Sabtu, 30 Oktober 2021

COP26: Boris Johnson warns of 'very difficult' climate change fight but says 'whole of humanity is in the ring' - Sky News

Boris Johnson has warned that success in the fight to tackle global warming "is going to very difficult" but "the whole of humanity is in the ring."

Imploring world leaders to act as the G20 summit begins in Rome on Saturday, the prime minister told Sky News' Beth Rigby there is "a chance, if everybody puts their minds to it" that an agreement on climate change can be achieved.

But, acknowledging the scale of the challenge ahead, the PM added that global temperature rises will not be stopped at the two-week long COP26 climate summit which kicks off in Glasgow on Sunday.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his wife Carrie arrive at Rome's Fiumicino Airport ahead of the G20 summit in Rome, Italy. Picture date: Sunday October 31, 2021.
Image: The PM and his wife Carrie Johnson arrived in Rome ahead of the G20 summit on Friday evening

The PM's comments come a day after he told journalists en route to the first of the global gatherings in Rome that "team world" was "5-1" down at half-time in the battle to save the planet.

Mr Johnson also stressed the alternative to securing change was apocalyptic and could consign future generations to shortages of food, conflict and mass migrations, all caused by global warming.

Speaking to reporters at the Colosseum on Saturday morning, the PM once more acknowledged that "the pressure is huge".

Asked if he is fighting a losing battle, the PM told Sky News: "Well, the whole of humanity is in the ring. And the foes of humanity are apathy and political indifference and lack of will and people's excessive caution about what they can achieve. Those are the foes that we all collectively face.

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"And actually, I think that we can still do it. I think there is a chance, if everybody puts their minds to it, that we can get an agreement that will allow us to restrain the growth in temperatures.

"We are not going to stop climate change… we are certainly not going to stop it at COP next week."

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Sir David Attenborough said he 'hopes and prays' that nations come together at COP26 and take action

Mr Johnson said the odds of success remain "about the same" as they were when he made his football analogy to reporters on Friday, noting that the task ahead is "going to be very difficult".

"Let's see where we get to and the pressure is huge - but what people need to do is see the scale of the risk," the PM said, referencing the rise and fall of the Roman Empire.

Mr Johnson acknowledged that China has made "a huge amount of progress in some areas" but warned that "what we want to see is more progress from lots of countries".

"We can fix it, but the lesson of history is that things can go badly wrong and stay wrong for a long time," the PM continued.

With 80% of all global emissions coming from the G20 group of industrialised countries, progress this week in Rome is seen as critical to the success of COP26, the annual climate summit in Glasgow which is meant to put in place national commitments from individual countries to hit emission targets of 2% and below by 2050.

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UN Secretary General and climate activists criticise world leaders over their lack of action on climate change

Earlier this month, Alok Sharma, the UK's COP president, challenged China, India and Saudi Arabia to deliver on G20 promises made months ago and come up with better formal targets in an interview with the Financial Times.

On Friday, the PM stressed progress was being made, with 17 nations of the G20 now committing to net-zero by 2050.

But two of the top three of the world's largest emitters - China and India - have so far failed to commit to getting to net-zero by 2050.

Some have raised concerns that while the UK is pledging to do its bit in the fight against climate change, the country accounts for just 1% of global emissions.

And of the three biggest emitters - China, the US and India - only the US has made similar promises.

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President Modi of India has resisted formal targets while there are concerns that President Xi of China is not going far enough.

China has committed to peak carbon emissions before 2030 and net-zero by 2060, but has indicated it is both unable and unwilling to move further.

US special envoy on climate change John Kerry has said the world will miss its global emissions targets unless this happens.

The PM said he spoke to President Xi on Friday and pushed the Chinese leader to bring down the peak in emissions to 2025 and to phase out coal.

"I told President Xi, when I first went to Beijing as Mayor of London, we had 40% of our energy come from coal. It is now less than 1%," Mr Johnson told Beth Rigby.

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Ahead of COP26, Sky News science correspondent Thomas Moore takes a look at what progress we have made in recent years

This year's UN Climate Change Conference, better known as COP26, kicks off this weekend and will see more than 190 countries come together in Glasgow to discuss the climate crisis.

This year's summit is particularly important as it will be the first time the parties will review the most up-to-date plans for how they will limit global warming to 2C but ideally 1.5C, a goal set under the Paris Agreement at COP21.

Watch the Daily Climate Show at 6.30pm Monday to Friday on Sky News, the Sky News website and app, on YouTube and Twitter.

The show investigates how global warming is changing our landscape and highlights solutions to the crisis.

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2021-10-30 10:02:46Z
CBMijgFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9jb3AyNi1ib3Jpcy1qb2huc29uLXdhcm5zLW9mLXZlcnktZGlmZmljdWx0LWNsaW1hdGUtY2hhbmdlLWZpZ2h0LWJ1dC1zYXlzLXdob2xlLW9mLWh1bWFuaXR5LWlzLWluLXRoZS1yaW5nLTEyNDU0Nzkz0gGSAWh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9jb3AyNi1ib3Jpcy1qb2huc29uLXdhcm5zLW9mLXZlcnktZGlmZmljdWx0LWNsaW1hdGUtY2hhbmdlLWZpZ2h0LWJ1dC1zYXlzLXdob2xlLW9mLWh1bWFuaXR5LWlzLWluLXRoZS1yaW5nLTEyNDU0Nzkz

Tonga records first coronavirus case since start of pandemic - BBC News

Beach in Tonga
Getty Images

Tongans have been rushing to vaccinate themselves against coronavirus after the Pacific island nation confirmed its first case on Friday.

The infection was detected in a fully vaccinated person who had arrived on a repatriation flight from New Zealand.

Tonga's Prime Minister Pohiva Tu'i'onetoa warned that residents on the main island of Tongatapu face a possible lockdown next week.

Tonga was one of the last countries not to have reported Covid infections.

Over 100,000 people live on the island nation, located north-west of New Zealand.

Only a third of Tonga's population have been fully vaccinated. But national immunisation co-ordinator Afu Tei told AFP news agency that thousands had been turning up at vaccination centres to receive their jabs.

The infected individual was among 215 people on a repatriation flight from Christchurch, New Zealand. Others onboard included members of Tonga's Olympic team who had been stranded in the city since the Tokyo Olympics.

New Zealand's health ministry said that the individual had tested negative before leaving the country.

But authorities in Tonga said a positive reading was recorded after a routine test on Thursday, done while in compulsory managed isolation.

Siale Akau'ola, chief executive of Tonga's health ministry, told reporters that the infected Tongan had received a second dose of the vaccine in mid-October, and that authorities were satisfied the person would not become seriously ill.

Prime Minister Tu'i'onetoa said he had been advised against enforcing an immediate lockdown "because the virus will take more than three days to develop in someone who catches it before they become contagious".

"We should use this time to get ready in case more people are confirmed they have the virus," he added.

Since the start of the pandemic, more than 246 million coronavirus cases have been reported worldwide, and nearly 5 million Covid-related deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

The virus has yet to spread to some island nations in the Pacific like Tuvalu.

Other countries like North Korea and Turkmenistan have yet to report any cases, but experts agree that the virus may be present, even if it is not officially confirmed.

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2021-10-30 09:42:55Z
CBMiLmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLWFzaWEtNTkxMDE1ODTSATJodHRwczovL3d3dy5iYmMuY28udWsvbmV3cy93b3JsZC1hc2lhLTU5MTAxNTg0LmFtcA

Covid-19 origins may never be known, US intelligence agencies say - BBC News

A man wears a mask while walking in the street on 22 January 2020 in Wuhan
Getty Images

US intelligence agencies say they may never be able to identify the origins of Covid-19, but they have concluded it was not created as a biological weapon.

In an updated assessment of where the virus began, the Office of the US Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) said an animal-to-human transmission and a lab leak were both plausible hypotheses for how it spread.

But there was not enough information to reach a definitive conclusion.

China has criticised the report.

The findings were published in a declassified report which is an update of a 90-day review that President Joe Biden's administration released in August.

It said the intelligence community remains divided on the most likely origin of the virus. Four agencies assessed with "low confidence" it had originated with an infected animal or a related virus.

But one agency said it had "moderate confidence" that the first human infection most likely was the result of a laboratory accident, probably involving experimentation or animal handling by the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The report also said Chinese officials were unaware of the existence of the virus before the initial outbreak of Covid-19 in the city of Wuhan, in late 2019. But it said China was continuing to hinder the global investigation and to resist sharing information.

Chinese authorities linked early Covid-19 cases to a seafood market in Wuhan, leading scientists to theorise that the virus first passed to humans from animals.

But earlier this year, US media reports suggested growing evidence the virus could instead have emerged from the Wuhab laboratory, perhaps through an accidental leak.

In May, President Biden ordered intelligence officials to investigate the virus's origins, including the lab leak theory, which is rejected by China.

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Responding to the intelligence report, the Chinese embassy in Washington said in a statement to Reuters news agency: "The US moves of relying on its intelligence apparatus instead of scientists to trace the origins of Covid-19 is a complete political farce.

"We have been supporting science-based efforts on origins tracing, and will continue to stay actively engaged. That said, we firmly oppose attempts to politicise this issue."

Around 240 million cases of Covid-19 have been confirmed around the world, with more than 4.9 million deaths.

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2021-10-30 03:47:01Z
CBMiM2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLXVzLWNhbmFkYS01OTEwMDExNNIBN2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLXVzLWNhbmFkYS01OTEwMDExNC5hbXA

G20 live: World leaders gather in Rome for summit ahead of COP26 in Glasgow - as campaigners issue COVID-19 warning - Sky News

Tone set by world leaders in Rome will indicate whether climate summit has a chance of success

Analysis by Hannah Thomas-Peter, climate change correspondent

World leaders are heading to Rome for the G20 with some thorny problems to sort out, knowing that what they agree on - or not - will set the tone for COP26 in Glasgow.

Coal is a big problem.

The eventual phase-out of financing overseas coal was all but assured when China, the world's biggest investor in foreign oil projects, announced that it would end the practice.

But getting China, India, Russia and Australia to agree to a timeline phasing out domestic production of the highly polluting fossil fuel is a different matter.

The last time G20 representatives met in Naples, there was an embarrassing lack of progress on the issue.

Western diplomats and negotiators tell me that nations are currently "parked" on the Naples agreement and that heels are well dug in on coal.

One highly placed source said: "It's really going to be tough, I think. Not optimistic."

Another government adviser suggested that the Rome meeting would have to settle for "sending a strong signal to the world that coal is over".

I think they knew even as they were saying it that this sounded like a pretty vague, even weak, backup plan.

Still, hope remains that something more can be done to set a positive tone for COP26 in Glasgow.

There will be a big push to agree on ending fossil fuel subsidies, on the absolute importance of limiting warming to 1.5C, and perhaps even real effort to include a reference to the importance of net-zero emissions by 2050 in the final communique.

The 2050 bit isn't actually an agreed G20 position, and rather hangs in the balance in this instance because China's deadline is 2060, and India won't set one at all.

The G20 nations are collectively responsible for 80% of the world's emissions, and so both the tone and the content of the meeting in Rome will be the world's clearest indication yet of whether Glasgow stands a chance, or is doomed to fall short.

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2021-10-30 07:28:41Z
CBMilAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9nMjAtbGl2ZS13b3JsZC1sZWFkZXJzLWdhdGhlci1pbi1yb21lLWZvci1zdW1taXQtYWhlYWQtb2YtY29wMjYtaW4tZ2xhc2dvdy1hcy1jYW1wYWlnbmVycy1pc3N1ZS1jb3ZpZC0xOS13YXJuaW5nLTEyNDU0Nzc00gEA

Jumat, 29 Oktober 2021

We opened our baby daughter’s coffin to find a bag of UNDERWEAR instead of her body in shocking blunder... - The Sun

TWO grieving parents were left horrified after they discovered a bag of underwear inside their baby daughter's coffin instead of her body.

The shocking blunder took place in the town of Turvo in Santa Catarina, Brazil earlier this week and the funeral home has been accused of gross incompetence.

The parents were left in shock when they removed the lid from their baby daughter's coffin
The parents were left in shock when they removed the lid from their baby daughter's coffin
They found a plastic bag containing underwear and a pair of black trousers
They found a plastic bag containing underwear and a pair of black trousersCredit: CEN

The coffin was supposed to contain the body of Emanuelle Costa Rosa who died after being born prematurely.

But her mourning parents were shocked to find a bag containing a pair of black trousers and underwear in the baby's coffin when they removed the lid during the wake, reports claim.

The Instituto Virmond – Hospital Santa Tereza in the city of Guarapuava has blamed the funeral home.

According to Portal RSN the COO of the hospital Michel Cunha said: "The body was prepared and identified.

"The funeral home was meant to take it to the wake. But the undertaker, upon entering the morgue, came across a transparent bag with black clothes and no identification.

"And he convinced himself it was the baby and took it to the town as if it were the baby.

"Meanwhile, the child remained in the morgue, wrapped in raffia and identified with tags."

He added: "We only found out about the funeral home's mistake through social media and the news. We did a quick analysis and followed all the hospital protocols, but the funeral home committed a human error.

"The baby weighed 860 grams (1.9 lbs), far from what a pair of trousers and underwear would weigh."

The clothes reportedly belonged to another deceased person in the morgue.

The girl's burial had to be postponed by a day, and it took place on Tuesday, October 26.

The parents discovered the shocking blunder during the wake
The parents discovered the shocking blunder during the wakeCredit: CEN

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2021-10-29 16:50:00Z
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Kamis, 28 Oktober 2021

Joe Biden arrives in Rome for meeting with Pope Francis ahead of G20 and COP26 - Sky News

Two weeks of global leaders meeting to save the world begin with a one-on-one between the leader of the planet's biggest religious denomination and its most powerful superpower.

US President Joe Biden flies into Rome for an audience with the Pope ahead of the G20 summit of world leaders and after that the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow.

The White House says the two men will discuss tackling poverty, COVID-19 and climate change, sharing a common "respect for fundamental human dignity".

President Joe Biden and the first lady, Jill Biden left for Italy on 28 October
Image: President Biden and the first lady, Jill Biden, left for Rome on Thursday

Mr Biden, a regular church-going Catholic, and the leader of his religion have far more in common than his predecessor Donald Trump had with the pontiff who criticised him during his term in office.

It will be a chance for the leader of the free world to set the tone for a fortnight that many believe is crucial for the future of mankind and the planet we live on.

There are signs though of disharmony between world leaders on the crucial issues of climate and COVID-19.

The US president will also meet with his Italian and French counterparts. It will be an early chance to thaw relations with French leader Emmanuel Macron after a diplomatic bust-up over the new AUKUS security pact involving the US, Britain and Australia.

More on Cop26

His main challenge during the G20 will be convincing allies of his claim that "America is back".

Pope Francis in Bratislava
Image: Pope Francis is expected to meet Joe Biden at the Vatican today

He arrives without having secured a deal in Congress for his climate and economic agenda at home and there are concerns that America acted first not in concert with its allies on Afghanistan.

Of far more interest to the rest of us are the chances of the G20 setting the stage for a successful COP26 climate change summit.

Reports claim divisions in the G20 over the two key aims of phasing out coal and keeping temperature rises to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.

Joe and Jill Biden landed in Rome, at the start of a crunch month in Europe. Pic AP
Image: Joe and Jill Biden landed in Rome, at the start of a crunch week in Europe. Pic AP

If the world's richest nations cannot agree on either, persuading struggling poorer nations to do so will be extremely challenging next week.

Russia, China, Saudi Arabia and India are reportedly holding out against efforts to phase out coal use. America hasn't seemed that enthusiastic either.

China has disappointed hopes it would announce new pledges on carbon emissions ahead of COP26 and its position on coal could be disastrous for global warming.

Away from the all-important issue of climate change, the G20 must prove its worth on a range of geopolitical issues.

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US President Joe Biden left for Europe after pledging trillions of dollars to climate change but facing push-back from parts of America, including in rural West Virginia

Some leaders are choosing to stay away and their members remain divided on key issues.

The organisation played a key role in saving the world from financial meltdown earlier this century. Hopes it can do the same for the planet that are looking in increasing jeopardy.

Subscribe to ClimateCast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or Spreaker.

Watch the Daily Climate Show at 6.30pm Monday to Friday on Sky News, the Sky News website and app, on YouTube and Twitter.

The show investigates how global warming is changing our landscape and highlights solutions to the crisis.

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2021-10-29 00:49:11Z
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Andrew Cuomo: Ex-NY governor accused of groping in court filing - BBC News

Mr Cuomo, pictured with his daughter on the day of his resignation in August
Getty Images

A criminal complaint accusing former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo of groping has been filed in a court.

The complaint, filed in the state capital Albany on Thursday, accuses Mr Cuomo of groping a woman under her blouse at the governor's mansion.

A lawyer for Mr Cuomo - who resigned in August - denied the charge, dismissing it as politically motivated.

A misdemeanour count of unwanted touching can carry a sentence of one year in prison.

Mr Cuomo stepped down after the New York state attorney general found in an investigation that he had harassed 11 female employees.

The former governor denied sexual misconduct, but apologised for ever making any woman feel uncomfortable.

According to CBS News, the BBC's partner in the US, Mr Cuomo has been issued with a criminal summons to appear in court on 17 November.

The filing states that Mr Cuomo did "intentionally, and for no legitimate purpose, forcibly place his hand under the blouse shirt of the victim and onto her intimate body part".

It states that he did this "for the purposes of degrading and gratifying his sexual desires, all contrary to the provisions of the statute".

The complaint does not name the victim, but says the alleged abuse occurred at the governor's executive mansion in Albany on 7 December 2020.

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Mr Cuomo's lawyer, Rita Glavin, told CBS that her client denies the charges, and accused the local sheriff of an "improper" motive.

"This is not professional law enforcement; this is politics," she said.

The charge comes more than two months after a former aide to Mr Cuomo, Brittany Commisso, filed a complaint with the county sheriff, accusing the governor of touching her breast last year.

Mr Cuomo has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing towards Ms Commisso, who is a former executive assistant to the governor.

New York Attorney General Letitia James, who investigated Mr Cuomo and is now herself tipped as a candidate for governor, tweeted: "The criminal charges against Mr Cuomo for forcible touching further validate the findings in our report."

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2021-10-29 01:26:05Z
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