World news and comment from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk |
- Minneapolis: police and protesters clash for second night over death of Daunte Wright
- ‘Stand tall’: Jimmy Lai writes letter to Hong Kong journalists ahead of sentencing
- Fukushima: Japan announces it will dump contaminated water into sea
- Tories accused of corruption and NHS privatisation by former chief scientist
- ‘Facebook isn’t interested in countries like ours’: Azerbaijan troll network returns months after ban
- David Cameron faces unprecedented formal inquiry into Greensill scandal
- Turkey’s economic turmoil drives Bitcoin frenzy
- Twitter advertises jobs in Ghana as it prepares to open first Africa office
- ‘World’s biggest rabbit’ stolen from home in Worcestershire
- Kanye West and Kim Kardashian West both ask for joint custody in divorce
- Coronavirus live news: India to fast-track vaccine approval; WHO urges pause on live wild animal market sales
- NHS England Covid vaccine website crashes as Moderna rollout begins
- England’s mosques ready as second Ramadan in Covid lockdown begins
- African health workers left without Covid jabs as paltry supplies dwindle
- The knacker: the toughest job in British farming
- From pencil sharpeners to a $539m lawsuit: how big tech weaponised patents
- Purple revolution: India’s farmers turn to lavender to beat drought
- Jordan Kristine Seamón: ‘We Are Who We Are helped me figure out that I’m gender fluid’
- Sonos Roam review: the portable speaker you’ll want to use at home too
- ‘A lack of political courage’: New Zealand’s drug reform efforts flounder
- Peers seek to block limit on UK soldiers’ accountability for war crimes
- Life’s a Bitche: French town’s Facebook page shut down over ‘offensive’ name
- ‘We will lose more doctors’: Sudan’s health workers plead for Covid jabs
- Like Thandiwe Newton, I want to embrace my full name in all its glory | Michelle Kambasha
- Fatal police shooting in Minneapolis suburb was accidental, authorities say | First Thing
- Peru faces polarizing presidential runoff as teacher takes voters by surprise
- Australia news live: Australia Post chair says he ‘will not be resigning’ over Holgate scandal
- ‘I felt humiliated’: parents respond to NHS maternity care racial bias inquiry
- ‘My son could die’: the disabled Syrian refugees on the sharp end of UK aid cuts – photo essay
- AstraZeneca blood clotting: what is this rare syndrome and how is it caused?
- Military buildup near Ukraine sows confusion over Russian intentions
- Natanz ‘sabotage’ highlights Iran’s vulnerability to cyber-attacks
- Police say officer who shot and killed unarmed Daunte Wright intended to fire Taser – video
- Black army officer pepper-sprayed by police during traffic stop in December 2020 – video
- Baltimore is burning trash, so we're starving the fire – video
- Covid vaccine passports: what can we learn from Israel? – video explainer
| Minneapolis: police and protesters clash for second night over death of Daunte Wright Posted: 12 Apr 2021 10:04 PM PDT Law enforcement swarms Brooklyn Center, deploying teargas and flash bangs to disperse hundreds gathered outside police headquarters Police have clashed with protesters for a second night in the suburbs of Minneapolis after the officer-involved death of 20-year-old Daunte Wright on Sunday. Multiple law enforcement agencies swarmed the suburb of Brooklyn Center on Monday, deploying teargas, flash bangs and other non-lethal force to disperse hundreds of people who gathered outside the police headquarters. Continue reading... |
| ‘Stand tall’: Jimmy Lai writes letter to Hong Kong journalists ahead of sentencing Posted: 13 Apr 2021 01:56 AM PDT Media mogul writes from prison that 'freedom of speech is a dangerous job' but journalists must uphold justice The Hong Kong media mogul and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai has told his staff to "stand tall" in a letter from prison, days before being sentenced in two of several cases against him. Separately on Tuesday, his fellow activist Joshua Wong was sentenced to a further four months in jail, concluding another of the growing number of trials in a sweeping crackdown. Continue reading... |
| Fukushima: Japan announces it will dump contaminated water into sea Posted: 12 Apr 2021 11:28 PM PDT Environmental groups and neighbours condemn plan to release more than 1m tonnes of contaminated water in two years' time Japan has announced it will release more than 1m tonnes of contaminated water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea, a decision that has angered neighbouring countries, including China, and local fishers. Official confirmation of the move, which came more than a decade after the nuclear disaster, will deal a further blow to the fishing industry in Fukushima, which has opposed the measure for years. Continue reading... |
| Tories accused of corruption and NHS privatisation by former chief scientist Posted: 13 Apr 2021 01:25 AM PDT Exclusive: Boris Johnson's 'chumocracy' is using Covid crisis to sell off health service by stealth, says Sir David King Boris Johnson's government has been accused of corruption, privatising the NHS by stealth, operating a "chumocracy" and mishandling the pandemic and climate crisis, by Sir David King, a former government chief scientist. "I am extremely worried about the handling of the coronavirus pandemic, about the processes by which public money has been distributed to private sector companies without due process," he told the Guardian in an interview. "It really smells of corruption." Continue reading... |
| Posted: 13 Apr 2021 01:00 AM PDT State-backed harassment campaign targets journalists and dissidents in authoritarian country Facebook has allowed a state-backed harassment campaign targeting independent news outlets and opposition politicians in Azerbaijan to return to its platform, less than six months after it banned the troll network. A Guardian investigation has revealed how Facebook allowed an arm of Azerbaijan's ruling party, the YAP, to carry out the harassment campaign for 14 months after an employee, Sophie Zhang, first alerted managers and executives to its existence in August 2019. Continue reading... |
| David Cameron faces unprecedented formal inquiry into Greensill scandal Posted: 12 Apr 2021 12:56 PM PDT Boris Johnson orders independent investigation into former prime minister's lobbying on behalf of collapsed finance firm David Cameron is at the centre of an unprecedented formal inquiry after Boris Johnson ordered a probe into lobbying by the former prime minister on behalf of the collapsed company Greensill Capital. The independent investigation will examine the firm's role in government, supply chain financing and communications by employees, including Cameron, who joined Greensill as an adviser in 2018, two years after resigning as prime minister, and who stood to make millions of pounds from his role. Continue reading... |
| Turkey’s economic turmoil drives Bitcoin frenzy Posted: 12 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT Investors turn to cryptocurrency after Erdoğan's sacking of central bank governor caused further fall in lira The neighbourhood teahouse is a focus of daily life across Turkey, an Ottoman tradition that has endured through the centuries. At the Red Lightning teahouse in Çorum, the enterprising owners have one foot in the past and one in the future: it's the first one in the country where customers can pay in bitcoin. "Everyone we know in Çorum is starting to invest in cryptocurrency. We think that in five years or so regular currency will be in decline, it will be replaced by digital ones. So we wanted to be in a good position now," said co-owners Hüseyin Nalcı, 38, and Kerem Kutay Yıldırım, 28. Continue reading... |
| Twitter advertises jobs in Ghana as it prepares to open first Africa office Posted: 12 Apr 2021 07:53 PM PDT Recruitment marks significant step in social media company's plans to establish presence on continent Twitter has announced it will recruit 11 people in Ghana, the company's first hires on the African continent, and that it is looking into opening an office there. The social media company joins Facebook and other tech companies moving into Africa. Continue reading... |
| ‘World’s biggest rabbit’ stolen from home in Worcestershire Posted: 12 Apr 2021 02:29 PM PDT Owner Annette Edwards offers £1,000 reward for return of Guinness World Record-holding giant rabbit A rabbit proclaimed the biggest in the world has been stolen from its home in Worcestershire, police have said. West Mercia police believe the 129cm-long continental giant rabbit, named Darius, was taken from its enclosure in the garden of the property in Stoulton overnight on Saturday. Continue reading... |
| Kanye West and Kim Kardashian West both ask for joint custody in divorce Posted: 12 Apr 2021 04:42 PM PDT Like Kardashian West's filing, the rap and fashion mogul also agreed neither of them need spousal support Kanye West has agreed with Kim Kardashian West that they should have joint custody of their four children and neither of them need spousal support, according to new divorce documents. West's attorneys filed his response Friday in Los Angeles superior court to Kardashian West's divorce filing seven weeks earlier, which began the process of ending their six-and-a-half-year marriage. Continue reading... |
| Posted: 13 Apr 2021 02:54 AM PDT India will move quickly to use vaccines already approved elsewhere; Fauci says US may not 'need' AstraZeneca jabs
Following Dr Fauci's comments earlier about the AstraZeneca vaccine [see 8.12am], it's also worth looking at how the US is approaching another vaccine where there has been concern over rare blood clots. Elizabeth Cohen reports for CNN: US health agencies are taking concerns about blood clots and the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine "seriously" and are working to assess whether the shot is associated with a very small increased risk of rare blood clots, a federal official told CNN. "The CDC and the FDA are taking these concerns about blood clots and the J&J vaccine seriously and are diligently assembling data," the official said. "The CDC is very concerned and they're very working hard on this and monitoring this closely."
We reported earlier that Austrian health minister Rudolf Anschober is stepping down. Associated Press have a few quotes from his press briefing this morning, when he announced the move. Anschober, who suffered a burnout nine years ago, said he had suffered two episodes of sudden fatigue in the past month, as well as high blood pressure and tinnitus. |
| NHS England Covid vaccine website crashes as Moderna rollout begins Posted: 13 Apr 2021 02:29 AM PDT Online booking for over-45s goes down as third jab offers alternative to AstraZeneca for under-30s The NHS England website allowing over-45s to book their coronavirus vaccination initially crashed, moments after it was opened. The website appeared to go down just after slots were made available. Users were met with the message: "The NHS website is currently experiencing technical difficulties. We are working to resolve these issues. Thank you for your patience." Continue reading... |
| England’s mosques ready as second Ramadan in Covid lockdown begins Posted: 12 Apr 2021 10:00 PM PDT Muslims are adapting with smaller prayer groups, sanitation stations and fasts broken separately Muslims have begun fasting on the first day of Ramadan, as mosques in England prepare to welcome worshippers in smaller groups due to Covid restrictions. Much like last year, Ramadan will be drastically different from usual for Muslims, with many customs and practices changed due to the restrictions. Continue reading... |
| African health workers left without Covid jabs as paltry supplies dwindle Posted: 12 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT Fear of third wave and new variants as sub-Saharan vaccine distribution is dogged by supply disruption Millions of healthcare workers in sub-Saharan Africa continue to risk their lives to fight Covid-19 as authorities across the continent struggle to obtain and distribute vaccines to frontline medical staff. Though hundreds of millions of people in western nations are now protected from the virus, doctors, nurses and others on the frontline of the fight against Covid in Africa will have to wait months, or even years, for a vaccine. Continue reading... |
| The knacker: the toughest job in British farming Posted: 12 Apr 2021 10:00 PM PDT Between accidents, disease and bad weather, farm animals are prey to so many disasters that dedicated professionals are called out to dispose of the casualties. It's a grim task, and one that's only getting more difficult One bright morning in the middle of May, Ian Carswell's tipper lorry came sliding to a halt in a Tenbury car park. It was a smallish thing with raw grey sides and nothing distinctive about it, the sort of truck that carries topsoil or aggregate all over the country. "Jump in," said Carswell, leaning over and prodding open the passenger door. The cab smelled of lemon air-freshener and self-consciousness. He wouldn't normally allow a passenger, and almost certainly wouldn't be taking one now if the boss hadn't told him to. Continue reading... |
| From pencil sharpeners to a $539m lawsuit: how big tech weaponised patents Posted: 12 Apr 2021 10:00 PM PDT In 1842, the US patent office registered 14 designs, including a bathtub and a 'corpse preserver'. It now handles 35,000 a year. Why did this once sedate world became a corporate arms race? It was designed to make sharpening a pencil feel as thrilling as flying a jet. A gleaming chrome teardrop, tapered to a point and adorned with a bullet-like handle, Raymond Loewy's aerodynamic tail-fin pencil sharpener brought the glamour of the machine age to the humble office desk. As the godfather of American industrial design, Loewy gave his streamlined signature to trains, planes and Coca-Cola vending machines, defining the sleek art deco look of the 1930s. But his go-faster pencil sharpener never made it into production, deemed one chrome-plated, deco-styled step too far. The design does survive in the form of its patent, filed in 1933 and now republished as one of 1,000 such protected inventions, brought together in a new book. Continue reading... |
| Purple revolution: India’s farmers turn to lavender to beat drought Posted: 12 Apr 2021 10:00 PM PDT Faced with climate change, farmers in Jammu and Kashmir are switching from maize to essential oils It's late June and the field is glowing with fragrant purple as the women in their flowing shalwar kameez arrive with scythes to harvest the lavender. In the 30-odd villages on the hilly slopes of Jammu's Doda district, more than 200 farmers have shifted from maize to lavender production, starting a "purple revolution" in the region. The village of Lehrote had a moment of agricultural fame this year when a 43-year-old farmer, Bharat Bhushan, won a prestigious award for innovative farming from the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, one of several institutions across the country looking to find ways of coping with the climate crisis and its devastating impact on farming. Lavender, a drought-resistant crop, can be grown on poor soil and likes lots of sun but needs little water. Continue reading... |
| Jordan Kristine Seamón: ‘We Are Who We Are helped me figure out that I’m gender fluid’ Posted: 13 Apr 2021 01:00 AM PDT From starring in the Luca Guadagnino series to releasing an album about identity, the 18-year-old star has enjoyed a lockdown like no other On a mid-afternoon in Atlanta, Georgia, Jordan Kristine Seamón is sitting at her desk, explaining her choice of bedroom decor. "That's Buttercup from The Powerpuff Girls," she says, gesturing behind her head. "That one is Jeanette from the Chipettes, I haven't finished it. That's Marceline from Adventure Time." She cranes her neck. "Right there, you can barely see him, that's Dexter from Dexter's Laboratory. And that guy over there," she points to the huge illustration hovering over her bed. "That's a character from The Boondocks. My dad outlined it and I painted it." She grins. "Something I like to do when I get very stressed and can't handle the world is paint on my wall." Related: The Guide: Staying In – sign up for our home entertainment tips Continue reading... |
| Sonos Roam review: the portable speaker you’ll want to use at home too Posted: 12 Apr 2021 11:00 PM PDT Cheaper wifi speaker has Bluetooth plus Google or Alexa for great indoor and outdoor music Sonos's new smaller and cheaper Roam portable speaker is one that won't end up relegated to a drawer collecting dust as it sounds great at home too. The £159 Roam joins the much bigger and heavier £399 Move as the second of firm's battery-powered models and proves itself as one of the best options in a saturated market. Continue reading... |
| ‘A lack of political courage’: New Zealand’s drug reform efforts flounder Posted: 12 Apr 2021 04:56 PM PDT From the outside, the country seems like a likely candidate for progressive drug laws but internally, change is proving hard to bring After New Zealand's referendum to legalise cannabis failed, social service agencies across the country are seeking a new path to decriminalisation of drug use, but obstacles are plenty. On Monday, a broad coalition of social service, advocacy and health organisations released an open letter calling on prime minister Jacinda Ardern to repeal and replace the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 "to ensure drug use is treated as a health and social issue". Signatories include the New Zealand Medical Association, Public Health Association, Auckland and Wellington City Missions, Mental Health Foundation, and the Māori Law Society, along with 20 others. Continue reading... |
| Peers seek to block limit on UK soldiers’ accountability for war crimes Posted: 12 Apr 2021 11:00 PM PDT Government could suffer high-profile defeat over five-year deadline proposed in overseas operations bill Peers behind a cross-party amendment to halt plans to restrict prosecutions of torture and war crimes by British soldiers serving abroad are hopeful of inflicting a high-profile defeat on the government in the Lords on Tuesday. Related: The UK government is attempting to bend the rules on torture | Nicholas Mercer Continue reading...This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Life’s a Bitche: French town’s Facebook page shut down over ‘offensive’ name Posted: 13 Apr 2021 02:53 AM PDT Ville de Bitche in north-east France has fallen foul of social network's algorithm Life's a Bitche for one town in north-east France that had its Facebook page shut down for offensive language. Bitche in the Moselle, population 5,000 and home to the Bitchois, has fallen foul of the social network's algorithm, which has deemed it insulting. Continue reading... |
| ‘We will lose more doctors’: Sudan’s health workers plead for Covid jabs Posted: 13 Apr 2021 01:00 AM PDT Country has struggled to get vaccines to frontline medical staff, while Covid toll remains under-reported More than 200 Sudanese doctors, nurses and medical workers have died from Covid-19, according to sources close to the health ministry – more than three times the official figure. Like other countries across sub-Saharan Africa, Sudan has struggled to obtain vaccines and distribute them to frontline medical staff. Many of the doctors who have died were senior consultants in their 50s and 60s or older, and so were in high-risk categories. Continue reading... |
| Like Thandiwe Newton, I want to embrace my full name in all its glory | Michelle Kambasha Posted: 13 Apr 2021 01:00 AM PDT Having names carelessly handled – even taken away from us – has an effect on identity. It is time to reclaim them When the actor Thandiwe Newton announced last week that she'd be reverting to the original spelling of her name, I felt some recognition. The journey her name has taken over three decades will strike a chord with many African and other non-western diasporas who have encountered the difficulty Anglophone countries have with accommodating foreign names. While shooting Flirting (Newton's first feature film) in 1991, the director decided to give her character her own name, Thandiwe. But in the film's credits, Newton the actor was listed by her anglicised "nickname", Thandie, to avoid confusion – this was done without consulting her. From then on she was known professionally as Thandie Newton. Continue reading... |
| Fatal police shooting in Minneapolis suburb was accidental, authorities say | First Thing Posted: 13 Apr 2021 02:36 AM PDT Police say officer intended to fire Taser at 20-year-old Daunte Wright, rather than handgun. Plus, WHO says the coronavirus pandemic is still growing exponentially Good morning. Police who shot and killed a 20-year-old black man on Sunday afternoon during a traffic stop in a Minneapolis suburb did so accidentally, law enforcement said last night. Continue reading... |
| Peru faces polarizing presidential runoff as teacher takes voters by surprise Posted: 12 Apr 2021 03:19 PM PDT Pedro Castillo will face Keiko Fujimori, the far-right heiress to one of the country's enduring and controversial political dynasties Peru faces a polarizing presidential runoff vote, in which a hard-left schoolteacher – who caught a wave of popular discontent over the coronavirus and a cratering economy – will face the far-right heiress to one of the country's most enduring and controversial political dynasties. Pedro Castillo, a veteran teachers' union leader, took pollsters and voters by surprise in Sunday's first-round vote winning 18.47%, with 84% of the official vote counted. In second place, Keiko Fujimori – daughter of the jailed former leader Alberto Fujimori – polled 13.12%, closely followed by two more far-right candidates. Continue reading... |
| Australia news live: Australia Post chair says he ‘will not be resigning’ over Holgate scandal Posted: 13 Apr 2021 02:31 AM PDT Holgate says she was 'humiliated' by prime minister Scott Morrison; man dies of coronavirus in Queensland. Follow all the latest news and updates, live
That's where I will leave you on what has been an eventful day. Here's what we learned:
Porsche driver Richard Pusey is set to contest a charge of assaulting a woman in Melbourne. But AAP reports that other charges, including that he threatened to kill her and placed a noose around her neck in December, are likely to be dropped. |
| ‘I felt humiliated’: parents respond to NHS maternity care racial bias inquiry Posted: 12 Apr 2021 11:15 PM PDT Black, Asian and ethnic minority women report being denied pain relief or feeling unheard to panel investigating mortality disparity Feeling manipulated into having medical procedures, dismissed by professionals and labelled with racial stereotypes are among the complaints of parents who responded to a national inquiry into racial injustice in UK maternity care. A panel established by the charity Birthrights is investigating discrimination ranging from explicit racism to racial bias and microaggressions that amount to poorer care. Continue reading... |
| ‘My son could die’: the disabled Syrian refugees on the sharp end of UK aid cuts – photo essay Posted: 12 Apr 2021 04:08 AM PDT Two centres in Lebanon are among the casualties of cuts to British aid, with devastating consequences for thousands of patients and families In January, the British government told its diplomats to start finding 50–70% cuts in aid funding. In March, it was revealed it was slashing aid funding to Syrian refugee projects by a third. Among the many casualties of those cuts is a project in Lebanon. Two centres – in Zahlé and in Beirut – offer specialised services, such as speech and physiotherapy, for disabled Syrian refugees who can't afford to pay for them. Continue reading... |
| AstraZeneca blood clotting: what is this rare syndrome and how is it caused? Posted: 12 Apr 2021 02:34 PM PDT Evidence is growing of a link between the Covid-19 vaccine and a deadly thrombosis – and theories are emerging as to why Since rare but severe clotting was seen in some people following vaccination with AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine, researchers worldwide have been grappling to understand why the clotting syndrome, known as "thrombosis with thrombocytopenia" (clotting with a low platelet count), occurs. Most cases of these clots occurred in veins in the brain (a condition called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, or CVST), though some occurred in other veins, including those to the abdomen (splanchnic vein thrombosis). It has a high death rate. Continue reading... |
| Military buildup near Ukraine sows confusion over Russian intentions Posted: 12 Apr 2021 08:32 AM PDT Analysis: there are several reasons Russia would want to raise tensions, but an attack appears unlikely Russia's fortnight-long military buildup to the east and south of Ukraine has helped it mass an estimated 80,000 troops in the border region in an attention-grabbing exercise that is increasingly occupying western thinking. Tanks and other artillery units have also been arriving at Voronezh, east of Ukraine, according to Janes, a military intelligence firm, and a staging ground for about 3,000 troops been established to the south of the city. Continue reading... |
| Natanz ‘sabotage’ highlights Iran’s vulnerability to cyber-attacks Posted: 12 Apr 2021 07:59 AM PDT Analysis: Apparent attack by Israel is a reminder of the weaknesses of industrial control systems The apparent attack by Israel on Iran's nuclear enrichment facility appears to be the latest episode in an increasing tit-for-tat cyberwar. Both sides have already targeted so-called industrial control systems [ICS], which have emerged as a key weakness for countries across the globe. While Iran described the latest attack as "sabotage", Israeli media called it a cyber-attack. Continue reading... |
| Police say officer who shot and killed unarmed Daunte Wright intended to fire Taser – video Posted: 12 Apr 2021 05:30 PM PDT The fatal police shooting of a 20-year-old Black man in a Minneapolis suburb appeared to be an 'accidental discharge' by an officer who drew her gun instead of her Taser during a struggle, the city's police chief said. 'This appears to me, from what I viewed and the officers' reaction and distress immediately after, that this was an accidental discharge that resulted in the tragic death of Mr Wright,' the Brooklyn Center police chief, Tim Gannon, told reporters. Police in the Minneapolis suburb attempted to arrest Daunte Wright following a traffic stop due to an expired vehicle registration. Video footage presented at a news briefing showed a struggle between Wright and officers. Wright then got back into the car and an officer could be heard yelling 'Taser, Taser, Taser' Continue reading... |
| Black army officer pepper-sprayed by police during traffic stop in December 2020 – video Posted: 12 Apr 2021 07:28 AM PDT One of two police officers accused of pepper-spraying and pointing their guns at a Black US army officer during a traffic stop has been fired, a Virginia town announced late on Sunday, hours after the governor called for an independent investigation. In the December 2020 encounter, two officers are accused of drawing their guns, pointing them at army second lieutenant Caron Nazario and using a slang term to suggest he was facing execution. Nazario, who is Black and Latino, was also pepper-sprayed and knocked to the ground by the officers, Joe Gutierrez and Daniel Crocker, according to the lawsuit he filed earlier this month against them. The two sides in the case dispute what happened but Crocker wrote in a report that he believed Nazario was "eluding police" and he considered it a "high-risk traffic stop". Attorney Jonathan Arthur said Nazario was trying to stop in a well-lit area Continue reading... |
| Baltimore is burning trash, so we're starving the fire – video Posted: 12 Apr 2021 04:23 AM PDT Residents in South Baltimore are fighting to 'starve' their nearby Bresco incinerator due to health concerns over the amount of pollution it creates. Of the 72 remaining facilities in the US, the vast majority are located in predominantly low-income or minority communities, raising concerns about compounding pollutants in already overburdened neighbourhoods Continue reading... |
| Covid vaccine passports: what can we learn from Israel? – video explainer Posted: 12 Apr 2021 02:58 AM PDT Israel became the first country in the world to test vaccine passports when it announced the 'green pass' scheme in February. The passes allow people who have had two doses of a Covid-19 vaccine to return to restaurants, theatres and sport events. With many countries planning to reopen after their vaccination campaigns, the Guardian's Jerusalem correspondent, Oliver Holmes, examines the lessons that could be learned from Israel's rollout Continue reading... |
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