moment as previous peaks had been countered by locking down.

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2021-08-07 15:22:30Z
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