The shows must go on: the best of Edinburgh fringe, in person and online

From a play in a car park to an online event from a shed, this year’s festival is finding new ways to entertain

The Edinburgh festival fringe, at its height, was a magnificent monster. The largest arts festival in the world, it was exhilaratingly, dizzyingly, dauntingly huge and – like a city-consuming ooze from a 1950s B-movie – it kept growing, year after year. In 2019, the fringe featured more than 3,500 shows in over 300 venues. And that’s without taking into account its less chaotic sibling, the Edinburgh international festival.

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

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source https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2021/jul/31/best-shows-edinburgh-festival-fringe-2021-live-online

Pedro Francke: relief in Peru as moderate is made finance minister

President Pedro Castillo completes his cabinet after causing shockwaves with appointment of controversial Guido Bellido as prime minister

After 24 hours of uncertainty and the worst Friday in years on the stock exchange, Peru’s new president, Pedro Castillo, has completed his cabinet, swearing in the moderate leftist economist Pedro Francke as finance minister, and in the process calming jittery investors and anxious Peruvians alike.

Aníbal Torres was also sworn in, as justice minister, on Friday, filling the remaining empty cabinet posts. The rest were sworn in late on Thursday, amid deep unease over Castillo’s choice of prime minister, Guido Bellido, who is under investigation for allegedly defending the Shining Path, a Maoist rebel group that killed tens of thousands of Peruvians in the 1980s and 1990s, and is also accused of making homophobic remarks.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/pedro-francke-relief-in-peru-as-moderate-is-made-finance-minister

Myanmar junta accused of crimes against humanity six months on from coup

Human Rights Watch says army’s suppression of protests has included torture and murder, as small protests mark milestone

Human Rights Watch has accused Myanmar’s military junta of crimes against humanity as small groups of protesters marked six months since the armed forces seized power.

Bands of university students rode motorbikes around the country’s second-largest city Mandalay on Saturday waving red and green flags, saying they rejected any possibility of talks with the military to negotiate a return to civilian rule.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/myanmar-junta-accused-of-crimes-against-humanity-six-months-on-from-coup

Coronavirus: China and Australia toughen Delta response

Snap three-day lockdown in Brisbane and surrounding areas of Queensland, while WHO urges containment ‘before more dangerous variants emerge’

Outbreaks of the Delta variant have prompted China and Australia to impose stricter Covid-19 restrictions as the WHO urged the world to quickly contain the mutation before it turns into something deadlier.

China’s most serious surge of coronavirus infections in months spread to two more areas on Saturday: Fujian province and the megacity of Chongqing.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/coronavirus-china-and-australia-toughen-delta-response

Billie Eilish: ‘To always try to look good is such a loss of joy and freedom’

In an exclusive interview, Gen Z’s biggest pop star talks about body image, oversharing with fans and what she’s missed most since becoming famous

Billie Eilish is making me nervous. She has called, as arranged, bang on time – 11pm in Los Angeles – but, she admits, she is not quite ready to speak: “This is a mess, I’m so sorry!” Her pale face and platinum hair loom from her phone screen, surrounded by darkness. Her head is at a funny angle and… oh God, she’s driving, her mobile apparently balanced on the car’s dashboard.

Help! I don’t want to inadvertently cause the death of one of the world’s most gifted and valuable pop stars; to watch as a generation-defining musician at the top of her game crashes her car.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/jul/31/billie-eilish-to-always-try-to-look-good-is-such-a-loss-of-joy-and-freedom

Lab-grown dairy is the future of milk, researchers say

Startups are joining the race to create first imitation cow’s milk by artificially reproducing proteins in curds and whey

For decades, people on plant-based diets were restricted to soya-based options to recreate dairy, until veganism went mainstream and a clutch of palate-pleasing almond, coconut and oat-based alternatives emerged. Last week, Swedish scientists launched a potato milk, equally lauded for its sustainability credentials and criticised for deriving from a humdrum carbohydrate. The holy grail now – according to researchers – is genuine dairy milk, made in a lab.

A growing number of startups from Silicon Valley to Singapore are rapidly joining the race to create the first imitation cow’s milk, based on artificially reproducing the proteins in curds (casein) and whey, that is suitable for mass market consumption.

Scientists say it will recreate dairy’s authentic mouthfeel and temperature resistance, and constitute the perfect texture for vegan cheese, capable of melting just like the real thing.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/food/2021/jul/31/lab-grown-dairy-is-the-future-of-milk-researchers-say

Sydney anti-lockdown protest blocked as organisers vow to regroup in August

Anti-lockdown protests planned in Sydney fail to materialise as police enforce exclusion zone

Anti-lockdown protests planned in Sydney on Saturday failed to materialise, with police confident a city-wide crackdown on movement and checkpoints entering the city prevented a repeat of the lockdown-violating mass gatherings seen last week.

As New South Wales health authorities announced 210 new cases in its Delta outbreak on Saturday morning, deputy police commissioner Michael Willing set the scene for what would be a severe operation involving mounted police, helicopters, harsh fines and an exclusion zone to keep potential protesters from gathering.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jul/31/sydney-lockdown-protest-police-claim-victory-as-organisers-vow-to-regroup-in-august

Floods block food from reaching thousands of refugees in Colombia

Families fleeing drug gangs and paramilitaries have been cut off, with government accused of being ‘incapable’ of protecting them

Flooding and landslides have left thousands of refugees cut off from food supplies in Ituango, the conflict-strewn municipality in north-western Colombia.

Roads have been blocked by mud and debris after heavy rains, while helicopters have been unable to land. As a result, the delivery of food and medical supplies has been stymied, and communications cut off.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/jul/31/floods-block-food-from-reaching-thousands-of-refugees-in-colombia

Hong Kong man arrested for allegedly booing Chinese anthem while watching Olympics

Man allegedly also waved colonial-era flags while watching fencer Edgar Cheung’s medal ceremony at a mall

Hong Kong police have arrested a man on suspicion of insulting the national anthem, after he allegedly booed the Chinese national anthem while watching an Olympic event at a mall.

The 40-year-old man was detained on Friday after allegedly waving colonial-era Hong Kong flags and booing, while urging others to join him in insulting the song, according to a police statement posted on Facebook.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/hong-kong-man-arrested-for-allegedly-booing-chinese-anthem-while-watching-olympics

Roll up, roll up: UK circus offers vaccine as take-up slows in under-25s

Festivals and sporting events such as Goodwood will host pop-up vaccination centres in England this weekend

Pop-up vaccine centres are being set up at festivals, sporting events and even a circus in England this weekend, as the NHS bids to boost take-up among younger people.

The latest official data shows that 60% of 18- to 25-year-olds have received at least one jab since all over-18s were invited to come forward for vaccination last month.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/uk-circus-offers-vaccine-as-take-up-slows-in-under-25s

Blind date: ‘He kept name-dropping celebrities he’s worked with’

Will, 27, A&E doctor, meets Owen, 26, stage manager

What were you hoping for?
To meet the love of my life, or at least go viral.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/jul/31/blind-date-will-owen

Father hopes to reopen case of British woman who disappeared 20 years ago

Louise Kerton went missing in 2001 after travelling to stay with her boyfriend’s family in Germany

Twenty years since the disappearance of Louise Kerton, who travelled to Germany to holiday with her boyfriend’s family and disappeared, her father is looking for fresh leads.

Phil Kerton is hoping publicity to mark the anniversary might trigger memories or encourage police in Germany, the UK or Belgium – which she is supposed to have travelled through via rail and sea – to reopen the case.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/father-hopes-to-reopen-case-of-british-woman-who-disappeared-20-years-ago

Eutelsat Quantum: breakthrough reprogrammable satellite launches

Transmission beams can be reconfigured from the ground, whereas most commercial satellites are hard-wired before launch

The world’s first commercial fully reprogrammable satellite has been launched, ushering in a new era of more flexible communications.

Unlike conventional models that are designed and “hard-wired” on Earth and cannot be repurposed once in orbit, the UK-engineered Eutelsat Quantum allows users to tailor it almost in real-time.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/jul/31/eutelsat-quantum-breakthrough-reprogrammable-satellite-launches

Tokyo 2020 Olympics: GB win gold in triathlon relay, plus athletics, swimming and more – live!

GB’s Jessie Knight, the British No 1, falls before the first hurdle, strikes it and is out of the race - and Olympics. USA’s Sydney McLaughlin jogs home in first, five seconds off her world record. No need to tire herself out early on... Panama’s Gianna Woodruff, Sara Slott Petersen of Denmark and Leah Nugent of Jamaica also qualify. Oh, Nugent has been DQ’s and Vietnam’s Thi Lan Quach goes through in her place.

Another Ukrainian in the hear three of the women’s 400m hurdles! Is it the national sport? Sydney McLaughlin the world record holder should win this. GB’s Jessie Knight is in lane one.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2021/jul/30/tokyo-2020-olympics-triathlon-relay-athletics-swimming-and-more-live

UN warns hunger is expected to rise in 23 global hotspots

https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
Two U.N. agencies are warning that hunger is expected to rise in 23 global hotspots in the next three months with the highest alerts for “catastrophic” situations in Ethiopia’s embattled Tigray region, southern Madagascar, Yemen, South Sudan and northern Nigeria
Originally posted here: https://ift.tt/3rKbZUW

‘The war has changed’: CDC paper warns Delta variant is far more transmissible

Rochelle Walensky says ‘extreme’ measures needed to counter threat of virus that can be spread even by vaccinated people

The Delta variant spreads much faster, is more likely to infect the vaccinated, and could potentially trigger more severe illness in the unvaccinated compared with all other known variants, according to an internal report compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The document, a slide presentation prepared by officials within the US’s health protection agency first obtained by the Washington Post, warned that the Delta variant is as infectious as chickenpox, and argues that government officials must “acknowledge the war has changed” given how dangerous the variant is.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/30/covid-delta-variant-guidelines-masks-cdc-paper-transmission

Extroverted, self-centred men less likely to comply with Covid restrictions, study suggests

Non-compliers more likely to leave home to meet friends, for religious reasons, boredom, or because they want to exercise right to freedom

People who do not comply with Covid-19 pandemic restrictions are mostly male, more extroverted and more likely to put their own self-interests above those of others, suggests a new study of behaviours internationally.

University of Sydney researchers assessed behaviours and attitudes towards Covid regulations in 1,575 people in Australia, Canada, the UK, and the US between April and May last year, during the first wave of the pandemic.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/extroverted-self-centred-men-less-likely-to-comply-with-covid-restrictions-study-suggests

State v state: war of words heats up over Sydney and Melbourne lockdowns

Far from pulling together during the pandemic, NSW and Victoria have increasingly swapped pointed barbs

Australia was hit by the pandemic in what seemed a moment of national unity. Large stretches of the east coast had been on fire all summer and the nation had pulled together to help. Volunteers – from firefighters to helicopter pilots to fence-fixers – drove across state lines to the areas of greatest need.

Eighteen months later, the nation – or at least its two largest cities – appear to be pulling apart. Requests for additional vaccines, first from Victoria, then from New South Wales, were rejected. The political rhetoric is pernicious.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/31/state-v-state-war-of-words-heats-up-over-sydney-and-melbourne-lockdowns

Covid Australia live news update: NSW police brace for lockdown protests as Victoria records two new cases

Anti-lockdown protests planned in Sydney after Scott Morrison and state and territory leaders back pathway out of rolling lockdowns

FYI: NSW Health just posted a quick a correction to their list of exposure sites at Baulkham Hills.

*Correction for exposure at Baulkham Hills* Aldi, corner of Old Northern Road and Olive Street: Wednesday 21 July, 5:45am to 3:10pm and Thursday 22 July, 6:49am to 10:25am.

Taxi and rideshare companies face fines of up to half a million dollars if they take passengers into Sydney’s CBD on Saturday, as NSW Police desperately try to prevent a sequel to last weekend’s anti-lockdown protest.

AAP understands that NSW Police will set up an exclusion zone around the city to last from 9am to 3pm on Saturday.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2021/jul/31/covid-australia-live-news-update-nsw-lockdown-protesters-urged-to-stay-home-by-police

Bob Odenkirk says he had small heart attack but vows ‘I’ll be back soon’

US actor, 58. makes first public statement since collapsing on set of Better Call Saul earlier this week

Bob Odenkirk, the actor and star of Better Call Saul, said Friday that he “had a small heart attack” but will “be back soon”.

Related: Nobody review – Bob Odenkirk is a blast in action man mode

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source https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2021/jul/30/bob-odenkirk-better-call-saul-heart-attack

‘Women have not been able hold these: Samoa’s first female PM gets down to the job

After months of political turmoil, following the country’s most contentious election, Fiama Naomi Mata’afa is ready to get to work

The prime minister’s office in Apia, the capital of Samoa, which overlooks the harbour, has just been vacated by the man who held the job for 22 years.

The bookshelves are still empty, but the room is filled with bunches of flowers, sent by well-wishers keen to congratulate the new incumbent.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/30/women-have-not-been-able-hold-these-position-samoas-first-female-pm-gets-down-to-the-job

On China, Covid-19 and being the first woman in the job: Samoa’s first female PM– video

Samoa's first female prime minister Fiame Naomi Mata'afa in her first sit-down interview with foreign media since taking office this week says there was 'a lot of excitement' in the Pacific nation about her election among women and girls . She also opened up about Samoa's relationship with China, saying that while 'of course we know what's happening in the global context' with the US-China tensions Samoa needed to be 'very focused on how we navigate our way through international relations'.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2021/jul/31/on-china-covid-19-and-being-the-first-woman-in-the-job-samoas-first-female-pm-video

Gabrielle Chan on why you should definitely care about farming

Katharine Murphy speaks to journalist Gabrielle Chan about her upcoming book, Why you should give a f*ck about farming. Gabrielle talks about how farming is at the intersection of the world’s greatest existential threats. She also explains how food consumption has become increasingly tribal and polarised, which is very similar to the changes we’ve witnessed in politics over recent years

Gabrielle Chan’s book Why you should give a f*ck about farming is available from 31 August 2021.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/audio/2021/jul/31/gabrielle-chan-on-why-you-should-definitely-care-about-farming

Samsung Galaxy Book Pro 360 review: flexible laptop with beautiful OLED screen

Latest thin, light and adaptable Windows 10 machine looks great, is fast and has a nine-hour battery

Samsung’s latest Galaxy Book Pro is a fast and versatile Windows 10 laptop that has a gorgeous-looking OLED screen.

Available as a standard laptop costing from £1,099 ($999) or one with a screen that folds back on itself called the Galaxy Book Pro 360 for an extra £100 ($200). It is the successor to 2020’s Galaxy Book Flex and follows a similar theme: good 13.3in screen, 360-degree folding hinge and thin metal body available in a distinctive royal blue colour.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/jul/30/samsung-galaxy-book-pro-360-review-flexible-laptop-oled-screen

‘A long-form pilgrimage’: Coventry hosts 24-hour interfaith celebration

The RSC and City of Culture’s free events include promenade performances and an installation by Tower of London poppy artist

In a celebration of one of the most religiously diverse cities in the UK, Coventry is to host 24 hours of art, theatre, music, food and debate aimed at exploring belief and promoting the connections between faiths.

The Royal Shakespeare Company and Coventry City of Culture have teamed up to produce Faith, a series of free live events in September, including four promenade performances and an art installation by the creator of the 2014 Tower of London poppy memorial.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2021/jul/30/a-long-form-pilgrimage-coventry-hosts-24-hour-interfaith-celebration

A portrait of black lives in Suffolk – in pictures

Black Suffolk is a series of portraits by photographer John Ferguson of people from Suffolk’s African-Caribbean community. The pictures will be on display in an outdoor exhibition in central Ipswich from 30 July and throughout August. Ferguson said: ‘I have produced a new collection of portraits which explore the concept of home for a diversity of people in the African-Caribbean community in Suffolk. This theme creatively expresses people’s experience and interpretation of what exactly is home. Home can be a feeling, a physical space or a geographical place. Home can be a memory, metaphor or experience. The idea is to connect with the notion that our lives are inextricably attached to where we live, our homes, and Suffolk.’

Black Suffolk is part of the six-month-long Aspire Black Suffolk cultural programme, promoted by Head East

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/gallery/2021/jul/30/a-portrait-of-black-lives-in-suffolk-in-pictures

Beijing warns of ‘counter-measures’ as Royal Navy sails South China Sea

Strike group led by HMS Queen Elizabeth is sailing through waters that are heavily contested between China and neighbouring countries

China’s military and state media have warned the UK against provocation as it sent a carrier strike group, led by a Royal Navy aircraft carrier, through the contested South China Sea.

A spokesman for China’s Ministry of National Defence, Wu Qian, said it respected freedom of navigation but firmly opposed any naval activities that aimed to provoke controversy.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/30/china-royal-navy-south-china-sea-warning-beijing

Coronavirus live news: Philippines locks down 13 million in Manila; Japan to expand state of emergency

Israel will be first country to give third Pfizer shot; Manila to be under tightest quarantine curbs from 6-20 August; Japan set to expand state of emergency

Hello and welcome to today’s live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic with me, Helen Sullivan.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has approved lockdown measures in the Manila capital region, home to more than 13 million people. It comes after Duterte said on Thursday that officials should detain those who refuse to be vaccinated against Covid inside their homes. Legal experts said the move would be unconstitutional and reflected his “militaristic mindset”, after Duterte claimed responding to the pandemic was more important than laws guaranteeing freedom of movement

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2021/jul/30/coronavirus-live-news-philippines-locks-down-13-million-in-manila-japan-to-expand-state-of-emergency

One in seven shops now vacant across the UK

Retailers call on government to amend business tax rates in response to changing shopping needs and habits

More than one in seven shops are now vacant on UK high streets, retail parks and shopping centres, the highest proportion since at least 2015, as the Covid-19 pandemic ramped up pressure on already weakened retailers.

Fashion stores have been hit particularly hard, with a major shift to online shopping during the pandemic, and a lack of parties, events and nights out to dress up for.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/jul/30/one-in-seven-shops-now-vacant-across-the-uk

‘Mary Whitehouse is living in my head’: how the video nasty scandal inspired a hot new film

Censor, Prano Bailey-Bond’s horror debut, was inspired by the 80s home video outrage. She discusses art versus offence, while the BBFC’s head makes the case for its relevance today

Rising film directors hailed as rock stars by the movie industry don’t always have much to talk about. Prano Bailey-Bond is different. Her first feature, the smart, playful horror Censor, is a talking point itself, an excavation of a murky British past. Then there is her background, of eye-opening things seen notably young. Her interview style is sharp. “I try to keep it fresh without changing the whole story,” she says.

Bailey-Bond has dark hair in a fringe, a trace of a Welsh accent and the friendly, practical manner of a film-maker used to working on a budget. Censor is set in an unwell-looking London, circa 1985. The heroine – ish – is Enid, played by Niamh Algar, a film examiner at what we take to be the British Board of Film Classification. Her personal history is a risk for an organisation in crisis. That much is drawn from real life – the tinderbox era of video nasties.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/film/2021/jul/30/mary-whitehouse-living-my-head-how-video-nasty-scandal-inspired-film-censor-prano-bailey-bond

‘Glorious Twelfth’ on the brink across UK after poor grouse breeding season

Hard frosts, sleet and cold rain during hatching season earlier in summer has caused loss of entire broods

The “Glorious Twelfth” may be effectively cancelled this year, shooting estates have said, as the grouse breeding season has been so poor.

Hard frosts while the birds were laying has meant that fewer were born, and some eggs are still yet to hatch. Sleet and cold rain during the hatching season earlier this summer caused the loss of entire broods.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/30/glorious-twelfth-on-the-brink-across-uk-after-poor-grouse-breeding-season

Greece sends police to Covid hotspot islands to step up controls

Party islands Mykonos and Ios could be shut down as Delta variant infection rates surge among young people

Greece has begun deploying police units to holiday island hotspots as the country’s tourism season moves into high gear amid a worrying spread of coronavirus variants.

Authorities moved to beef up police presence on party isles such as Mykonos and Ios as concerns mounted over local entrepreneurs failing to comply with health measures aimed at curbing the pandemic. “The Delta variant has meant that every country is dealing with the fourth wave now and not as expected in November,” the Greek tourism minister Haris Theoharis told the Guardian. “While hotels and family-type venues are implementing protocols diligently, there’s more congestion than we would like to see in bars, especially among the younger crowd ... so we are trying to ensure some balance is kept.”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/30/greece-sends-police-to-covid-hotspot-islands-to-step-up-controls

Australia’s 2021 National Photographic Portrait prize winner and finalists – in pictures

Sydney photographer Joel B Pratley’s photo of a lone farmer immersed in a dust storm in drought-stricken Australia has won the 2021 National Photographic Portrait prize. Titled Drought Story, the image shows David Kalisch captured amid a sudden dust storm on his 1,000-acre farm in Forbes, New South Wales. Pratley said his subject’s stance reflects the resilience of a man pushed to the limits by an unforgiving climate: ‘David’s composure during the storm was surreal, because he is just so used to it. For me, it was like being on Mars.’

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source https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2021/jul/30/australias-2021-national-photographic-portrait-prize-winner-and-finalists-in-pictures

Sheila Jackson Lee is third Black lawmaker to be arrested during voting rights protests

Congress members Joyce Beatty and Hank Johnson were previously arrested for participating in separate demonstrations

Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democratic representative of Texas, was arrested in Washington DC on Thursday while protesting lawmakers’ delay in passing legislation to protect voting rights, becoming the third member of the Congressional Black Caucus to be arrested for civil disobedience in recent weeks.

Related: Voting curbs enacted in 18 US states this year despite none finding widespread fraud

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/29/sheila-jackson-lee-arrested-voting-rights-protests

‘No place in modern New Zealand’: government signals conversion practices ban

Proposed legislation would make it an offence to perform conversion practices on anyone aged under 18

New Zealand has introduced legislation to ban conversion practices, saying the practice is harmful and has “no place in modern New Zealand”.

Conversion therapy refers to the practice, often by religious groups, of trying to “cure” people of their sexuality, gender expression, or LGBTQI identity.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/30/no-place-in-modern-new-zealand-government-signals-conversion-practices-ban

Tokyo 2020 Olympics: athletics blasts off, swimming and more – live!

Fiji need a win against Brazil to make it the quarter-finals of the women’s rugby sevens (the men’s team won gold a few days back). And it’s safe to say they’re going to make it: they’re 41-5 up with a a minute or so left.

The final heat of the women’s 100m preliminaries. Antigua’s Joella Lloyd wins in 11.55sec , followed by Malawi’s Asimenye Simwaka and Indonesia’s Alvin Tehupeiory. Malta’s Carla Scicluna creeps in to the next round as the fastest loser by 0.01 seconds. Phew. The first round proper is in a few hours.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2021/jul/29/tokyo-2020-olympics-athletics-swimming-latest-results

Russia rocket mishap briefly nudges International Space Station out of position

After several ‘hiccups’ on the journey to the ISS, the Nauka lab module accidentally fired its rockets after docking

Russia’s troubled Nauka laboratory module has caused a fright when its rockets accidentally fired after docking the with the International Space Station, briefly throwing the station out of position.

A few hours after docking, Nauka’s propulsive devices unexpectedly fired, forcing personnel aboard the ISS to fire thrusters on the Russian segment of the station to counter the effect.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/jul/30/russia-rocket-mishap-briefly-nudges-international-space-station-out-of-position

MPs rebuke police for ‘systemic failure’ to improve record on race

Failings have led to ‘unjustified inequalities’, says landmark report that finds little progress in 22 years since Macpherson

Police and governments have done too little to stamp out racial injustice in the ranks, with the failings being systemic and leading to “unjustified inequalities”, a report by an all-party committee of MPs has found.

The report by the home affairs committee was heavily critical of the progress made in the 22 years since the Macpherson report into why the white killers of Stephen Lawrence were allowed to go free, which blamed “institutional racism”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/30/mps-rebuke-police-for-systemic-failure-to-improve-record-on-race

Israel to offer Pfizer Covid booster shots to people over 60

Announcement makes Israel the first country to offer a third dose of a western vaccine to its citizens on a wide scale

Israel’s prime minister has announced that the country would offer a coronavirus booster shot to those people over 60 who have already been vaccinated.

The announcement by Naftali Bennett makes Israel, which launched one of the world’s most successful vaccination drives earlier this year, the first country to offer a third dose of a western vaccine to its citizens on a wide scale.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/30/israel-to-offer-pfizer-covid-booster-shots-to-people-over-60

Billie Eilish: Happier Than Ever review – inside pop stardom’s heart of darkness

(Darkroom/Interscope)
On perhaps the most anticipated album of 2021, Eilish uses subdued yet powerful songwriting to consider how fame has seeped into every corner of her life

“I’m getting older,” sings Billie Eilish, who’s 19, on Happier Than Ever’s opening track. “I’ve got more on my shoulders”, she adds, which is certainly true. Her debut album When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? wasn’t just a huge global hit, but an album that significantly altered mainstream pop music. Two years on, streaming services are clotted with bedroom-bound, teenage singer-songwriters dolefully depicting their lives: anticipation for what the genuine article does next is understandably running very high.

When We All Fall Asleep … was an album that turned universal teenage traumas – romance, hedonism, friendship groups – into knowingly lurid horror-comic fantasies, in which tongues were stapled, friends buried, hearses slept in and marble walls spattered with blood. That playfulness is less evident on its successor. It flickers occasionally, as on Overheated’s exploration of stardom in the era of social media, complete with death threats (“You wanna kill me? You wanna hurt me?” she mumbles, before giggling: “Stop being flirty”) or on NDA, where the “pretty boy” she entices home is required to sign the titular legal agreement before he leaves. But the overall tone is noticeably more sombre.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/jul/30/billie-eilish-happier-than-ever-review-inside-pop-stardoms-heart-of-darkness

Key moments in police relations with Britain’s BAME communities since 1999

The two decades that have followed the Macpherson report have passed in a state of apparently permanent crisis

A failure at the top of the police and government

Published six years after the killing of black teenager Stephen Lawrence, the Macpherson report was intended to be a turning point in police relations with Britain’s black and minority ethnic communities.

Finding that the force had a problem with “institutional racism”, the report exposed mistakes that allowed Lawrence’s killers to go free and made 70 recommendations for reform.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/30/key-moments-in-police-relations-with-britains-bame-communities-since-1999

A failure at the top of police, and at the top of governments both Tory and Labour

Analysis: we have been here before with damning reports on race and policing, and we will almost certainly be here again

Race issues for the police – after the Macpherson report in 1999 – were seen as a problem mainly affecting the rank and file, which was dominated by the white working class. It was clear that policing would radically change only if government pressured it to do so. Promises were made and very basic targets for the recruitment of ethnic minority officers were set. So why are we still here?

The bitter truth is because those who have the power to do something do not care enough, or lack the will, or focus, or think what the police are doing on race is enough. Critics would say those in power are hampered by institutional racism. The other possibility is that every report on this topic that raised troubling findings has been wrong.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/30/a-failure-at-the-top-of-police-and-at-the-top-of-governments-both-tory-and-labour

UK Covid cases rise for second day running amid drop in testing

Experts warn against drawing conclusions from fluctuations as 31,117 daily infections reported

The daily number of Covid cases reported in the UK has risen for the second day in a row, although experts have cautioned against drawing premature conclusions from the fluctuations.

On Thursday, 31,117 cases were reported in the UK, up from 27,734 the day before, which marked the first rise in cases since 20 July.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/29/uk-covid-cases-rise-second-day-running-amid-drop-testing

Australia Covid live update: military to join police in south-west Sydney; national cabinet meets to chart path out of coronavirus

Scott Morrison will chair a meeting of state and territory leaders to discuss a path to fully reopening the nation based on new vaccination rate modelling. Follow latest updates

Chief health officer Dr Jeanette Young says she is concerned that this school student Covid-19 case does not yet have any clear source.

So one new community-acquired case, which is quite concerning, because I’m struggling to understand how she’s acquired it.

So we’ll have to wait until we get whole genome sequencing results back later today to be able to work out from where she’s got this.

Taking you to this Queensland press conference now.

Health minister Yvette D’ath:

This case is very new as far as the information we have, so my message to everyone is please keep an eye out on social media and the Queensland Covid website today, as more information becomes available.

What we do know is that it is a 17-year-old female. She’s a student at Indooroopilly state high school. She became unwell yesterday and went and got tested and overnight her result has come back positive.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/live/2021/jul/30/australia-covid-live-update-military-south-west-sydney-national-cabinet-vaccine-target-modelling-doherty-institute-scott-morrison

A bat: In the city, they fly along routes that mirror roads | Helen Sullivan

In the city, they fly along routes that mirror roads

Every evening in Sydney, clouds of bats move across the sky. They time their trip so that there is just too little light to make out anything more than a silhouette – which is just enough light so that you can see, very clearly, the outlines of their legs and feet knocking together – an entrechat – as they flap their wings.

I’m not sure that I will ever stop having the exact same thought about this: “Oh my God, you can see their feet knocking together. Oh my God.”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/environment/commentisfree/2021/jul/30/a-megabat-why-its-practically-a-fox-with-wings

MPs decry ‘shocking conditions’ at facilities for asylum seekers

Yvette Cooper, chair of home affairs committee, wrote to Priti Patel after visiting Kent sites on Tuesday

MPs have raised serious concerns about the “shocking conditions” they found in Kent holding facilities for asylum seekers, including an unaccompanied child housed in an office space for 10 days, and a girl forced to sleep on a sofa for days on end.

Yvette Cooper, chair of the home affairs select committee, has written to the home secretary following a committee visit on Tuesday when MPs saw asylum seekers held in cramped, unsafe and “completely inappropriate” facilities.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jul/29/mps-decry-shocking-conditions-at-facilities-for-asylum-seekers

Will Sydney’s Covid lockdown work and how different are restrictions to Melbourne’s ‘ring of steel’?

State premiers including Victoria’s Daniel Andrews have criticised the lockdown settings in NSW as too lax

Greater Sydney’s lockdown has already been extended by another four weeks but New South Wales health authorities are facing questions about what more can be done to limit the spread of Covid-19, as well as criticism from other states.

A new daily record of 239 cases was announced on Thursday, along with tightened restrictions targeted at eight local government areas (LGAs) – Fairfield, Canterbury-Bankstown, Liverpool, Cumberland, Blacktown, Parramatta, Campbelltown and Georges River.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jul/29/will-sydneys-covid-lockdown-work-and-how-different-are-restrictions-to-melbournes-ring-of-steel

The truth about fast fashion: can you tell how ethical your clothing is by its price?

To find out the true production cost of a garment is a tortuous process. Here is what you need to know to buy clothes with a clear conscience

What is the true cost of a Zara hoodie? In April 2019, David Hachfeld of the Swiss NGO Public Eye, along with a team of researchers and the Clean Clothes Campaign, attempted to find out. They chose to analyse a black, oversized top from Zara’s flagship Join Life sustainability line, which was printed with lyrics made famous by Aretha Franklin: “R-E-S-P-E-C-T: find out what it means to me”. It was an apt choice, because the idea was to work out whether any respect had been paid to the workers involved in the garment’s production, and how much of the hoodie’s average retail price, €26.66 (£22.70), went into their pockets.

This was no simple assignment. It took several people six months, involved badgering Zara’s parent company, Inditex, over email, slowly getting limited information in return, and interviewing dozens of sources on the ground in Izmir, Turkey, where the garment was made. The researchers analysed financial results and trading data, and consulted with experts in pricing and production. It was, Hachfeld says on the phone, with dry understatement, “quite a huge project”.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2021/jul/29/the-truth-about-fast-fashion-can-you-tell-how-ethical-your-clothing-is-by-its-price

Man v food: is lab-grown meat really going to solve our nasty agriculture problem?

If cellular agriculture is going to improve on the industrial system it is displacing, it needs to grow without passing the cost on to workers, consumers and the environment

Americans will eat about 2bn chicken nuggets this year, give or take a few hundred million. This deep-fried staple is a way of profiting off the bits that are left after the breast, legs and wings are lopped off the 9 billion or so factory-farmed chickens slaughtered in the US every year. Like much else that is ubiquitous in contemporary life, the production of nuggets is controlled by a small group of massive companies that are responsible for a litany of social and ecological harms. And, like many of the commodities produced by this system, they are of dubious quality, cheap, appealing and easy to consume. Nuggets are not even primarily meat, but mostly fat and assorted viscera – including epithelium, bone, nerve and connective tissue – made palatable through ultra-processing. As the political economists Raj Patel and Jason Moore have argued, they are a homogenised, bite-size avatar of how capitalism extracts as much value as possible from human and nonhuman life and labour.

But if chicken nuggets are emblematic of modern capitalism, then they are ripe for disruption. Perhaps their most promising challenger is a radically different sort of meat: edible tissue grown in vitro from animal stem cells, a process called cellular agriculture. The sales pitch for the technology is classic Silicon Valley: unseat an obsolete technology – in this case, animals – and do well by doing good.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/jul/29/lab-grown-meat-factory-farms-industrial-agriculture-animals

Blaxploitation salvation: film directors’ children on rescuing their fathers’ lost movies

Melvin Van Peebles and Perry Henzell made seminal 70s films – now their kids have recovered their fathers’ would-be classics

Justine Henzell and Mario Van Peebles both know what it’s like to grow up on movie sets as the child of a groundbreaking director. Henzell was six in 1972 when her father, Perry, finished The Harder They Come, Jamaica’s first full-length feature, starring the reggae legend Jimmy Cliff as a fugitive whose musical success coincides with his criminal notoriety. Van Peebles even starred in his father Melvin’s third film, the 1971 underground hit Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, which is credited with inspiring the Blaxploitation genre.

As adults, each of them has now had a hand in rescuing and restoring great movies by their fathers that might otherwise have been lost or neglected: Henzell’s more ruminative second feature No Place Like Home, which was lost for more than 20 years, and Van Peebles’s stylish, Nouvelle Vague-tinged 1967 debut The Story of a Three-Day Pass, overlooked at the time and later overshadowed by the more incendiary Sweetback. Henzell laughs when I remark on her father’s momentum in getting started on his second feature so quickly after the first. “He may have had momentum but he had no money,” says the 55-year-old, the ocean lapping at the Saint Elizabeth, Jamaica, shoreline behind her. “The film was shot in fits and starts as the cash came in. He was completely broke after The Harder They Come. He’d been carrying those cans around the world himself trying to sell it. The film still hadn’t repaid its investors and here he was making something even more experimental.”

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source https://www.theguardian.com/film/2021/jul/29/blaxploitation-film-directors-children-melvin-van-peebles-and-perry-henzell-movies

Simone Biles: support has made me realise I am more than my gymnastics

  • Olympic champion withdrew from two events at Olympics
  • American has spoken of importance of mental health

Simone Biles has expressed her thanks for the support she has received since withdrawing from two gymnastics events at the Tokyo Olympics.

“[T]he outpouring love & support I’ve received has made me realize I’m more than my accomplishments and gymnastics which I never truly believed before,” she wrote on Twitter on Thursday.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/jul/28/simone-biles-support-message-gymnastics-withdrawal-tokyo-2020-olympics

Arthur, children’s animated TV series, to end after 25 years

The final season of the longest running animated series in the US will air in 2022

Arthur, the longest running children’s animated series in the US, will soon come to an end.

PBS Kids plans to end the beloved television show after 25 seasons, said an original developer of the show during a podcast released on Wednesday. The final season will air in 2022.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2021/jul/29/arthur-childrens-animated-tv-series-to-end-after-25-years

‘Extraordinary profits’: New Zealand considers breaking up supermarket duopoly

Report finds the country’s main grocers, Woolworths and Foodstuffs, make huge profits compared with their international counterparts

New Zealand’s government will consider breaking up its supermarket duopoly to secure more affordable food prices for shoppers, after a new report that found the grocers were making huge profits and charging some of the highest prices in the OECD.

David Clark, the commerce and consumer affairs minister, said on Thursday the government would “do whatever it takes to make sure New Zealanders get a fair deal at the checkout”.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/29/extraordinary-profits-new-zealand-considers-breaking-up-supermarket-duopoly-woolworths-foodstuffs

Prendergast and Gowler win first gold for New Zealand at Tokyo Olympics

Victory comes a day after the pair, only the third Kiwi women to win Olympic gold in rowing, regained their world record

Grace Prendergast and Kerri Gowler have won New Zealand’s first gold of the Tokyo Olympics in the women’s coxless pairs.

The rowers overcame a slow start to take the lead shortly after the midway point, winning in 6:50.19, with the Russian Olympic Committee team and Canada taking silver and bronze.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/jul/29/prendergast-and-gowler-win-first-gold-for-new-zealand-at-tokyo-olympics

New Sydney LGA Covid lockdown restrictions and update to regional NSW coronavirus rules explained

Covid restrictions extended for greater Sydney, with 8 LGAs in hard lockdown, including stricter mask rules and a 5km radius travel limit. Some restrictions have been eased with some construction to resume and a singles bubble introduced, while lockdown lifts in Orange. Here’s the full list of what you can and can’t do in NSW

Sydney’s lockdown has been extended to at least 28 August with a raft of changes to restrictions announced.

Three more local government areas have been added to a hard lockdown, which now includes an outdoor mask mandate and a 5km travel limit, as cases continue to increase in Sydney’s west and south-west. The stricter rules now cover eight LGAs; Fairfield, Canterbury-Bankstown, Liverpool, Cumberland, Blacktown, Parramatta, Georges River and Campbelltown.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jul/28/sydney-nsw-covid-19-lockdown-restrictions-update-coronavirus-face-mask-rules-explained-greater-syd-western-fairfield-canterbury-bankstown-liverpool-regional-new-south-wales-orange-blayney-cabonne-masks-indoors-singing-dancing-weddings-public-transport

Bob Odenkirk condition stable after ‘heart related incident’ on Better Call Saul set

The actor was rushed to hospital after he collapsed while filming the final series of the television series in New Mexico

Better Call Saul star Bob Odenkirk had a “heart-related incident” when he collapsed on the show’s set in New Mexico, and his condition was stable as he recovered in hospital, his representatives said.

“We can confirm Bob is in stable condition after experiencing a heart related incident,” the statement issued on Wednesday said.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2021/jul/29/bob-odenkirk-condition-stable-after-heart-related-incident-on-better-call-saul-set

US Senate votes to advance infrastructure deal after bipartisan breakthrough

Agreement, which follows months of talks between Democrats and Republicans, was hailed by Biden as ‘historic’

The US Senate voted on Wednesday to begin work on a $1.2tn bipartisan infrastructure deal after negotiators reached agreement on the major components of the package that is a key priority of Joe Biden.

Related: Americans are paying more for gas, hotels and cars – will Biden pay the price of inflation?

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/28/us-senate-infrastructure-congress-joe-biden

Jared Kushner set to move away from politics and launch investment firm

  • Trump’s former adviser to launch firm in Miami, sources say
  • Kushner to publish book next year about White House role

Jared Kushner, a top adviser to former Donald Trump, plans to launch an investment firm in coming months, a move that will take him away from politics for the foreseeable future, sources familiar with the plan said on Wednesday.

Kushner, the former chief executive of Kushner Companies, who served as the Republican president’s senior adviser in the White House, is in the final stages of launching an investment firm called Affinity Partners that will be headquartered in Miami.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/28/jared-kushner-donald-trump-investment-firm-politics

Belgium opens manslaughter investigation over flood deaths

A magistrate will look at whether possible failings in the alert system led to the country’s worst floods in decades

A Belgian judge has opened an investigation for possible manslaughter over floods there that claimed 38 lives, the prosecutors office in the city of Liege announced.

The investigating magistrate has the task of identifying who might be responsible for “involuntary homicide by lack of foresight or precaution” the prosecutors office said in a statement on Wednesday.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/29/belgium-opens-manslaughter-investigation-over-flood-deaths

Extreme weather will be the norm and UK is not prepared, report warns

Last year was first to be in top 10 for heat, rain and sunshine, as scientists say UK’s mild climate is at an end

Extremes of weather will strike the UK more frequently owing to the climate crisis, scientists said after data showed that last year was one of the warmest, as well as one of the wettest and sunniest, on record.

Last year was the first to figure in the top 10 for heat, rain and hours of sunshine, in records stretching back more than a century, as moderate British weather is rapidly becoming a thing of the past, according to a report from the Met Office and climate scientists.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/29/extreme-weather-will-be-the-norm-and-uk-is-not-prepared-report-warns

Tokyo 2020 Olympics day six: golf, swimming, rowing and more – live!

It’s morning in Japan and morning in Australia too. Which means our Aussie readers have a full day of action ahead of them. And given the success of Australia so far it may end up being another day awash with precious metals (and bronze, not sure if bronze is more on the semi-precious end). Anyway, here’s what Aussies have to look out for. All times are AEST:

The men’s golfers are out doing their golf at the moment. It’s very early days but Finland’s Sami Välimäki is leading at two under with Hoshino Rikuya (Japan), Sepp Straka (Austria) and Joachim Hansen (Denmark) on one under. But plenty of the big guns don’t tee off for a while.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2021/jul/29/tokyo-2020-olympics-day-six-golf-swimming-rowing-and-more-live

European football clubs’ revenue declines by £3.4bn over pandemic

  • Combined revenue falls to £22bn, according to Deloitte
  • Bundesliga overtakes La Liga as second most lucrative league

The pandemic led to a rare decline in the financial firepower of European football during 2019-20, according to a report that charts how Covid-19 has affected the hierarchy of the continental game.

The combined revenue of European clubs declined by £3.4bn to £22bn, according to the Deloitte Annual Review of Finance, with even the “Big Five” leagues – in England, Spain, German, France and Italy – feeling the pinch.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/football/2021/jul/29/european-football-clubs-revenue-declines-by-34bn-over-pandemic

ZZ Top bassist Dusty Hill dies aged 72

The band’s bassist for more than 50 years, who had recently suffered a hip injury, died in his sleep at his Texas home

Dusty Hill, bassist for ZZ Top, has died at the age of 72.

Hill, who had recently suffered a hip injury, died in his sleep, as confirmed by a statement on Instagram from bandmates Billy Gibbons and Frank Beard.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/jul/28/dusty-hill-zz-top-bassist-dies-aged-72

Once a Covid success story, South Korea sweats through summer of Delta surge

As infections soar to record highs and the vaccine rollout languishes, some fear there is no end in sight for the pandemic

Park Eun-sun is facing the most challenging set of circumstances since going into business for herself in August of 2020.

Having kicked off Nostimo, her restaurant in southern Seoul, during the coronavirus pandemic, Park has had to work harder to attract customers who were reluctant to eat out during a public health crisis, while complying with an evolving set of social distancing mandates that dictate how many diners she can host and when she can open her doors.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/29/once-a-covid-success-story-south-korea-sweats-through-summer-of-delta-surge

New Zealand rated best place to survive global societal collapse

Study citing ‘perilous state’ of industrial civilisation ranks temperate islands top for resilience

New Zealand, Iceland, the UK, Tasmania and Ireland are the places best suited to survive a global collapse of society, according to a study.

The researchers said human civilisation was “in a perilous state” due to the highly interconnected and energy-intensive society that had developed and the environmental damage this had caused.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/28/new-zealand-rated-best-place-to-survive-global-societal-collapse

‘A nightmare scenario’: how an anti-trans Instagram post led to violence in the streets

Misinformation about Wi Spa, a Korean spa in Los Angeles, quickly spread around the world. Since then, trans women in LA have faced violence and online abuse

On 24 June, a woman claimed on Instagram that a Korean spa in Los Angeles had allowed a “man” to expose himself to women and girls in the women’s section.

The unsubstantiated allegations about Wi Spa in LA’s Koreatown neighborhood quickly spread from social media to rightwing forums to far-right news sites to Fox News, and were distorted by anti-transgender groups across multiple countries.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/28/anti-trans-video-los-angeles-protest-wi-spa

Australia Covid live update: 2 million in western Sydney face tougher lockdown as some construction resumes

Residents of eight local government areas banned from leaving hotspots unless they are essential workers; tradespeople now allowed into clients’ homes. Follow all the day’s news

Oooh, Victorian premier Daniel Andrews is speaking early this morning. I wonder if we will get the Covid-19 update at this event or if we will have to wait for the CHO to step up later in the day.

Daniel Andrews is speaking at from 9.45am at a level crossing removal.

NSW is lagging behind many other states and territories when it comes to vaccinating its elderly population with fewer than 40% of over-70s fully vaccinated against Covid-19.

New data released by the federal government on Wednesday provides a state breakdown of national vaccination numbers for the first time. The figures reveal that of the almost 1 million people aged over 70 in NSW, 77% have received a first vaccine dose and 39% have received a second dose.

Related: Just 39% of NSW residents over 70 are fully vaccinated against Covid, despite push for jabs

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/live/2021/jul/29/australia-covid-live-update-western-sydney-tougher-lockdown-construction-nsw-victoria-vaccines-coronavirus

Facebook reports fastest quarterly growth in five years

  • Social media company beats forecasts and hits $29bn revenue
  • Network condemned for allowing vaccine misinformation

Facebook saw its fastest growth this quarter since 2016, the company revealed in its earnings report on Wednesday, despite regulatory concerns and criticisms surrounding misinformation on the platform.

Related: Remington offers $33m to settle lawsuit by families of Sandy Hook massacre

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source https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/jul/28/facebook-growth-earnings-business-quarter

Morning mail: vaccine rollout fails elderly, Tokyo glory, a centre of pride

Thursday: More than 1 million over-70s in NSW and Victoria remain unvaccinated. Plus: Australia chases more Olympic gold

Good morning. Australia’s vaccine rollout still leaves many elderly people behind, a golden day in and on the water at the Tokyo Olympics, and Melbourne’s Victorian Pride Centre has finally opened its doors. Those stories, and more in Thursday’s morning mail.

More than 1 million people over 70 in NSW and Victoria remain partially or fully unvaccinated, with the nation’s two most populous states badly lagging most other states or territories. Scott Morrison has heralded vaccine take-up as like a “gold medal run”, stating that “by Christmas”, “everyone who’s had the opportunity for a vaccine will have had it”. Australia remains last in the OECD by rates of vaccination, with just 14% of people fully vaccinated. Hundreds of thousands of Sydney-based welfare recipients will receive support for lost income in news that has come as welcome relief to many, after Gladys Berejiklian’s announcement of a four-week lockdown extension across greater Sydney. The state recorded 177 new infections on Wednesday, with the number of active cases also increasing in Victoria, Queensland and South Australia.

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source https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jul/29/morning-mail-vaccine-rollout-fails-elderly-tokyo-glory-a-centre-of-pride

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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...