Monday 28 February 2022

Pfizer vaccine significantly less effective in children ages five to 11, study shows

Strikingly higher rates of decline in effectiveness for younger children suggest the lower dose they receive may be the reason

The Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine is less effective in children aged five to 11 than in adolescents and adults, according to new data from New York state health officials.

The new research was announced shortly after federal authorities relaxed masking guidance and a day after Eric Adams, the mayor of New York, said he would probably follow Governor Kathy Hochul in ending a mask mandate in city schools.

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In the basement shelter of a children’s hospital in Kyiv, a vivid reminder of the costs of war.


By BY LYNSEY ADDARIO AND DAN BILEFSKY from NYT World https://ift.tt/CsZlU2c

Foreign owners of UK properties to be identified in new register

Proposal, which dates from David Cameron era, intended to tackle money laundering but has no date set to take effect

Oligarchs and kleptocrats will no longer be able to hide their ownership of property through companies based in overseas territories, the business secretary said on Monday, but refused to give a date for when the change would come into force.

In a move brought forward by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Kwasi Kwarteng said there would be a register showing the ultimate beneficial ownership of foreign-owned UK properties – a move that was first promised under David Cameron.

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Russian Artists Speak Out Against War, but Fear Reprisals


By BY ALEX MARSHALL from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/g76EH4B

Rikki Neave murder accused denies tailoring DNA evidence

Jury told James Watson spoke to police in 1994 but did not mention he had picked up Rikki until interviewed again in 2015

A police officer’s son accused of the 1994 murder of six-year-old Rikki Neave has denied he belatedly revealed he had picked up the schoolboy on the day of his disappearance in an attempt to tailor his account to fit the discovery of his DNA.

James Watson was 13 at the time it is alleged he killed Rikki in Peterborough on 28 November 1994, jurors have been told.

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Sunday 27 February 2022

BP to ‘exit’ its 20 percent stake in the Russian oil company Rosneft.


By BY STANLEY REED from NYT World https://ift.tt/AadOE1Z

Moscow braces for market meltdown Monday as new sanctions hit

Rouble expected to plunge in first day’s trading since Swift ban and other unprecedented measures enforced

Moscow is bracing for economic panic as markets open on Monday morning, with the value of the rouble expected to plummet after the US and European Union announced unprecedented sanctions over the weekend.

Those measures targeted the Russian central bank, which has intervened to prop up the value of the rouble following Vladimir Putin’s order to invade Ukraine. They also marked the first time Russian banks have been excluded from the Swift international payments system.

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How Volodymyr Zelensky rallied Ukrainians, and the world, against Putin.


By BY STEVEN ERLANGER from NYT World https://ift.tt/uUmrNSF

BP exiting its 19.75% shareholding in Russian oil giant Rosneft

BP chief executive Bernard Looney resigns from Rosneft's board after call with business secretary on Friday

BP is exiting its 19.75% shareholding in Russian oil giant Rosneft following pressure from the UK government.

The oil firm’s chief executive Bernard Looney is also resigning from the Rosneft board with “immediate effect”, it said in a statement.

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Ukraine invasion: Putin puts nuclear forces on high alert

The president blames "unfriendly" Western actions towards Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.

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Saturday 26 February 2022

‘Why don’t you just stop?’: living with Australia’s most common eating disorder

Binge eating disorder affects many thousands of Australians, and for most it got worse over the pandemic. But few seek help – or even know they have it

Since Sam Ikin was a child his urge to devour food was out of his control. He didn’t want to be fat. “I wanted to look good. But the more I deprived myself of something, the more I craved it,” he says.

In one go, he might end up eating a couple of packets of biscuits or a whole big bag of chips. “You’re not conscious of the quantity that you’re eating, you just want to keep eating. And then once you finish what’s in front of you, you start thinking about what else there is,” he says. He would “come out of it” when he had run out of food, get interrupted or because he had got to the point where he simply could not eat any more.

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Ukraine conflict: Children on their own, parents stay behind

Mothers and grandmothers lead their children into the unknown as men aged 18 - 60 must stay behind.

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Stranded Soccer Stars, Frantic Phone Calls and a Race to Flee Kyiv


By BY TARIQ PANJA from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/cs7x1om

Funeral of DUP’s Christopher Stalford attended by all main parties

Figures from across Northern Ireland’s political spectrum came to mourn 39-year-old MLA who died suddenly

Mourners from across the political spectrum gathered in Belfast on Saturday for the funeral service of DUP MLA Christopher Stalford.

The DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, alongside party MPs and MLAs (Members of the Legislative Assembly), were among the congregation at Ravenhill Presbyterian Church in south Belfast.

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Ukraine invasion: Kyiv imposes curfew amid sabotage fears

Citizens of the capital are told to stay indoors until Monday morning as Russian forces close in.

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Friday 25 February 2022

Eurovision: Russia banned from competing at 2022 Song Contest

The organisers said the inclusion of Russia could bring the competition into disrepute.

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Love Letter: Separating Dating From Mating


By BY MIYA LEE from NYT Style https://ift.tt/CKwOpe1

A quieter gender fluidity marks Gucci’s return to the Milan runway

The designer best known for putting men in feminine clothes, now dresses women in masculine clothes

Gender fluidity is not just Harry Styles in a feather boa. It can also be a woman in an elegantly oversized double-breasted trouser suit, like the model who opened Gucci’s first Milan fashion week show in two years.

“Seven years ago I designed a menswear collection, and everyone told me I had invented gender fluidity,” shrugged the designer Alessandro Michele backstage. “I was like, my definition of masculinity is broad, OK?” (Funny, now, to recall the furore caused by a man in a pussy-bow blouse, as recently as 2015.)

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Ukraine conflict: President Zelensky vows to defend independence

The president filmed himself surrounded by his advisers on the streets of Kyiv.

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Ukraine: Woman confronts armed Russian soldier

The woman angrily asks the soldier, seen holding a large machine gun, why he has come to the city.

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Thursday 24 February 2022

‘People won’t know if they are infected’: Britons on the end of Covid controls

As the government continues to lift pandemic safety measures, five people share their outlook on ‘living with Covid’

From Thursday, people who test positive for coronavirus are no longer required to self-isolate by law in England. Free mass testing for the general public in England will end on 1 April.

The change is part of the government’s new “living with Covid” plan, announced earlier this week, which will see the end of all pandemic regulations.

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Ukraine-Russia invasion: Europe prepares for wave of refugees

Roads out of Ukraine's major cities are jammed as many pack up and flee Russia's military invasion.

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How to Respond to Putin’s Attack on Ukraine


By Unknown Author from NYT Opinion https://ift.tt/GtMeNU1

How can Britons help the people of Ukraine?

Options include giving to charities on the ground, supporting local journalists and writing to your MP

Russia’s invasion and bombing campaign has sparked outrage, with many in the UK asking how they can help the people of Ukraine.

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Ukraine crisis and Africa: The effects on oil, students and bread

The war in Ukraine could threaten the economies and the stability of some African states.

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Wednesday 23 February 2022

Ukraine conflict: Where are Russia's troops?

Up to 190,000 troops are positioned near Ukraine's borders.

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In eastern Ukraine, the conflict’s toll is increasing.


By BY LYNSEY ADDARIO AND DAN BILEFSKY from NYT World https://ift.tt/oPIFk7r

Video of Ohio reporter surprised at work by his mother goes viral

Myles Harris was preparing to shoot a story when he turns to look at traffic and recognizes approaching car: ‘That’s my Mom, hold on’

A video of a local television reporter in Ohio being surprised at work by his mother has gone viral, striking a chord with parents and their children alike.

ABC 6 reporter Myles Harris was preparing to shoot a story with his back to a road when he turned to look at traffic and appeared to recognize an approaching vehicle.

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Starbucks Strategy for Responding to Union Elections Is Dealt a Setback


By BY NOAM SCHEIBER from NYT Business https://ift.tt/8w4zgBq

US trucker convoy gathers for cross-country trip to protest Covid rules

Group calling itself the ‘People’s Convoy’ is one of several due to arrive in capital, similar to the demonstrations in Ottawa

A group of US truckers were due to embark on Wednesday on a 2,500 mile cross-country trip from California to Washington to protest against coronavirus restrictions.

The group, which is calling itself the “People’s Convoy”, is one of several starting from different parts of the country and due to start arriving in the US capital at various points through to late next week – all inspired by the demonstrations that recently paralyzed Canada’s capital city, Ottawa, for weeks.

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Tuesday 22 February 2022

Today in On Tech: Why Apple’s fight in the Netherlands matters.


By Unknown Author from NYT Business https://ift.tt/5RAKh0B

¿Por qué aumentó la generosidad durante la pandemia?


By BY VIVIANA A. ZELIZER from NYT en Español https://ift.tt/vFLlnom

‘I cannot imagine the pain.’ Attorney general welcomes the verdict in the Arbery case.


By BY RICHARD FAUSSET from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/Z0sL3Nw

Global Tours Were Key for Orchestras. Then the Pandemic Hit.


By BY JAVIER C. HERNÁNDEZ from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/q4nSrGQ

The Guardian view on Ukraine: the shadow of war looms larger | Editorial

Vladimir Putin’s actions and angry rhetoric mean the threat has grown. Unity against aggression is essential

After months of growing tensions, and massing troops at Ukraine’s borders, there is no doubting the gravity of this moment. The tremors are felt across Europe, which the repercussions of Russian aggression could shape for decades to come – in its east, especially, where other former Soviet republics watch anxiously, but most of all, of course, in Ukraine itself, where this is not about geopolitical struggle but the threat of a massive human disaster. Its neighbours are preparing for millions of refugees in the worst case; some Ukrainians are already fleeing, abroad or to the country’s west, though others have vowed to fight.

Vladimir Putin’s recognition of Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine as independent states, and order to send in “peacekeepers”, is the culmination of events which began in 2014 when Russia fomented the separatist insurgency that created the two self-proclaimed republics. Since Russian personnel have long been believed to be involved, this could be seen as to some degree a formalisation of the status quo. But in recognising the separatists’ claims to parts of the Donbas region that they do not currently control, the Russian president has increased the prospects of his armed forces encroaching on other parts of Ukraine. On Tuesday he requested the Duma to authorise the use of troops abroad; his angry railing the previous day, and the size and location of the military buildup, already suggested actions on a much larger scale.

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Deforestation threat to Amazon indigenous areas if protected status changed - report

It is illegal to mine these areas of the rainforest but the government wants to change the law.

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Monday 21 February 2022

Russia recognises Ukraine separatist regions

The move from Vladimir Putin raises fears that Russian troops could be sent into the regions in eastern Ukraine.

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Covid persistente: así es como agota al cuerpo


By POR JOSH KELLER from NYT Science https://ift.tt/PNKFkGB

‘Hank the tank’: California officials seek to trap 500lb bear behind break-ins

Hank, who is far bigger than the average black bear, has broken into nearly 30 homes near Lake Tahoe

Authorities in South Lake Tahoe in California have launched a special trapping effort to trap a 500-pound black bear known as “Hank the Tank”.

Hank is, according to authorities, “readily identifiable due to [his] exceptionally large size and dark coat with a lighter muzzle”.

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Goodbye, Hades. Hello, Scotland. Amber Gray Parts With Persephone.


By BY MICHAEL PAULSON from NYT Theater https://ift.tt/yejbnp2

Poll shows hit to Coalition vote over Covid handling and health funding

One in three Australians found to be less likely to vote for Morrison government due to level of public hospital resourcing

Health and the handling of the Covid-19 pandemic are a significant drag on the Coalition vote, with one in three Australians less likely to vote for the Morrison government due to the level of public hospital funding, according to new polling.

An Essential poll, commissioned by the Australian Medical Association, found voters who had traditionally supported the Coalition on health and hospital funding were now deserting them. Support in this key area had dropped, with 34% now questioning the government’s record.

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Sunday 20 February 2022

How They Did It: Sandy Hook Families Savor Long-Awaited Legal Wins


By BY ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/cREaCo3

Morning mail: Australia welcomes international tourists, ceasefire attempt for Ukraine, Queen has Covid

Monday: Vaccinated international travellers to arrive as Australia reopens border for first time in nearly two years. Plus: the fall of Prince Andrew

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Good morning. There will be excitement at airports today as Australia’s international border reopens to vaccinated travellers, nearly two years after the border closed to help stop coronavirus from spreading.

Vladimir Putin and Emmanuel Macron have agreed to try to secure a ceasefire in the east of Ukraine and to put together an urgent summit at the highest level on the future of the country, the Élysée Palace said in a statement. The two leaders spoke on the phone for 105 minutes, and the outcome, broadly confirmed by the Kremlin, suggests Russia might be willing to step back from the brink of a full invasion of Ukraine to allow renewed diplomatic discussions. Meanwhile, Russian troops sent to Belarus for military exercises will remain in the country indefinitely, Belarus’s defence ministry has said, in a decision that will further fuel concerns Moscow is planning an imminent Ukraine invasion.

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Credit Suisse denies wrongdoing after big banking data leak

A new investigation identifies thousands of foreign customers who stashed their money at the bank.

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These vaccines have been embraced by the world. Why not in China?


By BY ALEXANDRA STEVENSON from NYT World https://ift.tt/kWBz3R1

At Billie Eilish’s Arena Show, the Only Spectacle Is Herself


By BY LINDSAY ZOLADZ from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/wOKj4G9

Tim Scott, only Black Senate Republican, hints he could be Trump running mate

South Carolinian tells Fox News ‘Everybody wants to be on President Trump’s bandwagon, without any question’

The only Black Republican in the Senate, Tim Scott of South Carolina, has indicated a willingness to be Donald Trump’s running mate should the former president mount another White House campaign.

Asked by Fox News if he would consider joining a Trump ticket in 2024, Scott said: “Everybody wants to be on President Trump’s bandwagon, without any question.”

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Saturday 19 February 2022

U.S. Lifts Temporary Ban on Avocados From Mexico


By BY EDUARDO MEDINA from NYT Business https://ift.tt/p5rQsUZ

Russia has been laying groundwork online for a ‘false flag’ operation, misinformation researchers say.


By BY DAVEY ALBA from NYT Business https://ift.tt/gmHUzap

‘Our spirits are being broken’: a year after Perth’s homeless tent city was cleared, the crisis remains

The camp put the issue on the agenda in Western Australia and led to housing for some. But many still struggle on society’s margins

On Boxing Day 2020, a small group of people concerned about the closure of Perth’s homelessness services over Christmas set up a camp kitchen in a Fremantle park.

They half expected nobody to turn up and to be packing up their trestle tables by mid-morning. Instead, an entire community bloomed.

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Ukraine


By Unknown Author from NYT World https://ift.tt/xqBRHgP

‘They torched our clubhouse’… but Sicilian rugby team won’t let mafia win

Librino’s amateur players have to guard their new pitch and facilities every night – but it’s worth it to keep children out of the clutches of Cosa Nostra

Gloria Mertoli’s shift is over when the first light of dawn shines on the goalposts of a rugby pitch in the Librino district of Catania, a stronghold of the Cosa Nostra, the feared Sicilian mafia. Since mobsters torched the clubhouse and team bus, she and other players on the women’s rugby team, Briganti Librino RUFC, have taken turns to stay after evening practice and guard the area overnight.

Since the club started working to take children – easy targets for mafia recruitment – off the streets of Librino, the clans have tried to put it out of business.

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Storm Eunice carves deadly trail across Europe

At least 14 people have died as high winds leave homes without power and transport systems in disarray.

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Friday 18 February 2022

Love Letter: ‘The Former Stripper and the Future Minister’


By BY MIYA LEE from NYT Style https://ift.tt/Jomt3OS

Diamond thief must pay back £244 after record £4.2m heist

Lulu Lakatos stole from Mayfair jeweller by replacing gems with pebbles in UK’s most expensive theft of its kind

A woman who stole £4.2m worth of diamonds by swapping them for pebbles has been ordered to pay back less than £250.

Lulu Lakatos, 60, is serving a five-and-a-half year jail sentence after she was found guilty of conspiracy to steal in 2021.

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Ukraine crisis brings British intelligence out of the shadows

Analysis: warnings of Russian invasion issued in bid to shape the narrative and win information war with Kremlin

British intelligence, so used to operating in the shadows, has been thrust into the spotlight during the Ukraine crisis, cited by Boris Johnson on Wednesday to warn that Russian troop numbers were still increasing or by the foreign secretary, Liz Truss, last month to warn of a possible coup in Kyiv.

As the crisis has intensified, the warnings have, if anything, become even less subtle. An extraordinary video released on Thursday by the Ministry of Defence, billed in capital letters as an “intelligence update”, included a Dad’s Army-style map showing a possible Russian invasion plan and other assessments aimed at the general public.

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In key election battlegrounds, the Liberal party is nowhere to be seen

Factional warfare in Scott Morrison’s home state is giving the Coalition’s opponents a valuable head start when it comes to campaigning

Three months, at most, from the next federal election, the seat of Hughes, in Sydney’s Sutherland shire, should be a prime target for the New South Wales Liberal party.

After Craig Kelly’s defection to the United Australia party, the seat, which the Liberals won with a 10% margin in 2019, became a key battleground. In a normal year, the party would already have a high-quality candidate knocking on doors and nodding encouragingly behind Scott Morrison at press conferences.

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No New Incursion, but Putin Has Already Weakened Ukraine’s Economy


By BY VALERIE HOPKINS from NYT World https://ift.tt/HfWUndp

‘Australia’s Pearl Harbor’: the Darwin bombing in 1942 – in pictures

The largest single attack ever mounted on Australia occurred on 19 February 1942, when Darwin was bombed by Japan. Often called ‘Australia’s Pearl Harbor’, the bombing of the Northern Territory capital by Imperial Japanese Navy aircraft killed more than 230 people and destroyed ships, buildings and infrastructure. Japanese air raids continued until 12 November 1943

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Thursday 17 February 2022

‘Lazy caricature’: St Austell reacts to Tim Smit’s rant about Cornish people

Most residents agree the Eden’s Projects creator’s comments were unfair, but others say there was a ‘grain of truth’

He saw it as a relaxed chat for a local podcast about social issues in the place he has worked and lived in for more than three decades and so, by his own admission, was a little unguarded.

But Sir Tim Smit, the co-founder of Cornwall’s Eden Project, has become embroiled in a furore in his adopted homeland after suggesting that the Cornish could be “a bit more fucking articulate” and were too fond of looking backwards to “good old days [that] never were the good old days”.

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When Walter Dellinger Spoke ‘the Justices Paid Attention’


By BY JESSE WEGMAN from NYT Opinion https://ift.tt/yvxs0Q6

US has suffered more than 1m excess deaths during pandemic, CDC finds

The latest statistic hints at the breadth of Covid-19’s impact on health in the United States

There have been more than 1m excess deaths in the US during the pandemic, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The deaths are mainly attributable to Covid-19, as well as conditions that may have resulted from delayed medical care and overwhelmed health systems.

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Cruel asylum policy is costing us more than money | Letter

Suzanne Fletcher says allowing asylum seekers to work and housing them in communities rather than detention centres would save billions of pounds and even lives

Not only is the government going to spend £2.7bn on implementing the dreadful nationality and borders bill (Refugee group warns of ‘astonishing’ cost of new Home Office policies, 14 February), but it is already spending more than it needs on existing policies.

There are billions that could be saved if it stopped detaining people in immigration detention centres and housed them in the community instead. If it allowed asylum seekers the right to work. If it stopped refusing so many applications, only to have to spend money on defending those decisions and losing over half the cases. If it was more efficient and made faster, fairer decisions to save housing and support seekers of sanctuary for what can be 10 years or more. If only.

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Ukraine tensions: Russia looking for excuse to invade, US says

President Biden alleges that Russia is plotting "a false flag operation" to justify launching an attack.

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Canada protests: Police warn protesters to leave amid plans to clear blockade

Prime Minister Trudeau is defending his decision to invoke the Emergencies Act to end the protests.

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Wednesday 16 February 2022

Liberal John Alexander ‘would think about’ supporting independent’s federal anti-corruption bill

Outgoing MP says he reserves right to cross the floor if bill is raised again, but attorney general says it will not progress before election

The outgoing Liberal MP, John Alexander, says he would “seriously consider” supporting Helen Haines’s bill for a federal integrity commission if the independent member for Indi again attempts to have the draft legislation debated by parliament before the election.

On Tuesday, the attorney general, Michaelia Cash, confirmed the government was “not progressing” its proposed commonwealth integrity commission until at least after the election, saying the government could not pass it without Labor support.

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Google moves to make Android apps more private

No details are available but it says it will not be using the same approach as Apple.

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Covid: Austria and Germany decide to ease rules

Both countries have pushed for compulsory vaccinations but now decide to lift restrictions.

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One-word gaffe invalidates thousands of US baptisms

Some Church members come to the defence of a Catholic priest in Arizona after he resigns.

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Don’t let the sprint in the name fool you.


By BY GABRIELA BHASKAR from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/1XNsrcJ

Brazil: Torrential rain triggers deadly mudslides

Landslides and flash flooding have left a trail of destruction and many dead in Petrópolis, Brazil.

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Tuesday 15 February 2022

The Senate confirms Califf as the F.D.A.’s commissioner in a tight vote.


By BY CHRISTINA JEWETT AND EMILY COCHRANE from NYT Health https://ift.tt/O6b84H1

Truss tells Iran she hopes UK will soon be able to repay £400m debt

Tehran is keen to see Britain do more to help with Afghan refugee crisis

Liz Truss has said she hopes Britain will soon be in a position to pay the £400m debt overdue to Iran, according to an Iranian account of the phone call between the foreign secretary and her Tehran counterpart, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

UK government officials have been exploring legal ways to pay Britain’s historical debt, although international economic sanctions on Iran have made it difficult.

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Rust shooting: Lawsuit alleges Baldwin 'recklessly shot' Hutchins

Halyna Hutchins died on 21 October on the set of "Rust" after Alec Baldwin discharged a live weapon.

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Senate Republicans Move to Stall Critical Vote on Fed Nominees


By BY JEANNA SMIALEK AND EMILY COCHRANE from NYT Business https://ift.tt/iNo8UMw

North Wales coast is monitored after oil pipeline spillage

Conwy to Douglas pipeline ‘was shut immediately’ after the hydrocarbon release, reported on Monday

Authorities are monitoring parts of the north Wales coast for an oil slick, after hydrocarbons were released into the sea following a pipeline failure.

The pipeline, which connects two oil installations in the Irish Sea, suffered a failure about 33km (20.5 miles) from the north Wales coast. According to Eni UK, the company which operates the pipeline, the incident – which involved “less than 500 barrels” – was reported on Monday.

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Novak Djokovic: Reaction from my colleagues 'hurt me a lot'

Novak Djokovic speaks exclusively to the BBC about his time in Covid detention in Australia last month.

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Monday 14 February 2022

Morning mail: trans-Tasman reunion joy, Russian ‘false-flag’ fears, Kamila Valieva clearance row

Tuesday: New Zealand and Australia to open borders by end of February. Plus: how to keep your hats clean

Good morning. Nurses in New South Wales are expected to strike today, calling for stricter nurse-to-patient ratios and a 2.5% pay increase, despite orders from the Industrial Relations Commission to call off the action. Budget estimates hearings will continue. And there are fears Russian-Ukraine tensions could spill over.

New Zealanders and Australians separated from loved ones for years are now counting down the days until they can reunite after the two countries announced they will relax the border rules for vaccinated travellers later this month. Vaccinated citizens and visa holders travelling to New Zealand from Australia will be able to fly there from 27 February and do 10 days of home quarantine, and those in other countries can return on 13 March, despite record Covid cases in NZ. We spoke to four people who have been affected by the countries’ strict border restrictions about how it will feel to be reunited with family and friends.

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Kentucky mayoral candidate survives being targeted by a gunman

Craig Greenberg is unharmed after someone entered and fired shots at him. A suspect has been arrested.

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Men’s Wear Hustles to Stay in the Game


By BY GUY TREBAY from NYT Style https://ift.tt/k7IOhX2

‘They didn’t think help was coming’: a month on from Tonga tsunami – in pictures

When a tsunami and volcanic eruption devastated Tonga, photographer Leki Lao boarded a navy boat to deliver emergency supplies. He witnessed destruction, heartache and fear

At 6.30am on the day after the tsunami hit, I went into work. I am a procurement officer at the Ministry of Lands in Tonga, and work as a photographer on the side. I had seen videos on Facebook that showed the waves from the tsunami reached the ministry’s building in the capital of Nuku’alofa and I wanted to see if I could help with the clean up.

Top: A boat found more than 60 metres from the sea on Tungua. The owner checks for damage and a way to haul it back to the ocean.
Bottom: A police station on the beach on Nomuka island next to what remains of a main road.

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Ukraine: Social media videos show Russian military equipment on the move near border

Social media clips show military vehicles on the move - despite Russia's denials of an attack.

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Sunday 13 February 2022

Ukraine seeks meeting with Russia within 48 hours to discuss build-up

Ukraine accuses Russia of ignoring requests to explain its troop build-up, and calls for a meeting.

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With temperatures in the 80s, this could be the hottest Super Bowl ever.


By BY RAYMOND ZHONG from NYT Climate https://ift.tt/3K7sXEv

Some starting points for the reinvention of Sheffield | Letters

Prof Lewis Lesley on Sheffield’s tram network, Judith Martin on the importance of local knowledge and Jane and Simon Clements on the city’s musical heritage

John Harris’s article about Sheffield and the impact of the closure of Debenhams and John Lewis (The death of the department store, 10 February) raised many questions, not least “What are city centres for?” Historically, they were the most accessible locations in a large urban area. The advent of the private car, and free use of roads, has made almost anywhere easy to get to. The cost, however, of sprawl, pollution and energy usage will become limiting as we move towards a zero-carbon economy. As the architect Adam Park said in Harris’s article: “We shouldn’t be demolishing buildings any more.”

The out-of-town Meadowhall shopping centre was approved by the city council to replace a brownfield former steelworks site. Surprisingly, no mention was made of Sheffield’s tram network; prior to the pandemic, this had provided a counter to Meadowhall by carrying passengers parked there into the city centre. There are three other lines, making the centre nearly as well-connected as Manchester through Metrolink. As an acceptable alternative to car travel, this offers a sustainable way to get people into the centre and, learning from the Strong Towns movement, is a good starting point for the reinvention of Sheffield.
Prof Lewis Lesley
Liverpool

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See some of the best photos from the competition.


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Russia’s FSB agency tasked with engineering coups in Ukrainian cities, UK believes

Following any invasion, FSB saboteurs are expected to install pro-Kremlin leaders in major cities

Britain believes that Russia’s powerful FSB spy agency has been given the task of trying to engineer coups in Ukraine’s major cities in the immediate aftermath of any invasion launched by the Kremlin.

The assessment is that an attack would see Russia strike first against military targets, then encircle the capital Kyiv and possibly other major cities, with FSB saboteurs then expected to try to install pro-Russian leaderships within.

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Saturday 12 February 2022

U.S. intelligence agencies warn of another effort by Russia to create pretext for an invasion.


By BY JULIAN E. BARNES from NYT World https://ift.tt/DYJvUV5

Next Covid strain could kill many more, warn scientists ahead of England restrictions ending

Demands grow for government science chiefs to reveal evidence backing move to lift last protective measures

A future variant of Covid-19 could be much more dangerous and cause far higher numbers of deaths and cases of serious illness than Omicron, leading UK scientists have warned.

As a result, many of them say that caution needs to be taken in lifting the last Covid restrictions in England, as Boris Johnson plans to do next week.

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Virginia governor Youngkin apologizes after mixing up Black state senators

Louise Lucas noted she received a text from Glenn Youngkin congratulating her for a speech Mamie Locke gave

The Virginia governor, Glenn Youngkin, has apologized after mistaking one Black legislator for another in a text message.

Youngkin is the new Republican governor of the state, which has trended Democrat in recent election cycles but stunned observers by picking Youngkin as its new leader last year over a centrist Democrat candidate.

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Super Bowl LVI by the Numbers


By BY ALANIS THAMES AND EMMANUEL MORGAN from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/okRgNYX

People injured as mezzanine floor collapses at east London bar

Emergency services at scene of partial building collapse in Hackney Wick, east London

People are being treated by paramedics after a mezzanine floor collapsed at a London bar and restaurant. The incident happened on Saturday evening at Two More Years in Roach Road, Hackney Wick, east London.

Emergency services are dealing with the incident. London ambulance service (LAS) said it sent a number of resources to Roach Road and crews are treating patients at the scene.

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Every beautiful thing came from the Papahaua mountains, and the trees were its lifeblood | Becky Manawatu

Not only did the mountains seem to watch us, they stimulated a hunger to scour the forest floors and decipher codes stamped in lichen

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

Although claiming a wild place as your favourite could be a masked attempt to tame it, the land either side of State Highway 67, between Big Ditch and Jones Creek just north of Waimangaroa, is my favourite. This stretch of highway which, if you’re heading north, has a row of houses to your left and a railway and the great Papahaua mountain range to your right, is called Birchfield.

There are no off-streets or gas stations. Not a single corner, nor corner store. Just some houses, several paddocks and, as of recently, one radio astronomy observatory. Perhaps it sounds a tame place, and to an extent – on a quick drive through the settlement – that’s fair.

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Cracking the formula: how should Australia be teaching maths under the national curriculum?

As Australia slips down in global rankings, maths experts are divided on which teaching method is best for students

Australia’s sliding mathematics ranking and disagreements around how the subject should be taught remain key sticking points preventing a consensus on the proposed national curriculum.

The nation’s eduction ministers met earlier this month to discuss the proposed curriculum and almost reached a consensus, but while most of the state and territories were happy with the latest revisions, the federal and Western Australian education ministers held out.

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Covid protests: Paris police fire tear gas at demonstrators

Police have already intercepted hundreds of vehicles trying to get into the city.

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Friday 11 February 2022

We know how to save the endangered koala – it starts with protecting habitat

For 10 years successive Australian governments have known the world famous species is in trouble, but neglected to do something about it

It’s happened. Australia’s globally famous animal, the koala, is officially listed as endangered – a decision both long expected and completely preventable.

It’s important to say this upfront.

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Macron calls for calm as convoy of protestors nears Paris

The French president admits there is a Covid "fatigue" in the country ahead a banned gathering.

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Kanye wants Billie Eilish to say sorry or he'll pull out of Coachella

The rapper wants her to apologise for crowd safety comments he thinks are aimed at Travis Scott.

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On the Scene: ‘Music Man,’ a Big Broadway Bet 🎺


By BY MATT STEVENS from NYT Theater https://ift.tt/XFTajuc

All out of love: Valentine’s Day flower prices surge as supply chain crisis hits

Valentine’s Day ‘the perfect storm’ as rose prices above double the usual cost

True love may cost a little more this Valentine’s Day with the global supply chain crisis hitting the flower industry and forcing up the cost of a single – albeit pimped up – rose to as much as $70.

The Flower Industry Australia chief executive, Anna Jabour, said there had been issues with rose supply for a while now, but this Valentine’s Day was seeing prices in excess of double what roses would normally cost.

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Ukraine tensions: Countries tell nationals to leave over Russia threat

A host of countries advise their nationals to leave after the US warns Russia might invade.

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Thursday 10 February 2022

The 10-year Treasury note hits 2% for the first time since July 2019.


By BY TALMON JOSEPH SMITH from NYT Business https://ift.tt/jPWeJKZ

France to build up to 14 new nuclear reactors by 2050, says Macron

French president says ‘renaissance’ of atomic energy industry will help end country’s reliance on fossil fuels

Emmanuel Macron has announced a “renaissance” for the French nuclear industry with a vast programme to build as many as 14 new reactors, arguing that it would help end the country’s reliance on fossil fuels and make France carbon neutral by 2050.

“What our country needs ... is the rebirth of France’s nuclear industry,” Macron said in a speech in the eastern industrial town of Belfort, in which he lauded the country’s technological prowess.

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Man upset over Canada mask mandates calls in bomb threat to police – in Ohio

A 20-year suspect called in bomb threat so Canadian police would waste their time chasing it, but called a village in Ohio

A man who wanted to join the protests in Canada’s capital over mask mandates called in a bomb threat so police would waste their time chasing it, authorities said, but he called the wrong Ottawa — a village in Ohio.

The man, a 20-year-old from Akron, Ohio, called the Putnam county sheriff’s office twice Monday, said sheriff’s Capt Brad Brubaker.

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Spanish police bust drug ring suspected of faking orca attack to aid smuggling

Group allegedly transported hashish on boats from Morocco then simulated accidents and asked to be towed to Spain

Spanish police have busted a drug ring suspected of simulating sailing boat accidents, including an attack by orcas, to smuggle hashish from Morocco to Spain.

The group allegedly loaded drugs on to sailboats in Morocco and once in Spanish waters “would fake a breakdown or accident and request maritime assistance to be towed to port”, police said on Thursday.

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Dame Cressida Dick to stand down as Met police commissioner

Scandal-rocked chief to leave role two years early after losing support of London mayor, Sadiq Khan

Dame Cressida Dick is to stand down as commissioner of the Metropolitan police after a series of scandals.

The decision follows a public falling out with the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, who put her “on notice” that she had to rapidly reform the Met or lose his confidence in her leadership.

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US Congress approves sexual harassment bill in #MeToo milestone

Legislation guarantees that people who experience sexual harassment at work can seek recourse in the courts

Congress on Thursday gave final approval to legislation guaranteeing that people who experience sexual harassment at work can seek recourse in the courts, a milestone for the #MeToo movement that prompted a national reckoning on the way sexual misconduct claims are handled.

The measure, which is expected to be signed by Joe Biden, bars employment contracts from forcing people to settle sexual assault or harassment cases through arbitration rather than in court, a process that often benefits employers and keeps misconduct allegations from becoming public.

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Luc Montagnier, co-discoverer of HIV, dies aged 89

The French virologist jointly won the Nobel Prize but later drew criticism for unscientific claims.

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Wednesday 9 February 2022

The Boston Fed names Susan M. Collins as its new president.


By BY JEANNA SMIALEK from NYT Business https://ift.tt/qAz5cZW

Massachusetts Lifting School Mask Mandate at End of February


By BY MASSACHUSETTS OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA YOUTUBE from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/RACTyg7

An Anti-Vaxxer Dies of Covid. Do You Empathize?


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The Latest From the Arbery Hate Crimes Trial


By BY TARIRO MZEZEWA from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/cbCRpkH

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Names New Director


By BY ROBIN POGREBIN from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/fxTH4sV

Liz Truss heads to Moscow with ‘toughest sanctions’ plan delayed

Foreign secretary told MPs laws would be in place by 10 February but nothing has been put to parliament

The British foreign secretary, Liz Truss, will meet her Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, on Thursday with her plan to have put the UK’s “toughest sanctions regime against Russia” on the statute book in time for the trip having fallen through.

Truss told MPs the laws would be in place by 10 February, but nothing has been put to parliament, raising suspicions among opposition MPs that government lawyers are struggling to frame the sweeping and unprecedented new laws.

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Drunk truck driver leaves trail of destruction in Germany

German police have arrested a man after the lorry he was driving ploughed into more than 30 cars.

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Tuesday 8 February 2022

Record-high seizure of $5bn in stolen bitcoin

Two suspects allegedly conspired to launder the money after it was stolen by a hacker in 2016.

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Andrew Garfield on ‘Tick, Tick … Boom,’ Jonathan Larson and the Spidey Connection


By BY DAVE ITZKOFF from NYT Movies https://ift.tt/htkZiCo

Where to Stream ‘The Power of the Dog,’ ‘Belfast’ and More 2022 Oscar Nominees


By BY SCOTT TOBIAS from NYT Movies https://ift.tt/7N53Vfs

Iceland Plane Crash Kills 4 People, Including Celebrated Aviator


By BY AMANDA HOLPUCH from NYT World https://ift.tt/Wp2kjNO

Por qué decidí retirar mi pódcast de Spotify


By BY ROXANE GAY from NYT en Español https://ift.tt/mJL1o05

It will take years to shrink England’s swollen backlog of nonemergency medical care, an official warns.


By BY MEGAN SPECIA from NYT World https://ift.tt/DNvVFoC

Arkansas officials praise doctor accused of giving inmates ivermectin without consent

Despite lawsuit filed against Dr Robert Karas by four inmates, local officials have praised him for a ‘job well done’

An Arkansas doctor accused of prescribing ivermectin to inmates in his state without their consent has been praised by local officials for a “job well done” despite widespread outrage at his actions.

In January, the Arkansas chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued Dr Robert Karas, the physician at Arkansas’s Washington county detention center, on behalf of four inmates who said they were given ivermectin to treat Covid-19 as a form of “medical experiment”.

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Monday 7 February 2022

Ottawa protesters defy deadline to end occupation of capital

Protesters against Covid vaccine mandates for truckers have defied government calls for them to end an 11-day occupation of Canada’s capital, a day after the city’s mayor declared a state of emergency and promised to “get the city back”.

Ottawa police have described the protest as a “siege” on the city, where hundreds of trucks and cars have blockaded the downtown areas. On Sunday, Mayor Jim Watson warned that officials were “losing this battle”, and a civil class action lawsuit was filed against protesters over the incessant horn blasting and disruption to daily life.

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Police rescue Keir Starmer after protesters berate him near parliament

Boris Johnson criticised after anti-vax protesters shout ‘traitor’ and ‘Jimmy Savile’ at Labour leader

Keir Starmer has had to be bundled into a police car after protesters surrounded him near parliament and shouted at him that he “protected paedophiles”.

In an incident that could reignite anger over Boris Johnson’s comments that the Labour leader failed to prosecute the child abuser Jimmy Savile, Starmer was rescued by police after an encounter with anti-vaccination protesters.

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Mason Greenwood dropped by Nike after Manchester United player’s arrest

  • Sportswear firm announce he is ‘no longer a Nike athlete’
  • Greenwood arrested over alleged rape and assault of a woman

Nike has terminated its endorsement agreement with the Manchester United and England striker Mason Greenwood, the sportswear firm has announced.

Greenwood was released on bail last week after being questioned over the alleged rape and assault of a woman.

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Las Vegas casino tracks down tourist who won $229,000 without knowing

Robert Taylor won bonanza at Treasure Island casino on 8 January but walked away unaware because of slot-machine error

A tourist from Arizona won $229,000 on a Las Vegas slot machine but walked away unaware of his windfall, due to an error in the machine. It took nearly three weeks for gaming board agents to track him down and enrich him.

On 8 January, Robert Taylor hit a jackpot on a slot machine at the Treasure Island Hotel & Casino on the Vegas strip.

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Canada truckers protest: ‘All we want is the right to choose’

Truckers wanted the vaccine mandate gone 10 days ago. Now they will stay until all mandates end.

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Amazon doubles its cap on base salaries for corporate employees.


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Macron warns don’t expect ‘miracles’ in talks with Putin over Ukraine

French president strikes cautious note about deterring invasion before meeting Russian counterpart in Moscow

Emmanuel Macron has warned against expecting “miracles” in his talks with Vladimir Putin in Moscow aimed at fending off a Russian attack on Ukraine.

The French president had been upbeat about the chances of finding a compromise over European security that would persuade Putin not to order an invasion but, on arrival in Moscow on Monday, Macron sought to play down expectations.

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Sunday 6 February 2022

Morning mail: Ukraine situation ‘pretty dire’, ABC funding boost, Neighbours need new friends

Monday: Russia has enough troops in place to seize Kyiv, a former defence minister warns. Plus: Network Ten needs a new backer for soap

  • If you would like to receive the Guardian Australia morning mail to your email inbox every weekday, sign up here.

Good morning. There are fresh warnings about a potential Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Morrison government says it will restore ABC funding. And the future of Neighbours is in doubt.

Russia has enough troops in place to seize Kyiv or another Ukrainian city but not yet for a full takeover and occupation of the country, Ukraine’s former defence minister has said, as Washington warned that an invasion could take place at any time. Andriy Zagorodnyuk said in an interview with the Guardian that the situation looked “pretty dire”: “Russia could now seize any city in Ukraine. But we still don’t see the 200,000 troops needed for a full-scale invasion.” Germany is preparing to send reinforcements to its battle group in Lithuania as the chancellor, Olaf Scholz, headed to Washington to reassure Nato allies his country can be relied upon.

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Ukraine crisis: Macron says a deal to avoid war is within reach

France's leader calls for a "new balance" to protect European states while affording Russia respect.

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Africa Union summit: Leaders complain about 'wave of coups'

The military has seized power in five countries in the past year, mostly in West Africa.

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Lata Mangeshkar: India bids farewell to beloved singer

Large crowds in Mumbai, India, pay their respects after the legendary singer's death at the age of 92.

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Seaman Dies After ‘Hell Week’ of SEAL Training, Navy Says


By BY AZI PAYBARAH from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/xDmslkM

Ten Cuban migrants in sinking vessel rescued off Florida coast

Rescue comes after a boat believed to be used for human smuggling capsized with only one of 40 passengers surviving

Ten Cuban migrants in a sinking vessel were rescued off the Florida coast, according to the US Coast Guard.

A Coast Guard boat spotted the vessel on Thursday about 40 miles (about 64km) off Key Largo, the Coast Guard said in a tweet.

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Saturday 5 February 2022

Rayan: Moroccan boy taken out of well after days trapped inside

The five-year-old had been trapped underground for four days, and his condition is unknown.

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China Wins Its First Medal


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A love letter to Newcastle: new century, new vision

Long gone are the steel works, and the coalfields are on notice. Newcastle is a city in transition

It’s not quite yet the new Berlin, as some have whispered, but a tipping point might have been reached as Australia’s sixth-largest city is being reimagined to embrace a very different future.

Not that Newcastle can ever escape its industrial past. Coal will forever occasionally wash on to its beaches from exposed coastal seams, while Newcomen Street, Bolton Street and Watt Street in the city centre salute 18th century giants of power generation. And though there’s no Pitt Street, there is a Pit Street.

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Man Charged in Kidnapping of Bloomberg’s Housekeeper From Colorado Ranch


By BY TROY CLOSSON from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/lPsTzYK

Middlesbrough fan arrested after leaving child to celebrate FA Cup win

11-year-old boy left in Trafford hotel room while man went drinking after victory against Manchester United

A Middlesbrough supporter has been arrested after leaving his 11-year-old son at a hotel while celebrating his side’s FA Cup victory against Manchester United.

Greater Manchester police used a Twitter post to confirm news of the man’s arrest on suspicion of child neglect.

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Cyclone Batsirai: Second storm in weeks hits Madagascar

Strong winds and heavy rain are reported as Cyclone Batsirai makes landfall.

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Friday 4 February 2022

‘Good Godly Leadership’: Citipointe Christian College’s extensive links to Queensland’s LNP

Questions are being asked about the timing of a Brisbane school’s attempt to introduce anti-gay contracts, amid the federal debate on religious freedom laws

Before the end of the last school year, the principal of Brisbane’s Citipointe Christian College, Brian Mulheran, brought his teaching staff together and asked them to pray.

Multiple teachers recall how Mulheran ran a PowerPoint presentation that listed the key elements of the federal government’s proposed religious freedom bill. As he went through them in turn, he led staff in a prayer that each measure would be enacted in 2022.

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Environmental campaigners film '100,000 dead fish' spilled into the Atlantic Ocean

The fishing boat blames a rip in a net, but campaigners accuse it of deliberately dumping the fish.

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This Chicken Will Take You to Spain


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Suspect arrested after violence outside LA’s SoFi Stadium left man in coma

  • Altercation took place in parking lot after Rams-49ers game
  • Daniel Luna, 40, in medically induced coma in hospital

Police have arrested the suspect in a violent altercation that badly injured a San Francisco 49ers fan after last weekend’s NFC championship game between the 49ers and the Los Angeles Rams at LA’s SoFi stadium.

Inglewood police lieutenant Nicole Loudermilk confirmed that the suspect was taken into custody Thursday night, but released no further details.

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Drugs, weapons 'smuggled to prisoners by drone'

As many as 20 people in South Carolina have been arrested over contraband deliveries to prisoners.

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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...