Monday 31 January 2022

Morning mail: unboosted aged care residents dominate Covid toll, UK warning to Moscow, and unapproved rapid tests

Tuesday: Nearly half of Australia’s aged care homes grapple with outbreaks as the government defends missing its booster rollout deadline. Plus what’s new to streaming this month

Good morning. Nearly half of Australia’s aged care facilities are battling Covid outbreaks. The UK warns Moscow that an invasion of Ukraine would be met with “massive consequences for Russia’s interests and economy”. And what’s new to streaming in Australia.

Unboosted aged care residents are dominating Australia’s Covid death toll, with almost half of the country’s aged care homes battling outbreaks. It comes as the Morrison government defends missing its own booster rollout deadline. More than a quarter of aged care staff say their workplace is not giving them free rapid antigen tests, with nearly 20% reporting they’ve had to find and buy their own kits before working. Trade unions have lashed the prime minister, Scott Morrison, and the Coalition over the findings of the new survey from the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Foundation, saying it was “an indictment on this government” that aged care workers were forced to dip into their own pocket for the tests

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Former Miss USA dead at 30

Attorney, TV personality and pageant winner Cheslie Kryst is believed to have taken her own life

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‘Vayas donde vayas, nunca te perderán’: los controles de salud del gobierno en China despiertan inquietud sobre la vigilancia


By BY CHRIS BUCKLEY, VIVIAN WANG AND KEITH BRADSHER from NYT en Español https://ift.tt/WRaCkZqz6

Dream work: the new creativity hack Hollywood stars swear by

Jane Campion, Benedict Cumberbatch and Sandra Oh all say they have used a coach to harness the power of their dreams and say the results have been extraordinary

Name: Dream work.

Age: People have been dreaming since people have been people. This is more about the exploration of dreams.

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Anne Frank's betrayal: Dutch publisher apologises for book

The book identifies a person who may have betrayed Anne Frank and her family to the Nazis.

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Sunday 30 January 2022

What to Cook This Week


By BY SAM SIFTON from NYT Food https://ift.tt/k590vp1JQ

My support for sports projects in Israel is not ‘sportswashing’ | Letter

Sylvan Adams, co-owner of the Israel Start-Up Nation pro cycling team, says his sports initiatives look to build bonds of coexistence and understanding

Jonathan Liew’s decision to attack my support for sports projects in Israel as “sportswashing” is perhaps the most ringing endorsement of why such bridge-building efforts are needed (Sportswashing is associated with certain countries – why not Israel?, 24 January).

When our liberal and open country holds its massive annual Gay Pride parade – the largest (if not the only one) in the Middle East, Israel is accused of “pinkwashing”. When Israel leads in environmental issues and breakthroughs in climate change technologies, Israel is accused of “greenwashing”. When our generous and supremely capable NGOs like IsraAid or Save a Child’s Heart provide support to communities in need around the world, we are accused of “aidwashing”.

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Cincinnati has had difficulties protecting Burrow.


By BY ALANIS THAMES from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/Bd0N1c5pz

Swedish activist investor targets Vodafone over weak performance

Cevian is seeking turnaround at telecoms firm whose share price has been falling for years

Vodafone has been targeted by activist investor Cevian, prompting speculation that the telecoms giant will come under pressure to shake up its faltering global business.

The Swedish investment firm has built up holdings in Vodafone in recent months, according to sources quoted by Bloomberg, privately piling pressure on the firm to improve performance.

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Freedom Convoy: Truckers cause chaos in Ottawa after second day of protests

Truckers blocked streets around parliament in a second day of protests against a vaccine mandate.

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Mason Greenwood: Man Utd player arrested over rape claim

Greater Manchester Police says a man in his 20s is being held following allegations on social media.

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Saturday 29 January 2022

Freedom Convoy: Why Canadian truckers are protesting in Ottawa

The 'Freedom Convoy' is protesting vaccine mandates but police are worried about fringe elements.

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American Woman Accused of Prominent Role in Islamic State


By BY ADAM GOLDMAN from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/7n9E0NDmG

The storm is good news for skiers and many ski areas.


By BY WILLIAM P. DAVIS from NYT Business https://ift.tt/gvrilMoIU

As Storms Intensify, the Job of TV Weather Person Gets More Serious


By BY MARC TRACY from NYT Business https://ift.tt/UiP40fXOD

Riot shields and good balance: managing New Zealand’s booming fur seal population

Once hunted close to extinction, the species is once again flourishing – but as their numbers grow, tensions are rising with their human neighbours

On the coastline around Kaikōura, the rocks seem to be moving. Jutting from the sea, shimmering in the summer heat, their grey planes begin to shift and ripple.

Step closer and you recognise them, first by their sound: a distant honking, barking, yelping. Then, by their smell: thick and potent, a mixture of kelp and excrement. Seals, hundreds of them, possibly thousands, are coming ashore for pupping. They roll in constant, joyful helixes in the rock pools, emerge from the sea to glisten like puddles of oil, or bask unmoving in the sun like comatose adolescents recovering from a hangover.

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Russia: Military drill moved further from Irish shore

Simon Coveney says the news was "welcome" following days of speculation over the exercise.

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Friday 28 January 2022

Love Letter: When It’s Too Good to Be True


By BY MIYA LEE from NYT Style https://ift.tt/3ADWq5A

Storm Malik: Met Office says power cuts and travel chaos possible

Gusts of up to 80mph forecast for coastal areas of eastern Scotland and north-east England

The Met Office has said there could be power cuts and travel chaos as Storm Malik brushes past the UK over the weekend.

Gusts are predicted to reach 80mph in coastal areas as the storm, named by Denmark, hits parts of Scotland and northern England.

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Restaurants to Customers: Don’t Call Us, We Won’t Call You


By BY VICTORIA PETERSEN from NYT Food https://ift.tt/3HdfRof

‘Colonial document’: Victorian justice department reports raise concerns about welfare of Indigenous young people

Independent review into ‘serious problem with systemic racism’ needed to safeguard Aboriginal Victorians, critics say

Internal reports raise significant concerns about how young people from Aboriginal and African backgrounds are being cared for by the Victorian justice department as it struggles to deal with increasingly complex youth offenders.

The reports show police are failing to refer youths to a support program designed to prevent them from offending, while service providers are keeping information on youth offenders in insecure online databases and some youth justice stakeholders fail to appreciate the concerns Aboriginal families have about the justice system.

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Winter Olympics: Global sponsors quiet ahead of Beijing Games

A week before the Beijing Games start global partners are lying low amid a US-China diplomatic spat.

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Thursday 27 January 2022

Xiomara Castro: Honduras swears in its first female president

Xiomara Castro's arrival marks the end to the right-wing National Party's 12-year reign.

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The Best Veggie Burgers Are Made With Vegetables


By BY TEJAL RAO from NYT Food https://ift.tt/3IGOcwd

Greek government faces confidence vote after botched blizzard response

Opposition leader Alexis Tsipras files censure motion, also citing poor handling of wildfires and pandemic

Greece’s main opposition leader, Alexis Tsipras has filed a motion of no confidence in the government, saying its bungled response to a winter blizzard this week showed it was no longer fit for office.

Tsipras, a leftist former prime minister, said Kyriakos Mitsotakis’s administration was “the worst the country has known” since the collapse of military rule in 1974.

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Lawyers question strength of Prince Andrew’s response to lawsuit

Legal experts question whether document filed with US district court can help royal avoid ‘disastrous’ trial

British lawyers have cast doubt on the strength of Prince Andrew’s defence to Virginia’s Giuffre’s lawsuit and whether it can help him settle the case, thereby avoiding a “disastrous” court trial.

In papers filed with the US district court on Wednesday, Andrew denied sexually abusing Giuffre when she was a minor and also sought to bar his accuser’s claim on grounds including the time elapsed since the alleged offences – despite a New York statute having extended the window for child victim claims – and her “wrongful conduct”.

Andrew and convicted sex-trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell have been photographed at numerous social events together.

Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty in Florida in 2008 to the charge of procuring a minor for prostitution.

Andrew had been on Epstein’s private plane and stayed at some of his homes.

The infamous photograph depicts Andrew, Giuffre and Maxwell at Maxwell’s home.

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West plans to tie Afghan teacher aid to girls’ education pledge

Funds will only go to provinces where girls are in school if Taliban reneges on promise, diplomats say

The west is planning to incentivise the Taliban to abide by their promise to allow girls to be educated by providing funding for teachers’ salaries only in provinces in which the pledge is met.

The Taliban claimed this week the group would allow girls of secondary school age to be educated from March, the start of the next school term. Sceptical diplomats said they would need more than verbal assurances, with physical and budgetary evidence of preparations being required.

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Key points from Prince Andrew’s response to Virginia Giuffre’s lawsuit

What the royal’s lawyers said in his answer and defences to the sexual abuse suit against him

Prince Andrew has filed his answer and defences to Virginia Giuffre’s sexual abuse lawsuit against him, brought in the New York district court. Here are some of the key points from the court papers. The prince’s lawyers say:

Prince Andrew denies the allegations contained in paragraph one of the complaint. (Paragraph one of the complaint: “This suit arises out of defendant’s sexual abuse of plaintiff when she was under the age of 18 years old.”)

Prince Andrew lacks sufficient information to admit or deny the allegations contained in paragraph two of the complaint. (Paragraph two: “During 2000–2002, beginning when plaintiff was 16, plaintiff was the victim of sex trafficking and abuse by convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.”)

Prince Andrew denies the first clause in paragraph seven of the complaint. He lacks sufficient information to admit or deny the remaining allegations contained in that paragraph. (Paragraph seven: “Prince Andrew was a close friend of Ghislaine Maxwell, a British socialite who spent years overseeing and managing Epstein’s sex trafficking network, and actively recruited underage girls, including plaintiff.”)

Prince Andrew denies the allegations contained in paragraph nine of the complaint. (Paragraph nine: “After publicly feigning ignorance about the scope of Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation and sympathy for Epstein’s victims, Prince Andrew has refused to cooperate with US authorities in their investigation and prosecution of Epstein and his co-conspirators.”)

Prince Andrew admits that he met Epstein in or around 1999. He denies the remaining allegations in the first sentence of paragraph 30 of the complaint, and lacks sufficient information to admit or deny the allegations contained in the second sentence of that paragraph. (Paragraph 30: “According to Prince Andrew, he first met Epstein in 1999 through Maxwell, Prince Andrew’s close friend. Prince Andrew and Maxwell have been photographed at numerous social events together.”)

Prince Andrew lacks sufficient information to admit or deny the allegations contained in paragraph 33 of the complaint. (Paragraph 33: “In 2006, Prince Andrew invited Epstein to his daughter’s 18th birthday party, despite Epstein being charged with procuring a minor for prostitution only one month prior.”)

Prince Andrew lacks sufficient information to admit or deny the allegations contained in paragraph 38 of the complaint. (Paragraph 38: “The below photograph depicts Prince Andrew, plaintiff, and Maxwell at Maxwell’s home prior to Prince Andrew sexually abusing plaintiff.”)

[Virginia] Giuffre’s complaint should be dismissed because this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the action.

Giuffre, through her own actions, inactions, and other conduct – including, without limitation, entering into the 2009 release agreement with Epstein containing a broad third-party release of her claims against Prince Andrew and others – waived the claims now asserted in the complaint.

Assuming, without admitting, that Giuffre has suffered any injury or damage, Giuffre and/or others, who are not Prince Andrew, contributed in whole or in part to the alleged damage.

Assuming, without admitting, that Giuffre has suffered any injury or damage alleged in the complaint, Giuffre’s claims are barred by the doctrine of consent.

Giuffre’s alleged causes of action are barred in whole or in part by her own wrongful conduct and the doctrine of unclean hands.

Giuffre’s claims are barred in whole or in part by the applicable statute(s) of limitations.

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Wednesday 26 January 2022

Why Online Stars Are Mad at Apple


By BY SHIRA OVIDE from NYT Technology https://ift.tt/3AC6bRD

Russia-Ukraine crisis: where are Putin’s troops and what are his options?

A visual guide to recent troop deployments as tensions soar

Russia has forward-deployed hundreds of tanks, self-propelled artillery and even short-range ballistic missiles from as far away as Siberia to within striking range of Ukraine’s borders.

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Democrats can seat a new justice on their own, even if Republicans unite in opposition.


By BY CARL HULSE from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3H5nzRo

Met to ask No 10 partygoers named by inquiry if they are guilty

Some could be questioned in writing and fined if they accept the findings, while others will be interviewed under caution

Police will ask aides of Boris Johnson who are named in Sue Gray’s report as having attended parties during lockdown if they are guilty and thus accept a fine under regulations passed by the government they work for.

Some could be asked in writing to accept or dispute the findings from Gray, while others will have to be interviewed under caution. The investigation is expected to take at least several weeks, with detectives prepared to expand their inquiry if further evidence emerges.

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Kurdish forces retake prison from Islamic State after six-day siege

The attack on the Kurdish-run prison in Syria was the jihadists’ most high-profile stand since 2019

Up to 2,000 Islamic State inmates who had overrun a Syrian prison have surrendered to their Kurdish captors, ending a six-day siege that marked the terror group’s most dramatic stand since the collapse of its so called caliphate nearly three years ago.

The peaceful finale to the standoff on Wednesday was at odds with its bloody beginnings when up to 100 extremists tried to storm the facility in the northern city of Hasakah and free those jailed inside. The raid on Thursday night, which was led by two suicide bombers, led to days of intense clashes, which claimed the lives of close to 40 members of the Syrian Democratic Forces and about 30 jihadists, and forced more than 50,000 civilians to flee.

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Russia Ukraine: US sends Moscow formal response over crisis

The secretary of state says he has offered Russia a serious diplomatic path but will help defend Ukraine.

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Tuesday 25 January 2022

Morning mail: Australia Day honours, aged care provider waits weeks for promised Covid tests, our best public loos

Wednesday: Paralympian and disability advocate Dylan Alcott named Australian of the Year. Plus: Guardian Australia readers’ favourite public toilets

Good morning! Australia Day honours have been handed out to a record number of women, including Australia’s richest person, mining magnate Gina Rinehart, a decision likely to spark controversy. Tennis champion, Paralympian and disability advocate Dylan Alcott has been named the 2022 Australian of the Year, the first person with a disability to receive the top gong. Australia Day and Invasion Day rallies are expected across the country, and today also marks the 50th anniversary of the Tent Embassy. Mununjali and South Sea Islander woman Chelsea Watego reminds us that for First Nations people 26 January “is a day that tells a story of a violent and heartless nation that insists upon our forgetting”.

An aged care provider says it has “no faith” in the commonwealth’s supply of rapid antigen tests after a delivery failed to show for almost three weeks after an outbreak of Covid. When it did arrive, the delivery contained less than half of the order. Supply at St Basil’s Homes in South Australia is so precarious that the provider wrote to residents and their families warning the tests were “like liquid gold”. The facility had ordered 1,300 rapid tests from the national stockpile three weeks ago, but received just 600 on Friday.

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Turkey: Airport warehouse roof collapses in snowstorm

Heavy snowfall across parts of Turkey has caused an airport warehouse roof to collapse.

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Frank Dutton, Who Took On Apartheid’s Crimes, Dies at 72


By BY CLAY RISEN from NYT World https://ift.tt/3G0gzE2

The Guardian view on the threat to Ukraine: high and rising | Editorial

Russia hopes for disagreement and distraction. To counter it, the west must maintain unity

The US president’s need to state on Monday that there is “total unanimity” over how to deal with the Ukraine crisis, like the video call with European leaders which preceded it, was itself evidence of ongoing differences among western allies. There is no dispute about the threat: more than 100,000 Russian troops are now massed near Ukraine’s borders. The US has put 8,500 troops on standby to deploy to Europe to reinforce allies there, while Nato has reinforced its eastern borders with warships and fighter jets. A senior US official briefed on Tuesday that in the event of an invasion, sanctions will “start at the top of the escalation ladder and stay there”.

In addition to the clear deterrent message, talks continue: Dmitry Kozak, the Kremlin’s deputy chief of staff, will meet French, German and Ukrainian officials in Paris on Wednesday, in the “Normandy format”. Set against that, Russia paid little price for the annexation of Crimea and fomenting the separatist uprising in the Donbas region in 2014. There is a credible case that Russia is set on a major military offensive – not merely pursuing coercive diplomacy – and that it is in Moscow’s interests to act before Kyiv receives further arms shipments. Above all, there is at present no visible off-ramp for Vladimir Putin. The very thing he says Russia must counter – Nato’s presence in eastern Europe – is growing because of his own actions. He might take an exit; it’s harder to see him beating a retreat.

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Ukraine: What is Nato and why doesn't Russia trust it?

Nato countries are trying to help Ukraine in the face of a possible Russian invasion.

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Monday 24 January 2022

Morning mail: inland rail goes off track, Australians told to leave Ukraine, Paul Kelly’s best gig

Tuesday: can the 1,700km rail route between Melbourne and Brisbane live up to its hype? Plus: Paul Kelly reflects on his most memorable concert

Good morning. It’s been two years today since the first confirmed case of Covid-19 in Australia. Since then, there have been more than 1.6m infections and more than 3,000 deaths, with many of those taking place in the current Omicron outbreak. The surge has caused shortages of rapid tests, which are causing stress for vulnerable people and has come at a difficult time for the return to school. In the aged care sector, some facilities are telling essential visitors to find their own rapid tests or be denied entry. Meanwhile, our economics correspondent, Peter Hannam, looks at whether Australia debt-fuelled pandemic finance party is finally over.

A 1,700km rail route between Melbourne and Brisbane has been promised by the Coalition to deliver an economic boom for Australia’s regions and rural communities. But four years after the project (worth $14.5bn and counting) was announced, just 130km of track has been laid and we are still unsure of where it will exactly start and finish. A major Guardian investigation examines the mega project to find out whether communities along its route will benefit and whether their concerns are being bypassed.

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As Lia Thomas Swims, Debate About Transgender Athletes Swirls


By BY BILLY WITZ from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3Ivikuw

Rising costs of Ukraine gamble could force Russia’s hand

Analysis: Putin can still turn back but it looks less likely as economic and political consequences mount

Russia’s aggressive buildup near Ukraine energised Nato into sending more forces to eastern Europe on Monday and led to a plunge on Russian markets, raising the stakes on the Kremlin’s bet that it could cajole, extort or force Ukraine into submission.

For Moscow it has become more difficult to pull back from its aggressive stance after US and Nato announcements that more troops would be deployed to the military alliance’s eastern flank. A unilateral drawdown now would leave the Kremlin a clear loser in the standoff, having provoked a strengthening of the very Nato presence that it had sought to banish from eastern Europe.

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The military says it has taken over the West African nation of Burkina Faso


By BY DECLAN WALSH from NYT World https://ift.tt/3tVFOos

Biden to video call European allies over Ukraine

The US president will hold a secure call with leaders of the UK, France and Germany, among others.

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Sunday 23 January 2022

French Adventurer Dies Attempting to Row Solo Across the Atlantic


By BY AZI PAYBARAH from NYT World https://ift.tt/3Ipwe1c

Morning mail: the cost of Nauru regime, Russia sends troops to Ukraine, powerful sick notes

Monday: Australia’s offshore processing system on Nauru will cost taxpayers nearly $220m over the next six months. Plus: can a sick note make you better?

Good morning. Australia’s offshore processing regime on Nauru will cost taxpayers nearly $220m over the next six months. Russia has sent troops close to Ukraine’s borders. And Google warns that an upcoming Australian court ruling could have “devastating impacts” on the internet.

Australia’s offshore processing regime on Nauru will cost taxpayers nearly $220m over the next six months as it holds 107 people on the Pacific island. Brisbane firm Canstruct International has been awarded a new extension – its eighth non-competitive contract extension – for $218.5m to provide six months of “garrison and welfare services” on Nauru. The company’s total revenue from island contracts over the past five years now totals more than $1.8bn. It currently costs Australian taxpayers more than $4m a year to hold one person within the Nauru offshore regime – a little over $11,000 per person per day.

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Von Miller has helped the Rams generate sacks despite defensive injuries.


By BY ALANIS THAMES from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/33KmFvd

‘Houses are just gone’: Tonga emerges from volcano and tsunami disaster

The eruption was unlike anything ever seen by Tongans, who are trying to rebuild their lives and devastated communities

Tonga is used to natural disasters, but they have never experienced anything like the last week.

“We’ve experienced tropical cyclones, but this is so new and no one will ever forget this, ever,” says Marian Kupu, a journalist for BroadCom Broadcasting FM87.5 in Tonga.

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Jalen Ramsey and Odell Beckham should create decisive matchups against the Buccaneers.


By BY ALANIS THAMES from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3It3d4O

Saturday 22 January 2022

Kebabs ’n’ jabs: the Punjabi grill in Gravesend offering a side of Covid shots

Kentish pharmacist-restauranteurs Rav and Raj Chopra joined the NHS vaccine rollout after their father’s hospitalisation

When customers walk through the doors of V’s Punjabi Grill, a family-run restaurant in Gravesend in Kent, the sign above their heads says in gold-letters: cocktails, grills, events.

Now, the family might need to paint a fourth bullet point: vaccinations.

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Daily Covid infections in UK less than half recorded two weeks ago

UK detects 76,807 new cases in the past 24 hours, suggesting Omicron wave has spiked

The UK detected 76,807 new Covid infections in the past 24 hours, a 54% drop on the 176,191 cases detected two weeks ago as the record-breaking Omicron wave appears to have spiked.

The UK reported a further 297 people died within 28 days of a positive Covid test on Saturday, 3% up on the 287 deaths reported last Saturday. Over 177,000 people in the UK have Covid on their death certificate, according to the Office for National Statistics, the seventh highest tally in the world.

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‘I’ve got this little extra strength’: the rare, intense world of a super smeller

From petrol and perfume to Parkinson’s disease, super-smellers can detect scents others are oblivious to. For Krati Garg, the ability’s both power and pain

A few years ago Dr Krati Garg, an oral and maxillofacial surgeon in Melbourne, was in theatre about to commence work on a patient when she told the anaesthetist she could smell sevoflurane.

Sevoflurane is the anaesthetic gas used to put – and keep – patients asleep during surgery. Ingested via a tube that is placed down the throat, in large quantities its bitter smell can be noticeable, but trace amounts are largely indiscernible.

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Deal with Jacinda Ardern’s Labour party is proving toxic for New Zealand’s Greens | Morgan Godfery

The inter-party agreement has left the Greens defending rising emissions – a stance that goes against all their principles

Metiria Turei, the former Green party co-leader, left parliament more than four years ago, resigning from the co-leadership and the party list after right wing lobby groups, with an able assist in the form of the parliamentary press gallery, led a ruthless campaign against the former lawyer for admitting that she once had to commit benefit fraud to feed her young family.

The admission came in a landmark speech condemning New Zealand’s miserly welfare system. Struggling families were paid far too little to survive, something policymakers had known for decades, with examples ranging from Turei’s own to anonymous sole parents who were coming forward to describe how they spent $380 of the $480 in assistance from the State on rent alone. Turei and the Greens were promising to lift the rate of sole parent support, remove sanctions, and make other necessary and progressive reforms to the welfare system in order for people to meet their basic needs.

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Jean-Jacques Savin: French adventurer dies crossing Atlantic Ocean

Jean-Jacques Savin, who was 75, had previously made the voyage in a large barrel.

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The Olympic torch relay shrinks to ‘prioritize safety.’


By BY ADEEL HASSAN from NYT World https://ift.tt/3fQgh7W

Ruffled feathers: is the power imbalance in Australia’s chicken industry making shortages worse?

Farmers believe a more diverse poultry industry could help ease supply chain issues – and reduce cost pressures on chicken growers

The domination of the chicken processing industry by a few large players has contributed to the shortages in supermarkets across Australia, farmers and industry representatives say.

But that claim is rejected by chicken processors, who say the current supply chain crisis is “unprecedented” and not related to the number of processors or the structure of the industry.

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Friday 21 January 2022

Ann Arensberg, Insightful Novelist of Mysteries and Manners, Dies at 84


By BY CLAY RISEN from NYT Books https://ift.tt/3Ap51cb

I’m not complaining that WA is staying shut. Like many, I’m just grieving for lost time | Calla Wahlquist

West Australians are torn between wanting to see loved ones and wanting to stay safe behind the barricade. Most of us in the eastern states feel that conflict too

It has been a hard few years to have family in Western Australia. On Thursday, at a late-night press conference after national cabinet, the premier, Mark McGowan, announced that his safe transition plan, which would have allowed quarantine-free travel into the state from 5 February, had been put on indefinite pause.

I exchanged muted text messages with my sister, who lives in Perth, from my home in central Victoria. We were not really surprised – relying on McGowan to open the border on schedule is a mug’s game this far into the pandemic.

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Five slices of Meat Loaf: Iconic moments on the BBC

He'd do anything for fun... Watch our highlights from Meat Loaf's many BBC appearances over the decades.

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A Viral Photo Helps Bring Syrian Refugee Family to Italy


By BY GAIA PIANIGIANI from NYT World https://ift.tt/3qPrcFk

George Christensen ramps up conspiracy theory and anti-vaxx commentary as signs suggest possible media brand launch

Exclusive: Controversial MP with large Facebook following has registered business name which appears to be a media brand


Government MP George Christensen has amped up his conspiracy theory and anti-vaccination commentary, described by the PM as “dangerous”, while signs suggest he may be quietly planning to launch his own media brand when he retires from parliament.

Christensen’s commentary has become increasingly controversial in recent months since he announced he would not re-contest the north Queensland seat of Dawson at the upcoming federal election.

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Thursday 20 January 2022

Toronto’s struggles with blizzard highlight its dependence on cars

Critics point to policy failures that prioritize vehicles over safety of pedestrians in a city that has routinely struggled with snow

When a blizzard struck Toronto earlier this week, Greg Cooke did what he and his neighbours knew was expected of them. They grabbed their shovels and worked for hours to clear the sidewalks from snowdrifts that nearly reached their knees. Mindful of elderly residents with trouble walking, they made sure to clear all the way to the edge of the street.

The next morning, Cooke went outside to find a snowplow had passed through once again to widen the road and pushed all the snow back on to the sidewalk.

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'Pastor' arrested after disabled people found locked in his basement

The man and his wife claimed they were operating a "personal care home" in the dead-bolted basement.

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They’ve Driven Everything, but the Miata Keeps Them Smiling


By BY JIM MOTAVALLI from NYT Business https://ift.tt/3nKPgap

Four jailed for trying to smuggle cocaine through Russia’s Argentine embassy

Drugs worth $62m (£45.5m) found in suitcases by authorities in South American country

A Russian court has sentenced four men to lengthy jail terms for trying to smuggle nearly 400kg (880lb) of cocaine in suitcases from the Russian embassy in Argentina.

Argentine authorities seized the cocaine, worth $62m (£45.5m), hidden in suitcases in the Russian embassy school in 2018.

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Paris Fashion Week: Louis Vuitton shows Virgil Abloh's last collection

The French fashion house pays tribute to its late artistic director during Paris Fashion Week.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3rE2yH1

Wednesday 19 January 2022

14-year-old boy one of youngest in UK to be convicted of terror charges

Boy, who cannot be named because of his age, charged with possessing a terrorist publication

A 14-year-old schoolboy from Darlington has become one of the youngest people in the UK to be convicted of terror charges.

The boy, who cannot be named because of his age, appeared before Westminster magistrates court on Tuesday charged with possessing a terrorist publication.

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Robinho: Brazilian footballer loses final appeal against rape conviction

Brazilian footballer Robinho loses his final appeal against a conviction for taking part in the gang rape of a woman in Milan in 2013.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3GLkYfk

A Florida public health official is put on leave after emailing his staff to urge vaccination.


By BY PATRICIA MAZZEI from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/32jOSbC

Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard denied bail over sexual assault charges

Nygard, 80, to be detained in Toronto as he awaits trial on sexual assault and forcible containment charges

The Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard has been denied bail and will be detained in Toronto as he awaits trial oncharges of sexual assault and forcible confinement.

This bail decision relates to charges Canadian authorities laid against Nygard, 80, in connection with events that allegedly took place between 1987 and 2006. He also faces charges from the United States. He has denied any wrongdoing.

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Top Florida health official on leave over support for vaccination

The state is investigating if Dr Raul Pino violated state law by urging his employees to get jabbed.

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Tuesday 18 January 2022

Man charged with murder over disappearance of nine-year-old girl in Blue Mountains

A 32-year-old man was arrested in Surry Hills on Tuesday night and will face court on Wednesday

A man has been charged with murder over the disappearance of a nine-year-old girl in the Blue Mountains in New South Wales last week.

Police arrested the 32-year-old at a Surry Hills unit on Tuesday night. He has been refused bail to appear in Central Local Court on Wednesday.

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Texas synagogue siege: Teens held in UK released without charge

Greater Manchester Police say the pair, who were detained in south Manchester, have not been charged.

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New York City’s mayor says ‘we are winning’ against Omicron, as experts urge caution.


By BY EMMA G. FITZSIMMONS AND SHARON OTTERMAN from NYT New York https://ift.tt/3FGWMcq

Paris goes in search of its lost looks with ‘manifesto for beauty’

City leaders concede ‘trashed Paris’ campaign has a point and commit to beautification

Paris city authorities have published a “manifesto for beauty” containing plans to spruce up the City of Lights, where an online campaign highlighting ugliness and filth has piled pressure on mayor Anne Hidalgo.

Deputy mayor Emmanuel Grégoire said that several recent initiatives from the Socialist-Green alliance that runs the capital would be scrapped, including allowing Parisians to plant their own gardens on public space.

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The Guardian view on China’s baby bust: let people choose | Editorial

Beijing faces a demographic timebomb, with population growth at its lowest for six decades

“Of all things in the world, people are the most precious,” Mao Zedong said soon after taking power, believing China needed more soldiers and workers. The advent of peace saw the population rocket from 540 million to 969 million over the next three decades. Authorities abruptly switched to curbing births and brutally implementing the “one-child” policy.

These days, most Chinese couples are curtailing their families – or going without – by choice. The population now stands at 1.4 billion; a sixth of the global total. But last year’s birthrate was the lowest since 1949, and the rate of population growth the lowest since the Great Famine six decades ago. The pandemic has seen dramatic drops in births in many places. But in China, the shift is part of a pronounced long-term trend. Several experts believe that last year marked the population peak.

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Mobile firms agree another 5G delay at US airports

Airlines have pushed for postponement, saying risks from 5G will force them to cancel flights.

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Monday 17 January 2022

La caída del príncipe Andrés: esto es lo que hay que saber


By BY DAN BILEFSKY from NYT en Español https://ift.tt/3nvN3je

Morning mail: businesses buy up rapid tests, Tonga tsunami damage, Djokovic faces French Open bar

Tuesday: Big orders from state and federal governments and large corporates for rapid tests are contributing to a shortage. Plus: how to care for Covid face masks

Good morning. Still searching for rapid antigen tests? Orders from big business and governments means less are ending up on the shelves. The extent of the damage in Tonga is becoming clearer. And some tips on how to keep your mask effective.

The shortage of rapid antigen tests for consumers is being exacerbated by state and federal governments and large corporates placing mammoth orders for the self-administered test kits, causing stock to be diverted from online retailers and pharmacies. Australia is currently in the midst of a huge Omicron wave after state and federal governments pivoted from a policy of Covid suppression to one of “living with the virus”, causing a surge in demand for rapid antigen testing kits. The federal health minister, Greg Hunt, denied on Monday the commonwealth was requisitioning supplies of rapid antigen tests, as it can do under the Health Act allows.

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Russia-Ukraine crisis: Why Brussels fears Europe is 'closest to war' in decades

Fears are rising over Russia's plans to shake up the region, writes BBC Europe editor Katya Adler.

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Texas Rabbi Recounts Dramatic Escape From Synagogue


By BY RUTH GRAHAM from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3nVgDPp

Sales of Electric Vehicles Surpass Diesel in Europe, a First


By BY JACK EWING from NYT Business https://ift.tt/33mntq2

In a Double Bill, the Avant-Garde Meets a Very Good Girl


By BY JESSE GREEN from NYT Theater https://ift.tt/3tBvrX0

Charity worker killed by former inmate she had a relationship with, jury told

Michaela Hall, 49, was allegedly stabbed through eye by Lee Kendall, 42, in Mount Hawke, Cornwall

A former charity worker who worked with released prisoners was stabbed to death by an ex-inmate she had begun a relationship with, a jury has heard.

Michaela Hall, 49, was stabbed through the eye by Lee Kendall, 42, in a bedroom of her house in the Cornish village of Mount Hawke, Truro crown court was told. The court heard that Hall, a mother of two, was the victim of a number of assaults before she was killed, but declined to pursue prosecutions against Kendall.

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Sunday 16 January 2022

Morning mail: Djokovic leaves, WA locks out doctors, Australia’s Ashes victory

Monday: Serbia’s leaders hit out at treatment of Novak Djokovic, who boarded a flight out of Australia on Sunday night. Plus: how American tinned meat, Spam, came to be loved in Asia

Good morning. Novak Djokovic has left Australia after his last-ditch court challenge failed. And the England Test side has once again failed to turn up with much fight, handing Australia a 4-0 Ashes series win.

Novak Djokovic has been deported from Australia after the full federal court dismissed his bid to restore his visa. The Serbian tennis player was seen boarding a flight from Melbourne to Dubai hours after the court rejected his challenge to the decision of Australian immigration minister, Alex Hawke, to cancel the visa. In a statement Djokovic said he was “extremely disappointed” with the ruling. “I respect the court’s ruling and I will cooperate with the relevant authorities in relation to my departure from the country,” he said. Serbia’s leaders have hit out at Djokovic’s treatment. The prime minister, Ana Brnabić, criticised the decision to cancel the visa as “scandalous”. “I find it unbelievable that we have two completely contradictory court decisions within the span of just a few days,” she said. The tennis world reacted with a mixture of silence and disappointment to Djokovic’s deportation and frustration that it had overshadowed the Australian Open.

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When Two Champions Leagues Titles in Eight Months Don’t Count


By BY RORY SMITH from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3GyFtM7

Millions under weather alerts as major winter storm hits US and Canada

Flights are cancelled and power cuts reported in south-eastern US states amid heavy snow and ice.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3FzEz0H

The U.S. surgeon general warns that Omicron has not yet peaked.


By BY SABRINA IMBLER from NYT Health https://ift.tt/3qA0QqY

French parliament approves vaccine pass law to tackle Covid

Law will require people to have a certificate to enter public places such as restaurants and cinemas

France’s parliament has given final approval to the government’s latest measures to tackle Covid-19, including a vaccine pass contested by anti-vaccine protesters.

Lawmakers in the lower house of parliament voted 215 in favour to 58 against on Sunday, paving the way for the law to enter force in the coming days.

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Tsunami hits coasts after Tonga eruption

Strong waves cause panic in Peru and flooding in Fiji following the eruption of an underwater volcano in Tonga.

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Saturday 15 January 2022

CVS and Walgreens temporarily shut some stores as Omicron cases soar.


By BY AMANDA HOLPUCH from NYT World https://ift.tt/3fquKrd

No friendly politician is too obscure for insecure China, not even Barry Gardiner | Nick Cohen

The Communist party is obsessive in its demand for respect, at home and abroad

The Chinese Communist party appears utterly deluded. Hasn’t it learned in its 100-year history that some politicians aren’t worth buying? Wasting its money, or rather the money of the subjugated Chinese people, on Barry Gardiner, of all MPs, seems more silly than sinister. Why bother?

If you’ve never heard of him, Gardiner is an unremarkable Corbynista, who has continued the far left’s tradition of excusing anti-western dictatorships. The Labour MP took £420,000, a large whack even by the lax standards of Westminster, from Christine Ching Kui Lee, an influence-peddler MI5 said had “established links” for Beijing with British politicians.

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Novak Djokovic: Court to decide player's Australian Open fate

Judges will hear the player's appeal against his visa being revoked on grounds of public interest.

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One America News Will Be Dropped by DirecTV, a Major Distributor


By BY MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM from NYT Business https://ift.tt/33rAHS6

‘We need to be alarmed’: food banks in overdrive as politicians allow Australians to go hungry

Food relief organisations say they are helping more people than ever before. But this is not a good news story. Head of news, Mike Ticher, introduces an investigation into underlying inequality in Australia that predates the Covid crisis

You can read the original article here: ‘We need to be alarmed’: food banks in overdrive as politicians allow Australians to go hungry

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Jovenel Moïse murder: Ex-senator arrested in Jamaica

John Joel Joseph has been arrested in Jamaica in connection with the death of Jovenel Moïse.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3A9H48H

Friday 14 January 2022

Markov Chains, Sinclair Lewis and Other Letters to the Editor


By Unknown Author from NYT Books https://ift.tt/3zWMuE1

Unions say exemption to allow Covid-positive people to work at SA meatworks sets ‘dangerous precedent’

Workers who tested positive to Covid were forced to wear yellow hairnets to identify themselves

An exemption issued to a South Australian meatworks to allow Covid-positive staff to continue working creates a dangerous precedent for other firms eager to operate even as case numbers soar, the head of Australia’s unions says.

Teys Australia abattoir near Naracoorte, which supplies beef to supermarket giant Woolworths, operated for several days before closing on Thursday even after at least 140 of its nearly 400 staff tested positive for Covid.

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Danish spy scandal: Ex-minister accused of state secrets leak

The case against Claus Hjort Frederiksen comes after an ex-intelligence chief faced similar charges.

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Alec Baldwin Turns Over His Phone in ‘Rust’ Investigation, Lawyer Says


By BY JULIA JACOBS AND GRAHAM BOWLEY from NYT Movies https://ift.tt/3I74uhS

Prince Andrew facing calls to pay for his own security

Growing clamour for royal to lose dukedom and taxpayer-funded Scotland Yard security detail

The Duke of York faces calls to pay for his own security and relinquish his dukedom after being stripped of his military affiliations and royal patronages in the fallout over the civil sexual assault case against him.

The calls come as his accuser, Virginia Giuffre, welcomed the New York court ruling that paved the way for her lawsuit against Prince Andrew to proceed to trial, as she pledged to “continue to expose the truth”.

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Thursday 13 January 2022

Canadian premier tests positive day after rejecting Covid measures

Saskatchewan premier Scott Moe said he tested positive even as region resumes events, hockey games and in-person learning

A day after dismissing the need for more restrictive measures to combat the coronavirus, the premier in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan has tested positive for Covid-19.

“I’m feeling fine, but will be self-isolating and working from home for the next five days,” wrote Scott Moe on Twitter, alongside an image of a positive antigen test.

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What have Ukraine talks achieved, and is war now more likely?

Russia calls talks a ‘dead end’ and it becomes clear that troop build-up is not a bluff to achieve other ends

The Guardian’s world affairs editor assesses the outcome of three rounds of talks this week about the fate of Ukraine, involving Russia, the US, Nato and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

Did the talks achieve anything?

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Plants at risk of extinction as climate crisis disrupts animal migration

Heating and habitat loss drive birds and mammals to cooler areas where plants can not follow, study shows

The decline of seed-dispersing animals is damaging plants’ ability to adapt to climate breakdown, a study has found.

Almost half of all plant species depend on animals to spread their seeds, but scientists fear these plants may be at risk of extinction when animals are driven to migrate to cooler areas, as plants cannot easily follow.

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The fall of Prince Andrew – a timeline

Alleged sexual assault occurred when Duke of York, once second-in-line to the throne, was 41

The stripping of Prince Andrew’s military roles and royal patronages marks a nadir for the Queen’s second son, since sexual assault accusations arose amid concern over his relationship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. It’s a fall from grace for the 61-year-old, who was once second-in-line to the throne.

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Earliest edition of US Declaration of Independence to go on sale

Historical document is part of an auction of the private library of antiquarian book dealer William S. Reese

One of the earliest contemporary broadside editions of the Declaration of Independence is to go on sale later this year, as part of an auction of the private library of William S. Reese – the most prominent antiquarian book dealer of his generation.

The collection of “Bill” Reese, including printed works, historic prints, fine art and colour-plate books, will be among the most valuable sales of printed Americana in over 50 years, Christie’s said, giving it a “conservative” pre-sale estimate of $12-18m.

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Capitol attack panel subpoenas Google, Facebook and Twitter for digital records

  • Select committee seeks records related to January 6 attack
  • Move suggests panel is ramping up inquiry of social media posts

The House select committee investigating the Capitol attack subpoenaed Twitter, Meta, Alphabet and Reddit on Thursday for records related to the 6 January insurrection, as it seeks to review data that could potentially incriminate the Trump White House.

Facebook is part of Meta and Google is part of Alphabet.

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London 'hitman' on trial over plot to kill Pakistani activist in Netherlands

Muhammad Gohir Khan is accused of agreeing to kill a Pakistani military critic for £100,000.

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Oath Keepers Leader Charged With Seditious Conspiracy in Jan. 6 Investigation


By BY ALAN FEUER AND ADAM GOLDMAN from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3fk0RbV

Australia news live update: Novak Djokovic decision looms; national cabinet’s supply chain crisis response ‘unworkable’

Government expected to rule on tennis star’s visa today; changes to close contact rules condemned by business and unions. Follow all the day’s news live

Good morning,

We’ve nearly reached the end of the week, and what a week it’s been.

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NATO Won’t Let Ukraine Join Soon. Here’s Why.


By BY EDWARD WONG AND LARA JAKES from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3nKF3en

Polish lawmakers pass bill to step up government control of schools

Critics say bill, now moving to senate, could curb access to teaching on LGBT and reproductive rights

Poland’s lower house of parliament has passed a bill by the ruling nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party that would step up government control of schools, which critics say could curb access to teaching on LGBT and reproductive rights.

The bill passed on Thursday with 227 votes in favour and 214 against, and will now move to the senate.

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Wednesday 12 January 2022

11 Macaroni and Cheese Recipes to Curl Up With on the Couch


By BY BECKY HUGHES from NYT Food https://ift.tt/3K5JMR1

Maureen Lipman: my opinion on casting was not an attack on Helen Mirren | Letter

If the ethnicity or gender of the character drives the role then that ethnicity should be prioritised, writes Maureen Lipman

Thank our mutual god for the intelligence and eloquence of David Baddiel (‘Why don’t Jews play Jews?’ – David Baddiel on the row over Helen Mirren as Golda Meir, 12 January). But may I take issue with the Guardian on one point? I did not attack Dame Helen Mirren (Maureen Lipman attacks casting of Helen Mirren as former Israeli PM Golda Meir, 12 January). I was asked by a reporter for my opinion in a continuing debate. (I don’t tend to charge out of the house to Speaker’s Corner with a loud-hailer and a dustbin lid.)

My opinion was that if the ethnicity or gender of the character drives the role then that ethnicity should be prioritised, as it is now with other minorities.

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Ukraine tensions: US says Russia faces stark choice

Russia is told it must decide between de-escalation and diplomacy, or confrontation and consequences.

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Libor, Long the Most Important Number in Finance, Dies at 52


By BY LANANH NGUYEN AND JEANNA SMIALEK from NYT Business https://ift.tt/3tiyXFz

Novak Djokovic back on court as investigations continue

  • World No 1 allows training to be observed
  • Australian government looking at multiple issues

Novak Djokovic’s preparations for the Australian Open continued on Wednesday as the question of his presence in the country remained unresolved. Australia’s immigration minister, Alex Hawke, continues to deliberate over whether or not he should revoke Djokovic’s visa.

On Wednesday afternoon, Djokovic returned for his third practice at Melbourne Park since he was released from immigration detention. With a small contingent of media present, Djokovic trained with the Australian youngster Tristan Schoolkate and he continued to ease himself back into practice, working through a series of drills.

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Quebec health tax for unvaccinated residents prompts fierce Covid debate

  • ‘Health contribution’ for those who do not want Covid vaccine
  • Critics warn move could target vulnerable members of society

Quebec’s announcement that it will impose a healthcare tax on unvaccinated residents has prompted a fierce debate, as the province looks to salvage its crumbing healthcare system amid the latest wave of the coronavirus.

The Canadian province’s premier, François Legault, said on Tuesday that those who had chosen to remain unvaccinated would pay a “health contribution”, acknowledging growing friction in the province as the unvaccinated draw on a greater share of the scarce medical resources.

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Tuesday 11 January 2022

Ethiopia: 19 people killed in latest drone strikes in Tigray

The deadly attacks come as Joe Biden raised concerns about recent airstrikes with Ethiopian PM

Nineteen people have been killed in drone strikes in Ethiopia’s Tigray, in the latest reported attacks in the war-stricken region.

In the deadliest strike on Monday in the southern Tigray town of Mai Tsebri, 17 people working at a flour mill were killed, said one of the humanitarian workers, citing witness accounts.

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Morning mail: Djokovic awaits fate, Omicron’s European ‘tidal wave’, respirators or cloth masks?

Wednesday: Andy Murray says the world No 1 has questions to answer. Plus: spice things up with a simple chilli oil recipe

Good morning. The world is waiting for news from Australia’s immigration minister, Alex Hawke, who has yet to decide the fate of Novak Djokovic. Covid is sweeping across Europe as health officials in Australia call for stronger public health messaging about ventilation.

Djokovic has been training with his coach in Melbourneas he awaits a verdict from Hawke. Australian Border Force is investigating whether he incorrectly declared he had not travelled for two weeks before his flight to Australia, despite social media posts showing him in Belgrade before flying out of Spain. The fiasco reveals a much larger problem with Australia’s borders, writes Ben Doherty. “In its incompetent handling of Djokovic’s case, the Australian government has exposed not just one bizarre case, but systemic, structural flaws in the way Australia treats those who arrive on its shores.” Other tennis stars are now speaking out about the situation, with Andy Murray suggesting Djokovic has questions to answer, and Marton Fucsovics saying: “I don’t think Novak has the right to be here.”

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Pig heart transplant an absolute miracle, says patient's son

David Bennett, 57, is the first person in the world to receive a heart transplant from a genetically-modified pig.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3nhAV59

The Georgia secretary of state warned of a ‘federal elections takeover.’


By BY RICHARD FAUSSET from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/33ejQlE

Two men arrested over Andrew Gosden disappearance in 2007

Doncaster teenager not seen again after his image was captured on Kings Cross station CCTV

Detectives investigating the disappearance of a teenage boy from South Yorkshire 14 years ago have arrested two men, aged 45 and 38, on suspicion of kidnap and human trafficking.

Andrew Gosden was 14 when he left his home in Doncaster on a Friday morning, emptied his bank account of almost £200 and bought a one-way ticket to London. He was last captured on CCTV emerging from Kings Cross station.

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Children were 'fighting for their lives' in Bronx fire

New Yorkers are still digesting the tragedy of the city's deadliest apartment blaze in three decades.

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Monday 10 January 2022

Australia news live: Djokovic trains on centre court as supporters take to Melbourne streets; Morrison government yet to decide on visa cancellation

Tennis star attends midnight training session at Rod Laver Arena as police called amid wild scenes in Melbourne; immigration minister threatens to revoke entry visa for a second time. Follow all the day’s news live

A 14-year-old girl swept away in floodwaters north of Brisbane on the weekend is still missing as residents in the region assess the damage after days of extreme weather, AAP reports.

Water levels started to drop on Monday after the remnants of tropical cyclone Seth dumped more than half a metre of rain on the Wide Bay-Burnett region in two days.

Prime minister Morrison and home affairs minister Karen Andrews have a whole lot of explaining to do because what we have seen from this is Australians now know they cannot trust the Morrison government to enforce the rules at the border and they have done incredible damage.

The Morrison government looks like a pack of idiots that could not organise a meat raffle in a local RSL. Come on, here. This is extraordinary circumstances. The Morrison government issued Novak Djokovic a Visa on 18 November. The Australian Open is not a secret event, the fact Novak Djokovic, a known anti-vaxxer, wanted to come to Australia and play was not a state secret and yet Mr Morrison, as he has done at every stage in this pandemic, failed to plan, failed to act. Quite frankly, his failures, whether around ordering rapid antigen tests, ordering enough vaccines, making sure the supermarkets are well stocked and enforcing the rules at the border, all of these failures from Mr Morrison are hurting real Australians.

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Obamacare sign-ups remain strong as the annual deadline approaches.


By BY MARGOT SANGER-KATZ from NYT The Upshot https://ift.tt/31H8w0G

Morning mail: Djokovic speaks out, US-Russia talks over Ukraine, decluttering made easy

Tuesday: Novak Djokovic ‘pleased and grateful’ to have visa rejection overturned. Plus: reorganising one shelf at a time

Good morning. Novak Djokovic’s visa cancellation saga continues despite his return to centre court ahead of the Australian Open next week. But he’s not the only tennis star in doubt for the grand slam – Nick Kyrgios has tested positive for Covid. Tensions between Russia and Ukraine persist, but security talks between the Kremlin and the US are under way this week.

Novak Djokovic has thanked Judge Anthony Kelly for overturning his visa cancellation, but still faces potential deportations from Australia’s immigration minister, Alex Hawke. Hawke confirmed that he is considering the use of discretionary powers to deport Djokovic, which comes with a hefty three-year ban from re-entering Australia. His decision is expected this week. Meanwhile Djokovic’s family have criticised the Australian government and his mother said he was “subjected to torture and harassment” while in detention. But the family abruptly ended a press conference when questioned about why Djokovic, who is not vaccinated, was photographed in public last month without a mask after testing positive for Covid.

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Millionaire murderer Robert Durst dies in prison

The real estate heir turned fugitive unwittingly confessed to three killings on a TV crime show.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3f5OgZU

The Endless Pop Shimmers of the Weeknd


By BY JON CARAMANICA from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/3qacJnc

In today’s New Zealand, it’s not about being just Māori or Pākehā - everyone must belong | Philip McKibbin

While some of us are both, many of us are neither. The urge to separate us out is used to marginalise people around the world

It took me a long time to embrace my Māori identity.

On my mother’s side, I whakapapa (relate, through ancestry) to Kāi Tahu, the largest iwi (tribe) of Te Waipounamu (the South Island of New Zealand), but I grew up believing I was only Pākehā (NZ European). I spent most of my childhood living with my Pākehā father. Even though my Māori ancestry was mentioned occasionally, I resisted the suggestion that I was Māori. I didn’t grow up on a marae (Māori village), or speak te reo – and I didn’t look like the Māori kids I knew.

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Sunday 9 January 2022

Scala dei Turchi: Sicily's famed cliffs streaked red by vandals

Sicily's Scala dei Turchi are visited by thousands of tourists every year.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3G6S2Oq

‘The numbers are horrific,’ Mayor Eric Adams said.


By BY AZI PAYBARAH from NYT New York https://ift.tt/3zTUVQB

Manchester electronic ad boards each use electricity of three households

Exclusive: FoI request shows screens that earn council rent of £2.4m a year consume over 11,000 kWh annually

Hi-tech advertising screens that have been criticised for blocking pavements in Manchester each use the same amount of electricity as three households, the Guardian has learned.

The council-branded screens, which became a pedestrian bugbear when they were covered with mysterious grey boxes during their installation, earn the local authority £2.4m a year in rent from the advertising firm JCDecaux, plus 2.8% of the revenue from each advert.

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Afcon 2021: Cameroon beat Burkina Faso 2-1 in opening game

Hosts Cameroon come from behind to beat Burkina Faso in an absorbing opening game at the Africa Cup of Nations.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3zOndfe

Dwayne Hickman, T.V.’s Lovelorn Dobie Gillis, Is Dead at 87


By BY MARGALIT FOX from NYT Obituaries https://ift.tt/3f2lAB3

Sinéad O’Connor criticises Irish authorities after death of son Shane

Singer says 17-year-old left hospital while ‘on suicide watch’ and condemns Irish health service and family agency

Sinéad O’Connor has criticised the Irish authorities after the death of her 17-year-old son, Shane, whom she alleges left hospital while “on suicide watch”.

The singer announced the news of Shane’s death on social media on Saturday, writing: “My beautiful son, Nevi’im Nesta Ali Shane O’Connor, the very light of my life, decided to end his earthly struggle today and is now with God.

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Saturday 8 January 2022

Basmah bint Saud: Saudi princess released from jail after almost three years

Princess Basma bint Saud and her daughter were held without charge for almost three years.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3HNRBZI

A Giant Telescope Grows in Space


By BY DENNIS OVERBYE AND JOEY ROULETTE from NYT Science https://ift.tt/3HKwQ19

Despite hours of terror lost in the tangled bush of Karekare as a child, I’ve always returned to it | Charlotte Grimshaw

I remember intense fear and despair, and the objectively correct understanding that we could die

  • Guardian writers and readers describe their favourite place in New Zealand’s wilderness and why it’s special to them

Karekare is a wild, beautiful area of the Waitakeres, west of Auckland. It’s the place I dreamed about when I lived in London, the landscape I yearned to return to. It was the location of my most intense experiences as a child: fear, euphoria, exhilaration, joy.

Our parents’ bach was built on a hillside with a view down the valley, surrounded by dense bush in all directions. There was always the risk that if we went too far off a track, even close to the house, we’d quickly get disorientated and lost. The bush was so thick you couldn’t get a clear view out of it, and the only way to escape was by standing still and shouting.

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t5ptgJ

Marilyn Bergman: Oscar-winning lyricist dies at 93

Together with her husband, Bergman wrote songs for legends like Barbara Streisand and Fred Astaire.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/31ComcX

Robert Birnbaum, Architect of Modern-Day Financial Markets, Dies at 94


By BY EMILY FLITTER from NYT Business https://ift.tt/3HNIA2O

‘My father will go down like the captain of the Titanic’: life on the Pacific’s disappearing islands

Many in the Saposa Islands are wrestling with the dilemma of starting a new life on the mainland or staying to watch their homes vanish. Deputy editor, David Munk, introduces this story

You can read the original article here: ‘My father will go down like the captain of the Titanic’: life on the Pacific’s disappearing islands


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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3zARUEw

Friday 7 January 2022

Rawah Arja on how to get inside the mind of a teenage boy

Rawah Arja was determined to write a YA novel for – and about – teenage boys in Western Sydney. She tells Zoya Patel about how she created a story about religion, rivalries, romance, racism and redemption in The F Team

Hear more episodes of Book It In here.

The F Team by Rawah Arja is published by Giramondo.

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3F3P780

Sidney Poitier: Remembering the Oscar winner and Hollywood trailblazer

We look back on the career of Sidney Poitier, the first black man to win a best actor Oscar.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3F4U0gU

Chili, Biscuits and All, in One Pan


By BY MELISSA CLARK from NYT Food https://ift.tt/3n4w6vQ

Sidney Poitier’s defiance, grace and style changed me – and shaped my life as an actor | David Harewood

His roles in films like To Sir with Love mirrored my own experiences, and made me rethink what was possible

As a young kid, there really weren’t many black figures to aspire to, to mould yourself to. I was always glued to the telly and one night my dad put on this film, In the Heat of the Night. I will always remember the moment when Sidney Poitier came on screen as Virgil Tibbs. Seeing any black person on TV was extraordinary, but seeing someone with such ability, such grace, such style, changed me.

I knew how bad racism was in the US at that time, and watching that film I feared for this black character in that world. But there’s a moment where an older white gentleman, Endicott, slaps Tibbs, and he immediately slaps him back in the face. There was an audible gasp in our living room, quickly followed by cheers. It was a thing we’d never seen before – he was standing up, he was strong, and he wasn’t taking any shit.

David Harewood is an actor

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3n6uYYG

Galápagos islands volcano erupts spewing lava and clouds of ash

Wolf Volcano, the tallest mountain in the Pacific archipelago, began erupting shortly before midnight on Wednesday

The tallest mountain in the Galápagos islands has erupted, spewing lava down its flanks and clouds of ash over the Pacific Ocean, according to Ecuador’s Geophysical Institute.

A cloud of gas and ash from Wolf Volcano rose to 3793 meters (12,444 feet) above sea level following the eruption that began shortly before midnight on Wednesday local time, the institute said.

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3t79vCT

Sidney Poitier was a ground-breaking black man - Bonnie Greer

Playwright Bonnie Greer pays tribute to the acting legend Sidney Poitier, who has died at the age of 94.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3r0igf4

Thursday 6 January 2022

Every Pore on Your Face Is a Walled Garden


By BY VERONIQUE GREENWOOD from NYT Science https://ift.tt/3G4SEnF

Steve Bell on the legacy of the Iraq war for Julian Assange and Tony Blair – cartoon

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3JYpxoC

Morning mail: Djokovic in hotel detention, Trump’s ‘web of lies’, Kazakhstan protests

Friday: Novak Djokovic’s time in immigration detention highlights plight of refugees held in same hotel. Plus: Norfolk Island grapples with its first Covid cases

Good morning. Novak Djokovic awaits his Australian Open fate in a Melbourne immigration hotel. New South Wales hospitals are anticipating Covid-related admissions to triple. And deadly protests in Kazakhstan has hampered the bitcoin network.

Novak Djokovic is awaiting his Australian Open fate in a Melbourne immigration hotel as he mounts a legal challenge against Australia’s decision to cancel his visa. Djokovic’s lawyers succeeded in a bid to stop him from being deported on Thursday with a full hearing in the federal court now scheduled for Monday. The tennis champion spent eight hours detained at Melbourne airport overnight before Australian Border Force officials announced he had been denied entry into the country on Thursday morning. They cited a failure to meet Australia’s Covid vaccination exemption requirements. Djokovic’s wrangling with authorities over entering Australia has inadvertently highlighted a different plight: those of the refugees and asylum seekers stuck for months, and years, at the Park Hotel which has been described by detainees as a “torture cell”. The Serbian president has accused Australia of “maltreatment” of the tennis star and Djokovic’s family said he is the victim of “a political agenda” aimed at “stomping on Serbia”.

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3zxkk21

Peter Bogdanovich: The Last Picture Show director dies aged 82

The New York filmmaker was Oscar-nominated for his coming-of-age drama starring Cybill Shepherd.

from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/3zFAXZG

Statuary Hall becomes a prime-time television set as Democrats mark the anniversary.


By BY LUKE BROADWATER from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3t8ibJ1

I had death threats and my tires splashed for my reporting. Many journalists in the Pacific face huge dangers | Joyce McClure

Freedom of the press might be included in some constitutions of Pacific countries, but it often only works in theory

I spent five years as the lone journalist on the remote Pacific island of Yap. During that time I was harassed, spat at, threatened with assassination and warned that I was being followed. The tyres on my car were slashed late one night.

There was also pressure on the political level. The chiefs of the traditional Council of Pilung (COP) asked the state legislature to throw me out of the country as a “persona non grata” claiming that my journalism “may be disruptive to the state environment and/or to the safety and security of the state”.

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from World news | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3HMG653

Vance doubles down on false 'pet-eating' claims

The baseless claims targeting Haitian immigrants have led to several security threats in the town of Springfield, Ohio. from BBC News http...