Covid live: UK reports 47,240 new cases; Merkel urges successor to impose more restrictions in Germany

LIVE – Updated at 17:48




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Angela Merkel warned over rising Covid cases in Germany.

UK also records 147 further deaths; outgoing German chancellor warns ‘every day counts’ as cases exceed 75,000 a day for first time.

 

Covid rates in England are continuing to rise among schoolchildren but falling among over-60s, new figures show.

A total of 932.3 new cases per 100,000 people aged five to nine were recorded in the seven days to 21 November, up from 741.8 the previous week, according to a weekly surveillance report by the Health Security Agency. The equivalent rate among 10-19-year-olds is 814.6, a rise from 712.8 the previous week.

Covid rates have slightly increased among all age groups up to 59 years old. But in older age brackets it has fallen. Among over 80s it has dropped from 81 to 63.6.

This could reflect the impact of booster doses of the vaccine which started for the oldest age groups at the end of September.

Rates have risen in all regions across England except the north east and Yorkshire and Humber. The highest rate is in the south east, with 530.5 cases per 100,000 people, and the lowest is in London, with 318.1 cases per 100,000 people.

Hospital admissions in England fell to 6.5 per 100,000 people in the week to 21 November from 7.7 the week before.




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A lateral flow test collection point in Chesham, Buckinghamshire yesterday. Photograph: Maureen McLean/REX/Shutterstock

 

Downing Street has said that a coronavirus variant identified in cases in South Africa and Botswana would be kept under “close investigation”.

PA report a Number 10 spokesman as saying: “We continue to monitor new variants as they emerge with our partners around the world.

“We have one of the largest genomic sequencing programmes here in the UK that allows us to spot and track variants as they emerge and, as we have done throughout the pandemic, we will continue to keep an eye and keep this particular variant under investigation.”

Asked whether travel restrictions would be needed before Christmas as a result of the variant, the spokesman said: “We will continue to keep the latest situation, the latest scientific evidence and data, under review, as we have done throughout the pandemic.

“We have said before if we believe we need to take action we will, but we will continue to monitor this variant and other variants in the same way that we have done throughout the pandemic.”

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UK Covid infections continue to rise with 47,240 new cases recorded and 147 new deaths

Coronavirus cases are continuing to rise in the UK today, recording 47,240 new cases, and 147 more people died.

Yesterday there were 43,676 new cases and 149 deaths.

Between 19 November 2021 and 25 November 2021, 303,504 people tested positive – an increase of 9.5% on the previous seven days. During the same period there were 874 deaths – a decrease of 14.8% compared to the previous week.

The Netherlands prepares to introduce a swathe of ‘heavy measures’ to slow Covid spread amid surge

The Dutch government today said it planned to bring in a swathe of “heavy measures” to slow the spread of Covid, but has yet to decide when they will be introduced.

The health minister, Hugo de Jonge, said: “That heavy measures will be needed is beyond doubt.” The government is expected to announce new restrictions on Friday, reports Reuters.

It comes after health authorities reported more than 20,000 new cases in the past 24 hours.




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The Dutch health minister, Hugo de Jonge, pictured yesterday in The Hague. Photograph: Robin van Lonkhuijsen/ANP/AFP/Getty Images

Merkel warns ‘every day counts’ in dealing with pandemic and implores successor to bring in more restrictions

Outgoing chancellor Angela Merkel has issued a stark warning to her successors on coronavirus, telling them that “every day counts”, as Germany’s death toll exceeded 100,000.

Speaking a day after Olaf Scholz presented his new ruling coalition to take office next month, she implored the new government to act quickly and decisively on Covid, reports AFP.




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German chancellor Angela Merkel today with the Polish prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki in Berlin, Germany. Photograph: Getty Images

“We need more contact restrictions,” Merkel said, adding that she had told Scholz that “we can still manage this transition period together and look at all necessary measures”.

Germany recorded 351 Covid fatalities in the past 24 hours, bringing the official death toll since the start of the pandemic to 100,119.

The weekly incidence rate also hit an all-time high of 419.7 new infections per 100,000 people, the Robert Koch Institute health agency said.

 

People infected with coronavirus in Belgium will soon be asked to log their potential high-risk contacts, reports the Brussels Times.

It comes as the country is planning to streamline its test-and-trace system as contact tracers are overrun with potential contacts.

The news outlet reports that infected people will soon receive a link by text message to log potentially risky contacts on the Mijngezondheid.be website to speed up the process of testing and quarantine.

New UK data finds Covid vaccination is safe for pregnant women

Covid vaccination is safe for pregnant women and not associated with higher rates of complications, according to new data released in the UK today.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said data from the Covid vaccine roll-out in Britain supports other studies around the world that vaccines are safe to give at any stage of pregnancy.

It found no substantial differences in rates of stillbirths, low birth weights and the proportion of premature births.

Dr Mary Ramsay, the head of immunisation at UKHSA, said:

Every pregnant woman who has not yet been vaccinated should feel confident to go and get the jab, and that this will help to prevent the serious consequences of catching Covid-19 in pregnancy.

The data found that vaccinated women had a stillbirth rate of 3.35 per 1,000, slightly lower than the rate of 3.60 per 1,000 in unvaccinated women.

The proportion of women giving birth prematurely was 6.51% for vaccinated people, slightly higher than 5.99% for unvaccinated women.

The government is urging pregnant women who have not yet been vaccinated to do so. It said that 98% of pregnant women in hospital with symptomatic Covid were unvaccinated.

Slovakia goes into two-week lockdown – closing non-essential shops, restricting movement and gatherings

Slovakia has gone into a two-week lockdown – closing non-essential shops and services, restricting movement and banning gatherings of more than six.

Hospitals in the country, which has one of the European Union’s lowest vaccination rates, are in a critical situation, reports Reuters, amid rising new infections.

From Thursday, people are not allowed to leave their district unless for work, school or a doctor.

In the city of Trenčín, musical instrument shop manager Roman Spatny said his income would vanish with another lost Christmas season.




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Roman Spatny inside his closed musical instrument store in Trenčín, Slovakia, today. Photograph: Radovan Stoklasa/Reuters

“For us this is a plain knife in the back. We have to be closed at a time that business-wise is the most important for us, same as last year,” he said. “Important decisions are taken from one hour to the next. There is no way to properly react to this.”

Slovakia reported more than 10,000 new cases in each of the past two days, its highest numbers to date.

With 1,929 average daily cases per million population over the past week, it has the world’s highest incidence rate according to Our World in Data.

It has the EU’s third lowest vaccination rate, with only 45.7% of the population vaccinated.

Neighbouring Austria started a lockdown on Monday.

Denmark to offer booster shots to all adults

Denmark has announced that it is to follow other European nations by offering a booster Covid vaccine to all adults as cases rise.

The Danish Health Authority said today that the “decline in immunity is also happening for people in the younger age groups”, reports the Associated Press.

Helene Probst, deputy head of the government agency, said:

When we see the epidemic flare up right now, it is primarily due to the transition from summer to autumn and winter, and at the same time we have an open society with only a few restrictions. Combined with the fact that the effect of the vaccines decreases over time, it is expected that the infection will increase.




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Protesters from the radical ‘men in black’ movement protest against Covid measures outside the Danish parliament on Saturday. Photograph: Thibault Savary/AFP/Getty Images

Like much of Europe, Denmark, has seen a rise in cases, and hospitalisations have risen faster than expected.

Booster shots have already been offered to older people and the vulnerable. Now they will be offered to all adults six months after their second vaccine dose.

Vaccination is voluntary in the country. So far, 88.4% have had one vaccine dose and 86.4% have had two.

The Danish government said said yesterday that it would seek support in parliament to reinstate Covid measures, including mandatory face masks in public places and the use of the Covid-19 digital pass. The health minister, Magnus Heunicke, said that “the Delta variant is far more contagious, and that challenges us”.

It comes after its Scandinavian neighbour Sweden recommended yesterday that everyone aged 18-65 should have a booster shot six months after their second vaccination.

 

The Irish deputy prime minister, Leo Varadkar, has said that Ireland’s regulator is expected to approve vaccines for five to 11-year-olds in the coming days, reports Reuters.

 

The European Commission has said that by the end of the week the European Union will have delivered 1bn doses of Covid vaccines to member states, reports Reuters.

Travellers within EU should get Covid booster to avoid testing and quarantine, says executive

13:11 Jennifer Rankin

The European Union executive has proposed that travellers should get a booster jab nine months after their original vaccines, if they want to maintain ease of movement inside the bloc.

The European Commission said there should be a standard nine-month acceptance period for vaccines across the bloc, in a bid to avoid a confusing hodgepodge of rules across the 27 member states. Travellers moving within the EU should get a booster jab after nine months in order to avoid testing and quarantine.

The Commission is expected to propose similar measures for travellers coming into the EU later on Wednesday. The nine-month period reflects scientific advice that the first round of vaccines wanes after six months, adding three months to allow governments to get booster-shot programmes up and running.

Both draft laws would have to be approved by EU member states before entry into force, which is expected in 2022.

Didier Reynders, the EU commissioner for justice, described the policy as a move to a person-based approach, rather than classifying travellers purely by their country of departure.

Our main objective is to avoid diverging measures throughout the EU. This also applies to the question of boosters, which will be essential to fight the virus. Among other measures, we propose today that the council [of EU ministers] agrees on a standard validity period for vaccination certificates issued following the primary series. Agreeing on this proposal will be crucial for the months ahead and the protection of the safe free movement for citizens.

Under the plans, cross-border commuters, lorry drivers and children under 12 would continue to be exempt from travel rules, although the list of exempt groups has been reduced.

Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, urged European citizens to get vaccinated, after EU health agencies recommended booster jabs earlier this week as part of a strategy to stem a surge in infections.

Von der Leyen, a trained medical doctor, said:

A quarter of EU adults are still not fully vaccinated. If you are unvaccinated, you are more at risk of having severe COVID-19 symptoms. Vaccination protects you, and the others.

 

What is driving Europe’s surge in Covid cases? Here’s a video to explain:

 

Some hospitals in the Netherlands have stopped chemotherapy and organ transplants to make way for Covid patients in intensive care.

The Dutch Hospital Association for Critical Care said it had asked the health minister, Hugo de Jonge, to escalate the national Covid response plan so that regular care requiring an overnight stay would be cancelled, reports Reuters.

With the number of coronavirus patients in hospitals surging, experts have warned that hospitals will reach full capacity in just over a week if the virus is not contained. Earlier this week several Covid patients were transferred to hospitals in Germany.

“There are hospitals in several regions scaling back care,” a spokesperson for the hospital association said. “We are talking about care that requires a bed. That means a lot of appointments are being cancelled.”

 

Scientists in South Africa are working “overtime” to understand the new Covid variant, B.1.1.529, the National Institute for Communicable Diseases has said.

South Africa has confirmed around 100 specimens as B.1.1.529, but the variant has also been found in Botswana and Hong Kong, with the Hong Kong case a traveller from South Africa, reports Reuters. As many as 90% of new cases in Gauteng could be B.1.1.529, scientists believe.

South Africa’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases said in a statement: “Although the data are limited, our experts are working overtime with all the established surveillance systems to understand the new variant and what the potential implications could be.”

The country has requested an urgent sitting of a World Health Organization (WHO) working group on virus evolution on Friday to talk about the new variant.

EU regulator approves Pfizer vaccine for children aged five to 11

The European Medicines Agency, the European Union’s drug regulator, has approved the use of Pfizer/BioNTech’s Covid vaccine on children aged five to 11.

The EMA said the dose would be lower than that used in those aged 12 and over, Reuters reports, and will be given as two injections in the upper arm three weeks apart.

The regulator said that it concluded that the benefits for children in the age group outweighed the risks, especially in those with conditions that increase their risk of getting severe Covid.

The EMA said it will now send its recommendation to the European Commission which will make a final decision.




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A 10-year-old in Wisconsin in the US receiving the Pfizer vaccine yesterday. Photograph: Mark Hertzberg/ZUMA Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

 

Millions of Americans have got Covid boosters in recent days after the US expanded eligibility to all adults last week.

A total of about 37.5 million people have received booster shots so far. But health officials urged more people to get them amid fears of a rise in infections over the winter holiday season.

“I think it is a good start,” said Dr William Schaffner, a leading infectious disease expert from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, told Reuters. “I am hoping for much better. I would like to see all of that doubled very, very quickly.”

From tomorrow, face masks mandatory indoors and at Christmas markets in France

The French health minister, Olivier Véran, said face masks have been left behind, especially by the vaccinated who think they have nothing to fear. From tomorrow he said it will be mandatory to wear a mask inside. He said they will also be required at events, including Christmas markets.

He also said that starting in December there will be a new anti-viral drug on the market in France that they are “very hopeful” about.

 

More from France:

Véran says people are no longer being as responsible as they should be, so they need to “shape up”.

He says hospitals and ICUs are filling with people who decided not to be vaccinated.

He says people need to be “constantly vigilant” and go back to the good habits they might have lost.

France announces new Covid measures including booster shots for all

The French health minister, Olivier Véran, is speaking now.

He has confirmed that France will roll out Covid vaccine booster shots for all adults and that the gap between initial doses and boosters will be cut to five months.

He said it will be “quite a feat” to roll out millions of vaccine doses.

From 15 December, the health pass for people aged 65-plus will no longer be valid if they have not had a booster five months after the first jab.

From 15 January, the same rules will apply for all adults aged 18-plus.

France to announce booster shots for all adults and stricter face mask rules amid Covid surge

France is to announce booster shots for all adults, stricter face mask rules and health pass checks to tackle a surge of infections, Reuters reports.

Two parliamentary sources confirmed the plans to the news agency today, ahead of a press conference with the health minister, Olivier Véran.

It comes after the country reported more than 30,000 new infections yesterday for a second consecutive day. Meanwhile, the seven-day moving average of daily new cases is at a three-month high of 21,761 and nearly quadrupled in a month.

 

In the UK, relatives of a grandmother in her 50s who was left brain damaged and paralysed from the neck down after contracting Covid have won the latest stage of a legal fight to keep her on life support.

A judge in the court of protection ruled earlier this year that the woman should be allowed to die. But relatives challenged the decision at a court of appeal hearing a few weeks ago. Today appeal judges allowed their appeal and said the case should be heard again, reports PA Media.

Her daughter welcomed the news. “I almost cried when I found out. It’s like a ton of bricks has been lifted off me. We are now preparing for the next hearing – we are preparing for everything,” she said.

This is Miranda Bryant looking after the blog for the next few hours. Please get in touch with any tips or suggestions: [email protected]

Today so far

  • The World Health Organization has issued a warning in the lead-up to Christmas, saying social mixing is back at pre-pandemic levels and threatens to spread the virus in the run-up to the holidays.
  • “We are concerned about a false sense of security that vaccines have ended the pandemic, and that people who are vaccinated do not need to take any other precautions,” the WHO director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu, said. “Vaccines save lives, but they do not fully prevent transmission.”
  • Germany, which weathered earlier bouts of the pandemic better than many of its neighbours, has found itself back at the centre of Europe’s virus outbreak as the latest wave of the pandemic infects people at a record pace.
  • Officials recorded 100,119 Covid deaths in Germany in total as of Wednesday. The head of the Robert Koch Institute has put the mortality rate in Germany at about 0.8%, meaning that at daily case numbers of around 50,000, some 400 people per day will end dying.
  • Some hospitals in the Netherlands have halted chemotherapy treatments and organ transplants to free up intensive care beds for a surging number of Covid-19 patients.
  • France is to announce new Covid measures as infections surge across the country.
  • Reports claim that the European Union will recommend a nine-month time limit for the validity of Covid-19 vaccinations for travel into the bloc and also propose prioritising vaccinated travellers.
  • Ministers are urging millions of Britons to get their Covid booster jab by 11 December to ensure they have “very high protection against Covid by Christmas Day” as new evidence shows the risk of infection increases with the time since the second dose.
  • Novavax is expected to be approved as a fourth Covid vaccine in UK. Trials show the protein-based jab causes fewer side-effects. The British government has so far ordered 60m doses.
  • Deaths of people being treated for substance misuse problems in England rose sharply during the pandemic, data shows, as charities put the rise down to treatment services closing their doors due to Coronavirus.
  • Turkey’s domestically developed Covid-19 vaccine, Turkovac, has applied for emergency authorisation. Health minister Fahrettin Koca said he hoped the shot would be available for use by year-end.
  • A little known sect led by a pastor who pokes eyes to heal is at the centre of a Covid outbreak in South Korea, as the country reported a new daily record of 4,116 cases and battles a rise in serious cases straining hospitals.
  • Airline Cathay Pacific has said it is “cancelling a number of flights to Hong Kong” for December blaming “operational and travel restrictions that remain in place”. Hong Kong’s strict quarantine rules are increasingly out of step with rivals for international business like Singapore.
  • Chief minister of Australia’s Northern Territory Michael Gunner has lambasted Covid conspiracy theorists as “tinfoil hat wearing tossers, sitting in their parents’ basements in Florida.”
  • Protests against Covid measures turned to violence on France’s Caribbean island of Martinique overnight.
  • Scientists say a new Covid variant that carries an “extremely high number” of mutations may drive further waves of disease by evading the body’s defences.

That is it from me, Martin Belam, today. I am now off to go and host our Thursday quiz. Andrew Sparrow has our UK politics live blog. Miranda Bryant will be here with you shortly to carry bringing you the latest coronavirus news from the UK and around the world.

 

11:36 Sarah Marsh

Deaths of people being treated for substance misuse problems in England rose sharply during the pandemic, data shows, as charities put the rise down to treatment services closing their doors due to coronavirus.

Official figures show that in 2020-21 3,726 people died while in contact with treatment services, a 27% increase compared with the year before when there were 2,929 deaths.

There were 275,896 adults in contact with drug and alcohol services between April 2020 and March 2021, up from 270,705 the year before. The number of adults entering treatment in 2020-21 remained relatively stable at 130,490, up from 132,124. Over half (51%) of the adults in treatment were there for problems with opiates, a medication or an illegal drug that is derived from the opium poppy including fentanyl and methadone.

Like other services, drug and alcohol treatment services were affected by the pandemic and had to restrict face-to-face contact, which affected the types of interventions that service users received.

For example, most patients whose opioid substitute consumption was supervised before the pandemic were given take-home doses from March 2020, after a risk assessment. Fewer service users were able to access inpatient detoxification for alcohol and drugs. Testing and treatment for blood-borne viruses and liver disease were also greatly reduced.

The government data release said it was likely that factors such as changes to alcohol and drug treatment, reduced access to other healthcare services, changes to lifestyle and social circumstances during lockdowns, and Covid-19 itself were likely to be behind the numbers.

Nuno Albuquerque, head of treatment for the UK Addiction Treatment Group, said: “The start of the coronavirus crisis was extremely frightening and uncertain. But drug and alcohol treatment is critical care intervention and cannot be simply put on pause. We know that a concerning number of facilities closed their doors to addicts who were already in the treatment process and although it was such a difficult time, it cannot be a coincidence that more people have subsequently lost their lives when they were in fact trying to save it.”

The figures show that people in treatment make up the second largest group (28%) after those in treatment for opiates. The number of people who started treatment for alcohol addiction in 2020 rose by 3% compared with the previous year – from 74,618 to 76,740.

Last year, all substance groups except opiate users recorded a decrease in deaths in treatment compared with the previous year. By contrast, there were increases in the proportion of people dying while in treatment in all substance groups this year. This includes 20% rise among opiate users and a 44% rise among those with alcohol misuse problems.

Nearly two-thirds (63%) of those who started treatment for all substance groups needed mental health treatment as well, but a quarter of them (25%) who had a mental health need were not receiving any treatment to meet this need.

Albuquerque said reports such as this one are “frightening” because each figure “is a person”. He added: “We have been lobbying for the government to reinforce ring-fenced, protected budgets for drug and alcohol treatment and prevention for some time.”

 

Russia’s Covid case numbers remain on a gradual downward trend overall, although today’s official figure of 33,796 is up slightly on yesterday’s 33,558. There were 1,238 deaths officially recorded.

 

The head of the Robert Koch Institute has put the mortality rate in Germany at about 0.8%, meaning that at daily case numbers of around 50,000, some 400 people per day will end dying.

Germany’s incoming three-party government has said it would create a team of experts who would assess the situation on a daily basis. Greens co-leader Annalena Baerbock said the new government had set itself 10 days to decide if further restrictions were needed.

Germany has already limited large parts of public life in areas where the situation is acute to people who have been vaccinated or have recovered.

Reuters reports that the chancellor-in-waiting, Olaf Scholz, has promised to ramp up vaccinations and did not rule out making them compulsory, a move undertaken already by Austria

“We must vaccinate and give booster shots to prevent the spread of the virus,” said Scholz. “Vaccination is the way out of this pandemic,” he said.

He said long queues for booster shots in some areas that are slowing things down had to be sorted out.

 

Turkey’s domestically developed Covid-19 vaccine, Turkovac, has applied for emergency authorisation, the health minister, Fahrettin Koca, has said, adding he hoped the shot would be available for use by year-end.

Speaking at his ministry’s budget debate in parliament, Koca said work on Turkovac was nearing completion, and added the shot would mark the first Phase III clinical research project to be fully carried out by Turkey.

“I would like to share a piece of good news for our people: our domestic inactive Covid-19 vaccine Turkovac has applied for emergency authorisation as of today,” Koca said.

Reuters reports that Turkey began developing Turkovac this year, but the launch date for the vaccine has been beset by delays. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has previously said Turkey would make the shot available globally.

Turkey has already administered nearly 120m doses of vaccines using China’s Sinovac and Pfizer/BioNTech’s vaccines, with more than 50 million having received two doses of the vaccines. It has also begun administering boosters shots.

Turkey’s daily infection numbers have hovered around 30,000 since mid-September, while the daily death toll, which peaked at 290 in September, remains near 200. The government has called on people to take personal measures and get vaccinated, attributing the high infections to insufficient vaccination levels.

 

Some Dutch hospitals have halted chemotherapy treatments and organ transplants to free up intensive care beds for a surging number of Covid-19 patients, an official said on Thursday.

The number of coronavirus patients in hospital has hit levels not seen since early May, and experts have warned that hospitals will reach full capacity in little more than a week if the virus is not contained.

The Dutch Hospital Association for Critical Care said it had asked the health minister, Hugo de Jonge, to escalate the national Covid plan to a stage under which regular care requiring an overnight stay would be cancelled. Several Covid patients were transferred to German hospitals this week.

Responding to record high infection rates, the government’s leading outbreak management team convened an emergency meeting last night and new lockdown measures are expected to be announced on Friday.

Anthony Deutsch reports for Reuters that although 85% of the adult Dutch population has been fully vaccinated, new cases hit a record high of 23,709 in 24 hours on Wednesday and are up almost 40% on a weekly basis.

“There are hospitals in several regions scaling back care,” a spokesperson for the hospital association said. “We are talking about care that requires a bed. That means a lot of appointments are being cancelled.”

EU to recommend nine-month vaccine validity for travel – reports

Alberto Nardelli (formerly of this parish) and John Follain have a story leading the Bloomberg site at the moment, claiming that the EU is to propose a nine-month limit on Covid vaccine validity for travel. They write:

The European Union will recommend a nine-month time limit for the validity of Covid-19 vaccinations for travel into the bloc and also propose prioritising vaccinated travellers.

The European Commission will propose that member states should continue welcoming all travelers inoculated with shots approved by the bloc, according to a document seen by Bloomberg. It also calls for countries to reopen as of 10 January to all those who have used vaccines approved by the World Health Organization.

The proposed updates introduce the new time limit for the validity of Covid inoculations, suggesting that boosters will be needed beyond the 9-month period.

 

08:16 Lorena Allam

Aboriginal elders, health organisations and frontline workers in the Australia’s Northern Territory’s Covid outbreak have lashed out at false information about public health measures on social media, with the NT chief minister blaming the misinformation on “tinfoil hat wearing tossers, sitting in their parents’ basements in Florida”.

Over the past few days false claims have been circulating online that Aboriginal people from Binjari and Rockhole were being forcibly removed from their homes and taken to enforced quarantine in Howard Springs, and people including children were being forcibly vaccinated.

None of these claims are true, according to the Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT), the local Aboriginal health services and community leaders.

On Thursday, the chief minister, Michael Gunner, laid into “conspiracy theorists” online, blaming overseas groups for the misinformation.

“Hello to all the conspiracy theorists overseas watching this. Please get a life,” Gunner told a media briefing on Thursday.

“There are ridiculous, untrue rumours about the ADF’s involvement. As we all know, they aren’t carrying weapons – they are carrying fresh food for people.

“Ninety-nine-point-nine-nine per cent of the BS that is flying around on the internet about the Territory is coming from flogs outside the Territory – mostly America, Canada and the UK, people who have nothing better to do than make up lies about us because their own lives are so small and so sad.

“If anybody thinks that we are going to be distracted or intimidated by tinfoil hat wearing tossers, sitting in their parents’ basements in Florida, then you do not know us Territorians,” he said.

Read more here from our Indigenous affairs editor Lorena Allam: ‘Tinfoil hat wearing tossers’: NT chief minister and Aboriginal elders hit back at Covid ‘false information’

Related: ‘Tinfoil hat wearing tossers’: NT chief minister and Aboriginal elders hit back at Covid ‘false information’

 

Airline Cathay Pacific has said it is “cancelling a number of flights to Hong Kong” for December blaming “operational and travel restrictions that remain in place”.

The city’s strict travel curbs continue to keep international travellers away at a time when rivals are seeing their prospects improve. Hong Kong has maintained some of the world’s harshest quarantine measures and travel restrictions during the pandemic which has seen the business hub cut off internationally for the past 20 months.

Hong Kong’s government has followed China’s strict coronavirus strategy and said normalisation of travel with the mainland must come before any reopening to the rest of the world.

As the peak holiday season approaches, Agence France-Presse report the airline will convert around one-third of flights bound for Hong Kong to handle cargo.




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A Cathay Pacific jet is seen in front of air traffic control tower at the Hong Kong International Airport. Photograph: Tyrone Siu/Reuters

Cathay is currently relying on volunteer staff to fly in and out of Hong Kong. Bosses have implemented a “closed loop” operation where cabin crew and pilots work three-week shifts, during which they are confined to hotel rooms between flights. When their shift has finished and they return home, they must quarantine for another two weeks.

Distribution and logistics firm FedEx has already announce it is closing its Hong Kong crew base and relocating pilots overseas. In contrast, Singapore Airlines is seeing flights and passenger numbers pick up as that city begins reopening to the outside world and switching to learning to live with the virus.

 

There have been another 628 deaths from Covid in Ukraine in the past 24 hours, according to figures released by the ministry of health. There were 16,943 new cases, which included 1,451 cases in children and 304 cases in healthcare workers.

The seven-day average for new cases stands at 16,025, comparing favourably with the level of over 20,000 a week ago.

Here is an updated map indicating incidence rates across Europe.

 

Protests against Covid measures turned to violence on France’s Caribbean island of Martinique overnight.

France Info published a video of protesters targeting a shopping centre and running away with goods, as well as videos of demonstrators setting up burning barricades on roads.




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A man walks through debris blocking a road after riots in Fort-de-France, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique. Photograph: Loïc Venance/AFP/Getty Images

Reuters notes that France’s Caribbean islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe have both been hit by unrest over the last week due to anger over Covid protocol measures, including moves to ramp COVID vaccination on the islands.

During the 20th century, many people on Guadeloupe were systematically exposed to toxic pesticides used in banana plantations, fuelling a distrust of medical interventions from the authorities.




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People evacuate the wreckage of burnt cars that block a road in Fort-de-France, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique. Photograph: Loïc Venance/AFP/Getty Images

The Caribbean region has been hit in recent weeks by a new wave of coronavirus infections that is causing lockdowns and flight cancellations and overwhelming hospitals, just as tourism was beginning to show signs of recovery.

 

Hello, it is Martin Belam, taking over here in London from Samantha Lock in Sydney. Here is a reminder of the current coronavirus figures from the UK.

There were 303,071 new cases in the last seven days, and that total is up 11.1% on the week before. Deaths are down 9.4% week-on-week and the number of people being admitted to hospital is down 11.6% week-on-week. The UK government’s dashboard states that there are 7,874 people in hospital, of whom 919 are in ventilation beds.

UK eligible public urged to get booster by 11 December

Ministers are urging millions of Britons to get their Covid booster jab by 11 December to ensure they have “very high protection against Covid by Christmas Day” as new evidence shows the risk of infection increases with the time since the second dose.

About 16 million people have had a booster vaccine or a third dose across the UK. Everyone aged 40 and over and the clinically extremely vulnerable are eligible to get a booster six months after their second jab.

“If you’re yet to get your first, second or booster dose, please do come forward for the jab as soon as possible,” said Maggie Throup, the vaccines minister.

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson added: “People who have had their booster vaccine by 11 December will have very high protection against Covid by Christmas Day. Following a rise in cases and a return of lockdown restrictions in Europe, those eligible for a booster have been urged to take up the offer as soon as possible to protect themselves and their families, and help to reduce the pressure on the NHS.”

Read the full story here.

Related: UK public urged to get Covid booster by 11 December if eligible to avoid waning immunity

Vaccines give people ‘false sense of security’, WHO says

The World Health Organization has issued a warning in the lead-up to Christmas, saying social mixing is back at pre-pandemic levels and threatens to spread the virus in the run-up to the holidays.

“We are concerned about a false sense of security that vaccines have ended the pandemic, and that people who are vaccinated do not need to take any other precautions,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

“Vaccines save lives, but they do not fully prevent transmission.”

Last week, more than 60% of all reported cases and deaths from Covid-19 globally were in Europe, Tedros told a news conference.

WHO emergency director Mike Ryan added: “We are back to pre-pandemic levels of social mixing (in Europe)… even in the midst of very strong resurgence in cases and even in the midst of some of those countries under high pressure in health systems.”

 

Hello and thanks for joining us.

I’m Samantha Lock and I’ll be bringing you all the latest Covid developments from across the world this Thursday.

Germany, who weathered earlier bouts of the pandemic better than many of its neighbours, has now found itself back at the centre of Europe’s virus outbreak as the latest wave of the pandemic infects people at a record pace.

Officials recorded 100,119 Covid deaths as of Wednesday, according to the latest data from the RKI public health institute.

The World Health Organization has also issued a warning in the lead-up to Christmas, saying social mixing was back at pre-pandemic levels.

“We are concerned about a false sense of security that vaccines have ended the pandemic, and that people who are vaccinated do not need to take any other precautions,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

“We are back to pre-pandemic levels of social mixing (in Europe)… even in the midst of very strong resurgence in cases and even in the midst of some of those countries under high pressure in health systems,” WHO emergency director Mike Ryan added.

  • Novavax is expected to be approved as a fourth Covid vaccine in UK. Trials show the protein-based jab causes fewer side-effects. The British government has so far ordered 60m doses.
  • Covid cases surge 23% in Americas, mostly in North America, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said.
  • US air travel is set to be busiest since pandemic began due to Thanksgiving.
  • Germany’s next chancellor seeks targeted vaccine mandate. German Social Democrat Olaf Scholz called on Wednesday for vaccinations to be made compulsory for targeted groups.
  • Scientists say a new Covid variant that carries an “extremely high number” of mutations may drive further waves of disease by evading the body’s defences.
  • Italy unveiled new Covid measures banning the unvaccinated from numerous venues, extending compulsory vaccination and expanding booster shots to all adults.
  • Portugal’s health secretary pledged to give Covid booster shots to a quarter of the population by the end of January to tackle the “pandemic storm that has not yet passed”.
  • The World Health Organization director-general has declared that Europe is once again at the epicentre of the pandemic and warned that “no country or region is out of the woods”.
  • Countries should consider implementing mandatory Covid vaccination, the director of World Health Organization (WHO) Europe said today.
  • France is to announce new Covid measures as infections surge across the country.

Source: Thanks msn.com