Jumat, 10 September 2021

Covid: President Biden's commitments on vaccines fact-checked - BBC News

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President Joe Biden has been making the case for enforcing Americans to take a Covid vaccine.

In a televised speech he said the unvaccinated were responsible for the rise in hospitalisations and made a series of claims about the US vaccine rollout.

We've been checking them out.

'Before I took office, we hadn't ordered enough vaccines for every American. Just weeks in office, we did.'

It's true that the Trump administration hadn't ordered enough doses to vaccinate every American - but they had secured hundreds of millions of jabs which the Biden administration subsequently rolled out.

Mr Trump secured 500 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech, Johnson & Johnson, and Moderna vaccines - the three jabs now authorised for use in the US.

That's not enough to fully vaccinate the entire US population of more than 320 million people, as the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines require two doses.

Vaccination
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Within his first month in office, Mr Biden had ordered an additional 200 million doses from Moderna and Pfrizer-BioNTech.

This order, combined with the Trump administration's purchases, provided enough doses to fully vaccinate every American.

When Mr Trump left office in January, the US had vaccinated more than 16 million people - the fourth highest per capita after Israel, the UAE and the UK.

The Trump administration also secured contracts for another 400 million doses from Novavax and AstraZeneca - vaccines which are yet to be authorised in the US.

'The unvaccinated overcrowd our hospitals... leaving no room for someone with a heart attack.'

A New York Times analysis published at the start of August found that the overwhelming majority of Covid hospitalisations were unvaccinated. This research looked at 40 US states and Washington DC.

Total occupied inpatient Covid beds have passed 100,000 for the first time since January, according to data published by Johns Hopkins.

It's a similar picture in intensive care wards. At the start of July, there were under 5,000 beds occupied by Covid patients and this has risen to more than 25,000. This equates to about 80% of beds across the country.

Some US states are facing a far worse situation than others.

ICU capacity rates have reached more than 90% in Idaho, Florida, Alabama and Georgia.

'I'm announcing a new plan to require more Americans to be vaccinated.'

This has taken by many as a move to introduce mandatory vaccinations, although Mr Biden has been careful with his words.

The president has previously said he had opposed mandatory vaccinations.

The new measures include the requirement that millions of federal government workers get vaccinated.

Back in July Mr Biden allowed workers to be tested twice a week instead - but he's now removed that option.

US protests
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When asked about vaccine mandates in December 2020, Mr Biden said: "I don't think it should be mandatory, I wouldn't demand it to be mandatory, but I would do everything in my power."

His plan also requires workers at large private companies to be vaccinated or face weekly testing.

In July, when asked about the administrations thoughts on implementing a wider vaccine mandate, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said: "That's not the role of the federal government - that is the role that institutions, private sector entities and others may take."

The plan to require private companies to make sure workers are either vaccinated or face weekly testing is controversial and likely to be challenged in court.

'Children have four times higher chance of getting hospitalised if they live in a state with low vaccination rates.'

Research suggests this is broadly accurate.

Mr Biden appears to be referring to a US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) study of Covid hospital admissions among of children (up to 17-years-old) published in August.

This found that the rate of admissions in the states with the lowest vaccination coverage was 3.7 times higher than the states with the most coverage.

These low-vaccination states include Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho and Wyoming.

Child hospital admissions have been rising since June, but as a group under-18s are still far less likely to go to hospital compared with adults and in particular older adults.

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2021-09-10 16:42:43Z
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Biden's whisper RETURNS: President pleas 'get's vaccinated' - Daily Mail

Biden's whisper RETURNS: President leans into the mic and quietly says 'get vaccinated' at the end of his speech announcing string of mandates on two thirds of all American workers

  • President Joe Biden brought back his stage whisper when he declared war on the 80 million Americans who have yet to get a COVID vaccine
  •  He ended his nearly 30 minute speech with a whispered plea: 'Get vaccinated'
  • Biden uses the whisper for emphasis and dramatic affect - a move critics call creepy but advocates say can be an effective communications strategy
  • He used it Thursday to speak directly to unvaccinated 
  • 'This is not about freedom or personal choice. It's about protecting yourself and those around you,' he said 
  • Biden announced an aggressive new plan to get 100 million employees across the federal government and private sector vaccinated
  • Labor Department to issue a temporary order to require all businesses with 100 or more employees to have them vaccinated or tested weekly 
  • Biden will require all federal workers to be vaccinated
  • Workers will not be given the option of testing out 
  • There will be limited exceptions but any federal employee who refuses the shot can be fired, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said  

President Joe Biden brought back his stage whisper when he declared war on the 80 million Americans who have yet to get a COVID vaccine.

Biden uses the whisper for emphasis and dramatic affect - a move critics call creepy but advocates say can be an effective communications strategy, causing people to lean in and pay attention. 

'Get vaccinated,' was his whispered plea at the end of his nearly 30 minutes of remarks.

The whisper is becoming a regular feature in Biden's remarks: he's used in a joint address to Congress, in question and answer sessions with reporters, and during other important speeches, such as when he pleaded with businesses to raise wages for workers, whispering 'pay them more.'

The whisper is usually the most important point Biden tends to make in his speeches and, when he deploys it, his body language changes: he leans into the microphone, pauses for dramatic effect and then whispers his plea.

His entreaty on Thursday came as his administration struggles to return life to normal for Americans, keep the economy on an upward trend, and increase vaccination numbers to counter the Delta variant of COVID, which is causing the case rate to spike. 

He spoke directly to the unvaccinated in remarks in the State Dining Room at the White House on Thursday.

'This is not about freedom or personal choice. It's about protecting yourself and those around you, the people you work with, the people you care about, the people you love. My job as president is to protect all Americans,' he said.

'We've been patient but our patience is wearing thin. And your refusal has cost all of us. So please do the right thing,' he said. 

Biden's speech was a marked change from previous remarks on the pandemic. He took a harsh tone with those who have not gotten vaccinated and expressed impatience with their decision not to get a shot in the arm. 

And he addressed that crowd directly, in stark language, where he called out those who cast doubt about the safety and efficiency of vaccines. 

He also outlined a series of new government mandates that will require shots in the arms for two-thirds of employed Americans. Federal employees who refuse can be fired and companies that don't comply will face thousands of dollars in fines. 

Republicans, including governors, called the orders 'coercive' and 'unconstitutional' and have vowed to fight back in the courts and with legislation. 

Both his tone and his action were some of the strictest measures he's taken since he became president - a move that comes as hospitalizations are up across the United States as the Delta variant continues to plague the nation. 

Biden charged the unvaccinated with 'overcrowding our hospitals and overrunning emergency rooms intensive care units, leaving no room for someone with a heart attack or pancreatic cancer.'

The president decried the 'pandemic politics' that he said was behind those who had not yet gotten a shot in the arm, calling out public officials who were 'actively working to undermine the fight against COVID-19.'

'These pandemic politics, as I refer to, are making people sick, causing unvaccinated people to die. We cannot allow these actions to stand in the way of protecting the large majority of Americans who have done their part and want to get back to life as normal,' he said.

He charged those who were fighting against COVID-19 mitigation procedures with helping increase the death rate. He didn't mention any specific official by name by his administration has publicly clashed with the Republican governors of Florida and Texas, Rick DeSantis and Greg Abbott. 

President Joe Biden brought back his stage whisper when he declared war on the 80 million Americans who have yet to get a COVID vaccine

President Joe Biden brought back his stage whisper when he declared war on the 80 million Americans who have yet to get a COVID vaccine 

'There are elected officials actively working to undermine the fight against COVID-19,' Biden said. 'Instead of encouraging people to get vaccinated and mask up, they're ordering mobile morgues for the unvaccinated dying from COVID in their communities. This is totally unacceptable.' 

'My message to unvaccinated Americans is this - what more is there to wait for?,' Biden said. 'What more to you need to see? We've made vaccinations free, safe, and convenient. The vaccine has FDA approval. Over 200 million Americans have gotten at least one shot.'

In his remarks, Biden announced an aggressive new plan to get 100 million employees across the federal government and private sector vaccinated against COVID as the case rate continues to rise due to the Delta variant.

To reach his goal, Biden will use the sweeping power of the federal government, ordering companies to vaccinate workers or face financial penalties.

He’ll have the Labor Department issue an emergency, temporary order to require all businesses with 100 or more employees to ensure every worker is either fully vaccinated or gets tested at least once a week. The order covers over 80 million employees and it will require employers with 100 or more employees to give employees paid time off to get vaccinated.

Any business that violates the new rule will face substantial fines, up to $14,000. 

Biden argued some of the biggest companies in the country already required vaccines, including, he noted, Fox News. Many conservative viewers of Fox News also refuse to get the vaccine. 

'Some of the biggest companies are already requiring this - United Airlines, Disney, Tyson food, and even Fox News,' he said.

He will also require all workers in healthcare settings that receive Medicaid or Medicare reimbursement to get vaccinated, which will apply to 17 million healthcare workers. 

He also issued an executive order Thursday night requiring all federal employees and contractors to get vaccinated.  

Additionally, the roughly 300,000 educators in headstart programs will be required to be vaccinated. 

And the TSA is doubling fines for people who refuse to mask on planes. The new range of penalties, which take effect Friday, September 10, 2021, will be $500-$1000 for first offenders and $1000-$3000 for second offenders, the Department of Homeland Security announced.

Biden denounced those who refuse to wear masks on flights, admonishing them to 'show some respect.' 

'If you break the rules, be prepared to pay,' Biden warned in his remarks. 'And by the way, show some respect. The anger you see on television toward flight attendants and others doing their job is wrong, it's ugly.'

Biden also called on governors to require vaccinations for all school teachers and staff, a call that will likely not go over well in Southern states like Texas and Florida, where the GOP governors have pushed back against the CDC’s requirement for face masks in schools.

In Florida, Republican Gov. Rick DeSantis has threatened to with hold funding from school districts that require face masks.

To counter moves like that, the Department of Education will make additional funding available to help local school districts backfill salaries and other areas where it has been with held.

'My plan also takes on elected officials in states that are undermining you and these life saving actions. Right now, local school officials are trying to keep children safe in a pandemic while their governor picks a fight with them and even threatens their salaries or their jobs. Talk about bullying in schools. If they'll not help us beat the pandemic I'll use my power as president to get them out of the way,' he vowed. 

Biden also announced a ramp up in testing, using the Defense Production Act to accelerate the production of rapid tests, including at home test, and purchase $2 billion worth of rapid tests e and over the counter at home COVID tests for a total of 280 million tests. 

Earlier in the day, the administration revealed Biden will require all of the roughly 2.1 million federal workers to be vaccinated as part of a series of his tough new mandates.

There will be limited exceptions but any federal employee who refuses the shot can be fired, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday.

Federal employees and contractors will have 75 days to get vaccinated. 

The executive order will not include an option of being regularly tested to opt out of the vaccine requirement. The orders will apply to workers in the executive branch but not the congressional or judicial.

'There will be limited exceptions for legally recognized reasons disability or religious objections,' Psaki said. Anyone who 'fails to comply, they will go through the standard HR process, which includes counseling and face disciplinary action,' she added. 

She confirmed that action could include termination of employment.

'Hopefully it won't come to that,' she said.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said any federal employee who doesn't get vaccinated can be fired

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said any federal employee who doesn't get vaccinated can be fired

President Joe Biden greets labor union members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers  on Labor Day

President Joe Biden greets labor union members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers  on Labor Day

She said the administration wanted the federal government to serve as an example for other businesses and organizations when it comes to vaccines.

'Obviously the federal workforce is one of the largest in the country and we would like to be a model to what we think other businesses, organizations should do,' she noted. 'The expectation is that if you want to work with federal government or be a contractor, you need to be vaccinated unless you are eligible for one of the exemptions.' 

Republican Congressman Rob Wittman of Virginia, who has federal workers in his district, said he objected to the forced vaccines.

'Although I have personally been vaccinated and regularly encourage those I represent to get vaccinated as well, I fundamentally disagree with forcibly injecting America's public servants,' he told DailyMail.com in a statement. 

'Our government was founded to secure the individual liberties of all. We should instead continue educating the public that the COVID-19 vaccines are both safe and effective. Resorting to forced vaccinations, and returning to unnecessary restrictions, only serves to eliminate critically important vaccination incentives and undermine public confidence in the vaccines' efficacy,' he added.

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union of federal workers, said they would bargain over the order.

'Workers deserve a voice in their working conditions,' the group said in a statement. 'Neither of these positions has changed. We expect to bargain over this change prior to implementation, and we urge everyone who is able to get vaccinated as soon as they can do so.' 

And the National Federation of Federal Employees, another government workers union, said they didn't receive advance notice of the executive order.

Psaki dismissed questions about the unions not being consulted. The Biden White House has bragged about its pro-union stance.  At a Labor Day event on Wednesday, Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said President Biden told him: 'This is labor's house.'

'We have a range of consultation with labor unions, and that has been the case for several weeks and months as we have worked to implement additional steps,' Psaki said. 

'But our objective here is to continue to save lives.'

The president is putting more pressure on states, businesses and schools to get people vaccinated as the Delta variant causes the case rate to continue to rise in the United States. 

But Republican-led states including Texas and Florida have pushed back and are in the process of trying to ban the orders being imposed. 

Psaki  indicated in interviews on Thursday morning that more mandates were coming. 

'What we've seen work over the past couple months are mandates, requirements, making it so workers in the federal government or others have to get vaccinated. We've seen it work and we've seen it become more popular,' Psaki said on MSNBC's Morning Joe.

'He's going to speak directly to vaccinated people and their frustrations and he wants them to hear how we're going to build on what we've done to date to get the virus under control,' she said. 

The Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Veterans Affairs already mandate vaccines for their employees. The military also has issued a vaccine mandate.  

There have now been more than 40 million cases of COVID recorded among Americans, which is nearly one-fifth of the global total of cases.

Biden, in his remarks scheduled for 5 p.m. ET time, will address six areas where his administration can push for more Americans to get vaccinated: that includes new plans to get more people vaccinated, enhancing protection for those who already have had shots, keeping schools open, increasing testing and mask-wearing, protecting the economic recovery and improving healthcare.  

The president will also urge business to implement strict vaccine requirements. Major corporations like WalMart, McDonalds and Disney require high-level employees, such as managers or white-collar workers, to get vaccinated. Most hospitals and universities require the vaccine. On Thursday the Los Angeles school district also said they would require it. 

President Biden and administration officials have repeatedly emphasized the best way for life to return to normal is for people to get vaccinated. 

Biden also plans to call for a global summit, to be held during the U.N. General Assembly later this month, to respond to the pandemic and talk about how to get more vaccine supply to the developing world.  

About 27 per cent of the eligible U.S. population age 12 and older have not received any COVID vaccine, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Meanwhile about 75 per cent of Americans have received at least one shot and 53 per cent are fully vaccinated.

In December 2020, after he was elected but before he took office, Biden said he didn't think COVID vaccines were necessary.

'I will do everything in my power as president to encourage people to do the right thing and when they do it, demonstrate that it matters,' he said at the time. 

Meanwhile, Dr. Anthony Fauci said this week Americans are getting infected with COVID at 10 times the rate needed to end the pandemic.

'We're still in pandemic mode, because we have 160,000 new infections a day,' Fauci told Axios. 'That's not even modestly good control.' 

'In a country of our size, you can't be hanging around and having 100,000 infections a day,' he continued. 'You've got to get well below 10,000 before you start feeling comfortable.'

About 75 per cent of Americans have received at least one shot and 53 per cent are fully vaccinated

About 75 per cent of Americans have received at least one shot and 53 per cent are fully vaccinated

The vaccination rate among Americans has increased since July, which is when the Delta variant caused case rates to spike, but it remains low in Southern states like Florida and Texas.

Biden will also address the divide between the vaccinated and unvaccinated. 

'He also will acknowledge the fact that the 175 million people who are vaccinated out there, many of them are frustrated. They want to go back to normal. Of course they do. That's going to require moving more unvaccinated people to a vaccinated status. That's what he'll talk about,' Psaki told CNN on Thursday morning.

In his remarks, Biden also will seek to return his focus to the COVID pandemic, resetting the narrative after the difficult evacuation of Americans from Afghanistan and from Democratic in-fighting on Capitol Hill over his $3.5 trillion budget filled with social programs. 

The Biden administration has already taken steps to try and stop Republican-led states from rolling back COVID mandates.

Last month, the Education Department announced a civil rights investigations into five states that banned schools from imposing mask mandates, claiming their stance could discriminate against students with disabilities or health problems.

Education chiefs in Iowa, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Utah have been told they are under investigation.

'It's simply unacceptable that state leaders are putting politics over the health and education of the students they took an oath to serve,' said Education Secretary Miguel Cardona.

'The department will fight to protect every student's right to access in-person learning safely.' 

NYPD cops are ordered to get vaccinated against Covid, get weekly tests on their own time, or go home without pay 

NYPD officers have been told they will be sent home without pay unless they get vaccinated against Covid or provide a weekly negative COVID-19 test which they have taken on their own time.

The new guidelines follow an executive order by Mayor Bill de Blasio about coronavirus protocols for city workers, in response to the surge of the highly contagious Delta variant.

The rules will go into effect on Monday, September 13. 

Civilians and paid members of the NYPD who choose to remain unvaccinated will have to get a PCR or a rapid PCR test every seven days on their own time and upload results to an internal contact-tracing system.

Tests have to be done on a weekly basis while officers are off-duty, but the NYPD announced it will soon allow its workforce to get tested at 15 sites across the city at no charge, according to a memo. 

At-home antigen tests will not be accepted by the department, under the new police policy.

'Members of the Service who fail to comply with this directive will not be permitted to work and will be ineligible to receive pay for each day of noncompliance,' the memo reads. 

Unvaccinated NPYD officers have no other choice but to get vaccinated if they don't want to provide a weekly negative COVID-19 test on their own time or be sent home without pay

Unvaccinated NPYD officers have no other choice but to get vaccinated if they don't want to provide a weekly negative COVID-19 test on their own time or be sent home without pay

The guidelines come after data published late last month revealed that just 47 percent of the department's workforce — 35,000 uniformed officers and nearly 18,000 civilian members — are fully vaccinated.  

That is far lower than the wider New York City population, which has a 61 percent vaccination rate.  

The NYPD has one of the worst vaccination rates among police departments in big cities across the country. 

Other cities, including Los Angeles and Washington D.C., have more than half of their workforce vaccinated, while Honolulu remains the only city in the U.S. with three-quarters of its police department vaccinated. 

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2021-09-10 13:39:53Z
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Out-of-control wildfire near Costa del Sol's Estepona resort kills a firefighter, forces evacuation - Daily Mail

Out-of-control wildfire near Costa del Sol's Estepona resort kills a firefighter and forces 1,000 people including Brits to evacuate

  • A 44-year-old firefighter killed as he tackled 'out of control' fire with colleagues
  • Blaze forced 1,000 people to evacuate and spent the night in hotels or their cars
  • Brits among those evacuated from residential estates in Estepona, Costa del Sol

A devastating wildfire affecting mountains behind the popular Costa del Sol resort of Estepona has killed a firefighter and forced 1,000 people to evacuate their homes. 

Officials confirmed a 44-year-old firefighter was killed on Thursday afternoon as he tried to tackle the 'out-of-control' blaze with colleagues.

Many of the local residents and holidaymakers told to leave their homes spent the night in hotels or in their cars although a small number were put up in a sports pavilion in Estepona which has been prepared to house around 100 people.

A residential estate in Benahavis near Marbella has been evacuated along with two others near Estepona including Forest Hills. Several Brits are among those known to have been told to clear the area.

Local reports say a house and part of another building have been destroyed by flames.

Strong westerly winds are continuing to hamper the effort to bring the fire under control, which is affecting four municipalities near the Costa del Sol beaches popular with British holidaymakers. 

A devastating wildfire affecting mountains behind the popular Costa del Sol resort of Estepona has killed a firefighter and forced 1,000 people to evacuate their homes

A devastating wildfire affecting mountains behind the popular Costa del Sol resort of Estepona has killed a firefighter and forced 1,000 people to evacuate their homes

Many of the local residents and holidaymakers told to leave their homes spent the night in hotels or in their cars after raging wildfires broke out near the Costa del Sol resort Estepona

Many of the local residents and holidaymakers told to leave their homes spent the night in hotels or in their cars after raging wildfires broke out near the Costa del Sol resort Estepona

Officials confirmed a 44-year-old firefighter (not pictured) was killed on Thursday afternoon as he tried to tackle the 'out-of-control' blaze with colleagues

Officials confirmed a 44-year-old firefighter (not pictured) was killed on Thursday afternoon as he tried to tackle the 'out-of-control' blaze with colleagues

The alarm was raised around 9:30 on Wednesday and six hours later level one of a regional emergency forest fire plan was activated in response to the threat to human life and property posed by the blaze.

Major roads including part of the AP-7 motorway running along the Costa del Sol were closed as the operation to contain the wildfire swung into action.

Nearly 9,000 acres of land have already been consumed by fire, making the blaze the most devastating of the last decade in Malaga province.

Confirming the death of the firefighter, identified only by his first name and initials as Carlos M.H., Andalucia's Regional Minister of Agriculture Carmen Crespo said: 'This man has died in an act of service for Andalucians.

'We owe him everything.'

Pictures showed a plume of black smoke drifting from the mountains down into the Mediterranean

Pictures showed a plume of black smoke drifting from the mountains down into the Mediterranean

Smoke and orange light filled the sky over the Costa del Sol resort town of Estepona as wildfires forced an evacuation of the town on Thursday

Smoke and orange light filled the sky over the Costa del Sol resort town of Estepona as wildfires forced an evacuation of the town on Thursday

Firefighters take a break after a colleague died while tackling the 'out-of-control' blaze near Costa del Sol resort Estepona

Firefighters take a break after a colleague died while tackling the 'out-of-control' blaze near Costa del Sol resort Estepona

Footage posted online showed the extent of the wildfires
Video showed the fires raging into the night near the Costa del Sol resort town of Estepona

Footage posted online showed the extent of the wildfires, seen raging into the night near the Costa del Sol resort town of Estepona

Spanish PM Pedro Sanchez added in a tweet, describing the dedication of the firefighters involved in the operation to control the blaze as 'admirable'.

'A hug from my entire government to the family and colleagues of the fireman who has died today while he battled the Sierra Bermeja blaze.'

More than 400 professionals were being deployed late Thursday in Sierra Bermeja to fight the fire.

Seven planes and helicopters were due to join them at first light this morning to assist them from the air.

Satellite pictures showed a plume of black smoke drifting from the mountains down into the Mediterranean.

Major roads including part of the AP-7 motorway running along the Costa del Sol were closed as the operation to contain the wildfire swung into action on Wednesday

Major roads including part of the AP-7 motorway running along the Costa del Sol were closed as the operation to contain the wildfire swung into action on Wednesday

At least 1,000 people were forced to evacuate after a wildfire near Costa del Sol resort town Estepona was deemed 'out-of-control'

At least 1,000 people were forced to evacuate after a wildfire near Costa del Sol resort town Estepona was deemed 'out-of-control'

Many of the local residents and holidaymakers told to leave their homes spent the night in hotels or in their cars

Many of the local residents and holidaymakers told to leave their homes spent the night in hotels or in their cars 

A woman carries her cat as officials evacuate people near the Costa del Sol resort of Estepona

A woman carries her cat as officials evacuate people near the Costa del Sol resort of Estepona

Around 100 residents were put up in a nearby sports hall after they were evacuated from their homes as wildfires threatened the settlements

Around 100 residents were put up in a nearby sports hall after they were evacuated from their homes as wildfires threatened the settlements

Tourists have been warned to stay out of the way of helicopters which may be flying low to gather water from the sea and reservoirs to tackle the fires.

At one critical point soon after the alarm was raised, the flames came within 150ft of a petrol station on the AP-7 motorway near Estepona.

The cause of the fire has yet to be confirmed, although well-placed sources are already pointing to possible arson.

Mrs Crespo, confirming it appeared to have started in two different places in the municipality of Genalguacil, said: 'What's very clear is that the circumstances behind it are very striking.'

A central government spokesman for Malaga, Javier Salas, added: 'The fact the fire started in two different places makes you think it could be deliberate.'

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2021-09-10 09:08:54Z
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Covid: Biden orders employees of big businesses to be vaccinated or face testing - BBC News

US President Joe Biden has announced sweeping new Covid-19 measures that require workers at large companies to be vaccinated or face weekly testing.

The measures also include a vaccine mandate for millions of federal government workers and come as cases in the country are surging.

Hospitals in several states have reached capacity amid the spread of the more transmissible Delta variant.

The new requirements cover about 100 million workers.

"This is not about freedom, or personal choice, it's about protecting yourself and those around you," the president said as he unveiled his plan.

More than 650,000 Americans have died with Covid-19 since last year. Some 80 million people in the US remain unvaccinated.

Covid numbers in the US graph
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Mr Biden announced his plan in a speech at the White House on Thursday.

He said he had directed the US Department of Labor to require all private businesses with 100 or more staff to mandate the jab or request proof of a negative coronavirus test from employees at least once a week.

Nearly 17 million healthcare workers at facilities receiving federal benefits will also face the same requirements, he said.

The plan triggered an immediate backlash among some Republicans, who argued that the government should not play a role in the health decisions of individuals.

South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster said "Biden and the radical Democrats [have] thumbed their noses at the Constitution".

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Analysis box by Anthony Zurcher, North America reporter

The time for sweet-talking, for cajoling Americans to take the Covid-19 vaccine is over. The time for government mandates has arrived.

That was the blunt message Joe Biden delivered to the nation on Thursday afternoon. While many Americans have received at least one jab, the president laid the blame for the continued US health crises squarely at the feet of the 25% of the public who are unvaccinated and the politicians who he said were "actively working to undermine the fight".

Mr Biden said his new vaccine orders were not about freedom or personal choice, but that's exactly how some Americans will view them - as a forced choice between vaccination and continued employment. And while the mandates will increase the number of vaccinated Americans, it will also enflame a debate already rife with political tension.

In July, Mr Biden gave an optimistic speech about how Americans soon would be declaring their "independence" from the virus. Because of the Delta variant, that independence day has failed to arrive. This, in turn, has taken a toll on the US economy and public perceptions of how the president is handling the pandemic. This is Mr Biden's bid to use government muscle to turn the tide.

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Biden's new Covid plan

The president's plan uses the full force of his executive power to mandate the jab for unvaccinated Americans.

Some of his initiatives address common concerns of Americans who have yet to get the vaccine - such as not wanting to miss work to get the jab or recover from side effects.

The president said that requirements that large businesses provide paid time off for workers to get vaccinated will be unveiled in the coming weeks by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Osha).

Businesses that do not comply with the new rules may face thousands of dollars in fines per violation.

A separate federal mandate, which the White House says will impact some 2.5 million government workers, supersedes Mr Biden's earlier order that permitted government employees to undergo regular testing if they did not wish to be vaccinated. Now workers that refuse the jab may be fired.

Overall, the rule now requires that about two-thirds of all US workers be vaccinated.

Thousands of people - largely unvaccinated - are dying every week in the US with Covid-19.

The situation has dealt a blow to Mr Biden's hopes that a successful pandemic response would bolster support for the Democratic president.

Other rules that Mr Biden directed include:

  • A doubling of fines for passengers on planes who refuse to wear a mask
  • Invoking the Defense Production Act to accelerate the creation of rapid at-home testing kits
  • Deploying healthcare workers to areas experiencing surges in cases
  • Increasing the weekly pace of shipments of free monoclonal antibody treatment to hospitals

The state of Covid and vaccines in the US

Despite the Delta-fuelled surge, deaths are still down in most places from the levels seen last winter. However, some regions with relatively low jab rates have recently recorded record high infection rates.

"The path ahead, even with the Delta variant, is not nearly as bad as last winter," Mr Biden said in Thursday's address.

How the US vaccination rollout compares graph

"What makes it incredibly frustrating is that a distinct minority of Americans are keeping us from turning the corner."

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 64% of American adults are fully vaccinated. More than 75% have received their first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine.

Separately on Thursday, education officials in Los Angeles voted to require students aged 12 and above to be vaccinated in order to attend school by January - unless they have a medical or other exemption.

The measure is likely to be challenged in the courts.

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2021-09-10 06:52:51Z
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Kamis, 09 September 2021

Covid: Biden requires employees of big businesses to be vaccinated or face testing - BBC News

President Joe Biden has announced sweeping federal Covid measures that require workers at large companies to be vaccinated or face weekly testing.

The new measures - which also include a vaccine mandate for millions of federal workers - come as the president is under fire to combat a Covid surge.

Covid has killed 650,000 Americans and hospitals nationwide are at capacity.

Mr Biden had promised a "summer of freedom" from the virus. But the Delta variant has instead run rampant.

In an address made from the White House on Thursday, Mr Biden directed the Department of Labor to direct all private businesses with 100 or more workers to be vaccinated or otherwise provide proof of a negative Covid test at least once a week. The order will affect around 80m workers.

"This is not about freedom, or personal choice, it's about protecting yourself and those around you," he said as he unveiled the six-point plan.

Nearly 17m other healthcare workers at facilities receiving federal benefits will also face the same requirements, he said.

Requirements that large businesses provide paid time off for workers to get vaccinated will also be unveiled in the coming weeks by the Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Osha).

Businesses that do not comply with the new rules may face thousands of dollars in fines per violation.

Covid numbers in the US graph

A separate federal mandate, which the White House says will impact 2.5m government workers, supersedes Mr Biden's earlier order that permitted government employees to undergo regular testing if they did not wish to be vaccinated. Now workers that refuse the jab may be fired.

Overall, the rule now requires that around two-thirds of all US workers be vaccinated.

Thousands of mostly unvaccinated Americans are still dying every week and approximately 80m are still unvaccinated, dealing a blow to Mr Biden's hope that a successful pandemic response would engender faith in the Democratic president.

But despite the Delta-caused surge raging in states with low jab rates, deaths are still down in most places from their high last winter.

"The path ahead, even with the Delta variant, is not nearly as bad as last winter," Mr Biden said in Thursday's remarks.

"What it makes it incredibly frustrating is that a distinct minority of Americans are keeping us from turning the corner."

Analysis box by Anthony Zurcher, North America reporter

The time for sweet-talking, for cajoling Americans to take the Covid-19 vaccine is over. The time for government mandates has arrived.

That was the blunt message Joe Biden delivered to the nation on Thursday afternoon. While many Americans have received at least one jab, the president laid the blame for the continued US health crises squarely at the feet of the 25% of the public who are unvaccinated and the politicians who he said are "actively working to undermine the fight".

Biden said his new vaccine orders were not about freedom or personal choice, but that's exactly how some Americans will view them - as a forced choice between vaccination and continued employment. And while the mandates will increase the number of vaccinated Americans, it will also enflame a debate already rife with political tension.

In July, Biden gave an optimistic speech about how Americans soon would be declaring their "independence" from the virus. Because of the Delta variant, that independence day has failed to arrive. This, in turn, has taken a toll on the US economy and public perceptions of how Biden is handling the pandemic. This is Biden's bid to use government muscle to turn the tide.

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Biden's new Covid plan

Other rules that Mr Biden directed include:

  • A doubling of fines for passengers on planes who refuse to wear a mask
  • Invoking the Defense Production Act to speed the creation of fast at-home testing kits
  • Deploying healthcare workers to areas experiencing surges
  • Increasing the weekly pace of shipments of free monoclonal antibody treatment to hospitals

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2021-09-09 21:55:05Z
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Euro crisis worse than Brexit! Angela Merkel in stunning confession before leaving power - Daily Express

Angela Merkel became Chancellor in November 2005, maintaining the country's position at the European Union's biggest economy and overseeing key policy decisions. She will step down from her position later this month. One of these key events was Brexit. Years of often extremely bitter wrangling over a number of issues relating to Britain's departure from the EU ensued, some of which the two sides are still arguing on to this day.

Brexit is seen as a bitter blow to the EU, with campaigners from several other member states, including France, Italy and the Netherlands, pushing for their respective countries to follow Britain out of the bloc in protest at being shackled to the EU's rules.

But when asked during an open and frank panel discussion in Dusseldorf what her hardest moment has been, Mrs Merkel opted for the devastating Eurozone crisis that threatened to bring the EU to its knees.

In 2009, EU member states Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Spain, and Cyprus found themselves unable to repay or refinance their government debt or to bail out over-indebted banks under their national supervision.

They consequently needed help from third parties like other eurozone countries, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The crisis hit Greece the hardest, with the country's Government admitting early on its budget deficits were far higher than initially thought, and in 2010, Greece called for urgent external help received a huge EU-IMF bailout.

Eurozone members introduced a series of support measures throughout the course of that year, while the ECB lowered interest rates and provided cheap loans of more than 1trillion to maintain money flows between European banks.

In November 2010, Ireland received an EU-IMF bailout, followed by Portugal six months later in May 2011. Just two months earlier, Greece received its second huge bailout, while both Spain and Cyprus received rescue packages in June 2012.

Elsewhere during the revealing panel discussion, Mrs Merkel said one of her most satisfying moments in power was the adoption of the Lisbon Treaty, which was signed by EU member states in December 2007 and came into force two years later in 2009.

Predominantly it amended the Maastricht Treaty, implementing a number of political changes aimed at providing a much stronger foundation for the EU.

The German Chancellor also revealed one of her best moments was when the heads of state and government of the EU finally agreed to a huge coronavirus rescue package following months of bitter arguments.

When asked if she was leaving office with a clear conscience, Mrs Merkel replied with a very clear "yes", adding to the applause from the audience: “I think I have made my contribution.”

Very little is known about what the German Chancellor will now fill her time with following endless days and long hours during her more than 30 years in politics.

When asked what her future now holds, Mrs Merkel replied: "Do I want to write? Do I want to do talks?

"Do I want to hike? Do I want to be at home? Do I want to travel the world?

"For this, I have decided I will not do anything for the time being and wait a minute to see what comes next. I think that's very fascinating."

Additional reporting by Monika Pallenberg.

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2021-09-09 15:59:05Z
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Taliban accused of torturing journalists for covering protests - Al Jazeera English

Kabul, Afghanistan – Taliban fighters have been accused of beating and detaining journalists for covering protests in the Afghan capital Kabul, raising questions over the group’s promises on media freedom.

Two reporters for the Etilaatroz newspaper – Taqi Daryabi and Nematullah Naqdi – were detained by the Taliban while covering a women’s protest in the west of Kabul on Wednesday morning.

Two other journalists from the newspaper – Aber Shaygan and Lutfali Sultani – rushed to the police station along with the newspaper editor, Kadhim Karimi, to inquire about the whereabouts of their colleagues.

But the moment they reached the police station, they say, Taliban fighters pushed and slapped them and confiscated all their belongings, including mobile phones.

“Karimi barely finished his sentence, when one of the Taliban slapped him and told him to get lost,” Shaygan told Al Jazeera, adding that as soon as they introduced themselves as journalists, the Taliban treated them with disdain.

Torture in holding cell

The three men were taken into a small holding cell with 15 people in it, two of whom were reporters with Reuters and Turkey’s Anadolu Agency, Shaygan said.

It was while they were in holding that the three heard reports of the disturbing abuse suffered by Daryabi, 22, and Naqdi, 28, who were being held in separate rooms.

“We could hear their screams and cries through the walls,” the cellmates said of the piercing cries. “The cellmates had even heard the sounds of women crying from pain.”

Naqdi, a video journalist, left and Taqi Daryabi, video editor undress to show their wounds sustained after Taliban fighters tortured and beat them while in custody [Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times]

Pictures posted by the newspaper online filled in the rest of the story. They showed clear physical evidence of the floggings and beatings with cables both men were subject to. Daryabi’s lower back, upper legs, and face were covered with deep red lesions. Naqdi’s left arm, upper back, upper legs, and face were also covered in red welts.

“They were beaten so bad, they couldn’t walk. They were hit with guns, they were kicked, they were whipped with cables, they were slapped,” Shaygan said.

He said the violence was so brutal that Naqdi and Daryabi had lost consciousness from the pain.

But it was not just journalists who seemed to meet this fate. Shaygan said a male protester was escorted into their cell by Taliban guards, clearly looking as if he too had been abused.

“He could barely walk, one of the other cellmates had to get up and help him in,” said Shaygan.

Stern warning

Though all five men were released after several hours in detention, Shaygan said they were issued a stern warning from a Taliban official before leaving: “What these protesters were doing is illegal and by covering such things, you all broke the law. We will let you go this time, but next time you won’t be let out so easily.”

At the time, protests were not outlawed but, within hours, the Taliban issued a decree saying any protests, along with their slogans, must be approved 24 hours prior by the Ministry of Justice.

A member of the Taliban forces points his gun at protesters, as Afghan demonstrators shout slogans during an anti-Pakistan protest near the Pakistan embassy in Kabul [Reuters]

Those claims of illegality by the official struck Shaygan and his colleagues as going directly against statements the Taliban have made about freedom of the press in their “Islamic Emirate”.

At an August 17 press conference, the group’s then-spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said: “Private media can continue to be free and independent; they can continue their activities … Impartiality of the media is very important. They can critique our work so that we can improve.”

Mujahid made similar claims at a private gathering of journalists working for foreign media late last month. At the time, Mujahid encouraged journalists to be transparent and report the realities of life in a Taliban-run Afghanistan.

But in the ensuing weeks, Afghan social media has been full of videos and pictures showing the group’s armed fighters trying to keep journalists from doing their job. During that time, the Taliban has repeatedly been accused of abuses against journalists.

These allegations range from the use of intimidation, physical violence, destruction and confiscation of property and detention of media workers.

Al Jazeera reached out to the Taliban for comment but it did not receive a response by the time of publication.

Amnesty decries reports of violence against the press

Amnesty International has decried the reports of violence and intimidation against the press.

“Journalists must also be permitted to report on the protests without fear of violence… The international community must use all leverage to demand that these basic rights are protected,” the rights group said in reaction to the Taliban’s alleged treatment of media workers during recent demonstrations.

Shaygan has been working with Etilaatroz, which is renowned for its investigative reporting, for four years. He says recent weeks have shown that the Taliban have “two faces,” one the leadership projects to the outside world and the one the Afghan people face on a daily basis on the streets.

I have no interest in working as a journalist in my country any more. My profession is dead there

Sulan Faizy, Afghan journalist based in Turkey

“On TV and at press conferences, their leaders are very mannered and speak of freedoms, but their fighters on the street act however they want,” Shaygan says that contrast is what makes reporting in a Taliban-run Afghanistan so difficult, “You never know what mood they’ll be in.”

Shaygan and his colleagues were surprised to find that other journalists who had been detained that day were in possession of letters from Mujahid that granted them “the right to operate” at virtually any location as journalists. This, he said, was further proof of the disconnect between the leadership and the foot soldiers of the Taliban.

“They don’t want us to operate freely, they just want media to parrot their propaganda to the world.”

Adding to his frustration and confusion is the fact that he and his colleagues were merely inquiring about the detention of their co-workers at the time of their detention and abuse, “We just wanted to find out what happened to our friends.”

Even though the media has continued to operate since the Taliban took over the country, journalists say their jobs have become increasingly difficult over the last three weeks.

The Taliban has not yet placed any outright restrictions on the media, but journalists speaking to Al Jazeera all said they fear the days ahead, especially now that the Taliban have named their caretaker cabinet.

Sulan Faizy, a journalist who worked with international media and is currently in Turkey with his family, said he has little hope for the future of the press in Afghanistan.

“I have no interest in working as a journalist in my country any more. My profession is dead there,” said the 37-year-old said.

“I’ve lived under the Taliban twice. I know what’s to come next for Afghans living under them. I will find another way to support my family,” he said.

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2021-09-09 13:10:15Z
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