Category: World News

  • US Election 2020: Trump campaign says race “far from over” and promises litigation starting Monday

    US Election 2020: Trump campaign says race “far from over” and promises litigation starting Monday

    Moments after networks, including CNN, called the presidential race for Joe Biden, President Trump said in a statement from his campaign that Biden is “rushing to falsely pose as the winner,” and call the race “far from over.”

    The statement says the campaign’s legal battle will begin Monday:

    “Beginning Monday, our campaign will start prosecuting our case in court to ensure election laws are fully upheld and the rightful winner is seated.”

    “I will not rest until the American People have the honest vote count they deserve and that Democracy demands,” Trump says in the statement.

    Trump is currently at his Virginia golf course.

    Myjoyonline

  • US Election 2020: Biden overtakes Trump in Pennsylvania as Georgia heads for recount

    US Election 2020: Biden overtakes Trump in Pennsylvania as Georgia heads for recount

    Democratic candidate Joe Biden has consolidated his lead over Donald Trump in Pennsylvania, a key state in the US presidential race, results data show.

    Mr Biden is ahead by nearly 29,000 votes, with 99% counted. If he takes the state, he will win the election.

    Earlier, Mr Biden edged ahead of his Republican rival in Georgia, another important battleground state, where a recount will now be held.

    Meanwhile, the Trump campaign said: “This election is not over.”

    However, there is no indication Mr Trump will concede to his opponent in the short term.

    “Joe Biden should not wrongfully claim the office of the President,” he tweeted on Friday afternoon. “I could make that claim also. Legal proceedings are just now beginning!”

    Mr Trump has been making unsubstantiated claims of election fraud, spurring some fellow Republicans to speak up that the rhetoric should be toned down.

    What’s the current state of the race?

    Mr Biden is leading Mr Trump by more than 4 million votes out of a record 145 million cast.

    But US presidential election results are decided on a state-by-state basis in the Electoral College, and the contest is much closer in the key battlegrounds.

    Mr Biden has 253 Electoral College votes, while Mr Trump has 214. To win the White House, a candidate needs 270.

    Some news organisations have a higher tally for Mr Biden, having projected a win for the Democrat in Arizona. But the BBC considers the state too early to call.

    Pennsylvania, where Mr Biden was born, has 20 Electoral College votes. If the Democrat wins it, he would secure the victory with 273 votes.

    The Rust Belt state voted Democratic in six consecutive White House races before it swung to Mr Trump in 2016.

    In Georgia, Mr Biden is currently leading with more than 4,000 votes, and 99% of the ballots counted. Georgia’s secretary of state said there would be a recount because the margin was so small.

    Georgia (16 electoral votes) is a traditionally Republican state and has not been won by a Democrat in a presidential race since 1992.

    Mr Biden leads by more than 22,000 votes in Nevada (six electoral votes) and by fewer than 30,000 in Arizona (11 electoral votes).

    Mr Trump leads in North Carolina (15 electoral votes) by more than 76,000 ballots.

    Mr Trump’s team says legal challenges and recounts in some states will favour them.

    Bob Bauer, a Biden campaign lawyer, says the lawsuits are legally “meritless”.

    But on Thursday, a judge in Pennsylvania ruled that Republican election observers should be granted close-up observation of the counting.

    A win in just Pennsylvania or two of the other four remaining states would be enough to confirm Mr Biden as president-elect.

    Mr Trump would need to win Pennsylvania and three of the remaining four states.

    BBC

  • US 2020 Elections: Germany, France, EU, Hungary React To US Electoral Dilemma While UK Stays Silent

    US 2020 Elections: Germany, France, EU, Hungary React To US Electoral Dilemma While UK Stays Silent

    As threats of legal challenges from Donald Trump mount against Joe Biden campaign due to the US president’s perceived allegations of ‘electoral fraud’ in states like Arizona, Pennsylvania and Michigan, the German governmen  has urged the US leader to refrain from pouring oil on the fire of an already tense electoral situation. 

    Trump has already dispatched his team of lawyers to battle ground states of Pennsylvania and Arizona and has reportedly told his aides he won’t concede as he has been “robbed of the election”. 

    His campaign allege Democrat controlled Pennsylvania electoral officials have been using votes from dead people and also double voting to clean off his lead against Biden. 

    While the UK government has refused to wade into the electoral situation in the US that might see Biden win the election but Trump refuse to vacate office, Germany has urged Trump to end his claim that the American election was fraudulent, urging the president and his followers to stop “pouring oil” on the tense situation in the US and noting that “decent losers” were vital to upholding democracy. 

    The German foreign minister, Heiko Maas, said: “America is more than a one-man show. Anyone who continues to pour oil on the fire in a situation like this is acting irresponsibly. Now is the time to keep a cool head until an independently determined result is available.”

    In order for the result – which has not yet been determined – to be accepted, everyone must first show restraint. Decent losers are more important for the functioning of a democracy than radiant winners.” 

    Maas said he expected that once the election result was settled, “the USA will probably not return to the international stage with full energy for the time being”, but he added: “The world needs the USA as a force for order, not as a factor of chaos.” 

    The UK will face a dilemma if Trump refuses to concede defeat and Biden claims victory, since it is traditional for the UK to congratulate the victor. 

    Reports from the UK say Britain could continue to keep quiet on the issue until all legal challenges by the Trump campaign are exhausted. 

    The UK shadow justice minister, David Lammy, said: “Boris Johnson and Dominic Raab’s silence as Donald Trump attempts to undermine the American people’s right to free and fair elections is a national disgrace. We must have the courage to stand up for democracy whoever attacks it. No exceptions.” 

    Jean-Yves Le Drian, the French foreign minister, said he had faith in the US institutions validating the result, adding that even if Biden was elected, the US and the EU “will not return to the status that prevailed before, to a kind of good old days in the transatlantic relationship. The world has moved in four years. Europe is trying to become a power unto itself, instead of relying on US support.”/ 

    He described the US election as “a historic vote, in terms of the tension and the size of the turnout”. 

    The Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, in his own remarks on Friday suggested the US would not be in a position to lecture other countries on democracy after this election.

    “If things happened in Hungary, like over there, then here, I don’t know, the sky would have fallen. It’s unimaginable,” the Hungarian leader said.

    Peacefmonline

  • Bihar elections: Huge crowds gather at rallies, raising coronavirus fears.

    Bihar elections: Huge crowds gather at rallies, raising coronavirus fears.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday asked people not to be complacent during the festive season, urging them to continue wearing masks and follow social distancing.

    But the message doesn’t seem to have reached the northern state of Bihar where large crowds have massed at political rallies ahead of state elections, scheduled to begin on 28 October.

    All parties, including Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), have ramped up campaigning ahead of the elections.

    Footage from some of the rallies shows people jostling to get a glimpse of politicians, and hardly anybody appears to be wearing masks.

    Virologists and doctors called the large gatherings “callous” and said that such complacency could have devastating consequences, enabling the virus to spread much faster.
    India has recorded more than seven million cases so far, but its daily case count has been steadily dropping in recent weeks even as testing has remained consistent. Although some have said this suggests that the worst of the pandemic is over, others have cautioned against celebrating too soon.

    The Election Commission has also warned politicians against flouting Covid-19 safety rules. But it seems to have had little impact as crowds continue to gather at rallies.

    Virologist Dr Shahid Jameel says political parties need to be more responsible and they need to educate their cadre.
    “We see thousands of people in these rallies and hardly anyone with a mask. It is the responsibility of every political party to ask its followers to follow safety rules.

    “That is the only way we know to prevent infection [from spreading],” he told the BBC.

    The first phase of polling will be held on 28 October, and the other two phases will follow on 3 and 7 November. Results will be announced on 10 November.

    The BJP-led coalition is seeking to be voted back into power – it’s facing opposition from an alliance of the Rashtriya Janata Dal and Congress party, and also from other regional parties.

    The stakes are high for all political parties. Their initial campaigns were virtual but now they have moved offline.
    Mr Modi is addressing three rallies on Friday and Congress party’s Rahul Gandhi is also holding campaign events.

    A senior journalist in the state told the BBC that nobody “was really talking about coronavirus as a campaign issue”.

    “It seems like the virus has disappeared from the state. People have become complacent and politicians are not doing enough to warn people,” he said.

    The state government says it’s conducting an average of 150,000 tests per day and positive rates have declined in the past few weeks.

    But experts are sceptical because most of the tests are rapid antigen tests, which gives results in 30 minutes but have an accuracy rate that, in some cases, is as low as 30%.
    Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on 22 September said that the state had conducted nearly 200,000 tests a day earlier. But only 11,732 among those were done through the RT-PCR method – which is the gold standard of testing.

    Experts say that this is risky since rapid antigen tests increase the chances of false negatives. So people can move around spreading the disease after they are “falsely” declared negative.

    Leading pulmonologist Dr A Fathahudeen says Bihar simply cannot afford to flout safety rules because that will only exacerbate its problems.

    The state has one of the worst healthcare systems in the world and has a shortage of doctors, trained paramedics and nurses.

    A spike in the number of cases in July and early August had completely overwhelmed the state’s healthcare system. Some families were forced to arrange oxygen cylinders for patients, and some people died without getting any treatment.

    “The state has a high population density and that means people live in large joint families. Many young people will go back to their parents after attending these rallies and may carry the infection home,” Dr Fathahudeen adds.

    The ongoing festive season and weather will also play a role in how the virus spreads in the state. Air quality in northern India significantly worsens November onwards as temperatures drop. And several studies have suggested that pollution increases Covid mortality and infection rates.
    “Looking at these pictures [of rallies], lowering temperatures and the coming festive season, I am scared what turn India might take if we are not careful over the next few weeks,” says Dr Jameel.

    Experts say what’s happening in Bihar can affect how other states deal with the virus.

    Dr Fathahudeen says the perception that “young people don’t get the worst of the virus” is spreading as fast as Covid-19.

    “There is no guarantee that young people won’t get seriously ill. The elderly are more vulnerable but everybody needs to be equally careful,” he says.

    And when people in other parts of the country see such large crowds, they may think that the virus is not spreading anymore, Dr Fathahudeen adds, which can have dangerous consequences.

    “I am alarmed,” he says. “We can’t hold elections at the cost of people’s health.”

    BBC

  • Poland abortion ruling: Police use pepper spray against protesters.

    Poland abortion ruling: Police use pepper spray against protesters.

    Police in Poland have used pepper spray against hundreds of people protesting in Warsaw against a court ruling that almost completely bans abortions.

    Protesters clashed with riot police outside the home of Deputy Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski.

    It follows Thursday’s ruling from the top court that ending the life of a deformed foetus is unconstitutional.

    It means abortion is only valid in cases of rape or incest, or to protect the mother’s life.

    Poland’s abortion laws were already among the strictest in Europe and it is estimated that about 100,000 women seek a termination abroad each year to get around the tight restrictions.

    The ruling by the Constitutional Tribunal led to protests in other cities across Poland on Thursday evening, including Krakow, Lodz and Szczecin.
    In Warsaw, hundreds of people marched from the court to the home of Jaroslaw Kaczynski – who heads the governing Law and Justice party – to vent their anger at the ruling. Some held candles or carried signs with the word “torture” on them.

    Current coronavirus restrictions limit public gatherings in Warsaw to just 10 people.

    Police said officers used pepper spray and physical force when some protesters threw stones and tried to push through the cordon around the house. A spokesman said 15 people were detained.

    The protest dispersed in the early hours of Friday but organisers called for further rallies later in the day.

    Although Poland is one of Europe’s most Catholic countries, opinion polls suggest there is a clear majority against making the abortion law stricter, the BBC’s Adam Easton in Warsaw reports.

    Rights groups had urged the government not to increase restrictions.

    The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights said the court’s decision marked a “sad day for women’s rights”. Dunja Mijatovic wrote on Twitter: “Removing the basis for almost all legal abortions in Poland amounts to a ban and violates human rights.”

    However, Kaja Godek, a member of the Polish group Stop Abortion, welcomed the court’s decision saying: “Today Poland is an example for Europe, it’s an example for the world.”

    The legal challenge against the 1993 law allowing abortion in cases of severe foetal disabilities was launched by MPs from the nationalist Law and Justice party last year. A majority of the court’s judges were nominated by the same party.

    Ahead of the ruling, Polish sexual and reproductive health and rights activist Antonina Lewandowska told the BBC that the defence of the 1993 law was based on UN rules outlawing torture.

    “It’s inhuman, it’s despicable honestly to make anyone carry a pregnancy to term, especially if the foetus is malformed, and 98% of legal abortions carried out in Poland are due to foetal malformations,” she said.

    BBC

  • Nigeria End Sars protest: Key protest group says stay at home.

    Nigeria End Sars protest: Key protest group says stay at home.

    A group that has been key in organising protests against police brutality that have gripped Nigeria in the last two weeks has urged people to stay at home.

    The Feminist Coalition also advised people to follow any curfews that may be in place in their states.

    President Muhammadu Buhari called for an end to the protests in a TV speech.

    The streets of Nigeria’s biggest city, Lagos, the centre of the protests, remained quiet on Thursday night but there is an atmosphere of fear.
    Lagos and other parts of Nigeria have seen buildings torched, shopping centres looted and prisons attacked since Tuesday night’s shooting of protesters in Lagos.

    Rights group Amnesty International said security forces killed at least 12 people, although Nigeria’s army has denied its involvement.
    The protests began on 7 October with mostly young people demanding the scrapping of a notorious police unit, the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (Sars).

    Although President Buhari said it had been dissolved on 11 October, the protests have carried on, and broadened to include demands for broader reforms in the way Nigeria is governed.

    On Thursday night President Buhari urged protesters to stop demonstrating and instead engage with the government “in finding solutions”.

    He did not however mention the shooting of protesters in Lagos which has led to global condemnation and criticism.

    His speech has been widely criticised on social media, the birthplace of the #EndSars movement.

    For many it was tone deaf, in that it failed to substantially address some of the key demands of the protesters. But it also reinforced the disillusionment with the current regime many young Nigerians have been feeling, correspondents say.


    In a statement posted on Twitter the group – which has been using the hashtag #EndSars to rally protesters – said that it condemned “every form” of violence that had occurred, saying that young Nigerians “need to stay alive to pursue our dreams to build the future”.

    “We are merchants of hope. Our priority is always the welfare and safety on the Nigerian youth,” it said.
    It added: “Following the president’s address, we hereby encourage all young Nigerians to stay safe, stay home, and obey mandated curfew in your state.”

    The group also said that it would no longer be receiving money but will use the $400,000 (£306,000) it has not yet spent, most of it donations from abroad, to fund hospitals bills, legal aid and relief for victims of police brutality.

    Other groups and celebrities have also been influential in organising the protests – it is not clear if they will follow the move by the Feminist Coalition.
    But a key demand remains unanswered: there’s been no talk of compensation, or justice, for victims of police brutality and their families. Still one thing is clear, there’s been a political awakening amongst young Nigerians at home and abroad.

    There’s already talk of the 2023 presidential elections and using the lessons learnt during these protests to field a candidate to campaign on issues relevant to this youthful nation.

    If the architects of the movement can keep the momentum gained over the past month, it may prove impossible to put the genie back in the bottle.

    BBC

  • Covid: US gives full approval for antiviral remdesivir drug.

    Covid: US gives full approval for antiviral remdesivir drug.

    US regulators have given full approval for the antiviral drug remdesivir to treat Covid-19 patients in hospitals.

    The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said Veklury, the drug’s brand name, cut the recovery time on average by five days during clinical trials.

    “Veklury is the first treatment for Covid-19 to receive FDA approval,” the FDA said in a statement.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) said last week remdesivir had little to no effect on patients’ survival.

    The WHO said this was based on its own study – but the drug’s manufacturer Gilead rejected the findings of the trial.

    Remdesivir had been authorised for emergency use only in the US since May.

    In the US it will cost $3,120 via private insurers and $2,340 via government purchasers for a five-day course.

    It was recently given to President Donald Trump after he tested positive for Covid-19. He has since recovered.
    In the statement, the FDA said the drug was approved on Thursday “for use in adult and paediatric patients 12 years of age and older and weighing at least 40 kilograms (about 88 pounds) for the treatment of Covid-19 requiring hospitalisation”.

    “Today’s approval is supported by data from multiple clinical trials that the agency has rigorously assessed and represents an important scientific milestone in the Covid-19 pandemic,” said FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn.

    The regulator said its decision was supported by the analysis of data from “three randomised, controlled clinical trials that included patients hospitalised with mild-to-severe Covid-19”.

    One of the studies showed that that “the median time to recovery from Covid-19 was 10 days for the Veklury group compared to 15 days for the placebo group”.
    For its Solidarity clinical trial, the WHO tested the effects four potential treatments – remdesivir was one, but they also looked at malaria drug hydroxychloroquine, auto-immune drug interferon, and the HIV drug combination of lopinavir and ritonavir.

    Dexamethasone, a low-cost steroid now widely used on Covid patients in intensive care in the UK, was not included in this study.

    The four drugs were tested with 11,266 adult patients in total, across 500 hospitals in more than 30 different countries.

    The results, which are yet to be peer-reviewed, suggested that none of these treatments had a substantial effect on mortality or on the length of time spent in hospital, the WHO said.

    BBC

  • Coronavirus: Belgium facing ‘tsunami’ of new infections

    Coronavirus: Belgium facing ‘tsunami’ of new infections

    Belgium could soon be overwhelmed by new coronavirus infections, the health minister has warned, amid soaring case numbers across the continent.

    Frank Vandenbroucke said new cases were close to a “tsunami” where authorities “no longer control what is happening”.

    New measures to try to halt the spread came into force on Monday. All bars and restaurants are closed for four weeks.

    Infection numbers are climbing throughout Europe, prompting new restrictions across the continent.
    Belgium was one of the worst-hit countries during Europe’s first wave of coronavirus earlier this year.

    Overall it has the third-highest number of Covid-related deaths per 100,000 people globally, behind only Peru and San Marino, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

    From Monday, under new government restrictions designed to tackle the fresh outbreak, residents will only be allowed to see one other person from outside their household and should work from home if possible.

    A curfew is in place from midnight until 05:00 for the next month and alcohol sales are banned from 20:00.
    Mr Vandenbroucke described the situation in the capital Brussels and in the south of the country as “the most dangerous in all of Europe”.

    The government “has only one message to the public: protect yourself, protect your loved ones, so as not to be contaminated”, he told broadcaster RTL.
    Health Minister Adam Niedzielski said that other major cities were also working to set up new hospitals. The country was preparing “for the worst-case scenarios – such as 15,000 or even 20,000 new infections” each day, he said.

    Government officials have urged people to stay at home, ordered restaurants to reduce opening hours and told universities and secondary schools to teach online.

    The head of the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, went into self-isolation on Monday after coming into contact with an infected person.
    Deputy Prime Minister Karel Havlicek said on Sunday the government would wait until restrictions show an impact before considering a full lockdown.

    “We have clearly said we will wait [until November] for results,” he said.

    In Prague about 2,000 football fans – including militant supporters known as ultras – clashed with police on Sunday during demonstrations against the restrictions.

  • Girl resurrected after 2 year of being burrier.

    Girl resurrected after 2 year of being burrier.

    A little girl who died 2 years ago has reportedly resurrected and returned to her parent’s home.
    The incident is said to have happened at Masala town in Ndola, Zambia on April 11, 2020.


    According to source, the girl named winnie died after a short illness and was taken to the mortuary where later, a funeral ceremony was held in the Church and buried at the mitingo cemetery.


    Resident of the community and family members couldn’t believe as the dead girl walked back home.

  • Coronavirus: French police raid ministers’ homes in pandemic inquiry.

    Coronavirus: French police raid ministers’ homes in pandemic inquiry.

    French police have raided the homes of senior government and health officials as part of an investigation into their handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Health Minister Olivier Véran and the director of the national health agency, Jérôme Salomon, are among those whose properties were searched on Thursday.

    It comes after a court launched an inquiry earlier this year into the government’s handling of the pandemic.

    It has faced criticism over shortages of equipment and slow response times.

    Prime Minister Jean Castex is also under investigation, French media report, as is his predecessor Edouard Philippe and Mr Véran’s predecessor Agnès Buzyn.

    The court that launched the investigation in July hears cases of alleged wrongdoing by ministers and other government officials in the course of their duties.

    The move comes shortly after President Emmanuel Macron announced a night-time curfew in Paris and eight other cities to try to curb the rapid spread of Covid-19 in the country.
    The measure – which will apply from 21:00 to 06:00 – will come into effect from Saturday and last for at least four weeks. A public health emergency has also been declared.

    What else is happening in Europe?
    Across Europe, governments are introducing new restrictions to battle a second wave of infections.

    On Wednesday, Germany announced that bars and restaurants in higher-risk areas must close early. The country recorded 6,638 new cases on Thursday – the highest daily figure since the start of the pandemic.
    A partial lockdown has also come into force in the Netherlands and cafes and restaurants are closing.

    Earlier, Spain’s north-eastern region of Catalonia said bars and restaurants would close for 15 days from Thursday.

    And the Czech Republic has shut schools and bars. It has the highest rate of infection in Europe over the past two weeks, at 581.3 cases per 100,000 people.

    The Irish government announced a ban on household visits from Thursday night, but childcare and visits on compassionate grounds will still be allowed.

    What are the new measures in France?
    The night-time curfew was announced by President Macron on Wednesday, and it will apply to the capital Paris and its suburbs as well as Marseille, Lyon, Lille, Saint-Etienne, Rouen, Toulouse, Grenoble and Montpellier.

    Affecting around 22 million people, it will be applied for four weeks to begin with and Mr Macron’s government will seek to extend it to six.
    The measures will stop people visiting restaurants and private homes during the evening and night-time, Mr Macron explained.

    Residents will need a valid reason to be outside their homes during the hours of curfew, the president said, adding that he understood that a curfew was a “hard” thing to ask people to do.

    Essential trips will be permitted. Anyone found breaking the curfew will be fined €135 (£121).

    Schools will remain open and people will still be able to travel between regions during the day.

    Businesses that suffer financially due to the new measures will be eligible for state aid, Mr Macron said, adding that a second nationwide lockdown would be “disproportionate”.

  • Breaking News; Trump Test Negative for COVID-19

    Breaking News; Trump Test Negative for COVID-19

    US President Donald Trump has tested negative for the novel coronavirus on “consecutive days,” White House physician Sean Conley announced Monday.

    “In response to your inquiry regarding the President’s most recent COVID-19 tests, I can share with you that he has tested NEGATIVE, on consecutive days, using the Abbott BinaxNOW antigen card,” said Conley in a statement.

    The development came as Trump is set to hold a campaign rally Monday evening in Florida.

    The statement concluded that the president “is not infectious to others.”

    Trump, 74, confirmed on Oct. 3 that he and first lady Melania Trump had tested positive for the virus, hours after one of his closest aides, Hope Hicks, who travelled with him as recently as last Wednesday, tested positive for COVID-19.

    He returned to the White House on Oct. 5 after receiving three days of treatment at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

    On Saturday, Conley said Trump was no longer considered a transmission risk and did not have to continue staying in quarantine after the president held his first public event at the White House since being diagnosed and hospitalized with the coronavirus.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • Monday briefing: Three tiers for Covid alerts

    Monday briefing: Three tiers for Covid alerts

    Downing Street says the country is at a “critical juncture” in managing Covid-19 as Boris Johnson prepares to lay out a new three-tier alert system for England.

    After a Cobra meeting this morning which will determine the final plan, Johnson will address parliament and then appear on TV tonight alongside the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, and England’s chief medical officer, Prof Chris Whitty.

    “This is a critical juncture and it is absolutely vital that everyone follows the clear guidance we have set out to help contain the virus,” a spokesman for No 10 said.

    The plan is expected to include areas with relatively low infection levels being placed in what is being described as tier 1, where only national restrictions such as the rule of six, the 10pm curfew on restaurants and pubs, and existing rules on masks and social distancing will apply. The next tier is likely to include bans on home visits and indoor socialising with other households in bars or restaurants.

    In areas under the toughest tier 3 restrictions – including Merseyside, Manchester and Newcastle – bars and pubs are expected to be forced to close. Late last night, the metro mayor of the Liverpool City Region and six other local leaders said in a statement their area was expected to face the toughest restrictions.

    Restaurants in tier 3 councils were expected to be allowed to stay open until 10pm, but casinos, gyms and betting shops will have to close. However, government sources have reportedly disputed that restaurants would be allowed to remain open in Liverpool, and claimed that “nothing has been agreed” until this morning. You can read the details of the tiers here.

    The plans will be debated on Tuesday, and could be implemented as soon as Wednesday, sources said. Business leaders are preparing to mount a legal challenge to the changes, which they say have “decimated the hospitality industry”. It comes as a survey by the Sustainable Restaurant Association showed 76% of respondents said they would revert to their previous habits of dining out up to four times a month, once restrictions allowed.
    School meals – There’s been a surge in the number of children registering for school meals, with an estimated 1 million pupils recently signing up for the first time, food poverty campaigners say.

    Analysis by the Food Foundation thinktank, released as part of footballer Marcus Rashford’s campaign to end child food poverty, estimates that as many as 900,000 more children have sought free school meals, on top of the 1.4 million who were already claiming, as the Covid-19 crisis plays havoc with family incomes.

    Scotland – The son of a banker shot dead on the doorstep of their family home nearly 16 years ago has spoken out for the first time, saying he and his family deserve justice and closure from the unsolved murder. Andrew Wilson, 20, has no memories of his father, Alistair, apart from seeing him at the age of four lying dying on the doorstep of their home in Nairn in the Highlands.

    “Someone came to our family home on a Sunday evening while my dad was reading my brother and me bedtime stories after our bath,” he said. “The next thing I know I am looking at my dad lying in our doorway covered in blood.” No one has been arrested in connection with the case, which remains under investigation.

    Lord Janner – Three weeks of partially closed hearings into the way police, prosecutors, local government and the Labour party dealt with child sexual abuse allegations involving the late MP will start on Monday. In order to protect the identities of those who allege they were assaulted by the former Leicester West MP, most of the evidence sessions will not be live-streamed to the public. The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse is already carrying out all of its work remotely because of the coronavirus pandemic. Short summaries of the hearings will be published.

    BBC

  • Woman’s private part shaved by Pastor in Church

    Woman’s private part shaved by Pastor in Church

    A video circulating on social media as Pastor seen shaving the private part of women in Church.


    The pastor to the women to remove their panties by themselves because he does not want anyone to tag him of removing women panties in Church.
    He told them, he will bath them later on.

    The Pastor went on by saying, many people will say what he is doing is not from God, but if it is not from God, is it from their mother? He ask.


    The pastor went ahead by saying, some Pastors even preach against him. But wat he is doing is from the Bible and as he quote Leviticus in the bible.

    Story by: Anita

  • Coronavirus: Cases in north of England ‘getting out of control’, minister says.

    Coronavirus: Cases in north of England ‘getting out of control’, minister says.

    Coronavirus is “getting out of control” in the north of England, a minister has said, as she defended government plans to bring in new restrictions.

    Gillian Keegan said the country was in an “unbelievably serious situation”, but added that communication with areas facing new rules needed to be clearer.

    It comes as Labour’s Sir Keir Starmer called for local leaders to be “in the room” and included in decisions.

    The chancellor will set out support linked to the new restrictions later.

    A Treasury spokesperson said Rishi Sunak’s latest move as part of the Jobs Support Scheme would help to “protect jobs and provide a safety net for those businesses that may have to close in the coming weeks and months”.

    It has already been announced that the scheme, which will replace the furlough scheme when it ends this month, will see workers get three quarters of their normal salaries for six months.
    Under the new system – which will replace the patchwork of existing rules – pubs and restaurants could be closed in the worst-affected areas, while a ban on overnight stays is also being considered.

    But there has been growing anger among MPs and local leaders about the way the government has communicated the proposed changes with them.

    Story by; Abigail Essel

  • Shocking: Goat leaves villagers stunned by walking on hind legs

    Shocking: Goat leaves villagers stunned by walking on hind legs

    A goat stunned villagers after walking on it’s hind legs for about 10 meters.

    This goat amazed many onlookers in India villagers of Telwara, Bihar, after strutting about 33 feet while only using its hind legs.

    The unbelievable moment was caught on camera and the video spread around the world with many stunned by the goats’ amazing trick.

    According to New York Post, the goat was perfectly coached by the locals for many hours until he was able to perform the hilarious stunt.

    In the short clip, the goat could be seen walking upright for about 10 metres in front of stunned onlookers while appearing to hold something with his front legs.

    The amazing act has reportedly led many people from different parts of the country to travel to the village to watch the incredible spectacle.

    Meanwhile, it was previously reported that the crown prince of Dubai, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, showed the world that it costs nothing to be kind and compassionate to animals.

    Story by: Anita