Glastonbury live-stream festival: Coldplay, Michael Kiwanuka and Haim to perform

Damon Albarn, Idles, Jorja Smith, Kano, Wolf Alice and Honey Dijon will also appear at Live at Worthy Farm, a ticketed virtual event on 22 May

The organisers of Glastonbury have announced that Coldplay, Damon Albarn, Haim, Idles, Jorja Smith, Kano, Michael Kiwanuka and Wolf Alice will perform at Live at Worthy Farm, a ticketed live-stream event to be broadcast on 22 May.

The five-hour film, directed by Grammy-nominated film-maker Paul Dugdale, will be presented as an uninterrupted production, tracing the arc of what festival co-organiser Emily Eavis called “one continuous wild night” at the festival, via festival landmarks including the Pyramid stage, the stone circle and the notorious south-east nightclubbing corner.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2021/mar/31/glastonbury-live-stream-festival-coldplay-michael-kiwanuka-and-haim-to-perform

Japan's cherry blossom bloom - in pictures

Japan’s famous cherry blossoms have reached their flowery peak in many places earlier this year than at any time since records began nearly 70 years ago, with experts saying climate change is the likely cause

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2021/mar/31/japan-cherry-blossom-bloom-in-pictures

Coronavirus live news: WHO chief says lab leak theory worth examining further; Quito hospitals overwhelmed

US releases statement with 13 allies saying WHO inquiry lacks data; hospitals in Ecuador capital working above capacity to treat Covid patients, say doctors

A chorus of activists are calling for changes to intellectual property laws in hopes of beginning to boost Covid-19 vaccine manufacturing globally, and addressing the gaping disparity between rich and poor nations’ access to coronavirus vaccines.

The US and a handful of other wealthy vaccine-producing nations are on track to deliver vaccines to all adults who want them in the coming months, while dozens of the world’s poorest countries have not inoculated a single person.

Related: How wealthy nations are creating a ‘vaccine apartheid’

At least nine people have tested positive for Covid-19 in a Chinese city on the border with Myanmar, health officials have said. The first case was identified on Monday, and subsequent testing of close contacts and others turned up the other ones.

Five are Chinese citizens are four are Myanmar nationals, the Yunnan Province Health Commission said in a report posted online. They ranged in age from 22 to 42 years old.

Related: UK and US criticise WHO's Covid report and accuse China of withholding data

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2021/mar/31/coronavirus-live-news-who-lab-leak-theory-investigation-quito-hospitals-overwhelmed

Myanmar: US orders diplomats to leave as coup spurs ethnic tensions

UN security council set for emergency meeting as death toll from military crackdown passes 520

The United States has ordered the departure of non-essential diplomats from Myanmar, amid growing violence following the military coup to oust civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Daily protests demanding the restoration of the elected government have been met with a military crackdown that has left more than 520 civilians dead in the weeks since the February 1 coup.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/us-diplomats-out-of-myanmar-un-security-council-emergency-meeting

Urgent policies needed to steer countries to net zero, says IEA chief

Economies are gearing up for return to fossil fuel use instead of forging green recovery, warns Fatih Birol

New energy policies are urgently needed to put countries on the path to net zero greenhouse gas emissions, the world’s leading energy economist has warned, as economies are rapidly gearing up for a return to fossil fuel use instead of forging a green recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Most of the world’s biggest economies now have long-term goals of reaching net zero by mid-century, but few have the policies required to meet those goals, said Fatih Birol, the executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA).

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/31/urgent-policies-needed-steer-countries-net-zero-carbon-iea-chief-fatih-birol

Elite minority of frequent flyers 'cause most of aviation's climate damage'

Small group taking most flights should face frequent flyer levy, says environmental charity

An “elite minority” of frequent flyers cause most of the climate damage resulting from aviation’s emissions, according to an environmental charity.

The report, which collates data from the countries with the highest aviation emissions, shows a worldwide pattern of a small group taking a large proportion of flights, while many people do not fly at all.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/elite-minority-frequent-flyers-aviation-climate-damage-flights-environmental

How wealthy nations are creating a ‘vaccine apartheid’

Activists have called for changes to intellectual property laws in an effort to speed the global vaccination project

A chorus of activists are calling for changes to intellectual property laws in hopes of beginning to boost Covid-19 vaccine manufacturing globally, and addressing the gaping disparity between rich and poor nations’ access to coronavirus vaccines.

The US and a handful of other wealthy vaccine-producing nations are on track to deliver vaccines to all adults who want them in the coming months, while dozens of the world’s poorest countries have not inoculated a single person.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/coronavirus-vaccine-distribution-global-disparity

How nearly 3,000 cattle came to be stranded at sea for three months

After being refused entry to several countries on health grounds, the surviving animals were ordered back to Spain for slaughter

Read more: Stranded cattle ship ordered to dock in Spain after ‘hellish’ three months at sea


After more than three months stranded in the Mediterranean, the surviving bulls onboard a livestock ship were humanely slaughtered by the Spanish authorities in Cartagena on Sunday. An official Spanish veterinary report described dire conditions onboard the Elbeik, on which 179 bulls had already died.

The Elbeik and a second livestock ship, the Karim Allah, had been refused entry to multiple countries on health grounds. We look back on the events that shaped this “hellish ride”.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/31/how-nearly-3000-cattle-came-to-be-stranded-at-sea-for-three-months

Death without answers: an agonising 24-hour hunt for medical help in Guinea-Bissau

Bernardo Catchura spent a last desperate night seeking treatment in the healthcare system he had spent decades campaigning to improve. His wife is still unsure how he died

In their 15 years together, Maimuna Catchura had not known her husband to be ill. But one night in late January, 39-year-old lawyer, activist and musician Bernardo Catchura could not sleep, and complained of severe stomach pain.

The pain forced Catchura from his bed at his house in Bissau, Guinea-Bissau’s capital. That night he would navigate the country’s medical care maze, visiting pharmacies, clinics and hospitals. Before the night was through, he even considered crossing the border into Senegal to get help.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/mar/31/death-without-answers-an-agonising-24-hour-hunt-for-medical-help-in-guinea-bissau

'I cried for two weeks': Britney Spears responds to documentary about her life

Singer said that she was ‘embarrassed by the light’ in which Framing Britney Spears cast her

Britney Spears said she “cried for two weeks” after watching part of a high-profile documentary that explored her career.

Framing Britney Spears premiered in February and examined the pop superstar’s rise to the summit of the music industry, her treatment at the hands of the tabloid media, her involuntary commitment to a psychiatric ward in 2008, and the subsequent conservatorship (an “imposed power-of-attorney-on-steroids”) given to her father that has had him oversee her finances and personal affairs since 2008.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/mar/31/britney-spears-responds-to-documentary-about-her-life-framing

A year of Covid crisis: a glimmer of economic hope at the end of the tunnel

Twelve months after the pandemic struck the Guardian’s economic tracker reveals real risk of lasting damage

When Boris Johnson announced the first stay-at-home order, effectively shutting down whole sections of the economy, it was hoped the tide could be turned within 12 weeks. As many months later, lockdown measures are being relaxed for a third time and Britain still faces a lengthy road to recovery from the worst recession for 300 years.

As restrictions ease, the chief economist at the Bank of England, Andy Haldane, warned that despite the reopening of the economy, the risk of a “jobs equivalent of long Covid” remains for workers across the country.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/mar/31/a-year-of-covid-crisis-a-glimmer-of-economic-hope-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel

The return of the bonkbuster: how horny heroines are starting a new sexual revolution

I longed for novels about female desire - women empowered by sex and their expressions of lust. So I sat down and wrote my own

The idea for my novel Insatiable emerged from a simple question: where were all the horny women? I knew that we were secretly legion. In fact, I suspected that I was surrounded by women, sitting on buses, standing in queues, staring out of the window and simultaneously entertaining all kinds of filthy daydreams. After all, millions of us had bought and read Fifty Shades of Grey. Even if half the sold copies were bought by people who wanted to mock it, that left millions of genuinely horny women unaccounted for – and buying the sequels.

I was not transported in the way I had hoped; I did not find Christian sexy, I did not relish the BDSM and, most of all, I struggled to connect with the beautiful, blank lead character, Anastasia. She seemed similar to every other sort-of-horny woman I had seen on screen, a sexual object before she was a sexual subject, a person who had to be perfect and prove herself desirable before she was allowed to pursue desires of her own.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/mar/31/the-return-of-the-bonkbuster-how-horny-heroines-are-starting-a-new-sexual-revolution

Destruction of world's forests increased sharply in 2020

Calls for forests to be high on Cop26 agenda after loss of 42,000 sq km of tree cover in key tropical regions

The rate at which the world’s forests are being destroyed increased sharply last year, with at least 42,000 sq km of tree cover lost in key tropical regions.

According to data from the University of Maryland and the online monitoring platform Global Forest Watch, the loss was well above the average for the last 20 years, with 2020 the third worst year for forest destruction since 2002 when comparable monitoring began.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/31/destruction-of-worlds-forests-increased-sharply-in-2020-loss-tree-cover-tropical

Missed it by that much: Australia falls 3.4m doses short of 4m vaccination target by end of March

Almost 600,000 doses of Covid vaccine have been administered in Australia but Scott Morrison had wanted 4m shots delivered by now

Australia has administered nearly 600,000 doses of the Covid vaccine, which is 3.4m shots short of a 4m dose target set by the prime minister, Scott Morrison, for the end of March.

The current figure is also 1m doses short of what’s needed to meet the government’s revised target of 4m doses administered by the end of April.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/mar/31/missed-it-by-that-much-australia-falls-34m-doses-short-of-4m-vaccination-target-by-end-of-march

ALP national conference 2021: Labor finalises energy platform for next election – live

Electric vehicle policy announced as as power brokers hash out amendments intended to strengthen support for new gas projects. Follow live updates

The Labor conference is back on for its final session – developing our people.

This is about childcare, education, welfare and inequality.

This is absolutely becoming an issue:

The states are doing what they can with the vaccines they've got.

We need guaranteed supply and delivery times from the Federal Government. pic.twitter.com/2dHTW1VHa5

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/live/2021/mar/31/alp-national-conference-2021-live-updates-news-anthony-albanese-federal-election-chris-bowen-energy-platform-australian-labor-party

G Gordon Liddy, mastermind of Watergate burglary, dies aged 90

Political operative went to prison before becoming a popular radio talkshow host

G Gordon Liddy, a mastermind of the Watergate burglary and a radio talkshow host after emerging from prison, died on Tuesday at age 90.

His son, Thomas Liddy, confirmed the death but did reveal the cause, other than to say it was not related to Covid-19.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/30/g-gordon-liddy-dead-90-watergate-nixon-talkshow-host

Oscars 'to set up Academy Awards hubs' for nominees in London and Paris

Actors unable to travel to Los Angeles had earlier been told a virtual appearance at the awards would not be allowed

The Academy will reportedly allow British nominees to take part in the Oscars from London, after earlier warning that appearing via Zoom was not an option.

The 93rd Academy Awards will take place on 25 April in the US with an in-person event at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles. Some live elements of the show will be included from the ceremony’s usual home of the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.

After nominees were earlier told a virtual appearance was not allowed, producers for the ceremony have said they will set up “hubs” in London and Paris to make it easier for Europe-based stars, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

The Academy, the body that oversees the Oscars, is still encouraging anyone who can safely and legally travel to Los Angeles for the ceremony to do so, the Reporter said.

Coronavirus is surging across much of Europe and nominees busy with productions around the world may find it challenging to make the show while grappling with different quarantine and travel rules.

Asked about Zoom appearances, film-maker Steven Soderbergh, one of the producers of the broadcast, reportedly told the nominees “we hope it doesn’t come to that”. The Academy has been contacted for comment.

Sir Anthony Hopkins, Gary Oldman, Olivia Colman, Daniel Kaluuya, Riz Ahmed and Carey Mulligan are among the British acting nominees.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/film/2021/mar/31/oscars-to-set-up-academy-awards-hubs-for-nominees-in-london-and-paris

Swiss army to begin issuing female recruits with women's underwear

Female recruits to stop being given male underwear in a bid to up recruitment

The Swiss armed forces is taking a big step to recruit more women – by no longer making female recruits wear men’s underwear.

At present, all recruits are issued with “loose-fitting men’s underwear, often in larger sizes”, the BBC reported. In a trial set to begin in April, the Swiss army said women would be issued with two sets of female underwear – one for warmer months and one for colder months.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/swiss-army-to-begin-issuing-female-recruits-with-womens-underwear

Unblocking the Suez canal – podcast

The gigantic cargo ship the Ever Given blocked the world’s busiest shipping lane for a week. Michael Safi reports on what the costly nautical traffic jam can tell us about global trade

The Suez canal, built in 1869, is a 120-mile strip of water that has been called a “ditch in the desert”. Nearly 20,000 ships pass through it a year, so when the Ever Given, one of the biggest vessels ever built, became wedged last week and blocked it, global trade through the canal ground to a halt.

The Guardian international correspondent, Michael Safi, tells Anushka Asthana the story of the crash, including the efforts to free the ship and the impact the blockage had on the movement of trade across the globe. The retired Turkish mariner Alper Gergin explains why steering a ship of such as size is harder than handling a Boeing 747.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/news/audio/2021/mar/31/unblocking-the-suez-canal-podcast

Trump ally Matt Gaetz say he faces federal investigation 'regarding sexual conduct'

Florida Republican congressman says he has never had sexual relationship with underage girl

Matt Gaetz, a prominent Republican in Congress and a close ally of Donald Trump, said on Tuesday he was being investigated by the justice department over a former relationship but denied any criminal wrongdoing.

Gaetz, who represents parts of western Florida, told Axios that his lawyers were informed that he was the subject of an investigation “regarding sexual conduct with women” but that he was not a target of the inquiry. He denied that he ever had a relationship with any underage girls and said the allegations against him were “as searing as they are false”.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/30/matt-gaetz-federal-investigation-sexual-conduct

Palau to welcome first tourists in a year with presidential escort

Palau is opening up to visitors from Taiwan under strict Covid-safe measures, but locals still have doubts

On Thursday, 110 people from Taiwan will be able to enjoy the thing so many around the world have been dreaming of since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic: an international holiday to a tropical island paradise.

The tiny Pacific country of Palau, in the north-west corner of the Pacific with a population of around 20,000 people, will this week begin welcoming tourists from Taiwan as part of a travel bubble.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/palau-to-welcome-first-tourists-in-a-year-with-presidential-escort

Merkel, Macron and Putin in talks about using Sputnik V jab in Europe

Kremlin says leaders discussed possibility of shipments and joint production amid shortage of doses inside Europe

Vladimir Putin, Angela Merkel and Emmanuel Macron discussed Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine and its use in Europe on a conference call on Tuesday, the Kremlin said.

Moscow’s statement said that among other subjects the Russian, German and French leaders discussed prospects for the registration of the vaccine in the EU and the possibility of shipments and joint production in EU nations. It did not say who raised the topic.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/merkel-macron-and-putin-sputnik-v-vaccine-eu

New Zealand raises minimum wage and increases taxes on the rich

Jacinda Ardern says the changes to wages and benefits will help support the most vulnerable

New Zealand is raising its minimum wage to $20 an hour and increasing the top tax rate for the country’s highest earners to 39%.

The changes will be rolled out on Thursday, alongside small increases to unemployment and sickness benefits. The government estimates the minimum wage increase – a rise of $1.14 per hour – will affect up to 175,500 workers, and increase wages across the economy by $216m.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/new-zealand-raises-minimum-wage-and-increases-taxes-on-the-rich

Rosie Jones: ‘I hope disabled people can see me on TV and think: if she can do it, I can do it'

The standup on representation, Matt Hancock, her new travel show and why she loves Norwich

A Great British, Female, Gay, Disabled, Covid-Compliant Adventure was the original name for Rosie Jones’s new travel show. “But,” says its host, “we thought that when you’ve got a presenter who speaks slowly, introducing that would take all bloody day.” She also might have called it Stereotypically Shit Places, another phrase bandied about in today’s Zoom chat. “The idea,” she says, “was to visit places where the local people would go: ‘Why have you come to Whitby for your holiday?!’” In the end, Channel 4 settled on Trip Hazard: My Great British Adventure. The four-part series, about comedian-of-the-moment Jones “going to shit places and making the most of it”, premieres this spring.

Related: The Guide: Staying In – sign up for our home entertainment tips

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source https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2021/mar/30/rosie-jones-i-hope-disabled-people-can-see-me-on-tv-and-think-if-she-can-do-it-i-can-do-it

NgĹ©gÄ© wa Thiong’o nominated as author and translator in first for International Booker

Kenyan novelist’s The Perfect Nine is first work written in an indigenous African language to be longlisted

NgĹ©gÄ© wa Thiong’o has become the first writer to be nominated for the International Booker prize as both author and translator of the same book, and the first nominee writing in an indigenous African language.

The 83-year-old Kenyan and perennial Nobel favourite is among 13 authors nominated for the award for best translated fiction, a £50,000 prize split evenly between author and translator. Thiong’o is nominated as writer and translator of The Perfect Nine, a novel-in-verse described by the judges as “a magisterial and poetic tale about women’s place in a society of gods”, and written in the Bantu language Gikuyu.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/30/ngugi-wa-thiongo-nominated-author-and-translator-first-international-booker-longlist

Queensland police receive formal complaint regarding Andrew Laming photograph from 2019

Crystal White has accused the Liberal MP of taking a photo of her while she was bent over exposing her underwear

A formal complaint against federal Liberal MP Andrew Laming has been lodged by a 29-year-old woman regarding an allegedly inappropriate photograph, Queensland police have confirmed.

The alleged incident, first reported by the Nine Network on Saturday, contributed to Laming announcing he would not contest the next election. The member for Bowman has denied committing an offence and defended his decision to take the photo as a “humorous” depiction of a woman hard at work.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/mar/30/queensland-police-receive-formal-complaint-regarding-andrew-laming-photograph-from-2019

Hell Bent for Metal: the podcast for LGBTQ rock fans – with 'horny German werewolves'

Tom Dare’s hilarious podcast celebrates what he calls a ‘really gay’ scene – and has tackled its homophobia

Back in November, the Hell Bent for Metal podcast (HBFM) put out their first episode, called Gay Satanic Love Songs. If you’re worried that they played their trump card too early, this was followed by an edition entitled BDSM Gear and Black Metal, and another named Horny German Werewolves.

It quickly became clear what you were getting: it’s gay, it’s about heavy metal, and it’s very, very funny. As a gay rock fan, HBFM founder and co-host Tom Dare’s hope was to be visible to other LGBTQ+ lovers of heavy music, and to offer a queer perspective that he felt was missing from a scene that is still affected by homophobia.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/mar/30/hell-bent-for-metal-the-podcast-for-lgbtq-rock-fans-with-horny-german-werewolves

Covid frontline workers priced out of homeowning in 98% of Great Britain

Exclusive: Years of rising prices, pay freeze and high private rents has prevented many from saving for deposit

Low-paid key workers on the frontline of the Covid-19 pandemic would not be able to afford to buy the average priced home in 98% of Great Britain, an exclusive Guardian analysis has found.

Years of rising prices have put homeownership out of reach of many key workers, who have also experienced pay freezes and had to channel their wages into paying high private rents, rather than being able to save for a deposit.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/mar/30/covid-frontline-workers-priced-out-of-homeowning-in-98-of-great-britain

Amazon union vote count set to start for Alabama warehouse workers

Campaign viewed as one of the biggest and most consequential unionization drives in recent America history

Vote counting is set to begin in an election to determine whether Amazon warehouse workers in Bessemer, Alabama, will form a union in what is viewed as one of the biggest and most consequential unionization drives in recent America history.

The contest has pitted America’s labor movement – backed by a slew of Democrat politicians and some Republicans – against one of the most powerful companies in the world.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/mar/30/amazon-union-vote-count-alabama-workers

'It was like a horror film': inside the terror of the Covid cruise ship

HBO documentary The Last Cruise revisits, through footage recorded by passengers and crew, the early-pandemic horror of the Diamond Princess cruise disaster

Before the shutdowns and eerie images of a barren Times Square, before the bungled US federal response to a virus that has since killed 549,000 Americans and nearly 2.8m people worldwide, before most people even had a date they could loosely observe as a pandemic anniversary this past month, there was the Diamond Princess.

The cruise ship departed from Yokohama, Japan on 20 January 2020 for a roundtrip tour of southeast Asia. On board was an 80-year-old passenger from Hong Kong who had recently visited Shenzen, Guangdong Province, China. At the time, there were only four confirmed cases of the then-unnamed Covid-19 virus outside mainland China; within two weeks, the ship would be stalled in the Japanese harbor under quarantine as the largest coronavirus outbreak outside Wuhan – 712 people, 14 of whom would die.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2021/mar/29/it-was-like-a-horror-film-inside-the-terror-of-the-covid-cruise-ship

‘Honey, I forgot to duck’: the attempt to assassinate Ronald Reagan, 40 years on

The Republican narrowly escaped becoming the fifth US president to be assassinated – and there’s been no closer call since

Few guests at the Washington Hilton, a vast hotel rendered in curving Brutalist concrete, notice the simple plaque tucked away near a lower entrance designed for VIPs.

It marks the spot where, 40 years ago today, President Ronald Reagan was shot and injured when would-be assassin John Hinckley fired six bullets in two seconds. White House press secretary James Brady, police officer Thomas Delahanty and secret service agent Tim McCarthy were also hit.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/29/ronald-reagan-assassination-attempt-us-president

Osinbajo defies expectations as Nigeria's vice-president

Analysis: Buhari’s deputy wants to create jobs, feed pupils and cut red tape. Is he too high-profile for his critics?

The role of vice-president is one that John Adams, the first person in the US to hold the position, called “the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived”.

Nigeria’s Patience Jonathan captured the situation in her sarcastic response to a journalist who asked about her husband, Goodluck Jonathan, when he was vice-president. She said: “He is in his office reading newspapers.”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/mar/30/activist-vice-president-yemi-osinbajo-breaks-trend-nigeria

Hilarious, literal, preciously simple: Big Boat Stuck in the Suez Canal was the narrative we needed | Ben Jenkins

Finally, a global news event that we weren’t screaming at each other on Twitter about – and which was simple enough to explain to a child

As the Ever Given was freed from the Suez Canal on Monday — just under a week after it jammed itself in there like a husky gentleman in a waterslide — the prevailing attitude online was not one of relief or celebration.

The hashtag #putitback started trending as people, with varying degrees of sincerity, immediately became nostalgic for the time when the whole world’s attention was fixed on huge oaf of a boat gunking up 200km of canal.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/commentisfree/2021/mar/30/hilarious-literal-preciously-simple-big-boat-stuck-in-the-suez-canal-was-the-narrative-we-needed

EU children in UK care system could become 'undocumented' adults, charity warns

Just 39% of children or young adults in care have applications to remain in UK after Brexit

Thousands of children of EU citizens who have been taken into care may become “undocumented” adults with no right to work, rent a home or receive benefits, a charity has warned.

The Children’s Society has found that just 39% of children in care, or young adults who have recently left care, have had applications to remain in the country after Brexit made on their behalf. It says this is “unacceptable” and that councils across the UK need to work urgently to identify EU citizens in their care.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/eu-children-in-uk-care-system-could-become-undocumented-adults-charity-warns

Goldman snacks: bank sends hampers to staff amid 'inhumane' working hours

Directors pay for fruit and snack bundles for juniors as workers at other firms get bonuses and Pelotons

Bosses at Goldman Sachs have been sending sympathy snack boxes to overworked junior London bankers in response to complaints over “inhumane” 100-hour weeks that have affected their physical and mental health.

The one-off hampers, full of fruit and snacks, are understood to have been paid for by managing directors out of their own pockets, since Goldman has not offered any company-wide gifts or additional bonuses after a leaked report revealed concerns about poor working conditions earlier this month.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/mar/30/goldman-snacks-bank-sends-hampers-to-staff-amid-inhumane-working-hours

Damage: the silent forms of violence against women

How is it that those with the power to inflict most harm are blind to the consequences of their actions?

It is a truism to say that everyone knows violence when they see it, but if one thing has become clear in the past decade, it is that the most prevalent, insidious forms of violence are those that cannot be seen. Consider, for example, a photograph from January 2017. A group of identical-looking white men in dark suits looked on as their president signed an executive order banning US state funding to groups anywhere in the world offering abortion or abortion counselling.

The passing of the “global gag rule” effectively launched the Trump presidency. (It was scrapped by Joe Biden soon after his inauguaration a few weeks ago.) The ruling meant an increase in deaths by illegal abortion for thousands of women throughout the developing world. Its effects have been as cruel as they are precise. No non-governmental organisation (NGO) in receipt of US funds could henceforth accept non-US support, or lobby governments across the world, on behalf of the right to abortion. A run of abortion bans followed in conservative Republican-held US states. In November 2019, Ohio introduced to the state legislature a bill which included the requirement that in cases of ectopic pregnancy, doctors must reimplant the embryo into the woman’s uterus or face a charge of “abortion murder”. (Ectopic pregnancy can be fatal to the mother and no such procedure exists in medical science.)

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source https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/mar/30/damage-the-silent-forms-of-violence-against-women

Crystal brains and witches' butter: discover the fabulous world of fungi

The UK’s woods are full of strange specimens. But they aren’t easy to identify – even for the experts

A host of otherworldly characters are squatting in the wood. Conventional toadstools make way for more gelatinous bodies slopping around fallen trees, dead wood and tree stumps during the coldest months of the year. Many are wood-decaying fungi – things that look like crusts, skin, slime and bits of brain that use enzymes to break down and digest wood and other dead plant material.

Related: Scientists find two new species of fungi that turn flies into 'zombies'

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/30/magic-woodeating-fungi-crystal-brains-witches-butter-aoe

Hong Kong: directly elected seats slashed as China brings in voting system changes

New measures imposed directly by Beijing are latest move aimed at quashing the city’s democracy movement after huge protests

Beijing has approved a sweeping overhaul of Hong Kong’s electoral system as part of its efforts to consolidate its increasingly authoritarian grip on the global financial hub.

The new measures include slashing the number of directly elected seats and ensuring a majority of the city’s lawmakers will be selected by a reliably pro-Beijing committee.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/hong-kong-china-brings-in-voting-system-changes

'Garbage strike' and candle-lit vigils as Myanmar death toll passes 500

Calls for ethnic minority forces to help those standing up to the ‘unfair oppression’ of the military as casualties mount

Myanmar protesters have held overnight candle-lit vigils and launched a civil disobedience campaign of hurling garbage on to streets after an advocacy group said security forces had killed more than 500 people since the 1 February coup.

Out of 14 civilians killed in Myanmar on Monday, the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) said at least eight were in the South Dagon district of Yangon.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/garbage-strike-and-candle-lit-vigils-as-myanmar-death-toll-passes-500

Britons in France could lose driving licences due to post-Brexit impasse

Thousands face not having a valid permit after lack of deal between UK and France and flood of applications

Thousands of British citizens in France have been left without a valid driving licence, or face losing theirs within months, because of bureaucratic overload and the failure of the two countries’ governments to sign a post-Brexit reciprocal agreement.

“I’d say there are 3,000 who are seriously worried – for whom this has really become nightmarish,” said Kim Cranstoun, who moved permanently to France three years ago and whose Facebook group for Britons affected has more than 6,000 members.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/britons-in-france-could-lose-driving-licences-due-to-post-brexit-impasse

Pike river mine families accept end of mission to find victims 'with heartbreak'

Government says it will no longer fund risky mission to retrieve 29 bodies from site of New Zealand’s worst mining disaster

Families of the men who died in one of New Zealand’s worst mining disasters have expressed their heartbreak that the government has ended funding to re-enter the mine, leaving the remains of their loved ones trapped inside.

Twenty-nine men were killed when an explosion ripped through the Pike river mine on the west coast in November 2010. Their bodies have not been recovered, and remain in the mine.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/pike-river-families-accept-end-of-mission-to-find-mine-disaster-victims

After the deluge: NSW's flood disaster victims begin cleanup – in pictures

More than a week after torrential rain hit New South Wales, communities are working to clean up what is left behind

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2021/mar/30/after-the-deluge-nsws-flood-disaster-victims-begin-clean-up-in-pictures

Arkansas and South Dakota pass bans targeting transgender minors

Measures are among dozens of anti-trans legislation across the US and conservatives have filed more proposals this year than ever before

Arkansas lawmakers have approved a ban on gender-affirming healthcare for transgender children, sending the governor a bill that has been widely criticized by medical and child welfare groups.

Related: How trans children became 'a political football' for the Republican party

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/29/arkansas-transgender-healthcare-ban-minors

Richard Okorogheye: appeal for help find 'struggling' London student

Nineteen-year-old, who has sickle cell disease, left his home on 22 March, saying he was going to visit a friend

A London mother is seeking help to find her son who has been missing for over a week.

Student Richard Okorogheye, 19, who has sickle cell disease, said he was “struggling to cope” with university pressures and had been shielding during lockdown, according to his mother, Evidence Joel.

The Metropolitan police said officers were becoming increasingly concerned about the teenager who was believed to have left his family home in the Ladbroke Grove area of west London on 22 March. He was reported missing on 24 March.

Joel told the MyLondon website: “Richard has never done anything like this. Something has gone wrong.” He would only leave the house to go to hospital for regular blood transfusions for his condition.

Joel recalled him saying he was going to visit a friend, although none of them had seen him, telling her to drive safe and that he would “see me later”, she told the website.

She returned home from a nursing shift at around 9pm and assumed he was in his room. She cooked him a meal but found he was not there when she knocked on his door and he did not answer his telephone.

The alarm was raised after a locksmith helped her gain entry to the room which was empty but Richard’s wallet, bus pass and bank card were left behind.

The teenager was last seen leaving his home and heading in the direction of Ladbroke Grove, west London, on 22 March at approximately 8.30pm, police said. Officers added that he was known to frequent London’s Westminster and Hammersmith and Fulham areas.

Chief inspector Clare McCarthy, of the Met’s Central West Command Unit, said: “Our officers have been working tirelessly to locate Richard, using all investigative opportunities and data inquiries, speaking with witnesses and trawling CCTV.

“We are following every lead possible and are appealing for the public to help us in our work.

“If you may have seen Richard, please contact police. If Richard is safe and well, we ask him to contact us as a matter of urgency so that we can put his family’s minds at ease.”

Anyone with information is asked to call police on 101 quoting 21MIS008134, or they can call 999 in an emergency.

They could also go online at https://www.missingpeople.org.uk to pass any information on to the charity Missing People.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/mar/30/richard-okorogheye-appeal-missing-student-london

Canada suspends use of AstraZeneca Covid vaccine for those under 55

Immunisation panel says there is ‘substantial uncertainty about the benefit’ of the vaccine given risk of rare type of blood clot

Canada on Monday suspended the use of the Oxford/AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine for people under 55 following concerns it might be linked to rare blood clots.

The pause was recommended by the National Advisory Committee on Immunization for safety reasons. The Canadian provinces, which administer health in the country, announced the suspension on Monday.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/30/canada-suspends-use-of-astrazeneca-covid-vaccine-for-those-under-55

ALP national conference 2021: Anthony Albanese to announce $15bn Covid recovery fund – live

Australian Labor party gathers online to endorse slimmed-down election platform and debate industrial relations, trade and foreign affairs. Follow all the latest updates, live

Bill Shorten is introducing Anthony Albanese.

But first - it’s time for the video introduction.

Bill Shorten is speaking about how “effectively” the Morrison government is in minority - “one more scandal” away, from losing the numbers on the floor.

He mentions “one more backbench troll, sent off to study how to be a human being” before moving on.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/live/2021/mar/30/alp-national-conference-2021-live-updates-anthony-albanese-election-covid-trade-economy-unions-australian-labor-party

No play, no pay: Covid drives Zimbabwe's pros to unofficial football matches

Informal games are a lifeline while the Premier League is locked down, but at what risk to players?

Sweaty and tired, the players tussle before the winning goal is scored on a red-dust pitch at the No 1 ground in Mufakose, a township west of Harare. The football fans start up a chant on the touchline, triggering a frenzied response from opposing supporters, who break into rapturous song.

This parched pitch and others like it have become a source of livelihood for some Zimbabwean footballers, struggling to earn a living during the Covid-19 pandemic’s lockdown regulations.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/mar/29/no-play-no-pay-covid-drives-zimbabwes-pros-to-unofficial-football-matches

Freedom on the slopes - skiing for women in Afghanistan

Skiing is a beacon of hope for the brave young women who have taken up the sport at Bamyan Ski Club amid political turmoil in the country

It is 6.30am and Nazira Khairzad, 18, and her older sister Nazima, 19, are sat with their family trying to eat the spread of breakfast laid out in front of them, despite their nerves. It is the start of the two-day Afghan Ski Challenge in the central highland province of Bamyan, and the women’s race is kicking off in just a few hours’ time. Not only are the pair the ones to watch but, as soon as they are on the slopes, they are one another’s direct competition.

“I’m nervous but I think I have a good chance of placing first this year,” says Nazira. “That’s what I’m aiming for.”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/freedom-on-slopes-the-women-skiers-of-afghanistan-photo-essay

'The world is waiting': Derek Chauvin set to go on trial for killing of George Floyd

Opening arguments begin in Minneapolis on Monday as ex-officer denies charges of murder and manslaughter

The murder trial of Derek Chauvin, the former police officer whose alleged killing of George Floyd last year prompted a wave of Black Lives Matter protests, gets fully under way with opening arguments in Minneapolis on Monday.

Chauvin, 45, has denied charges of second- and third-degree murder and manslaughter over the death of the 46-year-old Black man after he was detained on suspicion of passing a counterfeit $20 bill last May.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/29/derek-chauvin-trial-george-floyd-minneapolis

New Zealand housing crisis: Jacinda Ardern says rent-increase warnings are 'speculative'

Property investors have railed against last week’s policy changes, which sought to dampen skyrocketing house prices

New Zealand’s government is playind down the impact of its housing policy changes on rents, despite economists warning that they are likely to rise in response.

In a report responding to the housing policy changes announced last week, the ANZ Bank identified “the big negative externality [as] the possible impact on renters – the very people the government is trying to help into the housing market”.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/new-zealand-housing-crisis-jacinda-ardern-says-rent-increase-warnings-are-speculative

Covid hotspots NSW: list of Sydney and regional coronavirus case locations

Here are the current coronavirus hotspots in New South Wales and what to do if you’ve visited them

New South Wales health authorities have updated a list of hotspots Covid-positive people have visited while infectious.

Here’s an overview and what to do if you’ve visited them. More detailed information is available at the NSW Health website.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/mar/29/covid-19-nsw-hotspots-list-regional-sydney-coronavirus-case-outbreak-locations

Biden and EU condemn Myanmar bloodshed as 'outrageous' and 'a day of shame'

Criticism of the junta’s deadly crackdown mounts after military fires on funeral following killing of 100

US President Joe Biden has led global condemnation of an “absolutely outrageous” crackdown by Myanmar’s junta that left more than 100 people – including several children – dead in the bloodiest day since the coup two months ago.

Soldiers and police have killed hundreds in brutal suppression against weeks of mass protests demanding a restoration of democracy and the release of detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/biden-and-eu-condemn-myanmar-bloodshed-as-outrageous-and-a-day-of-shame

Italians defend Dante from claims he was 'light years' behind Shakespeare

Leaders rally in support of ‘father of Italian language’ after withering comments in German newspaper

Italian political and cultural leaders have sprung to the defence of their much-revered poet Dante Alighieri after a German newspaper downplayed his importance to the Italian language and said he was “light years” away from William Shakespeare.

In a comment piece in Frankfurter Rundschau, Arno Widmann wrote that even though Dante “brought the national language to great heights”, Italian schoolchildren struggled to understand the antiquated verse of his Divine Comedy, which was written in 1320.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/29/italians-defend-dante-from-claims-he-was-light-years-behind-shakespeare

The Royal Albert Hall at 150: 'It's the Holy Grail for musicians'

It’s hosted opera greats, suffragette rallies, Hitchcock films, sports events, sci-fi conventions – and, of course, the Proms and countless rock gigs. Artists from Led Zeppelin to Abba recall their moments on the hallowed stage

The Royal Albert Hall is 150 years old today (and the Guardian was there to see it opened by Queen Victoria). With a design based on a Roman amphitheatre, stacked balconies pack the audience close to the action – and at a capacity touching 6,000, the number of visitors entertained at the London venue runs to many millions. But what is it like to play as a performer? We asked artists and sportspeople for their memories of being centre stage at the iconic venue.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/mar/29/the-royal-albert-hall-at-150-its-the-holy-grail-for-musicians

Marti Pellow on success, songwriting and sobriety: 'Every day I punch addiction in the face!'

With Wet Wet Wet, Pellow was one of the biggest-selling musicians of the 90s. But heroin and alcohol soon became a problem. He talks about heroes, love and conquering his demons

Marti Pellow remembers his introduction to booze clearly. He was a young boy, about 11, and he sneaked a can of beer from his father. “I knew as soon as I had my first drink that it made me feel different,” he says. “I had a fuzzy feeling in my stomach. I liked the rush of that. It made me feel light.” By the time he was 12, he would go to dances with his friends and alcohol would give him dutch courage. “I’d ask an adult to buy me a couple of cans of lager. It gave me a wee bit more confidence to ask a girl to dance; it made me feel larger than life.”

Pellow went on to become the frontman of Wet Wet Wet, the blue-eyed soul band whose version of Love Is All Around, as featured in Four Weddings and a Funeral, topped the charts for 15 weeks and is still the UK’s biggest-selling love song. By the time he left Wet Wet Wet for the first time in 1998, three of their five studio albums had topped the UK charts (with the others peaking at No 2) and they had had 26 Top 40 hits. By then, he had also developed a dual addiction to alcohol and heroin that could easily have done for him. It did pretty much do for him, as far as the band was concerned. Sure, he rejoined in 2003, and they spent another 14 years together, but they never enjoyed the same success again.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/mar/29/marti-pellow-on-success-songwriting-and-sobriety-every-day-i-punch-addiction-in-the-face

AljaĹľ & Janette: Remembering the Oscars review – Strictly stardust at the movies

Rememberingtheoscars.com
The TV pro couple’s take on favourite routines delivers fans a fizzing taste of the full-length stage show waiting in the wings

The married Strictly stars AljaĹľ Ĺ korjanec and Janette Manrara have a two-hour live show lined up and raring to go, but until they can actually perform it, they’ve filmed a 60-minute screen version to give us a dose of light-entertainment sparkle.

Choreographed by Gareth Walker, a veteran of Strictly spin-offs, pop tours and the couple’s previous shows, Remembering Fred and Remembering the Movies (there’s a formula here), the Oscars theme is loosely applied. Mainly it’s an excuse for glam costumes, easy-on-the-eye routines danced to familiar songs (Singin’ in the Rain, Evita), and a jokey montage featuring Rocky, Flashdance, the Dirty Dancing lift and lots of mugging for the camera. Along with scripted interludes and extra backstage content, it comes with all the smiles, slick dancing and good humour you’d expect of two prime-time pros.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2021/mar/29/aljaz-skorhanec-janette-manrara-remembering-the-oscars-review-strictly-stardust-at-the-movies

Watchdog steps in over secrecy about UK women in Syria stripped of citizenship

Exclusive: Home Office refusal to disclose how many women are in same position as Shamima Begum prompts action

The Home Office’s refusal to disclose the number of women who, like Shamima Begum, have been deprived of their British citizenship after travelling to join Islamic State is under investigation by the information commissioner.

The watchdog said it would step in after the government refused to share the data with a human rights group concerned about the conditions of British women and children detained in camps in north-east Syria, where conditions are dire.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/watchdog-steps-in-secrecy-uk-women-syria-stripped-of-citizenship

Suez canal: Ever Given ship partially 'refloated' after almost a week blocking major waterway

Early on Monday morning, reports emerged that the mega ship’s bow had been dislodged

The Ever Given has reportedly been partially freed from the banks of the Suez canal, raising hopes that the vital waterway could reopen and ease global shipping backlogs.

Early on Monday morning, reports emerged that the bow of the massive container ship had been dislodged from the bank of the canal.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/suez-canal-attempt-re-float-ever-given-delay-salvage-tugboats

‘We’re treated as children,’ Qatari women tell rights group

Gulf state’s male guardian rules deny women right to wed, travel, work or to make decisions about their children, report says

Women in Qatar are living under a system of “deep discrimination” – dependent on men for permission to marry, travel, pursue higher education or make decisions about their own children, according to a new report.

Opaque rules on male guardianship leave women without basic freedoms, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW), which has analysed for the first time the way the system works in practice.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/mar/29/were-treated-as-children-qatari-women-tell-rights-group

Madeira lets in tourists who can show Covid 'vaccine passport'

Portuguese island’s ‘green corridor’ opens door to visitors even if they have not been vaccinated

Sara Pedro is sat at a beach-side restaurant with friends. It is her first time dining out in three months.

She is in Madeira, an autonomous region of Portugal, having left her home city of Lisbon’s strict coronavirus restrictions to take advantage of the more relaxed atmosphere on the Atlantic island and its “green corridor” for visitors who can show either a vaccination certificate or proof they have recently recovered from the virus.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/madeira-lets-in-tourists-who-can-show-covid-vaccine-passport

'I can't go on': women in Japan suffer isolation and despair amid Covid job losses

Suicide rates among Japanese women rose sharply during the pandemic, prompting calls for support for low-income households

The coronavirus had barely begun its surge across the globe when Ayako Sato was told that the nursery where she worked would temporarily close as part of Japan’s efforts to curb the outbreak.

The mother of two teenage daughters expected a few weeks of belt tightening, believing it wouldn’t be long before she was working again.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/i-cant-go-on-women-in-japan-suffer-isolation-and-despair-amid-covid-job-losses

PNG government official's company awarded lucrative Covid catering contract

Prime minister James Marape to set up investigation into AU$200,000 contract for Caring Ltd to provide catering services

A company, one of whose directors is a senior official within Papua New Guinea’s department of health was paid more than 539,000 kina (A$200,000) to provide catering including for a Covid isolation unit in the capital from May to November last year.

The revelations have prompted the country’s prime minister, James Marape, to call for a full investigation into the catering contract and the tender process by which it was obtained.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/png-government-officials-company-awarded-lucrative-covid-catering-contract

Sandstorms turn sun blue and sky yellow in Beijing

Thick dust carrying extremely high levels of hazardous particles blows in from drought-hit Mongolia

The second sandstorm to hit China in less than a fortnight has reversed the colours of the sky, turning the sun blue and the heavens yellow.

Beijing woke on Sunday morning shrouded in thick dust carrying extremely high levels of hazardous particles.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/29/sandstorms-turn-sun-blue-and-sky-yellow-in-beijing

Qld Covid: Brisbane to go into snap three-day lockdown after cluster grows to seven cases

Two women who travelled to Bryon Bay in NSW while infectious are among the four new local cases of the UK variant of coronavirus
• Follow the Australia liveblog
Queensland Covid hotspots; • NSW Covid hotspots

Greater Brisbane will go into to a three-day snap lockdown from 5pm Monday, after authorities detected four new locally acquired coronavirus cases.

The state’s chief health officer, Jeannette Young, described the growing cluster of seven cases as “significant community transmission” of the UK variant of the virus and warned people to stay at home in the coming days.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/mar/29/qld-covid-brisbane-to-go-into-snap-three-day-lockdown-after-cluster-grows-to-seven-cases

Glow-worms: as soon as you think you’ve seen them, they blink off | Helen Sullivan

As soon as you’re sure you imagined them, on they go again

“Thou aeronautical boll weevil / Illuminate yon woods primeval,” the Mills Brothers sang in 1952, imploring glow-worms to “Light the path below, above / And lead us on to love”. John Keats, comparing the fairness of goddess Psyche with the bright white moon and the evening star (spoiler: she is fairer than both), refers to the star as an “amorous glow-worm of the sky”. Seamus Heaney poked a glow-worm with a blunt stick and “a tiny brightening den lit the eye” – turning the stick into a wand.

Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo. I’m in Mozambique, it is dark, and there is a wedding tomorrow. I have just had my first – and I don’t know it yet, but only – drink in a coconut. I chose Fanta Grape. Outside at the restaurant, I see my first glow-worms. It is possible that they are fireflies, but they’re still: on the branches of what I hope are hibiscus trees, but then again, I would happily plant a hibiscus in every memory I have.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/commentisfree/2021/mar/29/glow-worms-as-soon-as-you-think-youve-seen-them-they-blink-off

'Is this patriot enough?': Asian-American veteran shows battle scars – video

Lee Wong, an Asian-American and former soldier, lifts his shirt to reveal scars he sustained while serving with the US military. Wong, 69, an elected official in West Chester, Ohio was speaking in a town hall meeting about the racism he has faced in his adopted homeland. Addressing the meeting, Wong stood up and lifted his singlet, showing large scars on his chest. ‘Here is my proof. This is sustained in my service in the US military. Is this patriot enough?’ he asked.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2021/mar/29/is-this-patriot-enough-asian-american-veteran-shows-battle-scars-video

Schitt's Creek motel for sale – minus the 'Rosebud' sign

First the Rose family’s former mansion hit the real estate lists – now it’s the 10-room motel they called home

The motel home of the Rose family in the Emmy-sweeping Canadian TV series Schitt’s Creek is up for sale for C$2m.

The Hockley Motel in the Canadian town of Mono, Ontario, was a key filming location throughout the six seasons of the hit CBC sitcom.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2021/mar/29/schitts-creek-motel-for-sale-minus-the-rosebud-sign

Ikea furniture, tea and French oak: goods held up by Suez canal blockage

More than 360 vessels have been stranded since giant container ship MV Ever Given became wedged diagonally across the Suez

A vast range of goods from Ikea furnishings to tens of thousands of livestock is stuck in a maritime traffic jam caused by the Suez canal blockage.

More than 360 vessels have been stranded in the Mediterranean to the north of the canal and in the Red Sea to the south since the giant container ship MV Ever Given became wedged diagonally across the vital waterway on 23 March.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/ikea-furniture-tea-and-french-oak-goods-held-up-by-suez-canal-blockage

UN in talks with China over 'no restrictions' visit to Xinjiang

Mission to check out treatment of Uighur minority is backed by Beijing, says secretary-general AntĂłnio Guterres

The UN has begun negotiations with Beijing for a visit “without restrictions” to Xinjiang to see how the Uighur minority is being treated, secretary-general AntĂłnio Guterres said in an interview broadcast.

At least one million Uighurs and people from other mostly Muslim groups have been held in camps in the north-western region, according to US and Australian rights groups, which accuse Chinese authorities of forcibly sterilising women and imposing forced labor.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/29/un-in-talks-with-china-over-no-restrictions-visit-to-xinjiang

Miami Beach curfew for spring breakers prompts racism complaints

The Florida city’s annual influx of young tourists, many African American, has been spurred by a lack of Covid restrictions but the response to rowdiness has been called heavy-handed

On Sunday, the second night of an emergency 8pm curfew in Miami Beach’s Art Deco Cultural District, a police squad came upon a large crowd of spring breakers having a good time on 8th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, a residential area just west of Ocean Drive, the city’s famous street where the annual party usually takes place.

According to a police report, approximately 500 people had gathered in the streets and the sidewalks wreaking havoc. They stomped on top of cars, causing roofs to cave in and windshields to shatter. They danced, drank booze and smoked marijuana. Just the type of rowdy behavior often associated with college students decompressing from a long semester of classes.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/28/miami-beach-curfew-spring-break-racism-complaints

Mexico Covid death toll leaps 60% to reach 321,000

New government report includes excess deaths and shows fatalities may exceed those of Brazil, the world’s second worst-affected country

Mexico’s government has acknowledged that the country’s true death toll from the coronavirus pandemic now stands above 321,000, almost 60% more than the official test-confirmed number of 201,429.

Mexico does little testing, and because hospitals were overwhelmed, many Mexicans died at home without getting a test. The only way to get a clear picture is to review “excess deaths” and review death certificates.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/28/mexico-covid-death-toll-rise-60-percent

Doug Emhoff: 'charming' second gentleman embraces supporting role

Kamala Harris’s husband hasn’t shied away from politics – but he shows little desire for the spotlight

With elbow bumps and masked greetings, Doug Emhoff convened a roundtable discussion on gender equity in the workplace at the headquarters of a construction company outside of St Louis on Wednesday.

Seated behind a placard that with his official title, “second gentleman”, Emhoff was also the only gentleman at the event, marking Equal Pay Day. In a nod to his own barrier-breaking role as husband to Kamala Harris – the nation’s first female, first Black and first South Asian vice-president - Lyda Krewson, mayor of St Louis, said his presence at the session was a welcome sign of change.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/28/doug-emhoff-second-gentleman-kamala-harris

Writers in culture war over rules of the imagination

New manifesto of writers’ association PEN accused by its US arm of backing ‘cultural appropriation’

It’s a venerable global cultural institution, dedicated to freedom of expression and set to celebrate its centenary this year. Yet the writers’ association PEN is being drawn into dispute over a declaration claiming the right of authors to imagination, allowing them to describe the world from the point of view of characters from other cultural backgrounds.

At issue is a charter manifesto, The Democracy of the Imagination, passed unanimously by delegates of PEN International at the 85th world congress in Manila in 2019. A year on , through the social upheavals of 2020, PEN’s US arm, PEN America, has not endorsed the manifesto, which includes the principle: “PEN believes the imagination allows writers and readers to transcend their own place in the world to include the ideas of others.”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/28/writers-in-culture-war-over-rules-of-the-imagination

Philip Roth: The Biography by Blake Bailey review – definitive life of a literary great in thrall to his libido

From the troubled marriages to the breakthroughs that led to Sabbath’s Theater and American Pastoral… a beautifully written book by Roth’s chosen biographer

In response to that staple biographer’s question, “when were you happiest?”, Philip Roth tended to think of his first year as a graduate student at the University of Chicago, when he was free to pursue his persistent “Byronic dream” of “bibliography by day, women by night”. In the six decades that followed, as Blake Bailey’s compulsively readable life of the novelist reveals, this idealised schedule was generally compromised one way or another, to Roth’s frequent frustration and sometime derangement. In Chicago and subsequently during his two-year national service beginning at Fort Dix, he had regular visits from his first obsessive lover, Maxine Groffsky, and he reminisced fondly to Bailey how on meeting, they would always tear each other’s clothes off at the door. “I haven’t done that in a while,” Roth mused, aged 79. “I take them off nicely, I hang them up, I get into bed and I read. And I enjoy it as much as I enjoyed tearing the clothes off.” That late-life liberation from desire is 900 pages in the making.

The two great and lasting traumas of Roth’s life were his marriages. He came to believe he had been trapped into both of them. First by Margaret Martinson, a waitress five years his senior, whom he had initially seduced as a “test” to see if he could charm a “shiksa blonde” and who Bailey later describes, through Roth’s eyes, as “a bitter, impoverished, sexually undesirable divorcee”. Martinson tricked him into a terrible union with false claims that she was pregnant, backed up with a sample of urine bought for $3 from an expectant mother in a homeless shelter, and threats of suicide if Roth should ever leave her. The second perceived “entrapment” was with the actor Claire Bloom, with whom Roth spent nearly 20 years from 1975, years that she documented in her brutally critical memoir of his role in their drama, Leaving a Doll’s House.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/28/philip-roth-the-biography-by-blake-bailey-review-definitive-life-of-a-literary-great-in-thrall-to-his-libido

Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue review: how Ruth Bader Ginsburg changed America

Remarks, rulings and dissents show the extraordinary influence of the supreme court justice known and loved as RBG

Two and a half years ago, at a naturalization ceremony for newly minted Americans, Ruth Bader Ginsburg asked: “What is the difference between a bookkeeper in New York City’s garment district and a supreme court justice?”

Related: Ruth Bader Ginsburg remembered by Lisa Beattie Frelinghuysen

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/28/justice-justice-thou-shalt-pursue-review-ruth-bader-ginsburg-rbg

Cocktails for 600? Home-tasting firms toast their success

Group online tests of food and drink have given participants’ spirits a welcome lift

Patrick Fogarty, who runs Dr Ink’s Curiosities, an award-winning cocktail bar in Exeter, estimates that 10,000 people have taken his virtual masterclasses since they started last March. “Everybody is looking for something to do. We have never been busier,” he said.

Desperate to relieve lockdown boredom, many people in the UK and across the world have turned to virtual tastings, which have soared in popularity over the past 12 months.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/mar/28/cocktails-for-600-home-tasting-firms-toast-their-success

‘It’s for the people’: how George Floyd Square became a symbol of resistance – and healing

The semi-autonomous area in Minneapolis has become a service to the community, but the city wants to see it reopened

The sign on a barricade on a once-unassuming street in Minneapolis reads: “You’re now entering the free state of George Floyd”.

A small rectangle of city blocks features murals, flowers, candles and tributes in the place where Floyd, a Black man, died under the knee of a white police officer last May, sparking the biggest US civil rights uprising since the 1960s.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/27/its-for-the-people-how-george-floyd-square-became-a-symbol-of-resistance-and-healing

Suez canal: Syria 'rations' fuel as efforts to free stuck ship fail

Syria oil ministry restricts supply as canal chief says ‘technical or human errors’ may have been behind stranding of the Ever Given

Syrian authorities say they have begun rationing fuel as the blockage of the Suez canal stretched into a sixth day, delaying vital shipments and worsening the country’s oil shortages.

Syria has been mired in civil war since 2011 and faces a severe economic crisis. It had already announced a more than 50% rise in the price of petrol in mid-March.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/28/suez-canal-ever-given-stuck-ship-syria-rations-fuel

MPs unite to call for total ban on ‘wicked’ foie gras in the UK

Outlawing the sale of the controversial delicacy will now be easier because of Brexit but could still be challenged by the WTO

Foie gras has been served in one form or another at the banquets of the pharaohs and the court of Louis XIV.

But present-day fans are losing the battle to keep foie gras on the menu in Britain, after years of campaigning by opponents appalled at its production by force-feeding ducks and geese.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/28/mps-unite-to-call-for-total-ban-on-wicked-foie-gras-in-the-uk

My partner is always with Zoom mates – there’s no time for me | Mariella Frostrup

Everyone is looking for distractions in lockdown, says Mariella Frostrup. Find your own and see how the land lies when things return to normal

The dilemma Since lockdown my partner has found a wonderful group, who all work in the same field as him. It’s a great support network and they regularly meet throughout the week on Zoom. He says it’s like going to the pub with mates and in that way it is great. However, it’s now becoming a bit of an issue. The calls take place multiple times a week and in between they all have one big WhatsApp group so sometimes it feels like he is plugged in constantly. A few times I have thought he wanted to spend time alone because, well, lockdown, so have headed to bed to give him space, only to find the next minute he’s logged on to Zoom and chatting with them again. On the nights when it’s just us, he falls asleep early and seems a little down. I can see what a wonderful group this is for him but it’s becoming a 24-hour thing. I don’t want to be unsupportive but I also want him to understand that multiple calls a week and at weekends cuts into quality time we could be spending together.

Mariella replies Careful what you wish for! For many, the past 12 months have provided over-exposure to our significant others that we’ll be glad to call a halt to as soon as we’re given dispensation. There’s no question that successive lockdowns have been a rough ride for almost everybody. With the impact of restrictions and the absence of friends, many have experienced the impulse to bolt the confines of our own homes.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/mar/28/my-partner-is-always-with-zoom-mates-there-is-no-time-for-me

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Ethiopia’s controversial quest for the sea

https://ift.tt/4t29xJd Ethiopia is famously landlocked. That’s why the ambitious Ethiopian prime minister Abiy Ahmed has long harbored visi...