Monday, June 1

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Pet cat in UK tests positive for virus
Featured, United Kingdom

Pet cat in UK tests positive for virus

    A pet cat has become the first animal to test positive for coronavirus in the UK. The only details known about the feline are that it lives in England and was tested at a laboratory in Weybridge, Surrey, last week, on 22 July. The government said there is no evidence the cat transmitted the virus to its owners or that any other domestic pets are able to, either. Chief veterinary officer Christine Middlemiss explained: "Tests conducted by the Animal and Plant Health Agency have confirmed that the virus responsible for COVID-19 has been detected in a pet cat in England. This is a very rare event with infected animals detected to date only showing mild clinical signs and recovering within in a few days. There is no evidence to suggest that pets directly transmit the ...
Luton Mayor and two councillors breaks lockdown rules to attend party
Featured, United Kingdom

Luton Mayor and two councillors breaks lockdown rules to attend party

    Mayor of Luton Cllr Tahir Malik, Cllr Waheed Akbar and Cllr Asif Mahmood attended a large gathering where social distancing was not being followed, and face masks were not worn. Pictures of the event caused outrage after they were shared on Facebook. On one image, Cllr Malik is seen with a face mask hanging beneath his face. Luton has currently been earmarked as an area for intervention by the government after a spike in Covid-19 cases. In a statement to the media, the three councillors stated: We apologise unreservedly to the people of Luton for our breach of the lockdown rules. We attended what we believed was going to be a small socially distanced gathering, in line with the government guidelines. During the course of the event, the arrival of additional guests ...
Government to fast-track passport renewals to save people’s holidays
Featured, United Kingdom

Government to fast-track passport renewals to save people’s holidays

    The government has pledged to fast-track passport applications to save the holidays of potentially millions of Britons this summer. Renewals will be guaranteed within within five working days but only if travellers can prove they applied a month ago and need to go abroad within the next fortnight. Two million passports are believed to have expired during lockdown and there are waits of 10 weeks or more for renewals. Earlier Boris Johnson announced he wanted to tackle backlog Britain and to encourage people to stop thinking of coronavirus as something that makes it impossible to do things. At the start of lockdown, passport offices were reduced to a skeleton service prioritising urgent and compassionate cases. The Home Office said more than 6,500 passports have bee...
Shops and police at odds
Featured, United Kingdom

Shops and police at odds

    Supermarkets and police are already at loggerheads over enforcing new mandatory face covering rules in England shops, which came into effect today and carry a penalty of a £100 fine. Major chains like Sainsbury's, Costa Coffee and Co-op said they will not impose the laws on customers, with Asda insisting: It is the responsibility of the relevant authorities to police and enforce the new rules. But the national chairman of the Police Federation of England and Wales John Apter has now urged shops to refuse entry to anyone not wearing a face mask and that police intervention should be a last resort. He said: It is our members who are expected to police what is a new way of living and I would urge retail outlets to play their part in making the rules crystal clear; if ...
UK must face no deal relationship with EU
Featured, United Kingdom

UK must face no deal relationship with EU

    The UK must face the possibility that it will not agree a deal on its future relationship with the EU by the end of the year. Chief negotiator David Frost said that with less than six months to go until the end of the transition period, the UK must continue preparing for all possible scenarios for once that deadline passes. In a statement after the latest round of talks in London, Mr Frost said considerable gaps remain in the most difficult areas the so-called level playing field and fisheries. We have always been clear that our principles in these areas are not simple negotiating positions but expressions of the reality that we will be a fully independent country at the end of the transition period, he said. That is why we continue to look for a deal with, at its...
Boris Johnson and Keir Starmer clash over Russia
Featured, United Kingdom

Boris Johnson and Keir Starmer clash over Russia

    The Russia report controversy is a Remainer plot to undermine the Brexit referendum, Boris Johnson has claimed. In fierce Commons clashes, the prime minister dismissed accusations that his government was asleep at the wheel in countering the Kremlin threat as absolutely absurd. Instead, he turned on Keir Starmer, claiming: These criticisms are motivated by a desire to undermine the referendum on the European Union that took place in 2016. He urged MPs to recognise what the damning study by the independent intelligence and security committee was all about, That was pressure from Islington Remainers who have seized on this report to try to give the impression that Russian interference was somehow responsible for Brexit. Later, the prime minister condemned the rage ...
Windows 7 Is Dead: What You Need To Do Now…
Featured, Technology

Windows 7 Is Dead: What You Need To Do Now…

    How to move on from or keep living with Windows 7 A legion of vocal PC enthusiasts swears by Windows 7. Why? Because it stays out of your way, and it just works. Until today. On January 14, 2020, Microsoft ends Windows 7’s extended support. Windows 7 has reached end of life and the free Microsoft Security Essentials antivirus program will no longer be supported either. Your PC will keep operating, of course. Microsoft isn’t literally pulling the plug on your devices. But Windows 7 won’t receive any more updates or security patches, meaning your PC will also be very vulnerable to all those nasty malware programs garnering headlines seemingly every day. If you keep using Windows 7 and over a quarter of all computers run it, per NetMarketShare you’re on your own, and ...
True virus death toll 56,100 in UK
Featured, United Kingdom

True virus death toll 56,100 in UK

    Boris Johnson's Cabinet met in person on Tuesday for the first time in four months as the Government continues efforts to secure millions of doses of a potential coronavirus vaccine. Senior ministers attended the first in-person meeting since March 17 in Parliament's larger Foreign and Commonwealth Office to allow for proper social distancing. Figures published on Tuesday by the ONS show that 56,100 deaths involving Covid-19 have now been registered in the UK. It comes as the Government figures on the UK death toll were "paused" after Health Secretary Matt Hancock ordered an "urgent review" into the data. Meanwhile, Mr Hancock will be quizzed on the vaccines and the latest NHS Test and Trace results when he appears before the Commons Science and Technology Committe...
Airlines call on Rishi Sunak to waive passenger tax for 12 months
Featured, United Kingdom

Airlines call on Rishi Sunak to waive passenger tax for 12 months

    The UK’s airlines have renewed calls for a 12-month waiver from paying Air Passenger Duty (APD) in a bid to protect the industry from damage from the coronavirus crisis. A new survey from industry body Airlines UK has found that without such a waiver, 600 air routes will be lost in the short-term, as well as 8,000 jobs. In 12 months time, the survey, which was carried about by York Aviation, said that 130 routes would be lost if airlines had to continue paying APD, 80 per cent of which would be in the UK. However, if they are exempted from the tax for a year, 56 of these could be saved, it found. Two weeks ago a group of 24 Tory MPs wrote to chancellor Rishi Sunak to ask for the exemption from the passenger tax. The UK’s aviation industry has already been devastat...
Legal aid review after IS bride case
Featured, United Kingdom

Legal aid review after IS bride case

    The government is reviewing legal aid eligibility rules following the decision to allow Shamima Begum to return to the UK to face trial, Boris Johnson has said. Earlier this week the Court of Appeal ruled that Begum, who travelled to Syria to join ISIS in 2015, should be allowed to fight the decision to strip her of her citizenship in person in a British court. The court decided that the 20-year-old, who is currently in refugee Camp Roj in northern Syria, could only mount a "fair and effective appeal" if she was in the UK. But the prime minister called the decision “odd and peverse” on Sunday, adding that the government would be reviewing the legal aid rules. "It seems to me to be at least odd and perverse that somebody can be entitled to legal aid when they are n...