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- Biden calls for new era in US foreign policy in defensive Afghanistan speech
- Up to half of world’s wild tree species could be at risk of extinction
- Air pollution is slashing years off the lives of billions, report finds
- Britney Spears’ court filing claims father seeking $2m before stepping down as conservator
- Hong Kong democracy activists jailed for illegal assembly in 2019 protests
- Shop prices rise amid driver shortages and Brexit red tape
- Capitol riot inquiry to investigate whether Trump’s White House was involved in attack
- Concern grows for global coffee supply amid Vietnam lockdown
- Spanish hotel booking app to show working conditions of staff
- Outrage after Ivory Coast TV presenter asks guest to simulate rape
- Coronavirus live news: WHO monitoring new Mu variant; stark Covid divides could shape Europe for generations – study
- WHO monitoring new coronavirus variant named Mu
- How contagious is the Delta variant of Covid-19? See how coronavirus can spread through a population, and how countries flatten the curve
- The chronic stress survival guide: how to live with the anxiety and grief you can’t escape
- ‘A horn blew when human remains were found’: Wim Wenders’ six hours in the hell of Ground Zero
- ‘I’ve never said we should plant a trillion trees’: what ecopreneur Thomas Crowther did next
- Four Thousand Weeks by Oliver Burkeman review – a brief treatise on time
- A moment that changed me: the death of my father, a coat of red nail varnish – and coming out to my family
- Unstoppable movement: how New Zealand’s Māori are reclaiming land with occupations
- London skyscraper plans threaten UK’s oldest synagogue
- The Champion of Auschwitz review – Polish boxer fights to live in sturdy drama
- Afghanistan’s neighbours offered millions in aid to harbour refugees
- Lesotho murder rate ranked sixth worst in world as judicial system breaks down
- Before and after Hurricane Ida – in pictures
- Australia politics live news update: Victoria lockdown restrictions to ease in September; NSW records 1,116 Covid cases, four deaths; ACT 23 cases
- Make historic campaign to ban leaded petrol ‘blueprint to phase out coal’, says UN
- Biden sets himself apart by placing Afghanistan blame at predecessors’ feet
- Does the fall of Kabul increase the terror threat to the west?
- Taliban inspect destroyed US planes after last US troops withdraw – video
- NSW Covid-19 update: 1,116 new cases as premier says she 'can't recall' worst case modelling – video
- US must quit 'nation building': Biden defends Afghanistan withdrawal – video
- Empty beaches and eerie skies as Caldor fire looms over Lake Tahoe – in pictures
- Geronimo’s owner says UK government 'planned to murder' alpaca – video
- Hurricane Ida: aerial footage shows flooding and destruction in Louisiana – video
Biden calls for new era in US foreign policy in defensive Afghanistan speech Posted: 31 Aug 2021 08:14 PM PDT President says he takes responsibility for withdrawal but argues others must also shoulder blame Joe Biden has said he takes responsibility for the bloody, often chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan and said it should mark a new era in US foreign policy, relying less on military muscle. Addressing the nation from the White House 24 hours after the last US soldier left Kabul, Biden sought to confront his critics about the handling of the withdrawal. He celebrated the evacuation of 124,000 civilians in the 17 days following the fall of the Afghan capital and said it was time to "turn the page" on the US role abroad, pointing to a less interventionist future. Continue reading... |
Up to half of world’s wild tree species could be at risk of extinction Posted: 31 Aug 2021 04:01 PM PDT Global study calls for urgent action to prevent ecosystem collapse, with farming the biggest cause of die-off Between a third and half of the world's wild tree species are threatened with extinction, posing a risk of wider ecosystem collapse, the most comprehensive global stocktake to date warns. Forest clearance for farming is by far the biggest cause of the die-off, according to the State of the World's Trees report, which was released on Wednesday along with a call for urgent action to reverse the decline. Continue reading... |
Air pollution is slashing years off the lives of billions, report finds Posted: 31 Aug 2021 09:00 PM PDT Dirty air is a far greater killer than smoking, car crashes or HIV/Aids, with coal burning the leading cause Air pollution is cutting short the lives of billions of people by up to six years, according to a new report, making it a far greater killer than smoking, car crashes or HIV/Aids. Coal burning is the principal culprit, the researchers said, and India is worst affected, with the average citizen dying six years early. China has slashed air pollution in the last seven years, but dirty air is still cutting 2.6 years from its people's lifespan. Continue reading... |
Britney Spears’ court filing claims father seeking $2m before stepping down as conservator Posted: 31 Aug 2021 07:41 PM PDT In newly filed court documents, Britney Spears' attorney likens the move to 'extortion' Britney Spears' new attorney has accused her father of trying to get about $2m in payments before stepping down from the conservatorship that controls her life and money, a move likened to extortion in a court filing. The document filed by lawyer Mathew Rosengart on Tuesday argues the upcoming scheduled accounting of the conservatorship, which Jamie Spears says he wants completed before he steps down, will mean significant payments for him. Continue reading... |
Hong Kong democracy activists jailed for illegal assembly in 2019 protests Posted: 31 Aug 2021 10:51 PM PDT The activists had pleaded guilty to charges related to their role in protests triggered by Beijing's tightening control over Hong Kong Seven Hong Kong democracy activists were sentenced to up to 16 months in jail for their role in an unauthorised assembly at the height of anti-government protests in 2019. They had pleaded guilty to charges, including organising and inciting others to take part in the illegal assembly on 20 October 2019, when tens of thousands took to the streets and police fired teargas and water cannon to disperse them. Continue reading... |
Shop prices rise amid driver shortages and Brexit red tape Posted: 31 Aug 2021 10:01 PM PDT Retail data shows 0.4% month-on-month increase in August, with 0.6% rise in non-food UK shop prices rose last month, according to the latest data from the British Retail Consortium, in a sign that driver shortages and the costs of Brexit-induced red tape are beginning to hit household budgets. The latest figures from the BRC and research group NielsenIQ reveal a 0.4% month-on-month rise in August. This was driven by a 0.6% rise in non-food prices, including a sharp increase in the cost of electrical goods caused by shortages of micro-chips and shipping problems. Continue reading... |
Capitol riot inquiry to investigate whether Trump’s White House was involved in attack Posted: 31 Aug 2021 11:00 PM PDT The committee has issued sweeping requests for Trump executive branch records related to the insurrection Congressman Bennie Thompson, chair of the House select committee investigating the Capitol attack, is preparing an expanded inquiry into Donald Trump that will scrutinize whether the White House helped plan or had advance knowledge of the insurrection. The move amounts to an escalation for the committee as they embark on an inquiry into the events around the 6 January assault that could ensnare the former US president and some top allies in the White House and on Capitol Hill, portending an aggressive inquiry with far-reaching ramifications. Continue reading... |
Concern grows for global coffee supply amid Vietnam lockdown Posted: 31 Aug 2021 07:00 PM PDT Traders are struggling to get beans to ports for export after Covid curbs were imposed on Ho Chi Minh City Concerns are growing over global coffee supplies amid tough coronavirus travel restrictions imposed in Vietnam to tackle the spread of the aggressive Delta variant of Covid-19. Supply chains are been disrupted after Vietnam, the world's second-biggest exporter of coffee, tightened lockdown measures in the port of Ho Chi Minh City, as well as bringing in restrictions in some coffee-growing areas of the Central Highlands. Continue reading... |
Spanish hotel booking app to show working conditions of staff Posted: 31 Aug 2021 09:00 PM PDT Spanish chambermaids' union to launch platform in response to outsourcing and low pay rates Tourists booking a hotel in Spain will soon be able to choose not only one with the best views or the biggest pool, but also one where the staff enjoy decent working conditions. Having tried without success to persuade platforms such as Booking.com and TripAdvisor to include working conditions as part of how they rate hotels, Las Kellys, Spain's indefatigable chambermaids' organisation, is setting up its own booking platform. Continue reading... |
Outrage after Ivory Coast TV presenter asks guest to simulate rape Posted: 31 Aug 2021 06:09 PM PDT Host Yves de Mbella, who has been suspended, apologises for shocking viewers while 'trying to raise awareness' A television channel in Ivory Coast apologised after airing a show in which a male guest introduced as an ex-rapist showed how he assaulted his victims using a dummy for the demonstration. The programme, broadcast at prime time on Monday by the private Nouvelle Chaine Ivorienne (NCI) channel, caused a massive outcry and sparked a petition signed by 37,500 people demanding that the presenters be punished. Continue reading... |
Posted: 01 Sep 2021 01:36 AM PDT Mu has been designated a 'variant of interest' and has mutations suggesting it could be more resistant to vaccines; New Zealand records 75 cases after two days of falls
In Italy, the government has said it will crack down on anti-Green Pass demonstrators who have threatened to block railway tracks throughout the country. It comes as a rule requiring Covid tests or vaccines takes effect for long-distance domestic public transport. The rule applies to domestic flights, train travel between regions and most sea travel. Local buses, trams and metros are exempt from the rule, which was announced by Premier Mario Draghi's government when daily case loads started steadily rising as the delta variant of the virus became prevalent in Italy.
North Korea has requested almost 3m doses of the Chinese-made Sinovac jab it was due through a United Nations programme is sent elsewhere. The immunisation programme procures and delivers shots on behalf of the Covax programme but North Korea has continued to claim that it has no coronavirus cases. Continue reading... |
WHO monitoring new coronavirus variant named Mu Posted: 01 Sep 2021 12:41 AM PDT Health body says Mu, or B.1.621, first identified in Colombia, has been designated as a variant of interest A new coronavirus strain, named Mu, has been designated a variant of interest by the World Health Organization. Mu, or B.1.621, was first identified in Colombia and cases have been recorded in South America and Europe. Continue reading... |
Posted: 31 Aug 2021 11:42 PM PDT How contagious is the Delta Covid variant? Take charge of this interactive and watch how small changes in isolation or reproduction rates of Covid-19 can affect our battle against it. One important characteristic of viruses and other pathogens is how contagious or infectious they are. One key measure of this is the R0, or basic reproduction number, which indicates how many new cases one infected person generates. This is not just a measure of the inherent infectiousness of a disease. It also depends on other factors, including the rate of contact within a population and the duration of the infectious period. It's a situation-dependent value, so in one city the R0 might be higher and in another lower. It also assumes that the entire population is susceptible to the disease. So what does the R0 of Covid look like, and how does it compare with other diseases? Continue reading... |
The chronic stress survival guide: how to live with the anxiety and grief you can’t escape Posted: 31 Aug 2021 10:00 PM PDT Stress can feel like a baseline condition for many of us – especially during a pandemic. But there are ways to help alleviate the very worst of it, whether through support, sleep or radical self-care At a time when all life's challenges have been amplified by the pandemic – and awareness of burnout, at home and at work, has never been higher – stress might seem to be our baseline condition. For most of us, these periods of pressure pass relatively quickly. Even serious stress can be temporary and, given the chance to recover, we usually will. "But emotional resilience won't solve everything," says Rachel Boyd, from the mental health charity Mind. "Some of the causes of stress are very challenging to cope with, even when we feel OK." Many of our everyday challenges have been amplified by the pandemic and its consequences for the economy and society. Those living with financial hardship, health conditions, or caregiving responsibilities, in particular, may feel there is no end in sight. But even if stress seems essential to your circumstances and you don't have the option or the resources to change them, there are ways you can support yourself. Continue reading... |
‘A horn blew when human remains were found’: Wim Wenders’ six hours in the hell of Ground Zero Posted: 31 Aug 2021 10:00 PM PDT After 9/11 the director felt haunted by the twin towers attack. As his epic photographs of Ground Zero go on show for the atrocity's anniversary, he remembers the horrors of that day – and considers its legacy As a boy growing up in the rubble and ruins of postwar West Germany, Wim Wenders would often dream of falling towers. So at the age of 56, when he watched the twin towers of the World Trade Center blaze and then plummet into the streets of New York, the impact hit him hard. "It started to haunt me badly," he says. "I mean, I saw everything live on TV like everybody else. All of mankind was badly shaken. But I kept dreaming of being stuck in collapsing towers. I wanted to somehow exorcise these things. And I figured if I could go to New York and see for myself, that would help." That was how Wenders came to be at Ground Zero in the aftermath of the attacks and took the five large-format photographs now showing at the Imperial War Museum in London as part of its 9/11: Twenty Years On exhibition. They are extraordinary works, capturing great horizontal and vertical swathes of this steel-and-concrete apocalypse, with cranes, diggers and firefighters standing out in heroically bright colours. Shattered pillars jut out from piles of warped girders in a hellish crucible of chaos and destruction. Continue reading... |
‘I’ve never said we should plant a trillion trees’: what ecopreneur Thomas Crowther did next Posted: 31 Aug 2021 11:29 PM PDT The ecologist admits 'messing up' in the past, but says his Restor project will be 'a Google Maps of biodiversity', showing the impact of restoration – from a forest to your own back garden Listen to our podcast: Can we really solve the climate crisis by planting trees? – part one Thomas Crowther understands more than most the danger of simple, optimistic messages about combating the climate crisis. In July 2019, the British ecologist co-authored a study estimating that Earth had space for an extra trillion trees on land not used for agriculture or settlement. Its implications were intoxicatingly hopeful. By restoring forests in an area roughly the size of China, the press release accompanying the paper suggested two-thirds of all emissions from human activities still present in the atmosphere could be removed. The study, led by Jean-François Bastin, a postdoctoral researcher at Crowther's lab in ETH Zürich, Switzerland, was the second most featured climate paper in the media in 2019, according to one analysis. It inspired the World Economic Forum's (WEF) One Trillion Trees Initiative, launched last year after Salesforce billionaire Marc Benioff read the paper on the recommendation of Al Gore, the former US vice-president. The Time magazine owner told everyone he could about the research: chief executives, friends and world leaders, even convincing climate sceptic Donald Trump to back the WEF initiative with a multibillion tree commitment. Continue reading... |
Four Thousand Weeks by Oliver Burkeman review – a brief treatise on time Posted: 31 Aug 2021 11:30 PM PDT A sage and sane theory of 'time unmanagement' exhorts us to stop chasing the seconds and embrace the joy of missing out You've probably already worked out what this book's title means, even if the number seems outrageously small. Four thousand weeks is roughly the amount of time you'll get through if you live to be 80. That will appear even more paltry as you age – not just because you're running out of weeks, but because time speeds up in your head the older you get, until the weeks seem to flash by in minutes. But Oliver Burkeman is not here to scare you into squeezing every last drop of pleasure and productivity from your meagre ration of weeks. His previous book, The Antidote, was subtitled "happiness for people who can't stand positive thinking". He is the self-help writer for people like me who find self-help books oversold on magical transformations. Here, true to form, he tells us to abandon the impossible – "the quest to become the optimized, infinitely capable, emotionally invincible, fully independent person you're officially supposed to be". Four Thousand Weeks is a time-unmanagement book, a pushback against what the American writer Marilynne Robinson calls the "joyless urgency" of our age. Continue reading... |
Posted: 31 Aug 2021 11:00 PM PDT When I received the call about my father's heart attack, there wasn't time to scrub the polish off my fingers. I realised I wanted to share the truth of my life with my loved ones I was in a Pret in Cambridge city centre when I got the call: the senior tutor of my college, Pembroke, told me I had to come and see him. I was needed urgently back in London for a family emergency, and he would drive me to the train station. It was an October morning, 2016, and I was about to go to a lecture. But my heart sank in that moment: it was the kind of call that can only signal tragedy. My father had a heart condition – cardiomyopathy – and I knew that the offer to take me to the station meant he was certainly dead. Continue reading... |
Unstoppable movement: how New Zealand’s Māori are reclaiming land with occupations Posted: 31 Aug 2021 01:00 PM PDT Since 1975, Māori have been able to reclaim land through a tribunal – but its reach is limited and now they are exploring other options Two years ago, a small pocket of land three kilometres from Auckland's international airport became the most prominent site of a struggle by Māori, New Zealand's indigenous people, to reclaim land confiscated by the crown more than 150 years ago. Ihumātao contains evidence of New Zealand's first commercial gardens, where thousands of hectares were planted with kumara, a tropical sweet potato which thrived in the warm and nutritious soil. The adjacent stonefields, today a category one Unesco heritage site, are rich with ancient nurseries and storage pits. When William Hobson, then-governor of New Zealand, founded Auckland in 1840, the produce of Ihumātao sustained the growing population. Continue reading... |
London skyscraper plans threaten UK’s oldest synagogue Posted: 31 Aug 2021 04:01 PM PDT Fears towers will block out natural light and increase noise around 320-year-old Bevis Marks synagogue Tucked away in a courtyard in the City of London, surrounded by glass, steel and concrete skyscrapers, is a historic and religious gem: the oldest synagogue in the UK. On Friday evenings, at the start of the Jewish sabbath, it takes 45 minutes to light up to 240 candles in the original chandeliers hanging from the ceiling of the 320-year-old building. Continue reading... |
The Champion of Auschwitz review – Polish boxer fights to live in sturdy drama Posted: 01 Sep 2021 02:00 AM PDT Dramatising the true story of Teddi Pietrzykowski, an internee who fought to entertain the guards, this is a solid, occasionally sentimental tale This cleanly hewn drama from Poland, surely destined to be Poland's submission for the Academy Awards, tells the true story of Tadeusz Pietrzykowski, AKA "Teddi", a (non-Jewish) Polish bantamweight boxer who was one of the earliest prisoners at Auschwitz. There have actually been a couple of other films about Pietrzykowski over the years, which might explain why writer-director Maciej Barczewski, making an impressive debut here, doesn't go into a lot of detail about how Teddi fought Nazis at the start of the war during the siege of Warsaw in 1939. Instead, a few slow-motion flashbacks are deemed sufficient to ground the story while the film settles down to the grim business of following Teddi as he tries to survive the camp by getting assigned to a work detail. Inevitably, a lot of this work involves disposing of the dead, and trying not to listen to the screams as Jews deemed too weak for work assignments are herded into the gas chamber on their arrival at the camp. Continue reading... |
Afghanistan’s neighbours offered millions in aid to harbour refugees Posted: 31 Aug 2021 02:30 PM PDT Bordering states such as Pakistan urged to temporarily take in Afghans bound for Europe and the US Countries neighbouring Afghanistan have been offered millions in aid if they are prepared to temporarily harbour tens of thousands of refugees, prior to security checks clearing them for transit to Europe and the US, but Pakistan and other bordering states have warned they will not take more refugees permanently. Iran could see a large influx of refugees – mainly Hazara Shias – reaching the country overland. Refugee specialists inside Iran have suggested as many as 7,000 people were crossing the border illegally a day, with no serious control over the entire 980km (608-mile) border, and very little international aid. Continue reading... |
Lesotho murder rate ranked sixth worst in world as judicial system breaks down Posted: 01 Sep 2021 12:01 AM PDT Killings of police officers in tiny mountain kingdom has added to sense of 'lack of consequences', say analysts The tiny mountain kingdom of Lesotho has the sixth highest murder rate in the world, according to a recent World Population Review report. The global average murder rate is seven per 100,000 people, found the report, and Lesotho had a rate almost six times higher at 41.25. The report ranked Lesotho as only safer than El Salvador (82.84 per 100,000 people), Honduras (56.52), Venezuela (56.33), Virgin Islands (49.26) and Jamaica (47.01). Continue reading... |
Before and after Hurricane Ida – in pictures Posted: 01 Sep 2021 12:20 AM PDT Satellite photographs reveal the damage caused by Hurricane Ida, one of the most powerful storms ever to hit the US gulf coast. The storm killed at least four people, and has left about 1.3 million residents, most of them in Louisiana, without electricity Continue reading... |
Posted: 01 Sep 2021 02:09 AM PDT Victoria announces lockdown changes for 23 September, after reporting 120 new cases and confirming two deaths; NSW records 1,164 cases and four deaths, with state to open to international Australians at 80% vaccination; June quarter economic growth revealed. Follow the latest updates live
Here are the main stories on Wednesday, 1 September:
This is an interesting piece about how youth radio station Triple J copped it the past day or so for a tweet some people found "ageist": Related: 'Ageism is alive and well': Triple J lampooned for 'insulting' tweet Continue reading... |
Make historic campaign to ban leaded petrol ‘blueprint to phase out coal’, says UN Posted: 31 Aug 2021 11:00 PM PDT Hailing end to toxic fuel additive, Guterres says same commitment is needed to eliminate other pollutants The UN secretary general and environmentalists have welcomed a declaration by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) on the end of leaded petrol in the face of years of "underhand" opposition. As Algeria became the last country to stop selling the toxic fuel last month, the two-decade campaign to ban it has been called a "milestone for multilateralism". Continue reading... |
Biden sets himself apart by placing Afghanistan blame at predecessors’ feet Posted: 31 Aug 2021 04:27 PM PDT The president appeared indignant and unwilling to concede defeat in a 26-minute speech that marked the close of a 20-year chapter Victory speeches are easy; conceding defeat is much harder. On Tuesday, Joe Biden tacitly blamed his predecessors for the failure of America's longest war but implied that, against all odds, one winner had emerged: him. In a 26-minute speech at the White House, the US president fiercely defended his decision to withdraw US forces from Afghanistan and hailed the mass evacuation from Kabul as a triumph. He scored highly in making the case against forever wars and expressing compassion for US military families. Continue reading... |
Does the fall of Kabul increase the terror threat to the west? Posted: 31 Aug 2021 08:11 AM PDT Analysis: Experts are divided over whether events in Afghanistan will significantly increase risk of attacks In three days in earlier this month Islamist militants killed more than 120 civilians in a series of attacks in the Sahel, a belt of increasingly anarchic and violent territory across Africa, where such groups have gone from strength to strength in recent years. Thousand of miles to the east, fighters from the al-Qaida-affiliated al-Shabaab stormed a military base in the centre of Somalia. None of these attacks received much attention – nor did the recent arrest of IS sympathisers in Australia, the attempted murder of a moderate politician in the Maldives or a court case against militants who attacked LGBT activists in Bangladesh. Continue reading... |
Taliban inspect destroyed US planes after last US troops withdraw – video Posted: 01 Sep 2021 12:09 AM PDT Taliban soldiers inspected damaged aircraft and equipment at Kabul airport after the last US troops withdrew from a shattered Afghanistan. US troops destroyed more than 70 aircraft and dozens of armoured vehicles before they left. A day after their departure, Taliban supporters celebrated across the country, with even a mock funeral held with coffins draped with US, British and French flags
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NSW Covid-19 update: 1,116 new cases as premier says she 'can't recall' worst case modelling – video Posted: 31 Aug 2021 07:24 PM PDT NSW has recorded 1,116 new cases of locally-acquired cases of Covid-19 and four deaths. When asked why the government would not release the modelling they were relying on to make decisions, NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian said there were numerous models that changed daily. Pushed on why she couldn't release the worst case scenario modelling, she said: 'I've seen various versions of modelling and I can't recall all the numbers but I can tell you this much - that we know that the rate of hospitalisations is likely to peak some time in October' ► Subscribe to Guardian Australia on YouTube
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US must quit 'nation building': Biden defends Afghanistan withdrawal – video Posted: 31 Aug 2021 02:15 PM PDT In a statement to the nation, Joe Biden claimed the US was ready for 'every eventuality' in its planned withdrawal from Afghanistan while taking responsibility for the execution of the abrupt, deadly and chaotic departure from Kabul. In an address from the White House, 24 hours after the last US soldier left Kabul, Biden made a case for the US to start looking inward and stop 'major military operations to remake other countries' Continue reading... |
Empty beaches and eerie skies as Caldor fire looms over Lake Tahoe – in pictures Posted: 31 Aug 2021 01:49 PM PDT Scenes from South Lake Tahoe as the raging Caldor fire bears down on the popular resort city and fills the skies with orange smoke. Thousands of firefighters are battling to slow the blaze, which has already consumed an area larger than Chicago Continue reading... |
Geronimo’s owner says UK government 'planned to murder' alpaca – video Posted: 31 Aug 2021 09:12 AM PDT After a four-year legal battle, Helen Macdonald gave an emotional statement after her alpaca was forcibly removed from his home in Gloucestershire and put down. Macdonald said the UK government did not engage in good faith and that 'all the time they were simply planning to murder Geronimo'. She went on to accuse the government of falsifying Geronimo's positive bovine tuberculosis test, and that she would not accept the postmortem results if there was not an independent witness present |
Hurricane Ida: aerial footage shows flooding and destruction in Louisiana – video Posted: 31 Aug 2021 02:22 AM PDT Nearly all of Louisiana lost electrical power on Monday after one of the strongest hurricanes to strike the region downed power lines, littered roads with debris and flooded isolated communities south of New Orleans in the US. After dumping a deluge of rain in Louisiana by late Monday afternoon and killing at least two people, Ida was downgraded to a tropical depression as its eye crawled through neighbouring Mississippi Continue reading... |
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