Rabu, 02 Juni 2021

Covid-19: Lack of queue jumping helped vaccine drive, says Matt Hancock - BBC News

A man queues for a Covid vaccine
Reuters

Britain's love of queuing helped the UK coronavirus vaccine rollout, the health secretary has said, as jabs were given "according to need, not ability to pay".

Matt Hancock said there had been no "special treatment, no queue-jumping" for politicians, footballers, or royalty, which helped show the system was "fair".

He also confirmed that three in four UK adults have now had their first jab.

But concerns remain over rising cases.

Reflecting on the UK's vaccine rollout at a conference in Oxford, the health secretary said it was important for the public to know people couldn't "buy their way up the queue".

"Prince William, our future king, waited in that same line for his jab a couple of weeks after me - no special treatment, no queue-jumping," he said.

Mr Hancock also announced the government was in talks with AstraZeneca to secure a future version of its jab adapted to better tackle the Beta variant first identified in South Africa.

Any altered vaccine would need to be approved by the medicines regulator, AstraZeneca said.

The health secretary admitted "a few eyebrows were raised" after he revealed the Hollywood film Contagion helped him shape the UK vaccine programme.

"When I watched that film, a penny did drop for me... that the power of the vaccine would be so great that we would have to think very hard about who to protect and in what order," he said.

Famous faces endorsing the vaccines, including the Queen and England's deputy chief medical officer Professor Jonathan Van-Tam, also helped encourage take-up, Mr Hancock said.

He added that while he was aware "this isn't a vaccine world cup", confidence in Covid vaccines has been "sky high" in the UK: "We continue to top the list of places where people are willing to take, or have taken, a Covid vaccine - around nine in 10 of us."

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Analysis box by Robert Cuffe, Head of statistics

Unfortunately, even with three quarters of adults having received at least one dose, there's still a way to go.

The first dose of the vaccine gives reduced protection against what will soon be the main type of coronavirus in the UK.

That's the variant first identified in India - now known as either B.1.617.2 or Delta.

There may be a small proportion of elderly and vulnerable people who are not vaccinated or who don't get full protection.

But this is a large country and that's still a large number of elderly or vulnerable people.

If this new strain of the virus truly is as infectious as some estimates suggest, it will find those people and we could see large numbers going into hospital.

Every person fully vaccinated makes it harder for the virus to spread and find them.

But we don't know exactly how infectious it is. That's the key job of the next few weeks - finding out whether the virus we'll be facing in the summer could cause a big third wave or, hopefully, just a ripple.

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Meanwhile, speculation continues over whether the government will ease all remaining restrictions in England on 21 June.

Asked whether mask wearing and work-from-home guidance may continue past that point, Mr Hancock said there was nothing in the data to suggest the UK was "definitively off track".

A graphic showing cases over time, rising slowly most recently

The decision on whether to ease the rules fully will depend on how successfully Covid vaccines sever the link between cases and deaths, Mr Hancock said.

Earlier, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: "I'm sorry that's frustrating for people, I know that people want a clear answer about the way ahead for 21 June but at the moment we have just got to wait a little bit longer."

The number of new cases reported daily continues to rise, with 4,330 infections reported on Wednesday. Another 12 deaths within 28 days of a positive test have also been reported.

The proportion of deaths involving coronavirus in England and Wales is at its lowest level for more than eight months, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics.

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2021-06-02 16:50:06Z
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Sri Lanka faces environmental disaster as chemical-laden cargo ship sinks - Sky News

A fire-stricken cargo ship carrying tonnes of chemicals has sunk off the coast of Sri Lanka, sparking fears of an environmental disaster.

Singapore registered MV X-Press Pearl was anchored and waiting to enter the port in Sri Lanka's capital, Colombo, when a fire broke out on 20 May.

The ship was carrying 1,486 containers, including 25 tonnes of nitric acid and other chemicals and cosmetics.

The navy believes the blaze was caused by the chemicals being transported on the vessel
Image: The navy believes the blaze was caused by the chemicals being transported on the vessel

Authorities have been tackling the blaze for over two weeks and were towing the ship into deep water when it began sinking early on Wednesday, a day after the blaze was extinguished.

A salvage crew tried to tow it to deeper water away from the coast, but the attempt was abandoned after several hours.

X-Press Feeders, operators of the container ship, said salvage experts were able to board the vessel and attach a tow line, but "efforts to move the ship to deeper waters have failed".

"The ship's aft portion is now touching bottom at a depth of 21 metres (70 feet)," while the forward area remains afloat with smoke coming out of two cargo holds, the company said in a statement.

More on Sri Lanka

The fire and subsequent submergence of the ship would cause severe pollution, navy spokesperson Indika de Silva said.

The navy is preparing to deal with an oil spill after the ship sank, Silva added.

The government banned fishing along an 80km (50 miles) stretch of coastline, affecting 5,600 fishing boats, while hundreds of soldiers have been deployed to clean beaches.

"The ship has dealt a death blow to our lives," said Joshua Anthony, head of a region fishing union.

"We can't go into the sea which means we can't make a living."

The MV X-Press Pearl vessel was carrying tonnes of chemical material
Image: The MV X-Press Pearl vessel was carrying tonnes of chemical material
The 25-member crew managed to evacuate when the fire erupted
Image: The 25-member crew managed to evacuate when the fire erupted

The navy believes the fire was caused by the chemicals being transported on the vessel.

Most of the ship's cargo was destroyed in the fire, polluting surrounding waters and a long stretch of the island country's beaches.

Plastic pellets from the ship have also washed up on the coastline.

The ship had left the port of Hazira, India on 15 May and was on its way to Singapore via Colombo.

Sri Lankan police are probing the fire and a court in Colombo on Tuesday imposed a travel ban on the captain, the engineer and the assistant engineer from leaving the country.

The government has said it will take legal action against the owners of the ship to claim compensation.

The vessel's 25-member crew, including nationals from the Philippines, China, India and Russian, were evacuated last week after an explosion.

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2021-06-02 15:00:00Z
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Disaster feared as fire-hit cargo ship sinks off Sri Lanka coast - Al Jazeera English

Ship carrying tonnes of chemicals is sinking, government and navy say, in one of the island nation’s worst-ever marine disasters.

A cargo ship carrying tonnes of chemicals is sinking off Sri Lanka’s west coast, the country’s government and navy said, in one of Sri Lanka’s worst-ever marine disasters.

Salvage experts were attempting to tow the fire-stricken container ship that had been loaded with chemicals into the deep sea as the vessel started to sink off Sri Lanka’s main port, officials said on Wednesday.

The Singapore-registered MV X-Press Pearl, was carrying 1,486 containers, including 25 tonnes of nitric acid, along with other chemicals and cosmetics that were loaded at the port of Hazira, India, on May 15.

Smoke rises from a fire on board the MV X-Press Pearl vessel in the seas off Colombo Harbour [Sri Lanka Air Force Media/Handout via Reuters]
The ship was anchored off the island’s west coast when a fire erupted on May 20, when the ship was anchored about 9.5 nautical miles (18 km) northwest of Colombo and waiting to enter the port.

Authorities have been battling the blaze since then, as flaming containers laden with chemicals have fallen from the ship’s deck, the navy said last month.

Water submerged the MV X-Press Pearl’s quarterdeck on Wednesday, a day after firefighters extinguished the blaze burning for 12 days.

Sri Lankan navy spokesman Captain Indika de Silva told Al Jazeera the rear part of the ship has sunk and that they have stopped its towing.

“The ship is resting in the bottom of the seabed now. There is no more towing. We have stopped trying to tow it out of the Sri Lankan waters,” he said.

“Now our concern is about any oil spill. We are closely monitoring this and so far we have not detected any spill. It will be devastating if that happens, but we are taking all precautions.”

Smoke rises from a fire on board the MV X-Press Pearl vessel in the seas off Colombo Harbour [Sri Lanka Air Force Media/Handout via Reuters]
The navy believes the blaze was caused by the chemicals being transported on the Singapore-flagged vessel.

Sri Lankan police are probing the fire and a court in Colombo on Tuesday imposed a travel ban on the captain, the engineer and the assistant engineer from leaving the country.

The vessel’s 25-member crew was evacuated last week after an explosion. They include Philippine, Chinese, Indian and Russian nationals.

The blaze destroyed most of the ship’s cargo and polluted surrounding waters and a long stretch of the island nation’s famed beaches.

Sri Lankan navy members remove debris washed off to a beach from the ship which caught fire off Colombo Harbour, on a beach in Ja-Ela, Sri Lanka [Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters]
Tonnes of plastic pellets have swamped the island’s coastline and rich fishing grounds, creating one of the biggest environmental crises in decades, experts say.

Sri Lanka’s Marine Environment Protection Authority (MEPA) chairman Dharshani Lahandapura called it a “man-made disaster”.

“This is an unfortunate incident for Sri Lanka. It has negatively impacted the country in many ways. What we are doing right now is minimising the negative impact,” he told Al Jazeera.

Lahandapura said most chemicals on the were “highly reactive” and emitted through fumes and gases. “Some even dissolved in sea water,” he said. “There were no signs of an oil spill.”

Meanwhile, the government has banned fishing along an 80km (50 miles) stretch of the coastline, affecting 5,600 fishing boats, while hundreds of soldiers have been deployed to clean the beach.

Al Jazeera’s Minelle Fernandez on Tuesday said the “beaches themselves are a sorry sight to behold”.

“Walking along some of these beaches in this vast stretch that has been affected, all you see is a blanket of white and black – they are the microplastic pellets mixed with a whole load of burnt, charred remains and debris material for dozens of kilometres as far as the eye can see,” she said.

Aanya Wipulasena contributed to this report from Colombo, Sri Lanka

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2021-06-02 09:31:01Z
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Californian teenager fights off bear attacking her dogs in garden - Sky News

A Californian teenager fought off a bear that was in her garden and attacking her dogs.

Home security footage captured the American black bear and its two cubs walking on a wall outside 17-year-old Hailey Morinico's home in Bradbury and her dogs running at them and barking.

The bear cubs retreated while their mother swiped at the pets and then picked up a small dog, before Ms Morinico ran at it and pushed it off the wall.

Speaking to NBC News, Ms Morinico said: "I was like 'Oh my god, there's a bear and it is taking my dog. It is lifting her up and off the ground'.

"The dog that the bear grabbed, she's the baby. I have to protect the baby."

The teenager said she sprained her finger in the incident but escaped from serious harm.

The American black bear is commonly seen in urban spaces throughout California. Bears are the state animal for California
Image: The American black bear is commonly seen in urban spaces throughout California

Black bears are common in Bradbury, a city that borders the Angels National Forest and San Gabriel Mountains.

More on California

According to Rebecca Barboza, a wildlife biologist from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, the bear was an adult, weighing in at an estimated 150 pounds (68kg).

Ms Barboza said the animals are common in urban areas near their natural habitats and "use it as their home range".

She added that from the video it appears the dogs provoked the encounter and no action will be taken against the bear.

"The bear was protecting her cubs, she was reacting to protect her cubs and the dogs of course were reacting to protect their territory," Ms Barboza told NBC News.

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2021-06-02 09:45:25Z
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EU army's secret weapon! Joe Biden urged to wade in and approve bloc's military - Daily Express

Macron criticised over push for EU army by Italian MEP

The US President was told by the Center for American Progress, a Washington think tank with close ties to his administration, that it was time America allowed the EU to become a global military power. In a push for French President Emmanuel Macron's dream of a united EU army, the think tank published a report urging President Biden to encourage the EU to develop hard-power military capabilities.

For the past few decades, US presidents have been staunchly opposed to EU defence integration under the facade of preventing duplication of NATO.

But writing in the report, Max Bergmann, James Lamond and Siena Cicarelli said it was time for the US to ensure Europe no longer depends on American defence powers.

They wrote: “Europe’s dependence on the United States for its security means that the U.S. possesses a de facto veto on the direction of European defence.

“Since the 1990s, the United States has typically used its effective veto power to block the defence ambitions of the European Union.

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Joe Biden has been urged to facilitate the creation of an EU Army (Image: GETTY)

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Emmanuel Macron has longed pushed for an EU Army (Image: GETTY)

“This has frequently resulted in an absurd situation where Washington loudly insists Europe do more on defence but then strongly objects when Europe’s political union — the European Union — tries to answer the call."

They added: “This policy approach has been a grand strategic error — one that has weakened NATO militarily, strained the transatlantic alliance, and contributed to the relative decline in Europe’s global clout.”

The call is sure to attract some criticism from NATO commanders who have longed believed EU countries lack the ability to defend themselves.

The authors of the reports said: “Today, much of Europe’s military hardware is in a shocking state of disrepair.

READ MORE: Joe Biden 'has a Europe problem' bloc warned before EU and US row

“European forces aren’t ready to fight with the equipment they have, and the equipment they have isn’t good enough.”

But they claimed the US was also to blame for such a state of the EU's military forces.

They said: “This is a European failure.

“But Washington has played a critical, if underappreciated, role in precipitating this failure.”

They added: “For more than two decades, both Republican and Democratic administrations have vigorously pressed European capitals to bolster their national forces in support of NATO.

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US Military power (Image: EXPRESS)

“But this focus on national defence spending levels, embodied by the 2014 commitment by NATO members to spend two percent of their GDP on defence, simply hasn’t worked. European defence today remains anaemic, despite noticeable increases in spending.”

Retired General Philip Breedlove, NATO’s former supreme allied commander for Europe, said he was opposed to an EU army that could be seen as a duplication of NATO.

He said: “If these nations that are also in NATO want to spend on their defense, I see that as a good thing, because anything that will benefit the EU will also benefit NATO.

“But there is a huge caveat and that is something that we have been saying for a long time, everyone from the secretary-general to everyone else: We should not be investing in duplicative capabilities.

“There are far too many readiness needs, capability needs and capacity needs that should be met first.

“What we don’t need to do is invest money in redundant duplicative capabilities.”

Mr Bergmann, the lead author of the report, said US politicians and commanders should be open to adopting a new approach.

He said: “We need to get out of the mindset that the EU will be a complication for us.

“There is a sort of kneejerk negativity about the EU’s potential involvement, instead of viewing it in a potentially positive way.

“The waste and duplication is in the current system, where everyone is having to have their own full spectrum militaries. That’s probably not the best use of militaries for the EU or NATO.

“Too often the opposition to EU defence is very theoretical and not based on the practicalities of the EU getting involved in defence in a realistic way.

“It would be one thing if you could make the case that NATO as currently structured is totally working and European defence is taken care of, but it’s not.

"Just pushing and yelling at member states to spend more on defence … that’s just not a recipe for a strong Europe or a successful transatlantic alliance.”

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2021-06-02 07:59:24Z
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Fears of oil spill emergency as cargo ship that burnt for 13 days off coast of Sri Lanka is now sinking - CNN

Since May 20, the Sri Lanka Navy and Indian Coast Guard have been working round the clock to try to stop that from happening as the blaze engulfed the container ship, which was laden with chemicals such as nitric acid and carrying 350 metric tons of oil in its tanks.
Sri Lanka's Marine Environment Protection Authority (MEPA) has warned the Singaporean-registered ship, called the MV X-Press Pearl, could create an oil spill emergency. It expects pristine beaches along a 30 kilometer-stretch of coastline from the tourist spot of Negombo to Dikowita to be hit.
The fire, which raged for almost two weeks, has prompted a large-scale clean-up operation along Sri Lanka's western coast, as millions of plastic micro pellets blanketed beaches near the capital Colombo. Fishing in the area was suspended and environmentalists warned birds and marine life could be threatened by the plastic and chemical pollution.
Authorities fear a bigger disaster if the oil leaks into the ocean and nearby lagoons before the vessel can be towed away.
A tugboat from the Dutch salvage firm SMIT tows the fire stricken Singapore-registered container ship MV X-Press Pearl away from the coast of Colombo on June 2.
Sri Lanka's State Minister of Fisheries, Kanchana Wijesekera, said on Twitter the X-Press Pearl was "sinking at the current position" and fishing activities and other vessels have been barred from entering the Negombo Lagoon.
"Emergency measures are (being) taken to protect the lagoon and surrounding areas to contain the damage form any debris or in case of an oil leak," Wijesekera added.
Images of the vessel shared by Sri Lanka's Navy showed the charred body of the container ship with its stern appearing to be submerged in the water as smoke continues to billow from its bow.
Wijesekera said the X-Press Pearl was being "towed away to deep waters" by a salvage company and the navy.
Salvors manage to board the stricken ship to assess the damage after fire had been successfully doused for the first time since May 20.
In a statement, the cargo ship's operator, X-Press Feeders, said an inspection team had managed to board the ship on Tuesday after dousing the fire and found the engine room had flooded.
"There are now concerns over the amount of water in the hull and its effect on the ship's stability," X-Press Feeders said Wednesday. A previous attempt to tow the ship away was aborted on Tuesday due to a large ocean swell, it said.
In a Facebook post Wednesday, the MEPA said the cause of the sinking was due to a water leak at the back of the ship.
The X-Press Pearl, was sailing from India's Gujarat to Colombo when a fire broke out on board on May 20, as it was nine nautical miles off the Sri Lankan coast.
Members of Sri Lankan Navy remove debris washed ashore from the MV X-Press Pearl on a beach in Colombo on May 30.
It was carrying 1,486 containers when the fire started, 81 of which held "dangerous goods," including 25 metric tons of nitric acid, according to X-Press Feeders. The other chemicals onboard the ship are yet to be confirmed.
Sri Lankan authorities have launched criminal and civil probes into how the fire started.
X-Press Feeders said it was "too early to tell" but had previously reported one of the containers onboard was leaking nitric acid at its previous stops in Hamad Port in Qatar and Hazira Port in India. The company said "the advice given was there were no specialist facilities or expertise immediately available to deal with the leaking unit."

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2021-06-02 08:47:00Z
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Covid Victoria: State extends lockdown to curb outbreak - BBC News

A food delivery driver drives through the deserted Melbourne city centre
EPA

The Australian state of Victoria will extend its lockdown by another week as authorities battle to control a growing virus outbreak.

Officials say people have been catching the virus from "fleeting" encounters in a Melbourne outbreak of the B.1.617.1 strain, now named the Kappa variant by the World Health Organization.

Australia's second most-populous state will now be locked down until 10 June.

It's the fourth shutdown endured by residents so far in the pandemic.

Six new local cases were reported on Wednesday, taking the cluster to 60.

"I know this is not the news that everybody wants to hear but given the cases we have... the government had no choice," said Acting Premier James Merlino.

"If we don't do this [lockdown], this thing will get away. This variant of concern will become uncontrollable and people will die."

Nearly seven million people have been in lockdown since 27 May, after the state recorded its first cases in the community in nearly three months.

For another seven days, people in the state capital Melbourne will be required to stay at home except for essential work, shopping, exercise, caregiving or to get a Covid vaccine.

No gatherings are allowed. Some measures have been eased including the expansion of travel limits to within 10km (6.1 miles) of the home, and senior school students will be allowed to return to the classroom.

Outside the state capital, restrictions will be relaxed for regional towns with limited outdoor gatherings and the re-opening of restaurants.

But Mr Merlino warned people to remain cautious. He said there are more than 350 places where people may have been exposed to the virus, including camping spots in the neighbouring state of New South Wales after a Melbourne resident travelled there.

James Merlino (middle) at a press conference in Melbourne
EPA

"No one - no one - wants to repeat last winter," he said, referencing Melbourne's second wave last year which caused over 90% of deaths nationwide.

The state endured a 112-day lockdown to bring the case rate back to zero.

Vaccination delay

Victoria's new outbreak has highlighted the low level of vaccination among Australians - a task that has been the responsibility of the federal government.

Less than 2% of the population has been vaccinated. Cases reported in aged care homes in Melbourne this week have also fuelled criticism of the flawed rollout.

The government had pledged it would prioritise vaccines for vulnerable groups like the elderly, but was forced to admit yesterday it did not know how many vaccinations had occurred in aged care homes amid reports of widespread delays.

The Victorian outbreak marks the biggest case increase in Australia since October.

The nation has largely avoided the level of Covid deaths seen in many other developed nations due to a stringent system of snap lockdowns, border controls and movement restrictions.

Officials say this outbreak has been traced to a traveller who tested positive days after finishing quarantine in South Australia.

It's believed he contracted the virus through airborne transmission from an infected traveller in another room- throwing up questions over the safety of hotel quarantine.

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2021-06-02 03:21:14Z
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