Rabu, 03 Maret 2021

BREAKING NEWS: Covid-19 test centre is hit by explosion in Dutch town that has seen surge in cases - Daily Mail

Dutch Covid-19 test centre is hit by explosion as fury over country's lockdown measures grows

  • Testing centre in Bovenkarspel was hit by explosion which shattered windows
  • Police suspect a deliberate attack after 'something metal' exploded at 6.55am
  • It comes weeks after major rioting across the Netherlands over lockdown rules 

A Covid-19 test centre was hit by an explosion in the Netherlands early today in an area which has suffered a surge in coronavirus cases, as anger grows over the country's lockdown measures. 

Police said the building in the town of Bovenkarspel appeared to be the target of a deliberate attack after 'something metal' exploded outside the testing centre, weeks after a nationwide curfew led to riots in major Dutch cities. 

'What we're saying is that something like that doesn't just happen by accident, it has to be laid,' police spokesman Menno Hartenberg said after the blast shortly before 7am on Wednesday. 

Nobody was injured, but windows were shattered and the site was cordoned off for a bomb squad to investigate. 

The town of Bovenkarspel, shown on this map of the Netherlands, saw an explosion at a Covid-19 testing facility today

The town of Bovenkarspel, shown on this map of the Netherlands, saw an explosion at a Covid-19 testing facility today 

The explosion at a testing centre on Wednesday comes weeks after several consecutive nights of rioting against lockdown measures (file photo)

The explosion at a testing centre on Wednesday comes weeks after several consecutive nights of rioting against lockdown measures (file photo) 

Hartenberg, the police spokesman, said that the explosive 'must have been placed' outside the testing centre run by health authority GGD.   

'We don't know yet exactly what exploded, the explosives experts must first investigate,' he said. 

The testing centre is at least the second to be attacked by protesters after a facility in the fishing village of Urk was set on fire during the late-January rioting. 

On the worst night of rioting on January 25, more than 180 people were arrested for burning vehicles, stone throwing and widespread looting.  

While the violence eventually calmed, anger at the lockdown measures has continued - with bar owners and prostitutes staging a raft of protests on Tuesday. 

Sex workers - who usually work legally - are furious that they are still prevented from working under virus restrictions while other 'contact professions' such as hairdressers and beauty salons have been allowed to re-open from Wednesday. 

Protesters from the sex industry gathered outside the Dutch parliament in The Hague on Tuesday arguing that they were being discriminated against. 

'You can go to the hairdresser or you can go to a massage therapist but you can't go and see a sex worker,' said one. 

Meanwhile, cafes across the country symbolically opened their terraces and served food to inflatable dummies to protest the lockdown. 

'We've waited long enough, we still don't see any perspective from the government,' said one cafe owner, Peter Bender. 

In January, this testing centre in the fishing village of Urk was set on fire during rioting across the country on the first night of a nationwide curfew

In January, this testing centre in the fishing village of Urk was set on fire during rioting across the country on the first night of a nationwide curfew 

A woman holds a placard as a group of Dutch sex workers demonstrate in The Hague on Tuesday, saying they are being discriminated against when hairdressers can re-open

A woman holds a placard as a group of Dutch sex workers demonstrate in The Hague on Tuesday, saying they are being discriminated against when hairdressers can re-open 

A group of sex workers display placards as they gather outside the Dutch parliament on Tuesday and demand their right to work like other 'contact professions'

A group of sex workers display placards as they gather outside the Dutch parliament on Tuesday and demand their right to work like other 'contact professions' 

The pandemic has taken a brutal economic toll in the Netherlands with turnover in the food and accommodation sectors plunging by 70.4 per cent in 2020. 

The government announced a partial easing of last week with secondary schools re-opening and young people allowed to play sports, but the wider lockdown will remain in place until at least March 15. 

Anti-lockdown campaigners initially succeeded in getting a court to overturn the curfew, saying the government had overstepped its emergency powers. 

But an appeals court in The Hague overturned that decision on Friday, saying the drastic measures were 'justified' to rein in the coronavirus outbreak.  

While Dutch infection rates have fallen from their winter peak, they are still very high in the so-called safety region of North Holland (North) which includes Bovenkarspel. 

The region saw 360 new cases on Tuesday, representing a very high figure of 54 infections per 100,000 people in the previous 24 hours. 

Across the Netherlands, the figure was 23 infections per 100,000, making the region one of the country's major hotspots.  

More than 14 per cent of tests came back positive in North Holland (North), compared to a figure of nine per cent across the Netherlands.  

And Dutch health authorities have been slow even by the EU's standards in distributing vaccines, with only 5.7 doses handed out per 100 people so far.  

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2021-03-03 07:56:54Z
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The latest on the coronavirus pandemic and vaccines: Live updates - CNN

Oxford/AstaZeneca Covid-19 vaccines are unloaded after arriving at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi, Kenya, on March 3. 
Oxford/AstaZeneca Covid-19 vaccines are unloaded after arriving at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi, Kenya, on March 3.  Daniel Irungu/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Kenya has received more than 1 million Covid-19 vaccines as part of the global COVAX program, according to a news release from the country’s Ministry of Health on Tuesday.

A plane carrying 1.02 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine touched down just before midnight Tuesday in Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.

It is part of an initial allocation to Kenya of 3.5 million doses, according to the joint statement from Kenya’s Health Ministry, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

According to the Ministry of Health, the first beneficiaries of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine will include frontline workers such as health care professionals, teachers and security personnel. 

The COVAX program, led jointly by WHO along with health non-profit organizations, aims to supply vaccines to developing countries in the first 100 days of 2021 and to deploy at least 2 billion doses by year’s end.

“We know that this pandemic will not end in one country until it has ended in all countries,” said Thabani Maphosa, managing director for country programs at Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
“The first arrivals of Covid-19 vaccine doses in Kenya represents the start of equitable distribution of Covid-19 vaccines worldwide. These first doses are for the vaccination of frontline health workers which are critical to the Covid-19 response and the maintenance of all health services."

In addition to the vaccines, UNICEF is providing syringes and safety boxes to Kenya, via a global stockpile funded and supported by Gavi. 

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2021-03-03 07:13:00Z
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Selasa, 02 Maret 2021

Thirteen die in southern California crash near Mexico border - BBC News

At least 13 people have died and more were injured after an SUV collided with a trailer truck in southern California, near the US-Mexico border.

Twenty-five people were said to have been travelling in the SUV, which would legally have had a capacity for eight or nine.

Police say the vehicle drove directly into the path of the truck, which had a full load of gravel.

The truck's driver suffered minor injuries.

Fire officials said they were called to an incident in Imperial - about 11 miles (18km) north of the Mexico border and 100 miles east of San Diego - at 06:15 local time (14:15 GMT) on Tuesday.

Twelve people died at the scene, and another later succumbed to their injuries in hospital.

Scene of crash in southern California
Reuters

At a press conference on Tuesday, California Highway Patrol Chief Omar Watson said: "Obviously that vehicle is not meant for that many people. It's unfortunate that that number of people were put into that vehicle."

He said several of the passengers were ejected from the vehicle upon collision.

A spokesman for Border Patrol, Macario Mora, told the Associated Press that the immigration status of the victims was being investigated.

He said they could be farmworkers involved in harvesting winter greens in the mainly agricultural area.

Map

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2021-03-02 23:06:05Z
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Nigeria: Released schoolgirls say kidnappers threatened to shoot them during three-day mass abduction - Sky News

School pupils from an all-girls' boarding school in the town of Jangebe were required to attend a different sort of assembly this morning.

Instead of the classroom, they sat in a building that government officials in the Nigerian state of Zamfara use to speak to the media.

They were given a little food, then filmed by members of the media as they ate it. The state police commissioner pronounced them "happy and healthy".

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One of the released girls spoke about how the gunmen appeared in the middle of the night.

All 279 pupils had been returned after their mass abduction on Friday reported commissioner, Abutu Yaro, who added that no money had been paid to get them back.

Then, a number of the girls spoke about what they had seen and experienced over three terrifying days in the forest.

"Most of us injured our feet and we couldn't continue with the trek. [The kidnappers] said they would shoot anybody who does not continue to walk," said schoolgirl Umma Abubakar.

Another, called Farida Lawali, said: "While we were walking they were hitting us with guns and beating us with a cane and telling us to move on."

More from Nigeria

In what has become a deeply unsavoury but fast-growing industry, criminal gangs and bandits have been targeting children attending government-run schools as a means of extracting ransoms for their return.

The abduction of the girls from Jangebe marks the third school-related kidnapping in Nigeria in the last two months.

Some of the kidnapped girls
Image: A group of about 100 gunmen abducted the girls from the school in Jangebe on Friday

A total of 344 boys were taken from a school in neighbouring Katsina State in December, then freed after a week.

On Saturday, gunman released 27 teenage boys who were abducted from their school in the central state of Niger.

Security analysists, like Kemi Okenyodo, warn these opportunistic practices will not go away.

"For us to hear that all of them have been released, we are happy about that - but then you say to yourself, where next?

"You are wondering if [the next kidnapping] is going to be in Zamfara, is it going to Niger, moving to Katsina? That is the big issue."

'Most of us injured our feet'' one of schoolgirls said
Image: 'Most of us injured our feet'' one of schoolgirls said

Such activities are fuelled by the precarious security situation in northern Nigeria and the payment of ransoms by government officials.

Local and state representatives have come under massive pressure, both domestically and internationally, to protect school-age children and gang members have learned how to exploit it.

"You find the government grappling to save face in paying the ransoms to ensure that all the children who are under their watch are returned safely. [They want] to be seen to be responsive, that they care for the citizens, particularly the children."

Ms Okenyodo fears for a generation of young people who are having their education disrupted as gang members seemingly strike at will.

The governor of Yobe State said he would close schools this week to protect students from kidnappers.

"The challenges of the northern part of the country are about development and [good] governance. What we are seeing is years of deprivation now coupled with insecurity and it is the people who are suffering for it, not the elites, up there."

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2021-03-02 20:02:17Z
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Alexei Navalny: US imposes sanctions on Russians - BBC News

The US has announced sanctions on Russians over the poisoning of opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

The measures target a number of Russian government officials and entities and are being co-ordinated with similar moves by the EU, US officials said.

They said US intelligence had concluded that the Russian government was behind the near-fatal nerve agent attack on Navalny in Siberia last year.

He is the most high-profile critic of President Vladimir Putin.

Moscow denies involvement in his poisoning and disputes the conclusion, by Western weapons experts, that the nerve agent Novichok was used.

What did the US officials say?

Speaking to reporters during a conference call, they said seven senior Russian officials and 14 entities involved in chemical and biological production were being targeted by sanctions. They gave no further details.

"Russia's attempt to kill Mr Navalny follows an alarming pattern of chemical weapons use by Russia," one of the administration officials said.

They are the first sanctions imposed on Russia by the administration of President Joe Biden.

He has taken a tougher stance than his predecessor Donald Trump towards President Putin.

After phoning his Russian counterpart last month, Mr Biden said he had made it clear the days of the US "rolling over in the face of Russia's aggressive actions, interfering with our elections, cyber-attacks, poisoning citizens are over".

What about the European Union?

In a co-ordinated move, the EU announced on Tuesday that it had targeted four Russian government officials.

They are Alexandr Kalashnikov, the head of the Russian prison system, Alexandr Bastrykin, chairman of the Investigative Committee, Chief Prosecutor Igor Krasnov, and Viktor Zolotov, who heads of the National Guard.

The sanctions include travel bans and asset freezes.

The BBC's Kevin Connolly in Brussels says they are a compromise between the Baltic states, which see Russia as a dangerous neighbour, and countries - notably Germany - which rely on Russian gas imports.

Who is Alexei Navalny?

An anti-corruption campaigner, he has long been the most prominent face of Russian opposition to Mr Putin's rule.

The 44-year-old blogger has millions of followers on social media. He managed to get some of his supporters elected to councils in Siberia in 2020.

Navalny was poisoned and fell into a coma during a flight to Siberia last August. He was airlifted to Germany, where he recovered. In January he decided to return to Russia and was arrested on arrival.

A court last month found that Navalny had violated the terms of an earlier sentence for embezzlement by not turning up to the probation office while he was being treated in Germany.

His suspended sentence was turned into an actual prison term of two-and-a-half years. Last week he was sent from detention in Moscow to a penal colony to serve out the sentence.

Navalny and his supporters say all charges against him are politically motivated. President Biden and EU leaders have called for his immediate release.

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2021-03-02 16:06:09Z
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US and EU hit Russia with co-ordinated sanctions over attempted murder and jailing of Alexei Navalny - Sky News

The United States and the European Union have imposed sanctions targeting a number of senior Russian officials and businesses over the attempted murder and jailing of opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

The 27-nation bloc imposed bans on travel and froze the assets in Europe of four members of Vladimir Putin's inner circle. They are:

• Alexander Bastrykin, head of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation
• Igor Krasnov, the prosecutor general
• Viktor Zolotov, head of the National Guard
• Alexander Kalashnikov, head of the Federal Prison Service

An EU statement said the four were listed "over their roles in the arbitrary arrest, prosecution and sentencing of Mr Navalny, as well as the repression of peaceful protests in connection with his unlawful treatment".

Meanwhile, the US announced sanctions of its own against Russian officials and businesses.

Joe Biden visited Russia and met with Vladimir Putin in 2011, when he was vice president. File pic
Image: Joe Biden, pictured with Vladimir Putin in 2011, has pledged to confront the Russian leader over attacks on opposition figures

Senior members of president Joe Biden's administration did not immediately identify the Russian officials named in them.

Fourteen businesses, most of which it said were involved in production of biological and chemical agents, have also been targeted.

More from Alexei Navalny

One official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity, said the sanctions would be the first of several steps by the Biden administration to "respond to a number of destabilising actions".

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January: Russian police arrest over 4,000 protesters

Mr Biden has pledged to confront Mr Putin for alleged attacks on Russian opposition figures and hacking abroad, including of US government agencies and US businesses.

Mr Navalny, an anti-corruption investigator, was arrested in Moscow in January upon returning from Germany, where he spent five months recovering from a nerve-agent poisoning that he blames on the Kremlin.

Russian authorities have rejected the accusation.

In February, a court sentenced the 44-year-old to two years and eight months in prison for violating the terms of his probation while recuperating in Germany.

The sentence stems from a 2014 embezzlement conviction that Mr Navalny has rejected as fabricated.

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2021-03-02 15:09:34Z
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Hundreds of kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls freed – BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Hundreds of kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls freed – BBC News  BBC News
  2. Nigeria school abduction: Hundreds of girls released by gunmen  BBC News
  3. BREAKING: Kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls reportedly released  Sky News
  4. Almost 300 schoolgirls kidnapped in Nigeria are free, says state governor  The Guardian
  5. Nigeria: 279 kidnapped Zamfara schoolgirls released  Al Jazeera English
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-03-02 12:45:28Z
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