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Latin American nations have begun imposing travel bans on the UK after a new COVID-19 strain was recently reported there.
Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Peru have announced that they will halt flights to and from the country amid fears over the new and highly infectious coronavirus variant in a region that has not passed its first coronavirus peak.
Argentine President Alberto Fernandez announced that all flights to and from the UK will be suspended except a British Airways service already en route to Buenos Aires.
"We will only allow the arrival of one flight scheduled to arrive on Monday at 9:00 a.m. at Ezeiza International Airport," the Argentine government said in a statement.
The passengers and crew of that flight "must comply with a 7-day quarantine once they meet the requirements to enter the country: a PCR test with negative results and COVID-19 insurance," the statement said.
Argentina has registered 1,547,138 cases and 41,997 deaths due to COVID-19, according to a running tally by US-based Johns Hopkins University.
The Chilean government also announced that it has cancelled flights coming from the UK and banned the entry of foreigners who have been in the UK during the last 14 days.
Chileans and foreigners living in Chile who have visited the UK in the last two weeks must observe a mandatory 14-day quarantine.
The restrictions will take effect Tuesday and will continue for two weeks, the government said in a press release.
Chile has reported 587,993 infections and 16,197 deaths and has intensified restrictions after detecting a significant resurgence of cases.
Colombian President Ivan Duque also announced similar measures Sunday.
“From tomorrow, flights from Colombia to the United Kingdom and from the United Kingdom to Colombia are suspended,” said Duque. “And anyone arriving in the country who has been in the UK in the last 14 days will be placed in a 14-day isolation.”
The country's case tally now stands at 1,507,222.
Meanwhile, Peru withdrew authorization for direct flights from the UK which it had granted since Dec. 15.
The Ecuadorian government imposed a rapid antigen test on passengers arriving from the UK, Australia, South Africa and European Union nations due to the COVID-19 mutation.
Mexican President Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador said Monday that the Ministry of Health is analyzing whether to maintain or stop flights from the UK.
However, the government in Brazil, the biggest country in the region, has not issued restrictions./aa
Turkish defense giant Aselsan said Monday it has developed an innovative virus diagnosis system that can also be used in the detection of the coronavirus.
According to information obtained by Anadolu Agency, with the emergence of the COVID-19 outbreak, a device development study was initiated at the Aselsan Research Center, with the knowledge obtained within the scope of research for the detection of chemical and biological threats to be used in the detection of the coronavirus.
Based on antibody-based digital detection, the system detects through an optical method using lenses. Samples taken from patients are incubated on disposable cassettes. The cartridge containing the sample taken from the patient is analyzed with artificial intelligence software and the result is reported.
The system aims to detect viruses that show symptoms of upper respiratory tract infections such as COVID-19 and influenza simultaneously on a single cassette. During the system tests, studies were carried out with antigens, inactive and active viruses and successful results were obtained.
It is aimed to achieve a 99% test accuracy rate for the virus diagnosis system, which is at the ethical committee approval stage for hospital tests.
Studies with patient samples will start soon and Aselsan has filed patent applications for the critical components of the system.
Fixture at hospitals
According to Didem Lale Ozkan, lead engineer from Aselsan's Biodefense Research Programs Unit, the pandemic revealed that domestic solutions were needed in the field of health as soon as possible.
She pointed out that the company focused on the virus diagnosis system with its knowledge of the detection of chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) threats.
“We have developed a domestic and national system with the work of our own engineers. We detect the COVID-19 virus with this microelectronic optics-based system," Ozkan noted, adding that after the hospital clinical tests are completed, the production process of the device will start, and it will take its place in hospitals./aa
Attacks by armed groups in northern Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province have forced more than 500,000 people to flee their homes, while nearly half of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) are children, a UN agency said Monday.
While over 90% of the IDPs are living with host families, insecurity in November “remained prevalent in some districts of Cabo Delgado province, with some population movement triggered by insecurity and restricted access to northern districts,” said UNICEF.
“According to ACLED, during November 2020, over 201 violence events occurred and about 872 fatalities from these events were reported,” UNICEF said in its report, referring to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a real-time data collection, analysis and crisis mapping project.
Due to the situation, UNICEF on Nov. 28 declared a Level 2 emergency for the Cabo Delgado crisis which affected Cabo Delgado as well as neighboring provinces, it said in the report.
“With the level 2 designation, the crisis receives prioritized corporate-wide support for the scale-up of [an] emergency response,” it added.
Funding gap
UNICEF said that for 2020, it has been appealing for US$11.1 million in order to “sustain the provision of life-saving services for women and children in northern Mozambique affected by the ongoing conflict,” but as of Nov. 30, it had received a total of only US$9 million, creating a funding gap of 41% for its 2020 Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) appeal.
“Without sufficient funding, over 100,000 people will not have access to safe water, adequate sanitation, and over 33,000 children will not have access to education, 27,000 pregnant and lactating women will not benefit from IYCF [infant and young child feeding] messages,” it said.
“These gaps are significant heading into 2021, where the HAC 2021 for Mozambique will require US$52.8 million for the entire country, of which over US$30 million is for the Cabo Delgado Emergency,” it warned./aa
US President-elect Joe Biden received his first dose of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine on live television Monday in a move meant to bolster public confidence as the country seeks to get out of the pandemic's grip.
Pfizer's vaccine must be delivered in two separate rounds spaced weeks apart, meaning Biden, 78, will receive the second and final dose shortly before he assumes the presidency on Jan. 20. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and her husband, Douglas Emhoff, are slated to receive their vaccinations next week.
"We owe these folks an awful lot," Biden said while wearing two masks immediately after receiving the vaccine. "The scientists, and the people who put this together, the frontline workers, the people who were the ones who actually did the clinical work are just amazing."
Outgoing Vice President Mike Pence, second lady Karen Pence and Surgeon General Jerome Adams all publicly received Pfizer's vaccine on Friday, as did several members of Congress.
The US is prioritizing frontline healthcare workers and individuals living in long-term care residences to receive the vaccine first while a second group announced Sunday will consist of essential workers and individuals over 75-years old.
While Pfizer-BioNTech's vaccine was the first to receive an emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration Dec. 11, a second from drug maker Moderna followed suit on Friday adding millions of doses to the available stockpile.
They are badly-needed with the US being mired in the world's most severe outbreak. There are nearly 18 million known infections and nearly 320,000 COVID-19-related fatalities, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
Both Pfizer and Moderna's vaccines utilize what is known as messenger RNA, and require two doses./aa
A German far-right extremist was sentenced to life in prison on Monday for attempting to storm a synagogue and killing two people in the eastern German city of Halle last year.
The Higher Regional Court in Naumburg found Stephan Balliet guilty of two murders and more than 50 counts of attempted murder, and sentenced him to life in prison.
The 28-year-old neo-Nazi had originally planned a mass shooting at a mosque but later changed his mind, according to a manifesto he posted online before the attack in October last year.
The neo-Nazi had failed to enter the synagogue in Halle due to tight security, fired randomly at people on the street, and later stormed a nearby Turkish doner restaurant.
He fled the scene in a car but was arrested a few hours later after he got involved in a road accident.
The attack in Halle raised alarms in Germany over the threat posed by far-right extremists, and increased pressure on the government to take new measures.
Germany has witnessed growing racism and xenophobia in recent years, fueled by the propaganda of far-right, anti-Semitic, and anti-Muslim groups, including the main opposition party Alternative for Germany, or the AfD./aa
Turkey on Monday remembered the “Bloody Christmas” martyrs of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) in 1963.
“57 years ago today, planned and brutal attacks were launched against our Turkish Cypriot brothers by the Greek terrorist organization EOKA,” the Defense Ministry said on Twitter.
“We commemorate our martyrs with mercy on the anniversary of these attacks which started the conflicts on the island and went down in history as #KanliNoel [BloodyChristmas],” it added.
‘Bloody Christmas’
While the Turkish Cypriots were discriminated and alienated by the Greek Cypriots in state institutions, systematic and comprehensive attacks began on Dec. 21, 1963 when a bloody incident, which was later termed as "Bloody Christmas", took place.
A total of 103 Turkish Cypriot villages were attacked, leading to hundreds of deaths. In fact, the bloody campaign led to the displacement of 30,000 Turkish Cypriots, who had to take shelter in an area constituting merely 3% of the island.
In 1967, a military junta ousted the government in Greece and started to destabilize the island. The junta struck two villages in Cyprus -- Bogazici and Gecitkale.
Bulent Ecevit, then-prime minister of Turkey, instructed the army to take action and Cyprus Peace Operation was launched on July 20, 1974.
With fighter jets flying low over the land and paratroops deployed on the island, Turkey prevented the annexation of Cyprus and brought protection to weary Turkish Cypriots.
The peace operation proved Turkey’s claims about the persecution of Turks as a number of mass graves were unveiled in some Turkish Cypriot towns on the island.
The success of the operation paved the way for the establishment of the Turkish Federated State of Cyprus on Feb. 13, 1975, with Rauf Denktas as president.
On Nov. 15, 1983, the Turkish Federated State of Cyprus held an extraordinary session and the members of the parliament unanimously approved the establishment of the TRNC./aa
KUWAIT :( Agencies) Kuwait said it will suspend all commercial flights and close its land and sea borders starting from 11 pm on Monday until Jan. 1, the government communications office said in a Twitter post.
On Sunday, the civil aviation authority in Kuwait added the United Kingdom to its high-risk list of countries following the outbreak of a new strain of COVID-19, meaning all flights from it are banned.
Kuwait joins fellow gulf states like Oman and Saudi Arabia, who also announced the closure of their borders for one week over the new COVID-19 strain.
Heiko Maas didn't further identify the women or children, who were flown back to Germany on Saturday.
However, the German weekly Bild am Sonntag reported that all three women had left Germany in recent years to join the extremist Islamic State group in Syria. The paper identified the women as Merve A., Yasmin A. and Leonora M.
Also Sunday, Germany's federal prosecutor's office said a German citizen by the name of Leonora M. had been arrested upon her arrival at Frankfurt airport. It said she is accused of IS membership and allegedly committed crimes against humanity.
Maas said he was “very relieved” about the return of the 12 children and three of their mothers. He said the return was organized in cooperation with Finland, which brought home six children and two women.
“These are humanitarian cases, especially orphans and children with illnesses — cases in which the departure was urgently needed,” Maas said.
“This good news just before Christmas makes us confident that we will be able to organize the return of further cases as well," he said.
Hundreds of Europeans — many of them young women — left the continent in the last couple of years to join IS and fight in Syria and Iraq. Several died while others were arrested and detained by Turkish, Kurdish or Iraqi authorities who have been eager to deport them and their children back to Europe.
European governments, however, have been reluctant to take back the often-radicalized IS supporters.
The Finnish government said Sunday the repatriation of its citizens from the al-Hol camp in Syria was done for humanitarian reasons and because of the country's legal obligations for its citizens.
“The basic rights of the children interned in the al-Hol camps can be safeguarded only by repatriating them to Finland,” the Finnish government said in a statement.
No identities of the children or women were given, but Finnish officials said they consisted of two families.
Jussi Tanner, the Finnish Foreign Ministry’s special representative in charge of making the repatriation decision, stressed at a news conference that the Syria camps formed a highly complex case judicially for Finland and other Western countries..
“No such world exists where we are able to repatriate children only,” Tanner said, referring to parents’ legal rights to their children. He said Finland opted to cooperate with Germany as the two countries had common interests in the case and share similar legislation.
The two returning women, which Finnish media said are both known to be radicalized IS sympathizers, will face thorough screening by security officials upon return.
The Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat said Sunday that Finnish security police consider both of them “a security threat." It marked the first time that Finland repatriated adults from Syrian camps apart from orphaned children.
The women and children who just arrived in Germany were detained at the al-Hol and Roj camps in northeastern Syria, the German foreign ministry said. The camps are managed by the Kurdish-led administration in northeastern Syria, but lack basic services and have been rife with diseases and lawlessness.
Al-Hol holds more than 60,000 Syrian, Iraqi and Western detainees, most either family members of IS fighters or supporters of the group who had remained in the territories it held until the final battle in March last year. In late 2019, Finland repatriated two orphans from the al-Hol camp. Around 15 Finnish children and five adults still remain there, Finnish officials said Sunday.
Roj is a smaller camp with mostly Westerners — also family members of imprisoned or killed IS fighters or supporters.
The Kurdish-led authorities said last month they would begin releasing some of the 25,000 Syrians held in the al-Hol camp, allowing them to return home if they choose to.
• A pilot on a German-bound flight from the UK told non-German passengers aboard the Sunday flight they needed to get off the plane before it took off or face mandatory COVID-19 testing and a subsequent quarantine when they landed, according to audio published by BILD.
• The pilot first said passengers would quarantine in hotels at or near the airport, but in a subsequent message, he said passengers would remain at the airport due to a lack of space at hotels.
• "Passengers without a German passport need to be aware that there are no more hotel rooms available, all hotels reached maximum occupancy in Stuttgart," the pilot told passengers in audio obtained by BILD, offering them the opportunity to deplane.
• A number of European countries, including Germany, have imposed restrictions on travel with the UK over a new, potentially more contagious strain of COVID-19 detected there.
Passengers on at least one flight Sunday departing the UK headed to Germany were told by the plane's pilot they faced a mandatory test and quarantine upon landing at Stuttgart Airport should they choose to remain on board the aircraft.
In audio obtained by the German publication BILD, which is owned by Insider's parent company Axel Springer SE, a pilot on a Eurowings flight from London's Heathrow Airport to Stuttgart Airport in Germany informed passengers of the new requirements.
"I am the captain of this flight," the pilot says in a message delivered in English over the plane's intercom system, alerting passengers to an "important announcement" with little room for "discussion."
The pilot continued, adding that all passengers with German passports will "go through the police station" as normal but said those who do not carry German passports would be required to undergo testing for COVID-19 immediately upon landing in Germany before they were brought to a hotel at or near Stuttgart Airport to quarantine until receiving their test result.
In a subsequent recording, translated from German into English by Business Insider, the Eurowings pilot updated passengers that hotel space at and near the airport had reached capacity.
"German citizens continue to be able to enter the country without any limitations," he said, noting he received the update within the last minute. "Passengers without a German passport need to be aware that there are no more hotel rooms available, all hotels reached maximum occupancy in Stuttgart."
He told passengers there would instead be a "designated, separated area in the airport with camp beds" to house passengers while they wait for their test results to return.
A spokesperson for Stuttgart Airport told Business Insider on Sunday evening that the airport "will be testing passengers arriving from London" in "accordance with the authorities."
Representatives for the Federal Police at Stuttgart Airport did not immediately return Business Insider's request for comment on Sunday, nor did representatives for Eurowings.
In a video obtained by BILD and reviewed by Business Insider, a passenger from the UK arriving at Hannover Airport in Germany was seen providing personal information, such as his address, to someone dressed entirely in PPE.
The audio recording comes amid numerous European countries on Sunday limiting travel with the UK following the discovery of a new, potentially more contagious strain of COVID-19 and a surge of cases. Germany on Sunday afternoon issued a ban on flights from the UK beginning at midnight.
German Health Minister Jens Spahn announced the travel restrictions Sunday afternoon, adding that the government planned to announce greater travel restrictions on Monday, according to DW.
Business Insider
US: (CBSNews) A shooting at the Great Mall near San Jose, California, left thousands of people emotionally distressed, sheltering-in-place and calling home to tell families they loved them, authorities said Sunday, according to CBS San Francisco.
Officers responded around 5:16 p.m. local time on Saturday to numerous reports of shots fired inside the Great Mall located in the city of Milpitas. When they arrived, they found a 22-year-old San Francisco man suffering from a non-life-threatening gunshot wound and was later hospitalized.
Several law enforcement agencies responded to the Great Mall to assist. The stores were asked to shelter in place while the interior of the mall was evacuated and searched by SWAT teams for suspects and any additional victims.
Two unrelated medical emergencies occurred during the evacuation. Both victims were transported to a local hospital by paramedics.
Officers completed the search at 9:26 p.m. with no gunman being located. Further investigation overnight by detectives determined that the 22-year-old man who had shot himself and was not the victim of an act of violence.
The chaotic, terrifying event unfolded during the crush of holiday shopping on the last weekend before Christmas, and shoppers say the mall was packed at the time of the shooting — despite California's stay-at-home orders.
Terrified employees and shoppers ran out of the mall only minutes after the shooting.
"People were running forward. People were running back, and people were falling," Angelo Balma told CBS SF. He was at the mall with friends after a church gathering and said he was inside the Columbia store when he heard people screaming, according to the station.
Other people hid in the back of stores.
"They just said active shooter and we just ran, and I just ran into the store because the Levi's guy said just run in the back," one woman, who wanted to remain anonymous, said through tears.
"The people who work at the store told everybody to run to the back of the store, so everyone was panicking, didn't know what was going on," said Tiffany Shuler. She was shopping at Gap when she heard there was a shooting at the mall.
"We just went to the back room, barricaded all 3 doors that we had, and just waited for police to get there," said Cecilia Centenl. She works at a clothing store inside the mall.
Officers from the Santa Clara County Sheriffs Department dressed in SWAT gear searched the mall store by store. They even found some shoppers hiding in a hallway.