/media

  • Why India’s worsening Covid crisis is a dire problem for the world | India | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/25/the-world-must-act-indias-covid-crisis-is-a-dire-problem-for-us-all
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/8ace91ed2164d338c754f5e742f5b2d17ec73a8e/0_182_5472_3283/master/5472.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Why India’s worsening Covid crisis is a dire problem for the world. Analysis: Urgent supplies are needed to stem the rampant spread of infections in country of 1.4bn. The catastrophe unfolding in India appears to be the worst-case scenario that many feared from the Covid-19 pandemic: unable to find sufficient hospital beds, access to tests, medicines or oxygen, the country of 1.4 billion is sinking beneath the weight of infections.The two opposed assumptions of the global response to coronavirus – wealthy countries in the west prioritising vaccines for their own need in one camp, and the argument led by the World Health Organization for global vaccine equality in the other – are also failing to hold as the scale of the crisis in India points to an urgent need to prioritise the response there.
    With the global supply of vaccines unlikely to pick up until the end of this year, what is required now is international leadership and a recognition that, despite the best intentions of the World Health Organization and the vaccine-sharing Covax initiative to fairly distribute jabs, the pandemic may require a period of more focused firefighting where difficult and sometimes unpopular decisions need to be made.That will require countries to look beyond their own health crises to see that the pandemic could still get much worse without intervention. Experts have repeatedly warned that allowing the virus to circulate unchecked increases the risk that dangerous new strains will emerge and prolong the pandemic.
    Models already exist for what could be done, including George W Bush’s initiative to fight Aids in Africa under the president’s Emergency plan for Aids relief and the 2014 global response to Ebola in West Africa, which was seen as an international priority.
    The reality is that the magical thinking displayed by the Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s government – which claimed the pandemic was in its “endgame” in March as the country careened towards a second wave of infections – was not much different from the mistakes of other leaders, including the former US president Donald Trump, who thought the virus would simply disappear, or the mistaken boosterism of the UK prime minister, Boris Johnson. What is different in India – a country with a fragile health system and even weaker surveillance – is the huge possibility for harm locally and globally, perhaps on a scale not yet seen in the pandemic.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#inde#monde#sante#pandemie#mortalite#morbidite#circulation#virus#ebola#frontiere#variant

  • EU may let vaccinated Americans holiday in Europe this summer, says Brussels | European Union | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/26/eu-vaccinated-americans-holiday-europe-summer-ursula-von-der-leyen-non-
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    EU may let vaccinated Americans holiday in Europe this summer, says Brussels. Ursula von der Leyen says rules on non-essential travel will change to take into account vaccination coverage. The president of the European commission has offered fresh hope of a summer holiday in the EU for those living outside its borders. Ursula von der Leyen suggested in an interview with the New York Times that Americans who were fully vaccinated would be able to visit the EU in what would be a change of policy on non-essential travel.The EU adopted tough restrictions on travel into the the bloc’s 27 member states last year. Non-essential trips are only permitted from Australia, New Zealand, Rwanda, Singapore, South Korea, and Thailand.To qualify for the list, countries must record no more than 25 new Covid cases per 100,000 people over the last 14 days and no more than 4% of tests carried out in the previous week can return positive. The latest statistics, dated 20 April, shows the UK recorded 24.7 cases per 100,000 across a seven-day period. The list of countries exempt from the ban is reviewed every two weeks.Von der Leyen suggested, however, that the EU’s rules on non-essential travel would change in time for summer to also take into account vaccination coverage.“The Americans, as far as I can see, use European Medicines Agency-approved vaccines,” she said. “This will enable free movement and the travel to the European Union. Because one thing is clear: all 27 member states will accept, unconditionally, all those who are vaccinated with vaccines that are approved by EMA.”She added that the travel situation would still depend “on the epidemiological situation, but the situation is improving in the United States, as it is, hopefully, also improving in the European Union”.Last week, EU diplomats opened a discussion as to what criteria could be used to allow Europe’s tourism hotspots to enjoy a summer season.It was suggested by the commission that the vaccination rates in several parts of the world “support updating the approach for the safe lifting of restrictions on non-essential travel into the EU”.
    While a number of northern EU member states are cautious about reopening to tourists, ministers in Spain and Greece, among others, have been outspoken about the needs of their tourism sectors.The EU is developing a “digital green certificate” that would record whether someone has been vaccinated or had a recent negative test.Last week Von der Leyen said it would be up to member states whether they wished come to arrangements with non-EU countries to allow such certificates to open up to tourists.
    Greece has said it will open its borders to travellers from the US from Monday, provided they show proof of vaccination or a negative coronavirus test.Spain’s tourism minister, Fernando Valdés, said last week that his country would be ready for mass tourism this summer.He told Sky News: “We are desperate to welcome you this summer. “I think we will be ready here in Spain and we also think that things on the vaccination scheme of the UK are going pretty well. So, hopefully we will be seeing this summer the restart of holidays.”The European commissioner leading the EU’s vaccine taskforce, Thierry Breton, told the Guardian earlier this month that he was confident the bloc would hit its target of vaccinating 70% of adults by the end of the summer, permitting it “an almost normal tourist season”.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#UE#etatsunis#sante#tourisme#passeportvaccinal#vaccination#economie#voyagenonessentiel#frontiere

  • Vaccine success makes UK attractive to international students, poll finds | Universities | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/apr/26/vaccine-success-makes-uk-attractive-to-international-students-finds-pol
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    Vaccine success makes UK attractive to international students, poll finds. Survey reveals Britain is more popular destination for studying than US, Canada, Australia and Germany. International students are more likely to want to study at British universities thanks to the success of the vaccine rollout, despite a widespread perception that the UK government mishandled its initial response to the pandemic, a survey suggests.
    Nearly half (47%) of prospective international students said they would be more likely to choose to study in the UK because of the rate of vaccinations in the country, with nearly a fifth (17%) saying they thought the government was handling the rollout better than anywhere else, according to the survey of 105,083 students planning to attend university abroad. The UK was more popular than the US, Canada, Australia and Germany. The report, authored by university rankings provider QS, said: “The effectiveness and speed of the rollout is making the UK seem a more attractive and viable destination to begin their studies in September compared to some other countries.”
    Despite their enthusiasm for the vaccine programme, nearly half (45%) of the students surveyed said they did not think the UK had handled its broader pandemic response effectively, a much lower rating than for New Zealand, Canada, Australia and Germany. The report speculated that this was due to international coverage of the UK’s high death toll.
    Vivenne Stern, the director of Universities UK International (UUKi), said the survey showed UK universities had remained resilient over the course of a difficult year, but they and the government would need to listen closely to international students’ concerns and priorities to sustain high recruitment levels.Nearly a fifth (17%) of the respondents said the vaccine had made them bring forward their plans to study abroad, while more than half (56%) said they were focusing their search on countries in which a successful vaccine programme was being implemented.Nearly two-thirds (58%) of the students also thought the UK was becoming more welcoming to international students thanks to the reintroduction of post-study work visas, following several years of immigration policies seen as hostile to overseas students. However, European students perceived the UK to be less welcoming since they will have to pay higher international fees from September as a result of Brexit.Despite initial fears that international students would be deterred from attending UK universities due to the country’s high Covid infection rates and death toll, applications from overseas reached their highest level last year.
    However some current international students have been angry at paying high fees to study mostly online during successive lockdowns. In March, 300 international students at several London universities withheld their £29,000 fees in protest at their universities’ response to the pandemic.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#grandebretagne#sante#vaccination#etudiant#immigration#economie#politiquemigratoire

  • ‘We don’t get help from anywhere’: Covid exposes inequality in crisis-hit New York neighborhood | New York | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/22/coronavirus-covid-queens-new-york-inequality
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    A year after New York City became the center of the global Covid-19 outbreak, the neighborhood considered at the time to be the “epicenter of the epicenter” of the pandemic remains in crisis – laying bare many of the economic fault lines exposed by the coronavirus.Corona, Queens, a welcoming enclave for many of the city’s undocumented immigrants and home to many of the “essential” workers who kept New York running during the pandemic’s worst days, has had the highest number of infections and deaths in the city – and now has one of the lowest percentages of people vaccinated.At least 37% of residents there have received one dose of the vaccine, according to city data. On the Upper East Side, home to the city’s grand museums, luxury boutiques and multimillion-dollar townhouses, more than 64% of residents have received their first dose.
    Densely packed, Corona’s multi-family homes are among the most crowded in the city. In the past year, there were 40 eviction filings per 1,000 units, according to the Association for Neighborhood and Housing Development, a coalition of housing non-profits – 1,211 evictions in total. In Brooklyn’s Carroll Gardens, a neighborhood of gourmet coffee shops and craft beer breweries, landlords had sued 37 families altogether.
    It’s no coincidence that New York depended on Corona families to deliver food, clean the subways and work in cramped restaurant kitchens while many New Yorkers stayed put. Like many such neighborhoods across the developed world, its residents were on the frontline, allowing their richer neighbors to shield themselves at home.This disparity was obvious one year ago, when New York City was the global center of the Covid-19 outbreak. At the time, not-for-profits in Corona described to the Guardian how they acted as disaster relief agencies to feed families, connect people with doctors and speak with consulates to repatriate the deceased’s remains.
    A year later, undocumented New Yorkers are still at high risk of contracting the virus, and are largely excluded from the federal economic stimulus benefits that have helped so many others weather the pandemic.
    For Ciria Santiago, who has lived in Corona since 2005, this spring is certainly better than the last. When businesses shuttered at the beginning of the pandemic, her household of six suddenly had an income of zero: the three working-age people in her family were newly unemployed and were unable to obtain benefits because they are undocumented immigrants.
    The Santiagos’ unemployment drought lasted five months. “We either paid rent or bought food,” said Santiago, who would wake up at 4am to wait five hours in line for the local food pantry to open because it was so crowded with demand.Despite their concerns about Covid-19, her husband and nephew returned to work as a cook and delivery driver and dishwasher in July. It was too late for their landlord, who forced them to move in November because of earlier missed rent payments.
    Like many mothers in the neighborhood, Santiago has stayed home while school is online, but she has found satisfaction as a volunteer at New Immigrant Community Empowerment (Nice), which helps immigrant workers in the city. “We’re happy here, but yes, we’re pressured with money, because we don’t get help from anywhere,” said Santiago, who is originally from Veracruz in Mexico.Undocumented immigrants, including the estimated 50% to 75% who pay taxes, have largely not qualified for health, business and cash aid included in the federal stimulus packages. And 5.1 million US citizens or green card holders were excluded from the first round of stimulus payments as well because they filed their taxes with an undocumented person, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
    Some state and local governments have attempted to fill in the gaps. New York state this month agreed to provide up to $15,600 in one-time payments to undocumented immigrants who lost work during the pandemic. In the city, undocumented people can also access food assistance and the city’s low-cost or no-cost health program. Philanthropic groups are also providing financial aid to the city’s undocumented people.
    But none of this answers the fundamental issue that undocumented people are in a stratified class from the rest of the city’s residents.
    In her role as program director at Nice, Diana Moreno said she has yet to see “sustainable, systemic change” in how undocumented immigrants have been treated through the pandemic.“These workers don’t feel like they have a choice: they have to go to work, in order to get to work, they have to take public transportation, and they have to be out and about in the city, and they are not being properly compensated or properly cared for,” Moreno said.Moreno said the biggest issue Nice members face is that the US still does not have a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
    “We are not saying US citizens have had an easy time during this pandemic – we’ve all suffered extensively,” Moreno said. “But US citizens have access to a safety net, and yes, it is a faltering safety net, but it exists.”
    Corona is one of the most diverse neighborhoods in New York City, and here, a church sign on National Street is posted in four different languages.
    Corona is one of the most diverse neighborhoods in New York City.
    The pandemic has also emphasized how a lack of permanent immigration status is a health threat.The Center for Migration Studies released a report in late January that found that in Queens, the neighborhoods most at risk for poor health outcomes were the two combined community districts of South Corona/Elmhurst and North Corona/Jackson Heights. These are also the two sectors of Queens with the highest concentration of non-citizens – which includes undocumented people, green-card holders and people on temporary visas.Undocumented people are not eligible for most health insurance programs, and are the largest group of people in the country ineligible for financial assistance to get healthcare coverage.Until then, undocumented immigrants are uniquely vulnerable even when provisions are in place that should protect them, like the city’s pandemic eviction moratorium.
    Part of this low rate can be attributed to how much Covid-19 there has been in the neighborhood already – people may be less inclined to get the vaccine if they have already contracted the illness. Moreno at Nice said it had also been difficult for people to book appointments because of the scarcity of spaces available and the limited time working people have available to get one.Epidemiologist Denis Nash said: “The vaccine delivery system has really been designed to perpetuate some of the inequities we’ve seen in transmission.” Nash is one of the researchers leading the City University of New York’s group study on the spread of Covid-19. He said since the early phases of the pandemic, essential workers have been at higher risk than non-essential workers. “Of all the different interventions and strategies and policies that we’ve come up with in different parts of the country, including New York City and New York state, we haven’t really identified strategies that work well for reducing disparities and protecting essential workers,” said Nash, executive director of Cuny’s Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health.To help them, Nash explained, community transmission has to be kept at a minimum, but it has been unmitigated across most of the US. “That is really bad for essential workers,” Nash said.And because essential workers will always be on the frontlines of an infectious disease outbreak, it’s crucial to identify strategies that actually reduce their risk of infection. Nash said: “If we don’t come up with strategies to help them or deal with that situation then I think we’re going to see the same situation repeated in the next pandemic.”Francisco Moya, a New York City council member who represents, and was born and raised in, Corona, knew immediately that his community would be hard hit by the virus. When the local Elmhurst hospital was overwhelmed by Covid-19 cases, he became the first stop for people looking to donate PPE and money there. During those PPE deliveries, people would warn him not to breathe the air around the hospital.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#etatsunis#newyork#sante#inegalite#immigrant#sanspapier#minorite#systemesante#travailleurmigrant#travailleuressentiel

  • ‘Enough of the senseless killings’: Biden calls Chauvin verdict ‘a start’ as Democrats demand action | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/20/biden-harris-derek-chauvin-verdict
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    Addressing the nation on Tuesday evening, Joe Biden said the guilty verdict for the former Minneapolis police office Derek Chauvin was “a start”. But, he said, “in order to deliver real change and reform, we can and we must do more”.

    “Protests unified people of every race and generation in peace and with purpose to say enough,” Biden said. “Enough. Enough of the senseless killings. Today’s verdict is a step forward.

  • Derek Chauvin found guilty of murder of George Floyd | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/20/derek-chauvin-verdict-guilty-murder-george-floyd
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    Derek Chauvin has been convicted of murder for killing George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for more than nine minutes, a crime that prompted waves of protests in support of racial justice in the US and across the world.

  • France is first EU member state to start testing digital Covid travel certificate | Coronavirus | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/20/france-is-first-eu-member-state-to-start-testing-digital-covid-travel-c
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    France is first EU member state to start testing digital Covid travel certificate. French trial will be extended from 29 April to include vaccination certificate. France has become the first EU member state to begin testing a digital coronavirus travel certificate as part of a Europe-wide scheme that Brussels hopes will allow people to travel more freely within the bloc by the summer.The TousAntiCovid app, part of the country’s contact tracing programme, has been upgraded to store negative Covid-19 test results on travellers’ mobile phones and is being trialled on flights to Corsica and overseas départements from this week.The trial will be extended from 29 April to include vaccination certificates, officials told Le Monde, and the system could eventually be adopted for public events such as concerts, festivals and trade fairs, although not for bars and restaurants.
    The French trial will form one part of a “reinforced, consolidated and standardised” Europe-wide system, the minister for digital transition, Cédric O, said, with talks already under way with several countries and airlines to ensure early recognition.
    The European commissioner for justice, Didier Reynders, said last week he expected the EU’s “digital green certificate” to be operational by by 21 June. The certificate is an urgent priority for southern European member states whose economies have been devastated by the pandemic.The scheme has deliberately not been called a “vaccine passport” to avoid discriminating against people not yet offered a shot. Brussels has stressed that while it should make travel easier, it must not become a pre-condition of free movement.The certificate should mean travellers will not need to quarantine, allowing them to store on their phones evidence that they have been vaccinated, have recently tested negative, or have antibodies after recovering from Covid-19.In France, people taking a coronavirus test from Tuesday will receive a text message or email giving them access to a state-certified online document that can be downloaded and either printed off or stored in the TousAntiCovid app. The same will apply to those being vaccinated from next week, with a complete database of past tests and vaccinations open for download by everyone from mid-May. Antibody test results should be incorporated at a later stage.
    The app will generate a secure QR code containing a range of information including the traveller’s name, the date and type of their test or vaccine, and details of the relevant doctor or laboratory, all of which can be checked against a national database.Several EU members states are developing similar systems, leading to concerns about how well they will work together. The EU’s privacy watchdogs also warned earlier this month the scheme must respect data protection laws and “have an appropriate legal basis” in each member state.Denmark last week began trialling its Coronapas, available to people who have been either vaccinated, tested positive two to 12 weeks previously, or negative within the past 72 hours. The Danish scheme currently only allows users to access non-essential businesses such as hairdressers, beauty salons and driving schools, but is set to expand to include museums, theatres, cinemas and restaurants from 6 May.
    The Netherlands is also testing a scheme called Back to Live that allows people to attend live events provided they have tested negative at special sites from 8am that morning and recorded that on a CoronaCheck app with a QR code.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#france#UE#sante#passeportvaccinal#frontiere#circulatoin

  • Joy, actually: happy reunions fill Auckland airport as trans-Tasman bubble begins | New Zealand | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/19/joy-actually-happy-reunions-fill-auckland-airport-as-trans-tasman-bubbl
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    Joy, actually: happy reunions fill Auckland airport as trans-Tasman bubble begins. Emotional scenes in arrivals hall as hundreds of travellers touch down on first day of quarantine-free travel from Australia
    Lisa Tetai warned her son not to take a sick day when he picked her up from Auckland airport. “I thought there might be media there,” she explains.She wasn’t wrong.As she stepped into the arrivals hall on Monday afternoon, Tetai, like hundreds of others who travelled to New Zealand on the first day of what has been dubbed the trans-Tasman travel “bubble” with Australia, was swamped; a flash of cameras, journalists buzzing with anticipation, then, pushing through the crowd, the people she had actually come to see. Cue tears.
    “I was supposed to be here for a funeral,” she said. “My uncle was admitted to hospital and I booked the earliest ticket I could get. He didn’t make it. They had the funeral last week, but I wanted to see my son and my grandson.
    “I’ve got family all over the North Island and before the pandemic I came back four or five times a year. It has been really, really hard.”
    It happened over and over again. Steph Wood was already crying when she walked into the cacophony. So too was her mother, Narelle. Wood had hoped to be back for Christmas last year, but a Covid outbreak in her home city of Sydney delayed the beginning of the long-mooted quarantine exemption for Australian arrivals.

    When it was finally announced two weeks ago, she didn’t waste time.

    “It was just like, I need to be here as soon as I possibly can,” she said. “I haven’t been back since 2019, I have been counting down the days.”

    Narelle was mostly speechless: “It’s just too good to have her back.”

    So it went all afternoon. A never-ending stream of emotional airport scenes, as though someone had organised a mass re-enactment of Love Actually’s opening montage. It was hard not to be moved. Not only by the reunions but also by the deep link these two island nations share
    Both Auckland airport and the airlines supplying the flights had put a lot of work into manufacturing this media moment – an acoustic band played the same Dave Dobbyn song on repeat all afternoon (Welcome home / I bid you welcome / I bid you welcome) and Jetstar served champagne in the departures lounge – possibly a budget airline world-first – before the first flight to leave Sydney.And for good reason. Monday might have been a day for reunions but there is a lot riding on the bubble. The pandemic has decimated both airlines and the tourism industry. According to Tourism Australia, 8,000 international visitors came in January – a 99% decrease from the year before.For both countries, pulling visitors from across the ditch is a crucial lifeline, particularly as lagging vaccine rollouts have forced politicians to warn other international travel may be some time off.
    While the New Zealand prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, said on Monday that her government was exploring options for travel bubbles with other Covid-free nations in the Pacific, it would not look further afield. Similarly, the Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison said on Sunday that Australia was “in no hurry to open those borders” to other countries.
    The questions is whether, after the initial flurry of reunions, the bubble between these two countries will offer a genuine economic boon for devastated tourism industries.Pre-Covid, Australians made up about 40% of the international visitors to New Zealand and spent $2.7bn in 2019. New Zealanders spent almost the same amount – $2.6bn in 2019, although Australia’s larger tourism market meant they only made up about 15% of visitors there. Perhaps aware of the political risks to welcoming Australians if there were to be an outbreak – a new poll by Research New Zealand for RNZ found 22% of New Zealanders were on the fence about the bubble and 28% were against an opening – Ardern has warned the high probability of fresh Covid-19 outbreaks meant the travel bubble could be burst at any moment.
    Indeed, new arrivals on Monday were warned they could be forced into quarantine in the event of an outbreak. But despite the tough stance, Ardern also seemed to get swept up in the enthusiasm on Monday, saying she was personally experiencing some of the excitement that had greeted the travel bubble. “I, like many New Zealanders, have friends and family in Australia,” she said, including some who were “desperate to return to New Zealand”.
    “I know how enthusiastically this has been greeted and I’m really pleased about that,” she said. “It is truly exciting to be able to welcome our Tasman cousins quarantine-free to Aotearoa.”Still, that level of uncertainty could mean that many holiday-makers will delay trips while they wait to see how it unfolds. Tourism NZ acknowledges this, saying its scenario modelling showed it could take until January 2022 for Australia to reach 80% recovery to pre-Covid 19 levels.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#australie#nouvellezelande#tasmanie#bulledevoyage#circulation#frontiere#sante#economie#tourisme

  • Spreading faster, hitting harder – why young Brazilians are dying of Covid | Coronavirus | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/16/spreading-faster-hitting-harder-why-young-brazilians-are-dying-of-covid
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    “I saw everything in there. Children, adults, young people, bodybuilders – the lot. All of them going through the same thing,” Castro recalled, rubbishing the idea that only elderly people were in danger. “If you’re a human being you’re at risk,” he said. “This disease is a total game of Russian roulette.”

    When Covid first hit Brazil last February it was, as elsewhere, considered mainly a threat to the ageing or infirm. A year later, as Brazil grapples with by far the most traumatic phase of its epidemic, a troubling trend has emerged, as intensive care units fill with younger patients such as Castro, some seemingly battling more severe forms of the disease. An unusually high number of infant fatalities has also been reported with more than 1,000 Brazilian babies dying last year compared with 43 in the US.

    Brazilians have been particularly shocked by the case of Paulo Gustavo, a 42-year-old television star who has spent the past month fighting for his life in a Rio ICU despite being previously fit and healthy. Last week, the Brazilian Association of Intensive Care Medicine said that for the first time, most Covid patients in ICU were under 40 – a finding echoed by frontline doctors.

    • Boulos said the vaccination of older Brazilians partly explained the increasing proportion of younger patients in ICU. “But there’s no doubt young people are being [physically] more affected by this new variant. It’s unquestionable.”

      “Sometimes … these young people will die after just a few hours or days with very acute, severe illnesses – and you won’t find any comorbidity or factor to explain why. It’s dramatic,” added Boulos, pointing to similar suspicions that the South African variant might be affecting the young more.

      Bressan suspected behavioural factors were also at play, with younger Brazilians more likely to be frequenting places where they might be exposed to greater doses of the virus, more often. “It’s younger people who are going out to work, to parties, restaurants and nightclubs,” said Bressan, adding that many of the patients she was now seeing in their 40s were domestic workers, cleaners, retail workers and waiters. “People who absolutely have to leave home to work.”

  • Paradise cost: high prices and strict rules deflate Palau-Taiwan travel bubble | Taiwan | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/15/palau-taiwan-travel-bubble-high-prices-strict-rules
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    Palau-Taiwan Quarantine Free Travel Starts - 01 Apr 2021Mandatory Credit: Photo by Daniel Tsang/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock (11840467d) A woman waits to collect specimen samples for the first flight connecting Taiwan to Palau as Taiwan and Palau start a travel bubble scheme exempting visitors to undergo quarantine. The scheme allows Taiwanese people and Palauans to travel to each country without having to quarantine but gatherings and visits to crowded areas are prohibited whilst self management is compulsory for 9 days upon arrival to their home countries. But a COVID test before boarding the aircraft is required. Palau-Taiwan Quarantine Free Travel Starts - 01 Apr 2021It launched with a presidential escort and the promise of rare international travel to a postcard-perfect tropical island, but the Taiwan-Palau travel bubble has deflated after just a couple weeks, with Taiwanese bookings dwindling to single figures.
    Travel agents, consumers and health authorities have blamed the high cost of the tours and the Taiwanese government’s strict rules for returning travellers.The “sterile corridor” of bilateral tourism guaranteed travel between the two archipelagos, which are both otherwise closed to all tourists, on strictly managed, twice-weekly package tours.
    The inaugural flight, packed with nearly 100 passengers including Palauan president Surangel Whipps Jr, boded well, but this week China Airlines announced it had cancelled an upcoming flight from Taipei after just two people booked tickets. The airline told the Guardian it was constantly assessing the situation but it couldn’t guarantee further cancellations.
    Trans-Tasman travel bubble between New Zealand and Australia to start on 19 AprilTo go on the Palau holiday from Taiwan, tourists must make several health declarations, pay for Covid tests, and not have left Taiwan in the last six months. Upon return they had to complete 14 days of “self-health management”, including five “enhanced” management days banned from public transport and spaces. On Wednesday health authorities announced it was dropping the enhanced requirement, and agencies are hoping it’s enough to restore interest.
    One of the six agencies contracted to run the tours, Phoenix travel, told the Guardian they’d had “sporadic” individual bookings and inquiries about future tours, “but the momentum is not as good as expected”.“The fare is higher than normal, plus the cost of two PCR tests, and the inconvenience of health management after returning home are the reasons why most travellers maintain a wait-and-see attitude,” the spokesperson said.Gibsen Lin, marketing manager of Lifetour travel, said they had received many more inquiries for the upcoming summer holiday period from May to July, and that uncertainty about the process had also discouraged early take-up.
    “Many details were not determined at the beginning. They changed the rules of the game … and then gave consumers less time to react in the market,” Lin said.Taiwanese passengers pay between $2,100 and $2,800 plus associated costs for the group tour which runs for fewer than eight days, keeps the tourists away from crowded locations and local people, and doesn’t allow for autonomous activity.
    On Wednesday evening Whipps welcomed the easing and said returnees who didn’t show signs of fever and hadn’t been in the presence of anyone who did, could “go about their daily lives as usual”.Whipps also said costs had also been decreased, but did not detail by how much. He claimed the presence of Tropical Storm Surigae had also affected bookings, but that the two governments were working closely together to improve the bubble.
    He said his office had been “assured” that the next scheduled flight on 21 April would have more passengers. The Guardian has contacted the Taiwan government for confirmation of the changes and comment.Palau has recorded zero cases of Covid, and is on track to have 80% of its population vaccinated by the summer, while about 90% of Taiwan’s 1,062 cases were recently arrived people in quarantine, and there is no community transmission.The travel bubble was hailed as a lifeline for Palau’s tourism industry, which contributes almost half of its GDP, but had been completely stalled by the pandemic. Taiwanese made up the third-largest proportion of tourists in pre-Covid times, behind people from China and Japan.
    “We seek everyone’s support and patience as we continue to address challenges and improve the sterile corridor. Challenges help us improve customer experience and increase demand,” said Whipps.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#palau#taiwan#australie#nouvellezelande#sante#bulledevoyage#corridorsterile#circulation#frontiere#tourisme#economie

  • New Zealand suspends travel from India after jump in Covid-19 cases | New Zealand | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/08/new-zealand-suspends-travel-from-india-after-jump-in-covid-19-cases
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/45a0ccc2dd20f57e4a37538ccc129c36ae47a651/0_305_4836_2902/master/4836.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Announces Plans For COVID Travel Bubble With AustraliaWELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND - APRIL 06: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks to media during a press conference at Parliament on April 06, 2021 in Wellington, New Zealand. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced that quarantine-free travel between New Zealand and Australia will start on Monday 19 April. The travel bubble will aid economic recovery by safely opening up international travel between the two countries while continuing to pursue a COVID-19 elimination strategy.
    New Zealand has temporarily suspended entry for all travellers from India, including its own citizens, for about two weeks following a high number of positive coronavirus cases arriving from the South Asian country.
    The move comes after New Zealand recorded 23 new positive coronavirus cases at its border on Thursday, of which 17 were from India.
    “We are temporarily suspending entry into New Zealand for travellers from India,” the prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, said in a news conference in Auckland.India is battling a deadly second wave of Covid-19 with daily infections this week passing the peak of the first wave seen last September.
    How New Zealand’s Covid success made it a laboratory for the world
    The suspension will start on 11 April and will be in place until 28 April. During this time the government will look at risk management measures to resume travel.“I want to emphasise that while arrivals of Covid from India has prompted this measure, we are looking at how we manage high risk points of departure generally. This is not a country specific risk assessment,” Ardern said.New Zealand has virtually eliminated the virus within its borders, and has not reported any community transmission locally for about 40 days.But it’s been reviewing its border settings as more people with infections arrive in New Zealand, the majority from India.Ardern said the rolling average of positive cases has been steadily rising and hit 7 cases on Wednesday, the highest since last October.New Zealand on Thursday also reported one new locally infected case in a worker who was employed at a coronavirus managed isolation facility. The 24-year-old was yet to be vaccinated.The travel suspension came just two days after New Zealand announced it would be launching a trans-Tasman travel bubble with Australia on 19 April.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#nouvellezelande#inde#sante#frontiere#circulation#vaccination

  • Ministers urged to give UK home-workers a ‘right to disconnect’
    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/apr/13/ministers-urged-to-give-uk-home-workers-a-right-to-disconnect

    Addition to employment bill would help people switch off and protect mental health, says union Ministers are being urged to tackle the “dark side” of remote working by giving employees a legal “right to disconnect” to improve their mental health. After a year of disruption caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the union Prospect, which represents specialists such as scientists, engineers and tech workers, wants companies to be legally required to negotiate with staff and agree rules on when (...)

    #GigEconomy #santé #télétravail #travail

    ##santé
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/7f12dce95b46e2ce75acff2f3192aa13ad32e4a3/0_448_6720_4032/master/6720.jpg

  • Why Silicon Valley’s most astute critics are all women | Technology | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/03/why-silicon-valley-most-astute-critics-women-tech-gender
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/658f194e8cb3f8db0de3b288c4b603fd331c41fe/0_63_1200_720/master/1200.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    The first conclusion is that the industry that is reshaping our societies and undermining our democracies is overwhelmingly dominated by males. Yet – with a few honourable exceptions – male critics seem relatively untroubled by, or phlegmatic about, this particular aspect of the industry; they seem to see it as inevitable and pass on to more ostensibly urgent concerns.

    The chronic lack of gender diversity in tech has been well known for ages and recent years have seen many of the companies admitting to the problem and vowing to do better. But progress has been mighty slow.

    My hunch is that however much the industry bleats about gender diversity, it doesn’t truly see it as a real problem. Male-dominated firms still receive more than 80% of venture-capital funding and the money often goes to entrepreneurs promising to create products or services that supposedly address consumers’ real needs.

    Many of the most trenchant critics of the technology and its deployment by Silicon Valley are women of colour. That’s no accident, because they in particular are understandably attentive to the ways in which, for example, machine learning and facial recognition technology embody the prejudices embedded in the datasets that trained them.

  • All countries should pursue a Covid-19 elimination strategy: here are 16 reasons why | New Zealand | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/commentisfree/2021/jan/28/all-countries-should-pursue-a-covid-19-elimination-strategy-here-are-16
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/951197ac7332c48511417bf31afbe96c4a8f8f92/0_182_5472_3283/master/5472.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    The past year of Covid-19 has taught us that it is the behaviour of governments, more than the behaviour of the virus or individuals, that shapes countries’ experience of the crisis. Talking about pandemic waves has given the virus far too much agency: until quite recently the apparent waves of infection were driven by government action and inaction. It is only now with the emergence of more infectious variants that it might be appropriate to talk about a true second wave.

    As governments draw up their battle plans for year two, we might expect them to base their strategies on the wealth of data about what works best. And the evidence to date suggests that countries pursuing elimination of Covid-19 are performing much better than those trying to suppress the virus. Aiming for zero-Covid is producing more positive results than trying to “live with the virus”.

    #zero_covid

    • Suppression du virus plutôt que le « vivre avec » : c’est aussi l’avis de l’épidémiologiste Antoine Flahault qui accorde un entretien au JDD, entretien relayé ici :

      https://www.lefigaro.fr/sciences/covid-19-le-vaccin-ne-suffira-pas-a-contrer-le-virus-estime-antoine-flahaul

      La campagne de vaccination ne suffira pas à elle seule à endiguer l’épidémie de Covid-19, à cause du risque de variants résistants ou des lacunes de cette campagne, a affirmé l’épidémiologiste Antoine Flahault au Journal du dimanche .Interrogé par l’hebdomadaire sur le choix de « tout miser sur le vaccin pour sortir de la crise », le directeur de l’Institut de santé globale de l’université de Genève répond : « Cela me paraît un pari hasardeux. Et risqué ». Il voit trois hypothèses qui pourraient limiter l’efficacité de cette stratégie : « Si de nouveaux variants émergent et mettent en péril l’efficacité des vaccins ; si l’acheminement ne se fait pas au rythme voulu ; si les problèmes rencontrés par le vaccin AstraZeneca se posaient avec d’autres vaccins et remettaient en question l’adhésion de la population ».

  • How US Capitol attack surveillance methods could be used against protesters
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/07/us-capitol-attack-surveillance-methods-protesters-first-amendment

    The FBI has relied on a variety of technologies to track down rioters – and watchdogs are concerned those technologies could impede protesters exercising their first amendment rights Over the past months, federal law enforcement has used a wide variety of surveillance technologies to track down rioters who participated in the 6 January attack on the US Capitol building – demonstrating rising surveillance across the nation. Recent news coverage of the riot has largely focused on facial (...)

    #FBI #algorithme #CCTV #biométrie #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #conducteur·trice·s #immatriculation (...)

    ##surveillance
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/b5e6c314893079187669905eceecd9a4a427c476/0_200_6000_3600/master/6000.jpg

  • The protesters who gather every day to demand justice for George Floyd | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/08/derek-chauvin-trial-minneapolis-george-floyd-protesters
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/535a76f6aaf235f2b1c2a76a0110bb1a47e22f5b/0_117_3500_2100/master/3500.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    A small but determined group rise early to take their spot outside the Minneapolis courthouse – and they stay all day

  • Macron to close elite school that hothouses French leaders | Emmanuel Macron | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/08/macron-close-france-elite-finishing-school-ena-elite-presidents
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/724f5466fa5e7f1da801d00e0bc26d69501ff9ad/0_166_3522_2113/master/3522.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Emmanuel Macron is expected to officially announce on Thursday the closure of the École Nationale d’Administration, the elite French finishing school for the country’s leaders where he studied.

    Known as ENA, the grande école has been the hothouse for France’s top civil service and a pathway to power in the public and private sectors. Four French presidents, including Macron, have passed through its doors as have dozens of ministers and business leaders.

  • New Zealand suspends travel from India after jump in Covid-19 cases | New Zealand | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/08/new-zealand-suspends-travel-from-india-after-jump-in-covid-19-cases
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/45a0ccc2dd20f57e4a37538ccc129c36ae47a651/0_305_4836_2902/master/4836.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    New Zealand suspends travel from India after jump in Covid-19 cases
    PM Jacinda Ardern said the government would look at risk management measures during suspension.NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Announces Plans For COVID Travel Bubble With AustraliaWELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND - APRIL 06: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks to media during a press conference at Parliament on April 06, 2021 in Wellington, New Zealand. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced that quarantine-free travel between New Zealand and Australia will start on Monday 19 April. The travel bubble will aid economic recovery by safely opening up international travel between the two countries while continuing to pursue a COVID-19 elimination strategy. New Zealand has temporarily suspended entry for all travellers from India, including its own citizens, for about two weeks following a high number of positive coronavirus cases arriving from the South Asian country.The move comes after New Zealand recorded 23 new positive coronavirus cases at its border on Thursday, of which 17 were from India.“We are temporarily suspending entry into New Zealand for travellers from India,” the prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, said in a news conference in Auckland.India is battling a deadly second wave of Covid-19 with daily infections this week passing the peak of the first wave seen last September.
    The suspension will start on 11 April and will be in place until 28 April. During this time the government will look at risk management measures to resume travel.“I want to emphasise that while arrivals of Covid from India has prompted this measure, we are looking at how we manage high risk points of departure generally. This is not a country specific risk assessment,” Ardern said.
    New Zealand has virtually eliminated the virus within its borders, and has not reported any community transmission locally for about 40 days.
    But it’s been reviewing its border settings as more people with infections arrive in New Zealand, the majority from India.Ardern said the rolling average of positive cases has been steadily rising and hit 7 cases on Wednesday, the highest since last October.New Zealand on Thursday also reported one new locally infected case in a worker who was employed at a coronavirus managed isolation facility. The 24-year-old was yet to be vaccinated.The travel suspension came just two days after New Zealand announced it would be launching a trans-Tasman travel bubble with Australia on 19 April.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#nouvellezelande#inde#australie#tasmanie#sante#bulledevoyage#frontiere#virus

  • Global rollout of vaccines is no longer a guarantee of victory over Covid-19 | Coronavirus | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/06/global-rollout-of-vaccines-is-no-longer-a-guarantee-of-victory-over-cov
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/71e1522fa5cbac44972ffbca4f687b12a77b7822/0_0_4482_2689/master/4482.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    At the end of 2020, there was a strong hope that high levels of vaccination would see humanity finally gain the upper hand over Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. In an ideal scenario, the virus would then be contained at very low levels without further societal disruption or significant numbers of deaths.

    But since then, new “variants of concern” have emerged and spread worldwide, putting current pandemic control efforts, including vaccination, at risk of being derailed.

    Put simply, the game has changed, and a successful global rollout of current vaccines by itself is no longer a guarantee of victory.

    No one is truly safe from Covid-19 until everyone is safe. We are in a race against time to get global transmission rates low enough to prevent the emergence and spread of new variants. The danger is that variants will arise that can overcome the immunity conferred by vaccinations or prior infection.

  • Bill Gates is the biggest private owner of farmland in the United States. Why? | Bill Gates | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/05/bill-gates-climate-crisis-farmland
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/374b3c232df9ff7069ea40362c198183b6eec3ee/0_0_3500_2101/master/3500.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    The world’s richest 1% emit double the carbon of the poorest 50%, an 2020 Oxfam study found. According to Forbes, the world’s billionaires saw their wealth swell by $1.9tn in 2020, while more than 22 million US workers (mostly women) lost their jobs.

    Like wealth, land ownership is becoming concentrated into fewer and fewer hands, resulting in a greater push for monocultures and more intensive industrial farming techniques to generate greater returns. One per cent of the world’s farms control 70% of the world’s farmlands, one report found. The biggest shift in recent years from small to big farms was in the US.

    The land we all live on should not be the sole property of a few

    The principal danger of private farmland owners like Bill Gates is not their professed support of sustainable agriculture often found in philanthropic work – it’s the monopolistic role they play in determining our food systems and land use patterns.