Monday, January 18, 2021

Global sport's problem with the appropriation of Indigenous culture
It's a question that has been asked for 50 years -- again and again.
© Provided by CNN The logos of soccer teams Kaizer Chiefs in South Africa, KAA Gent in Belgium and rugby team Exeter Chiefs in the UK all have a Native American wearing a headdress.

"Why do these people continue to make a mockery of our culture?"

© Matheus Sebenello/AGIF/Alamy T77NC1 Chapeco, Brazil. 05th May, 2019. SC - Chapeco - 05/05/2019 - Brazilian A 2019, Chapecoense X Athletico PR - ndio Guerreiro, Chapecoense mascot during match between Chapecoense X Athletico-PR at Cond Arena by Brazilian A 2019. 

The question in 1970 was posed by Dennis Banks in reference to the use of Native American heritage being used for names and mascots for American sports teams. Banks was a Native American activist and a longtime leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM).
© John McDonnell/The Washington Post/Getty Images LANDOVER MD - DECEMBER 17: Leah Muskin-Pierret of Washington DC works on signs as part of a Native Americans protest against the Redskins team name before the Washington Redskins play the Arizona Cardinals in Landover MD on December 17, 2017 . 

Banks devoted much of his life and attention to campaigning for the team formerly known as the Washington Redskins to change its name.

He died in 2017, aged 80, with the team's name still intact.

The year 2020 put the issue of race front and center of political and societal debate.

The killing of George Floyd also forced many sport teams that utilize Native American heritage to review that association -- be it their name or logo.

Washington has changed its logo and is now known as the Washington Football Team. Additionally, the Kansas City Chiefs in the NFL, the Cleveland Indians and Atlanta Braves in the MLB, and the Chicago Blackhawks in the NHL have all looked inwards and made changes.

Changes also came in Canada. In July, the Edmonton Eskimos football team announced that the team would retire the "Eskimos" name.

The Inuit -- Indigenous People of the Canadian Arctic -- often take offense at the term "Eskimo."

"While many fans are deeply committed to keeping the name, others are increasingly uncomfortable with the moniker," said the club in an official statement.

The club said it had engaged with Inuit communities in recent years to discuss the name and felt now the time was right to change it.

The team has retained its recognizable "EE" logo, but is yet to choose a new name. For the moment, the club is called the Edmonton Football Team or the EE Football Team.
OR AS IT IS KNOWN COLLQUALLY THE "EVIL EMPIRE" FOR ITS HISTORIC HEGEMONY OVER THE CFL

© Silvia Izquierdo/AP According to a study prepared for the UN, poverty rates, morbidity rates and infant mortality rates are all higher among Indigenous people in Latin American than the non-Indigenous.

But across the rest of the world, notably in Latin America, there's arguably been less willingness to engage with the idea of what these associations potentially mean for Indigenous communities.  
© EVARISTO SA/AFP/AFP via Getty Images Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has actively sought to limit the legal protections of Indigenous People.

In Latin America, it isn't just the sporting world turning its back on Indigenous communities. According to a study prepared for the UN, poverty rates, morbidity rates and infant mortality rates are all higher among Indigenous people in Latin American than the non-Indigenous.

For Native Americans, the use -- and abuse -- of their images, likenesses and culture in sports is a contemporary form of the marginalization they have historically experienced.

The director of First Peoples Worldwide Carla Fredericks told CNN that a lot of the offense caused is due to false representation and outright racism.
© Mario Tama/Getty Images Tribe members march for indigenous territorial rights on November 11, 2015 in Angra dos Reis, Brazil. Members of the Pataxo and Guarani tribes in Rio de Janeiro state joined the march.

"Of course, in the US, Native Americans have endured a really brutal history of colonization, marginalization, and so on," she says.
© Susan Walsh/AP While originally a placeholder name, Washington president Jason Wright said the "Football Team" name may remain the team's long-term name.

"And one of the kind of end results about that is that Americans really don't have a good grip on who contemporary Native American people are and so the only representative of us is the representation that we see in sport -- for many people.

© Silvia Izquierdo/AP Guarani people in Brazil are one of the most vulnerable Indigenous groups in the world.

"And obviously that's troubling because that's a caricatured representation and not an accurate representation of living, breathing cultures."

© Ezra Shaw/Getty Images OAKLAND, CA - SEPTEMBER 29: Washington Redskins helmets lay on the ground during their game against the Oakland Raiders at O.co Coliseum on September 29, 2013 in Oakland, California. 

The use of indigenous culture in sport is, therefore, an act that reminds Native Americans of their historic oppression at the hands of colonizers.

There is also evidence to suggest that caricaturing Indigenous culture in sports causes depression, low self-esteem, substance abuse and even suicide among Native American youth.

Fredericks adds that "the notion of consent and stakeholder engagement" -- or lack thereof -- is central to the issue too.

She says consent is key when considering the acceptability of the use of Indigenous Peoples' culture, pointing to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
© Harry Trump/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images Exeter Chiefs rugby team has retired its mascot "Big Chief" but will not remove the "Chiefs" part of its name.

"I think the right approach at this point in time is really to seek counsel from those communities and ask them, you know, 'Where do you stand on this? Is this something that you appreciate? Is it something that is harmful to you?'"
© Marcelo Hernandez/Getty Images Colo-Colo's badge depicts its namesake, the Mapuche tribal leader Colocolo. Unlike many other clubs, Colo-Colo has actively engaged with the Indigenous community on which its name is based.

The issue has long been the focal point of media and activist attention in the US, particularly over professional sports franchises. But it is not a uniquely American issue, and it is not a social phenomenon that affects just Native Americans. It is a global problem, and one that affects Indigenous people around the world.
© Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images Guarani FC have been promoted back to the Brazilian Serie A after one season in Serie B. The club came second to Neymar's Santos in the 2012 Campeonato Paulista.


The story beyond North America

The Exeter Chiefs rugby union team in the UK, the KAA Gent soccer team in Belgium and the Kaizer Chiefs soccer team in South Africa all use a Native American man in headdress as their logos.

While teams in the US are reviewing and removing similar logos and names, these teams have each chosen to keep their logo. This is in spite of public pressure in some cases.

A recent petition, launched by an Exeter fan named Ash Green, asked the Exeter Chiefs to change its "harmful use of Indigenous Peoples' imagery and branding." It initially gained 3,700 signatures and the club announced its board would meet to discuss a rebranding.
© Thiago Calil/AGIFP/AGIF via AP Fans of Brasi de Pelotas, who wear red and black, are known as Xavantes after an official of a rival used it as a slur against them in 1946.

However, that meeting resulted in only the retirement of the team's mascot, "Big Chief." The club released a statement saying that the logo would remain, and that the board took the view that it was "in fact highly respectful."

As for the "Chiefs" name, the club said that the name "dated back into the early 1900s and had a long history with people in the Devon area," the English county in which Exeter lies.

The Exeter Chiefs for Change, a group campaigning for the club to change its name and remove references to Native American culture, released a statement labeling the decision as "incredibly disappointing," and that the club had "thrown away an opportunity to show itself as an inclusive club."

"We accept that the intention of the club for the branding was originally positive and not derogatory," they continued. "But now they know it is not perceived in that way, they are making a conscious decision to be intentionally offensive by continuing to use it."

The group concluded its statement saying that they were "horrified" and that "the decision will not age well."

In their statement, the Chiefs said the club will be making no further comment on the matter.

KAA Gent has an extensive section on its website that speaks to the historic oppression and present-day struggle of Native Americans.

It also explains the history of the club's logo, and that the cultural context was "a positive one."

It says that the club represents "respect, courage and honor. Values that they attributed to the Native Americans rather than to their White oppressor."

Despite acknowledging the potential offense that its logo may cause, the club explains that it chooses to retain the logo as it "draws attention throughout Europe to the social situation facing the Native American population today."

In addition, the club says through its foundation, it is "willing to investigate, along with representatives of the Native American population, if and how KAA Gent can organize a social partnership with an initiative in the United States that aims to bring about an improvement in the standard of living experienced by Native Americans, using football as a powerful instrument."  
© Cosimo Martemucci/SOPA/Light Rocket/Getty Images KAA Gent acknowledge potential offense the team's logo can cause, but said it would remain the club's logo.

CNN was told by the club that it reached out to "some [Native American] organizations/representatives" via Facebook in 2018 but received no rejection or acceptance of an "exchange of views."

The club says if a Native American organization did reach out, representatives "would listen respectfully and try to establish such a partnership for the future."

CNN contacted Kaizer Chiefs but did not receive a response at the time of publication.


The Latin American story

In Latin America, there is a case to be made that not only do the clubs not engage with Indigenous communities, but actively ignore scrutiny of practices. Only two of the five Latin American clubs contacted for this story responded to CNN.

Guarani people are indigenous to South America, and live in Paraguay, Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Bolivia.

The Guarani people represent the largest indigenous group in Brazil with a population of 51,000.

They are one of the most vulnerable Indigenous groups in the world. In 2013, it was found that Guarani people suffer a murder rate four times higher than the national homicide rate in Brazil, according to the Brazilian non-governmental organization CIMI.

Most of their land was taken from them during the twentieth century, and they have an unequaled suicide rate in South America.

In the world of soccer, there are numerous Brazilian teams named after the Guarani people.

Second division side Guarani FC last played in the top division in 2010 and won the Serie A title in 1978.

In Paraguay, the fourth most successful team is Club Guarani.

These two sides represent the best known "Guarani" soccer clubs and it is unclear whether the clubs ever obtained the consent of the Guarani people.

CNN reached out to both clubs to seek comment but didn't receive a response from either.

Guarani FC is based in Campinas, and is named in homage to the opera Il Guarany by Campinas-born composer Carlos Gomes. While the name is born out of an opera, it still marks an appropriation of an Indigenous peoples' identity.

Fans of Guarani sometimes use an ethnic slur for an Indigenous Brazilian when referring to the club.

There are numerous other examples across the continent where Indigenous culture is used by clubs without affiliation to Indigenous groups.

Chapecoense made global headlines after a 2016 plane crash killed the vast majority of players and staff at the club.

The club's stadium was formerly known as Estadio Indio Conda.

Brazilian football historian and podcaster Matias Pinto says that in Latin America, Indio is often a word regularly utilized as a racial slur that connotes indigenous people.

"In Brazil and other parts of Latin America, it depends how you say it. But when you chant 'Indio' it's derogatory," he says.

He also adds that the club has no link to native people.

"Conda is an Indigenous leader from the past, so they honor this native hero in the West of Santa Catarina. But the Chapecoense fans are not native. They are mostly European descendants from the 19th century."

The club's mascot is an indigenous person -- in reality, a person wearing Chapecoense kit alongside a mask of an indigenous person.

One can also download a cartoon image of the mascot from the club's website, which is entitled "Indio."

Chapecoense was contacted by CNN but did not receive a response at the time of publication.


"They were barbarians, they looked like the Xavantes."

It isn't just appropriation that can cause problems for Indigenous People, as Fredericks says: "Unfortunately, because of the nature of sport, not only home team fans might behave in a way that's very disparaging and appropriative. But the opposing team fans might engage in behavior that's very insulting towards people."

The Xavante are an Indigenous People in Brazil numbering approximately 22,000, according to Povos Indigenas no Brasil. Fans of the football club Gremio Esportivo Brasil, also known as Brasil de Pelotas -- which is based in the south of Brazil -- have been nicknamed Xavantes since 1946.

According to an official statement made to CNN by the club, the nickname came about following a 1946 match against its main rivals Esporte Clube Pelotas. Down 3-1 at half time, Brasil de Pelotas came back in the second half to win 5-3. After the final whistle, fans of Brasil de Pelotas destroyed the fence separating the field from the stands and broke onto the field to celebrate.

Following the game and the subsequent field invasion, an Esporte Clube Pelotas official gave a statement to the press, saying: "They were barbarians, they looked like the Xavantes."

The name was soon adopted by Brasil de Pelotas fans with pride and the club says that "despite the pejorative" meaning behind the name, it sees the name as "an honor."

"It relates to the bravery of the indigenous tribe with the team. In our history, we have as main characteristics the guts, the fight for every ball and not to give up any play.

"The fans and the club adhered to the nickname and the likeable figure of the Indian, and today we are known in the country as Xavante, the red-black gaucho. And we won't change it."

Sao Paolo-based Pinto says that it goes further than that: "It started with a slur but nowadays Brasil de Pelotas fans are very proud [to be] Xavantes," as fans perceive themselves similarly to the Xavante people: warlike, brave and tough.

"Pelotas is a city that is facing an exodus," he says. "People are moving to other parts of Brazil. So they have a lot of supporters' clubs around Brazil and they always merge the name of the state/city with Xavantes."

Pinto says that racist slurs against Indigenous People are most common in intercontinental football matches in South America.

"In the continental competitions it happens too. Here in Sao Paulo, we do not have a lot of Indigenous, in Buenos Aires and Montevideo too. In Sao Paulo we are more Black or White, not Indigenous.

"So when a club from Bolivia or Peru or Ecuador [visits], countries in the middle [of the continent] are closer to indigenous traces, the supporters from Brazilian clubs, Argentinian clubs, Uruguayan clubs reference these people as 'Indios.'"

While racism against Indigenous People through sport continues across the continent, in Brazil Pinto offers that, "they have more urgent issues [with which] to struggle."

He speaks with reference to president Jair Bolsonaro and the policies towards Indigenous People during his presidency.

"It was a promise that [Bolsonaro] made in his campaign," Pinto says. "He will not concede any land to the communities, that he will explore the surface for miners, and the environmental minister is very close to the farmers and miners. So the Indigenous, since the first day of this government, are very scared about these promises."

During the Covid-19 pandemic, Bolsonaro has actively sought to limit protections of Indigenous People as well as devastating indigenous lands while the world is distracted.

CNN contacted the Brazilian government but did not receive a response at the time of publication.


Positive steps in Latin America

Chile's most successful club Colo-Colo was founded by a White Chilean footballer but is named after Colocolo, a Mapuche tribal leader during the Arauco War fought against the Spanish colonizers.

The club's badge also features the likeness of Colocolo.

In a statement, the club told CNN it believes there are "essential differences" from other teams around the globe which "have a negative or derogatory charge."

According to Pinto, the club was founded by "rebels and workers", so it acts as a symbol of an oppressed people fighting against oppressive powers.

The club told CNN that the "Mapuche identity is present and diluted in the Chilean population in a patent and documented way" and as such the club has taken steps to recognize that.

Colo-Colo flies the Mapuche flag alongside the Chilean flag at its stadium, and signage around the ground is written in both Spanish and Mapuche.

The club said it was making efforts "to seek an understanding and solution of the demands of the Mapuche people," along with "performing ceremonies such as the the Mapuche June Solstice celebration in the stadium together with partners, fans, Mapuche communities and club authorities."



Pinto is less optimistic that real change will happen soon. Speaking of indigenous communities in his local Rio state, he said: "They are very threatened by the Rio state ... they [Indigenous People] march and make demos but the majority of society doesn't give a sh*t."

There is still a long way to go in Latin America for Indigenous People, let alone their representation in sports.
Egypt unveils ancient funerary temple south of Cairo

CAIRO — Egypt’s former antiquities minister and noted archaeologist Zahi Hawass on Sunday revealed details of an ancient funerary temple in a vast necropolis south of Cairo.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Hawass told reporters at the Saqqara necropolis that archaeologists unearthed the temple of Queen Neit, wife of King Teti, the first king of the Sixth Dynasty that ruled Egypt from 2323 B.C. till 2150 B.C.


Archaeologists also found a 4-meter (13-foot) long papyrus that includes texts of the Book of the Dead, which is a collection of spells aimed at directing the dead through the underworld in ancient Egypt, he said.

Hawass said archaeologists also unearthed burial wells, coffins and mummies dating back to the New Kingdom that ruled Egypt between about 1570 B.C. and 1069 B.C.

They unveiled at least 22 burial shafts up to 12 metres (40 feet) deep, with more than 50 wooden coffins dating back to the New Kingdom, said Hawass, who is Egypt’s best known archaeologist.

Hawass, known for his Indiana Jones hat and TV specials on Egypt’s ancient sites, said work has been done at the site close to the Pyramid of Teti for over a decade.





The discovery was the result of co-operation between the Antiquities Ministry and the Zahi Hawass Center at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina.

The Saqqara site is part of the necropolis at Egypt’s ancient capital of Memphis that includes the famed Giza pyramids as well as smaller pyramids at Abu Sir, Dahshur and Abu Ruwaysh. The ruins of Memphis were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1970s.

In recent years, Egypt has heavily promoted new archaeological finds to international media and diplomats in the hope of attracting more tourists to the country.

The vital tourism sector suffered from years of political turmoil and violence that followed a 2011 uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak. 

IT WAS ALREADY SUFFERING FROM DECADES OF THE MILITARY JUNTA'S AUSTERITY PROGRAM

The Associated Press
In cold weather, anti-Netanyahu protests continue in Israel

JERUSALEM — Hundreds of protesters braved a cold night in Jerusalem on Saturday to press on with their calls for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to step down over corruption charges against him.  
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Demonstrators gathered at a Jerusalem square near Netanyahu’s official residence.

The weekly protests have been taking place for over seven months.

Netanyahu is charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in three cases involving billionaire associates and media moguls, charges that he denies.

The protesters insist Netanyahu cannot properly lead the country while under indictment for corruption.

His trial is set to begin evidentiary hearings next month.

Israel will hold its fourth national elections in two years in March, in what will likely be another referendum on Netanyahu as he faces a challenge from defectors within his Likud party.

The protesters also say Netanyahu and his government have bungled the coronavirus response.


The country has seen its economy hit hard by virus restrictions throughout the year and is again under a nationwide if partial lockdown amid surging infection rates.

Netanyahu and his allies have used Israel’s vaccination drive, in which more than a tenth of its population has been immunized,
BUT NOT PALESTINIANS WHO ARE UNDER THE THUMB OF THE 
ZIONIST APARTHEID STATE.
 to try to belittle the protesters and their cause. They say the prime minister is working to end the outbreak while they hold demonstrations.

The Associated Press
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican QAnon supporter, suspended from Twitter

Freshman Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has been suspended from Twitter, the platform says.
© (Photo by Erin Scott-Pool/Getty Images) WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 03: U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) wears a "Trump Won" face mask as she arrives on the floor of the House to take the oath office on the year's opening session on January 3, 2021 in Washington, DC. Both chambers are holding rare Sunday sessions to open the new Congress as the Constitution requires.

Hannah Jackson and Emerald Bensadoun 

In an email to Global News, a Twitter spokesperson said the account was "temporarily locked out for multiple violations of our civic integrity policy."

According to Twitter's civic integrity policy, this includes "manipulating or interfering in elections or other civic processes."

Read more: Republican QAnon supporter Marjorie Taylor Greene wins Georgia house seat

It also includes "posting or sharing content that may suppress participation or mislead people about when, where, or how to participate in a civic process," Twitter's policy states.


Trump’s Twitter account suspended ‘permanently’



A source familiar with Twitter's policies said Greene's account will be locked for 12 hours.

Greene won her seat in the November 2020 election after her Democratic challenger Kevin Van Ausdal suddenly dropped out of the race, saying he was moving out of state.

She received praise from Trump on the campaign trail, who called her a “future Republican Star.”

"Twitter, Facebook Trump ban raises censorship concerns"

Greene is a businesswoman and political newcomer who’s gained large followings on social media in part by posting incendiary videos and comments.

She has expressed racist views and support for QAnon conspiracy theories in a series of online videos.

Earlier this month, Twitter moved to permanently ban outgoing U.S. President Donald Trump from the platform.

Read more: Twitter permanently suspends Trump as supporters face social media purge

The social media giant attributed his account's permanent suspension to the president's comments following the storming of the U.S. Capitol, in which supporters of Trump led a violent riot in an attempt to prevent Congress from certifying President-Elect Joe Biden's election win.

Five people died as a result of the riot, including a U.S. Capitol officer.

"Given the violent events in Washington, DC, and increased risk of harm, we began permanently suspending thousands of accounts that were primarily dedicated to sharing QAnon content on Friday afternoon," Twitter said in an online statement released Tuesday.

-- With files from The Associated Press

VIDEOS



'An unmitigated disaster': America's year of Covid


At around 5pm on 20 January 2020, Dr George Diaz received a call from the federal health protection agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), bearing alarming news. They had just logged a positive test for a new strain of coronavirus in a 35-year-old man who had recently returned to Washington state from Wuhan, China. CDC officials wanted to bring the patient in to Diaz’s hospital, Providence Regional medical center in Everett, outside Seattle
.
© Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images A nurse supports a patient as they walk into a Covid-19 care site built in a parking garage at Renown Regional medical center in Reno, Nevada, on 16 December 2020.

Many people taking that call would have hit the panic button. The positive test was the first ever recorded in the US for this frightening new strain of disease. The virus was so novel it still had no name other than 2019-nCoV, and no one could say for sure how infectious it was, how it was transmitted and critically just how deadly it would prove to be.

Related: 'It’s like we didn’t count': when Covid deaths are omitted, families pay the price

But for Diaz, this was his moment. As an infectious diseases physician, dealing with highly-infectious airborne illnesses was his business. He’d trained for years to handle Ebola, and when the first news started trickling out of Wuhan about a novel coronavirus, he knew it was only a matter of time before it might reach America.

“The only surprise here was that we would be the first to receive a patient,” he said.

So thoroughly was his hospital prepared, that two weeks previously they had staged a table-top drill that ran through caring for a patient with the new coronavirus. So when reality struck and the anonymous patient really did arrive on the evening of 20 January, Diaz and team knew exactly what to do.

The man was brought into the hospital through a secret side entrance of the hospital. He was carried inside an isopod, and taken along designated corridors to an isolation room. Only nursing staff were allowed to enter, while Diaz communicated with his patient through an intercom
.
© Provided by The Guardian Providence Regional medical center where the first known person infected with coronavirus was observed, in Everett, Washington. Photograph: Jason Redmond/AFP/Getty Images

Diaz told the Guardian that the man he was now treating at the frontlines of what would become the US pandemic “was a bright and educated person. He was obviously very concerned about this novel disease which really had no end in sight.”

On his fifth day in hospital, the patient developed pneumonia. That was a serious turn, as early indications from Wuhan suggested that people infected with the virus who went on to have pneumonia were dying in large proportions.

Diaz was ready for that too. He had been studying the promising results of a trial on animal models in North Carolina using a new antiviral medication, remdesivir, that appeared to speed recovery. It looked like it might be applicable to the coronavirus. So he scrambled to get emergency approval, and within a day of the patient developing pneumonia, Diaz was infusing him with remdesivir – the first such deployment of the drug in the world.

A day after that, the patient started to feel better. His pneumonia receded and breathing improved, and he was allowed to go home under supervision soon after.

That first confirmed case of Covid-19 in the US had turned out to be a triumph of medical science. Everyone – from Diaz down – had been operating in the dark. They were dealing with a terrifying unknown, yet responded with discipline, logic and imagination and achieved an outcome that was astonishingly successful. That the first patient is with us still is testament to that achievement.

“It did go well, it actually did all go well,” Diaz said demurely.

That was day one, patient one. If only the same could be said about the rest of America’s year of Covid.

One of the striking coincidences of the US pandemic year is that the first anniversary, 20 January 2021, falls on the day of Joe Biden’s presidential inauguration. That sets a sharp frame through which to view the year: the devastation that has befallen America as a result of the political mishandling of the crisis must wholly be owned, down to the day, by Donald Trump.

The numbers crudely tell the story. Nobody knew it then, but that initial confirmed case in Washington state was the opening drop in what was to become a tsunami of infection – more than 23,896,221 cases, and rising now at the tear-away rate of up to 300,000 new cases a day.

The death statistics are similarly brutal. That first patient may have survived and is doing well. But he was followed by 396,935 people who were not so fortunate. In another striking coincidence of this year of contagion, the death toll from Covid in the US is now within a hair’s breadth of surpassing the 405,000 Americans who lost their lives in the second world war.


There’s another resonant lens through which the year can be seen. Last week, at least 4,400 Americans died from Covid on a single day – more than the total loss of life on 9/11.

Across the country, from coast to coast and through every nook and cranny of the heartlands, the virus is wreaking havoc, upturning lives as it shreds the global reputation of this once revered nation. More than one in 10 members of Congress have tested positive. The new highly contagious variant of the virus has landed in New York City and other cities, including Los Angeles where hospitals are once again on the edge of meltdown with patients parked on gurneys in crowded hallways.

© Provided by The Guardian Bodies wrapped in plastic line the walls inside a refrigerated trailer used as a mobile morgue in El Paso, Texas on 13 November 2020. Photograph: Justin Hamel/AFP/Getty Images

John Holdren has spent much of the year investigating what lies behind these horrifying features of the American pandemic and the human catastrophe they denote. He was Barack Obama’s senior White House science adviser through both terms in office and in that role he and a council of top scientists and public health experts prepared six reports seeking to prepare the country for a future pandemic.

When the real pandemic struck home a year ago, Holdren reassembled 10 members of that Obama-era council to carry out a series of inquiries into specific aspects of the national Covid response. What went wrong, and how could it be put right? The idea was to come up with practical tips that could help the US government extract itself from the current disaster, as well as provide advice for tackling any future pandemic.

Their findings give a wealth of detail on the failings of the Trump administration’s response. Their first inquiry, released in May, looked at how the national stockpile of emergency medical supplies had been allowed to wither under Trump.

© Provided by The Guardian Healthcare workers treat a patient suffering from Covid-19 in Houston, Texas. Photograph: Go Nakamura/Getty Images

They warned that urgent action was needed to replenish the reserves to avoid drastic shortages of masks, ventilators and other PPE come the winter, but Trump ignored that advice too. Just as they predicted, an alarming dearth of masks and other equipment is once again putting frontline health workers in mortal danger.

Later studies by Holdren’s group looked at the disastrously slow roll out of testing and contact tracing and how public health data could be better used to control spread of the disease. As he looks back on their work, Holdren is struck that one factor kept cropping up in all their studies that more than anything else explains the calamity.

President Trump and his minions ignored the science and, worse, actively disputed it 
John Holdren

“The federal government has to take leadership in the response to a national and global pandemic. Trump refused to do that, and that stance was an unmitigated disaster.”

At the start of the pandemic, Holdren watched with dismay as Trump disbanded the White House team responsible for pandemic preparedness and ignored the plethora of detailed plans that had been bequeathed to him by the Obama administration. The president even ignored his own top scientific advisers such as Dr Anthony Fauci, the leading US infectious diseases official.



But the most damaging aspect of Trump’s response, in Holdren’s opinion, was the alternative universe he created around the virus.

“President Trump and his minions ignored the science and, worse, actively disputed it. They created misunderstanding and confusion among the public, and made not wearing masks a political statement which was a catastrophe,” Holdren said.

On the anniversary of America’s pandemic, the results are still glaringly visible. Republican-controlled states like Oklahoma, where new cases have soared to record-breaking heights, still have no mask ordinance in place.

At least three Democratic Congress members have tested positive after they were forced to shelter from the insurrection at the Capitol building incited by Trump. As they cowered in a room, several Republican peers also taking cover sneeringly refused to wear a mask. The refuseniks included Marjorie Taylor Greene, the first open advocate of the QAnon conspiracy theory to gain a congressional seat.

The cumulative impact of such willful disregard for public safety has been that the early successes of George Diaz and other doctors and scientists like him have been dissipated in the winds of cynical political discord. Diaz himself has seen the fallout with his own eyes.

Having worked so effectively with hospital colleagues and health partners at local, state and even federal level, he has observed their collective efforts undermined by lies. “We live in an era in the US of disinformation where many people believe things that are simply untrue. That’s been a major hindrance for us,” he said.

Patients in life-threatening condition have been flown into his hospital over the mountains from Idaho, where mask wearing is still widely frowned upon. He sees the pattern as a direct result of disinformation. “That’s been a massive problem. It directly harms our people, and it makes our job harder in saving lives.”  

  
© Provided by The Guardian A patient rests in a corridor waiting for a room at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana medical center in Tarzana, California.
 Photograph: Apu Gomes/AFP/Getty Images

As historians look back on the first year of America’s pandemic, they might single out Scott Atlas, who joined the White House in August as a senior adviser on coronavirus. As Trump’s attention drifted away from the pandemic to more exciting prospect – such as overturning the results of a presidential election – Atlas provided the intellectual cover he needed for federal inaction.

A senior fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institute, Atlas insisted that the risk of the virus had been “grossly overblown”. If vulnerable groups such as older people could be protected from the virus, then the rest of the population could be exposed and left to acquire “herd immunity”.

Tell that to Jessica Beltran. Most of her relatives were fit and healthy and could not be categorized as anything like vulnerable. Yet when the virus swept through their community in Phoenix, Arizona, it ripped her family apart.

Beltran, 39, was the first to fall sick. She developed a fever on 1 July, having probably contracted the virus from her job as a TSA employee at Phoenix airport. She became severely ill and took days to recover. By the time she was back on her feet, her brother Gil and mother Irene had fallen sick.



Gil, 44, was in a vulnerable category. He was 450lb, obese and diabetic. He too probably caught the virus from his job, driving rental car buses at the airport. “He had the biggest heart, he would help anybody in need,” Beltran said.

He entered hospital on 16 July. The institution was overrun in the midst of a surging pandemic, and had run out of the breathing apparatus Gil desperately needed. His condition declined so rapidly that he was put on a ventilator, and died on 21 July.

“It hit us hard. I have no words for all the love we felt for Gil,” Beltran said.

The family had little time to mourn. Two days after Gil’s death, Beltran’s mother Irene, a healthy and strong 66-year-old, was hospitalized with Covid. She fought hard for a full month, dying on 20 August after developing a brain bleed.

Six days later Beltran’s father Gilberto, 75, who had been contracted the virus separately while visiting his brother in Douglas, Arizona, became the next to die. His body had been ravaged by a blood infection unleashed by Covid-19.

The last to go was Beltran’s brother Pablo, 42. He struggled for more than 50 days in an induced coma before the family had to let him go and switch off his machine on 10 September.

Jessica Beltran lost both her parents and both her brothers. She can’t get the picture out of her head of her loved ones entangled in tubes and wires, unable to say goodbye. She has waves of depression, finds it hard to function. “It’s a very big void,” she said. “I’m trying to mourn four people and I don’t know how to do that.”

A month after her second brother died, Beltran turned on the TV to hear Trump brag about how quickly he had recovered from his own bout with Covid-19. He’d received a cocktail of state-of-the-art drugs including remdesivir, the antiviral medication Diaz had prescribed for the very first confirmed patient. Beltran had tried to secure that same medication for her parents and brothers, but had been told it wasn’t available.

As Trump returned from hospital to the White House, he said: “Don’t be afraid of Covid, don’t let it dominate your life.”

“That was hurtful,” Beltran said. “It’s not fair. It’s not fair to the people.”

LIKE THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA REMOVING HIS MASK
© Provided by The Guardian Donald Trump removes his protective mask on the Truman Balcony of the White House on 5 October 2020. Photograph: Ken Cedeno/Bloomberg/Getty Images



Andi Egbert, senior researcher with APM Research Lab, has thought a lot about fairness during America’s year of Covid. Her team has been looking at the racial disparities of the pandemic’s impact in a project named The Color of Coronavirus.

The project’s latest figures for the year, brought up to 5 January, show that one in 735 black Americans have died from the disease, substantially more than the 1 in 1,030 white Americans.

When you adjust the data for age, the contrast is even starker. Black Americans are 2.3 times more likely to die than white Americans.

When Egbert reflects on those statistics, she thinks of each of the 56,000 African Americans who have lost their lives. She thinks too about the wider trauma inflicted on entire communities, where the prevalence of death has become so great, she says, that “it must feel like your world has come unmoored”.



And then she thinks about the booming lack of urgency that has ensued in the pandemic response. “We knew very early on how cruel and unequal the damage would be, and yet what? Where was the action that this country needed to stop the virus steamrolling over communities of color?”

Where was the action that this country needed to stop the virus steamrolling over communities of color? Andi Egbert

You can see what she means in a historic black community like Lowndes county, Alabama. This is the crucible of the civil rights movement, the area through which Martin Luther King and thousands of others marched in 1965, from Selma to Montgomery.

Lowndes county has suffered the highest per capita incidence of Covid in Alabama, among the highest in the country. On either side of Highway 80, the route of the legendary voting rights march, families have been left devastated by the contagion.

Families like those of Dizzie Maull, who died in May aged 81. He was active during the 1965 marches, which renders his passing not just personal, but epochal. “We’ve lost a lot of history,” said Catherine Flowers, an environmental justice campaigner whose group CREEJ has its roots in Lowndes county.

For Flowers, it is no coincidence that the pandemic has struck so hard in this resonant community. Lowndes county was dubbed “Bloody Lowndes” on the back of its long exposure to lynching and other forms of racial terrorism.

Today’s wounds are more of the same. “Covid – it’s the continuation of a trauma that has always been.”

© Provided by The Guardian A man walks past Sogho Express African Hair Braiding salon in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, on 7 April 2020. 
Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP

•••

As America’s year of Covid comes to an end, and a new year begins, there’s hope of a fresh start. Biden’s proposed $1.9tn stimulus plan includes $160bn to fight the virus, including provision for a national vaccination program.

The battle now is to move beyond Trump’s fumbling and get a grip. But in the longer term there will need to be a reckoning with what has transpired.

Holdren’s group of scientists are among those who want to see a formal commission established to review Trump’s year of Covid so that the monumental mistakes that were made can be avoided down the line.

“We need to do better next time,” he said.

George Diaz looks back on the year that began so promisingly with his first patient, and thinks of South Korea, which through another startling coincidence recorded its first case on exactly the same day, 20 January 2020. South Korea’s death toll for the totality of the pandemic stands at 1,217 – fewer than a third of those who have died in the US on a single day.

“It shows you what happens when an entire nation is on the same page about the collective good,” Diaz said.

Jessica Beltran can do nothing else but review the year through the lens of loss. “My family was taken from me,” she said. “It was stolen. We had so much ahead of us together. We had a lot to live.”


The public face of the pandemic: Canadian doctors who have become medical celebrities

© Global News Doctors Isaac Bogoch and Sumon Chakrabarti trained in internal medicine together at the University of Toronto.

Sumon Chakrabarti is looking forward to the day when he's no longer asked to appear on the nightly news.

The infectious diseases physician works for Trillium Health Partners in Mississauga, just west of Toronto, in one of the regions hardest-hit by the coronavirus pandemic in the country.

Read more: Misinformation is spreading as fast as coronavirus. It will ‘take a village’ to fight it

And he's also one of a number of front-line doctors across Canada who have volunteered their scarce free time over the past year to provide daily media interviews and help Canadians understand COVID-19.

"There's so much stuff coming out on a daily basis -- information, misinformation -- and I think the big thing is to try to not come to conclusions right away," he said.

"Some of the information we have is uncertain because we just don't know. But somebody who speaks very confidently about something that's wrong, that can spread much quicker, so that's been a constant struggle."

VIDEO

Coronavirus: The Canadian doctors who are providing answers about COVID-19


The married father of two young girls grew up in the small city Sarnia, Ont., on the shores of Lake Huron. In his teens, he developed a kidney disorder, which inspired an interest in medicine. But he also had a passion for teaching.


"When I was in the first years of med school, I really, really enjoyed being with medical students and residents. I have always naturally gravitated towards teaching of some kind. And I found that, when I was discussing these complicated topics, it seemed I was pretty good at being able to explain it to people."

In January 2020, when news of a mysterious virus started making headlines, Chakrabarti began receiving phone calls from journalists.

Nearly every day since has raised more anxious questions: How does COVID-19 spread? How long after exposure to the virus does a person become contagious and develop symptoms? Are the new vaccines safe for people who are obese or immunocompromised?

Are stay-at-home orders more productive than curfews? Doctor answers COVID-19 questions


With the pandemic lockdown, most of his interviews are conducted over video conference, such as Zoom or Skype. As a result, Chakrabarti can take a few minutes in between seeing patients or after putting his daughters to bed in the evening to log on and answer a few questions.

"To be able to Skype and Zoom quickly, it's been a lot easier," he said, joking that it also means he can wear shorts during an interview. "That's huge, by the way."

In addition to giving interviews, Chakrabarti has also written articles, including one column in November calling for action to address the disproportionately high number of cases amongst his South Asian community.

Chakrabarti and some of his colleagues are also working to translate public health advice.

"I always like to give positive messaging. Nobody likes finger-wagging. There are times when you have to tell people that this is what we need to do, but doing it in a positive way as opposed to insulting people, shaming people," he explained.

"I think with that in mind, you can really be effective at messaging. And I try that every day."

Read more: Inconsistent messages on COVID-19 reflect evolving science, regional differences: Tam

And he's not alone. Another front-line physician who has quickly become a household name is Isaac Bogoch. Bogoch and Chakrabarti are old friends — they trained in internal medicine together at the University of Toronto.

Bogoch is based at Toronto General Hospital. In addition to seeing patients, he's also an associate professor at the University of Toronto and was recently appointed to Ontario's Vaccine Distribution Task Force.

In the midst of that daunting juggling act, Bogoch also regularly makes time for interviews, often in the early mornings and late evenings.

His motivation stems, in part, from the overwhelming volume of misinformation about the virus and pandemic circulating online and on social media.

Read more: Misinformation is spreading as fast as coronavirus. It will ‘take a village’ to fight it

"It's wild watching an idea that's wrong or misinformed form online. And you can watch it amplify before your eyes and look at people comment and build off it. It is absolutely mind-boggling to see that happen," he said. "And you realize what a task it is, to combat that. And quite frankly, I think we failed."

Lisa Barrett echoed those sentiments. The infectious diseases doctor at Dalhousie University in Halifax has also become a familiar face for Canadians. Five years ago, Barrett was conducting clinical trials and lab work with Dr. Anthony Fauci, now the top immunologist in the United States who is also no stranger to the spotlight.

Barrett recalled Fauci's advice about the importance of public health education: "He said, 'if you're given the opportunity to share information with the public, do it, do it often, do it well, because otherwise someone else is going to fill that void and you might not be as happy with the message,'" she said. "Actually, it's kind of been an honour to get to do it. That's why I keep at this every day."

There have even been occasions where that misinformation has directly interfered with their work.

One of their friends and colleagues, Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious diseases physician at St. Joseph's in Hamilton, launched a clinical trial in April to determine if the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine might be effective against COVID-19.

Read more: Global trial of hydroxychloroquine as coronavirus treatment to resume

"I tried to do a large clinical trial across Ontario about hydroxychloroquine, which ended up being this drug that Donald Trump started selling," Chagla recalled.

How will I know it’s my turn to get the vaccine? Your COVID-19 questions answered




Donald Trump began backing hydroxychloroquine early in the pandemic, calling it a “game changer.” Following the president's endorsement, the United States' Food and Drug Administration authorized hydroxychloroquine for emergency use, sparking accusations that the agency was buckling to political pressure from the White House.

The FDA later rescinded that authorization and issued a safety warning, saying the drugs could cause heart-rhythm problems

"All of this misinformation came out and it made it so hard to actually finish this damn trial. And at the end of the day, hydroxychloroquine showed no effect," he said.

"The misinformation actually slowed down the actual research to find the correct information."

Read more: No plans for ‘divisive’ vaccine passports for Canadians, Trudeau says

Like Chakrabarti and Bogoch, Chagla is also a regular contributor to public health education in the pandemic, giving interviews and writing articles, while stressing the importance of putting science above politics.

"As much as there's science, there is so much political theory, it's been aligned with party lines and it's just getting overwhelming," he said.

"As doctors, we try to be completely devoid of politics and follow the science. But even in our own communities, there are people that are succumbing to this. And it just makes it even more dicey for the public to say, who do they trust and how do they get consistent, reliable information?"

Coronavirus: Canada’s top doctors won’t say if they’ve received direct threats

As a result of their newfound public profiles and outspokenness, Chagla, Bogoch and Chakrabarti all said they've received plenty of backlash.

"I've got a folder of hate mail," Bogoch said, noting that critics often point to instances when public health advice has changed over time, such as the messaging around face masks.

"They'll point to (one of us) and say: First you said this and now you've said that! Look, they can't even make up their minds!'" Bogoch said.

"It's completely acceptable to modify your opinion based on new information, emerging information. That's how science works."

Despite the blowback and the extraordinary pressures of the pandemic, the physicians said they're committed to continuing their regular appearances and public health education. But they're also looking forward to the end.

"As much as this has been great to talk with the media," Chakrabarti said, "I think once this is all over and I can kind of fade back into relative anonymity, I'll be happy about it."
'We're starving': U.S.-bound migrant caravan hunkers down after Guatemala crackdown

By Luis Echeverria
© Reuters/LUIS ECHEVERRIA Hondurans take part in a new caravan of migrants, set to head to the United States, in Vado Hondo

VADO HONDO, Guatemala (Reuters) - Hundreds of Honduran migrants huddled overnight on a highway in eastern Guatemala after domestic security forces used sticks and tear gas to halt the passage of a U.S.-bound caravan just days before U.S. President-elect Joe Biden takes office.
© Reuters/LUIS ECHEVERRIA Hondurans take part in a new caravan of migrants, set to head to the United States, in Vado Hondo

As many as 8,000 migrants, including families with young children, have entered Guatemala since Friday, authorities say, fleeing poverty and lawlessness in a region rocked by the coronavirus pandemic and back-to-back hurricanes in November.
© Reuters/CARLOS JASSO A man holds a mobile phone as immigration agents stand by the bank of the Suchiate River, while they guard the border with the National Guard to prevent a migrant caravan of Central Americans from entering, in Ciudad Hidalgo

"There's no food or water, and there are thousands of children, pregnant women, babies, and they don't want to let us pass," said a Honduran stuck at the blockade, who gave his name only as Pedro.

Guatemalan authorities say they have sent hundreds of migrants back to Honduras.

A Reuters witness said about 2,000 migrants were still camped out on the highway near the village of Vado Hondo, about 55 km (34 miles) from the borders of Honduras and El Salvador, after clashing with Guatemalan security forces on Sunday.

Gallery: Guatemalan forces clash with major U.S.-bound migrant caravan (Reuters)





4 Slides of 31: Hondurans taking part in a new caravan of migrants clash with Guatemalan soldiers as they try to cross into Guatemalan territory, in Vado Hondo, Guatemala January 17, 2021. Guatemalan security forces used sticks to beat back a migrant caravan after thousands of people set off from Honduras for the United States this week, just as President-elect Joe Biden prepares to enter the White House. Between 7,000 and 8,000 migrants have entered Guatemala since Friday, according to Guatemala's immigration authority, fleeing poverty and violence in a region hammered by the coronavirus pandemic and back-to-back hurricanes in November.   31 SLIDES © Reuters






Hondurans taking part in a new caravan of migrants clash with Guatemalan soldiers as they try to cross into Guatemalan territory, in Vado Hondo, Guatemala January 17, 2021. Guatemalan security forces used sticks to beat back a migrant caravan after thousands of people set off from Honduras for the United States this week, just as President-elect Joe Biden prepares to enter the White House. Between 7,000 and 8,000 migrants have entered Guatemala since Friday, according to Guatemala's immigration authority, fleeing poverty and violence in a region hammered by the coronavirus pandemic and back-to-back hurricanes in November. REUTERS/Luis Echeverria


"We're starving," said one Honduran mother, stuck behind the cordon with her 15-year-old son, her daughter, 9, and her 4-year-old niece.

"All we have is water and a few cookies," said the woman, who declined to give her name, but added that she and other travelers had formed a prayer circle as they camped out.

Other migrants evaded the gridlock by fleeing into the hills to continue onward to the border of Mexico, where the government has deployed police and National Guard troopers.

"We ran into the mountains because I'm traveling with my one-year-old," said Diany Deras, another Honduran.

Mexico's border with Guatemala was quiet.

"All is calm here," said a National Guardsman in charge of a border crossing directly opposite Tecun Uman, Guatemala, where caravan leaders hope to cross into Mexico. He sought anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to media.© Reuters/LUIS ECHEVERRIA Hondurans take part in a new caravan of migrants, set to head to the United States, in Vado Hondo

"I hope Guatemala contains them," he added.

(Reporting by Luis Echeverria in Vado Hondo, Sofia Menchu in Guatemala City and Laura Gottesdiener in Tapachula; Writing by Laura Gottesdiener; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)© Reuters/LUIS ECHEVERRIA Hondurans take part in a new caravan of migrants, set to head to the United States, in Vado Hondo
THE FOUR HORSEMEN ARRIVE
'Extreme urgent need': Starvation haunts Ethiopia's Tigray




© Provided by The Canadian Press

NAIROBI, Kenya — From “emaciated” refugees to crops burned on the brink of harvest, starvation threatens the survivors of more than two months of fighting in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

The first humanitarian workers to arrive after pleading with the Ethiopian government for access describe weakened children dying from diarrhea after drinking from rivers. Shops were looted or depleted weeks ago. A local official told a Jan. 1 crisis meeting of government and aid workers that hungry people had asked for “a single biscuit.”

More than 4.5 million people, nearly the region's entire population, need emergency food, participants say. At their next meeting on Jan. 8, a Tigray administrator warned that without aid, “hundreds of thousands might starve to death” and some already had, according to minutes obtained by The Associated Press.


“There is an extreme urgent need — I don’t know what more words in English to use — to rapidly scale up the humanitarian response because the population is dying every day as we speak,” Mari Carmen Vinoles, head of the emergency unit for Doctors Without Borders, told the AP.

But pockets of fighting, resistance from some officials and sheer destruction stand in the way of a massive food delivery effort. To send 15-kilogram (33-pound) rations to 4.5 million people would require more than 2,000 trucks, the meeting's minutes said, while some local responders are reduced to getting around on foot.

The spectre of hunger is sensitive in Ethiopia, which transformed into one of the world's fastest-growing economies in the decades since images of starvation there in the 1980s led to a global outcry. Drought, conflict and government denial contributed to the famine, which swept through Tigray and killed an estimated 1 million people.

The largely agricultural Tigray region of about 5 million people already had a food security problem amid a locust outbreak when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Nov. 4 announced fighting between his forces and those of the defiant regional government. Tigray leaders dominated Ethiopia for almost three decades but were sidelined after Abiy introduced reforms that won him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019.

Thousands of people have been killed in the conflict. More than 50,000 have fled into Sudan, where one doctor has said newer arrivals show signs of starvation. Others shelter in rugged terrain. A woman who recently left Tigray described sleeping in caves with people who brought cattle, goats and the grain they had managed to harvest.

“It is a daily reality to hear people dying with the fighting consequences, lack of food,” a letter by the Catholic bishop of Adigrat said this month.

Hospitals and other health centres, crucial in treating malnutrition, have been destroyed. In markets, food is “not available or extremely limited,” the United Nations says.

Though Ethiopia's prime minister declared victory in late November, its military and allied fighters remain active amid the presence of troops from neighbouring Eritrea, a bitter enemy of the now-fugitive officials who once led the region.

Fear keeps many people from venturing out. Others flee. Tigray’s new officials say more than 2 million people have been displaced, a number the U.S. government’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance calls “staggering.” The U.N. says the number of people reached with aid is “extremely low.”

A senior Ethiopian government official, Redwan Hussein, did not respond to a request for comment on Tigray colleagues warning of starvation.

In the northern Shire area near Eritrea, which has seen some of the worst fighting, up to 10% of the children whose arms were measured met the diagnostic criteria for severe acute malnutrition, with scores of children affected, a U.N. source said. Sharing the concern of many humanitarian workers about jeopardizing access, the source spoke on condition of anonymity.

Near Shire town are camps housing nearly 100,000 refugees who have fled over the years from Eritrea. Some who have walked into town "are emaciated, begging for aid that is not available,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said Thursday.

Food has been a target. Analyzing satellite imagery of the Shire area, a U.K.-based research group found two warehouse-style structures in the U.N. World Food Program compound at one refugee camp had been “very specifically destroyed.” The DX Open Network could not tell by whom. It reported a new attack Saturday.

It's challenging to verify events in Tigray as communications links remain poor and almost no journalists are allowed.

In the towns of Adigrat, Adwa and Axum, “the level of civilian casualties is extremely high in the places we have been able to access,” the Doctors Without Borders emergency official Vinoles said. She cited the fighting and lack of health care.

Hunger is “very concerning," she said, and even water is scarce: Just two of 21 wells still work in Adigrat, a city of more than 140,000, forcing many people to drink from the river. With sanitation suffering, disease follows.

“You go 10 kilometres (6 miles) from the city and it’s a complete disaster,” with no food, Vinoles said.

Humanitarian workers struggle to gauge the extent of need.

“Not being able to travel off main highways, it always poses the question of what’s happening with people still off-limits,” said Panos Navrozidis, Action Against Hunger’s director in Ethiopia.

Before the conflict, Ethiopia’s national disaster management body classified some Tigray woredas, or administrative areas, as priority one hotspots for food insecurity. If some already had high malnutrition numbers, “two-and-a-half months into the crisis, it’s a safe assumption that thousands of children and mothers are in immediate need," Navrozidis said.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network, funded and managed by the U.S., says parts of central and eastern Tigray are likely in Emergency Phase 4, a step below famine.

The next few months are critical, John Shumlansky, the Catholic Relief Services representative in Ethiopia, said. His group so far has given up to 70,000 people in Tigray a three-month food supply, he said.

Asked whether combatants use hunger as a weapon, one concern among aid workers, Shumlansky dismissed it by Ethiopian defence forces and police. With others, he didn’t know.

“I don’t think they have food either, though,” he said.

Cara Anna, The Associated Press
Vaccine skepticism hurts East European anti-virus efforts

BELGRADE, Serbia — Vaccines from the West, Russia or China? Or none at all? That dilemma faces nations in southeastern Europe, where coronavirus vaccination campaigns are off to a slow start — overshadowed by heated political debates and conspiracy theories.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

In countries like the Czech Republic, Serbia, Bosnia, Romania and Bulgaria, vaccine skeptics have included former presidents and even some doctors. Serbian tennis champion Novak Djokovic was among those who said he did not want to be forced to get inoculated.

False beliefs that the coronavirus is a hoax or that vaccines would inject microchips into people have spread in the countries that were formerly under harsh Communist rule. Those who once routinely underwent mass inoculations are deeply split over whether to get the vaccines at all.

“There is a direct link between support for conspiracy theories and skepticism toward vaccination,” a recent Balkan study warned. “A majority across the region does not plan to take the vaccine, a ratio considerably lower than elsewhere in Europe, where a majority favours taking the vaccine.”

Only about 200,000 people applied for the vaccine in Serbia, a country of 7 million, in the days after authorities opened the procedure. By contrast, 1 million Serbians signed up for 100 euros ($120) on the first day the government offered the pandemic aid.

Hoping to encourage vaccinations, Serbian officials have gotten their shots on TV. Yet they themselves have been split over whether to get the Western-made Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine or Russia’s Sputnik V, more divisions in a country that is formally seeking European Union membership but where many favour closer ties with Moscow.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic on Saturday greeted a shipment of 1 million doses of the Chinese Sinopharm vaccine, saying he will receive a shot to show that it is safe.

“Serbs prefer the Russian vaccine,” read a recent headline of the Informer, a pro-government tabloid, as officials announced that 38% of those who have applied to take the shots favour the Russian vaccine, while 31% want the Pfizer-BioNTech version — a rough division among pro-Russians and pro-Westerners in Serbia.

In neighbouring Bosnia, a war-torn country that remains ethnically divided among Serbs, Bosniaks and Croats, politics also are a factor, as the Serb-run half appeared set to opt for the Russian vaccine, while the Bosniak-Croat part likely will turn to the Western ones.

Sasa Milovanovic, a 57-year-old real estate agent from Belgrade, sees all vaccines as part of the “global manipulation” of the pandemic.

“People are locked up, they have no lives any longer and live in a state of hysteria and fear,” he said.

Djokovic has said he was against being forced to take a coronavirus vaccine in order to travel and compete but was keeping his mind open. The top-ranked tennis player and his wife tested positive in June after a series of exhibition matches with zero social distancing that he organized in the Balkans. They and their foundation have donated 1 million euros ($1.1 million) to buy ventilators and other medical equipment for hospitals in Serbia.

Serbian Health Ministry official Mirsad Djerlek has described the vaccine response as “satisfactory,” but cautioned on the state-run RTS broadcaster that “people in rural areas usually believe in conspiracy theories, and that is why we should talk to them and explain that the vaccine is the only way out in this situation.”

A study by the Balkans in Europe Policy Advisory Group, published before the regional vaccination campaign started in December, concluded that virus conspiracy theories are believed by nearly 80% of citizens of the Western Balkan countries striving to join the EU. About half of them will refuse to get vaccinated, it said.

Baseless theories allege the virus isn’t real or that it’s a bioweapon created by the U.S. or its adversaries. Another popular falsehood holds that Microsoft founder Bill Gates is using COVID-19 vaccines to implant microchips in the planet's 7 billion people.

A low level of information about the virus and vaccines, distrust in governments and repeated assertions by authorities that their countries are besieged by foreigners help explain the high prevalence of such beliefs, according to the Balkans think-tank .




Similar trends have been seen even in some eastern European Union countries.

In Bulgaria, widespread conspiracy theories hampered past efforts to deal with a measles outbreak. Surveys there suggested distrust of vaccines remains high even as coronavirus cases keep rising. A recent Gallup International poll found that 30% of respondents want to get vaccinated, 46% will refuse and 24% are undecided.

Bulgarian doctors have tried to change attitudes. Dr. Stefan Konstantinov, a former health minister, joked that people should be told neighbouring Greece would close resorts to tourists who don't get vaccinated, because “this would guarantee that some 70% of the population would rush to get a jab.”

In the Czech Republic, where surveys show some 40% reject vaccination, protesters at a big rally against government virus restrictions in Prague demanded that vaccinations not be mandatory. Former President Vaclav Klaus, a fierce critic of the government's pandemic response, told the crowd that vaccines are not a solution.

“They say that everything will be solved by a miracle vaccine,” said the 79-year-old Klaus, who insists that people should get exposed to the virus to gain immunity, which experts reject. “We have to say loud and clear that there’s no such a thing. … I am not going to get vaccinated.”

Populist authorities in Hungary have taken a hard line against virus misinformation, but rejection of vaccines is still projected at about 30%. Parliament passed emergency powers in March that allows authorities to prosecute anyone deemed to be “inhibiting the successful defence” against the virus, including “fearmongering” or spreading false news. At least two people who criticized the government's response to the pandemic on social media were arrested, but neither was formally charged.

Romanian Health Minister Vlad Voiculescu said he is relying on family doctors to “inform, schedule and monitor people after the vaccine” and that his ministry will offer bonuses to medical workers based on the number of people they get onboard. Asked if such incentives would fuel anti-vaccination propaganda, Voiculescu said: “I am interested more by the doctors’ view on the matter than I am about the anti-vaxxers.”

Dr. Ivica Jeremic, who has worked with virus patients in Serbia since March and tested positive himself in November, hopes vaccination programs will gain speed once people overcome their fear of the unknown.

"People will realize the vaccine is the only way to return to normal life,” he said.

___

Associated Press writers Veselin Toshkov in Sofia, Bulgaria; Karel Janicek in Prague, Czech Republic; Justin Spike in Budapest, Hungary; and Vadim Ghirda in Bucharest, Romania, contributed.

—-

Follow AP coverage of the coronavirus pandemic at:

https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic

https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine

https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

Dusan Stojanovic And Jovana Gec, The Associated Press


64% of Canadians in favour of mandatory coronavirus vaccines: poll

By Saba Aziz Global News
Posted January 16, 2021 

VIDEO
https://globalnews.ca/video/rd/01fad352-55ff-11eb-b330-0242ac110007/?jwsource=cl

One month since the start of coronavirus vaccinations in Canada, there is growing support for COVID-19 vaccines, with a majority of Canadians in favour of making the shots mandatory.

According to a new Ipsos poll conducted exclusively for Global News, 64 per cent of Canadians think the inoculations should be made compulsory. Meanwhile, 72 per cent say they would personally take a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as they could, without hesitation – a number that has gone up 20 points since November.


READ MORE: Canadian doctors call for more transparency about coronavirus vaccine rollout

“People realize that vaccines are going to be an important part of getting us back on track,” Darrell Bricker, CEO of Ipsos, told Global News.

“So fighting the disease, but also getting the world back to the way that it needs to be — vaccines are an important element of that.”

But the idea of making the vaccines mandatory also raises some ethical concerns, which is why not all are on board, he added.

The survey showed that men compared with women were more likely to take the vaccine without hesitation, as were people aged 55 and above compared to the younger demographic.

Kerry Bowman, a bioethicist at the University of Toronto, said concerns about a higher community spread of the virus, as well as no significant reports of immediate side effects from the vaccine, are making people feel more inclined to get it.

In fact, nearly 80 per cent believe that the COVID-19 vaccine will be effective at limiting the spread of the virus.

READ MORE: ‘Massive undertaking’ — Roadmap of Canada’s coronavirus vaccine rollout

Canada has so far approved two COVID-19 vaccines – from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. As of Friday, more than 493,863 people in Canada had received at least one dose of an approved COVID-19 vaccine. Since mid-December, Canada has distributed 765,100 doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.

The federal government is aiming to vaccinate a majority of Canadians by September, but most people are not confident they will receive it imminently.

According to the Ipsos survey, which was conducted earlier this month, 13 per cent think their turn will come by that September target, while 19 per cent believe they will have access to the vaccine before the end of March. And 18 per cent of Canadians think they will not be eligible to receive the vaccine this year.

In the initial stages of its rollout, which began last month and is expected to stretch into March, Canada is prioritizing the vaccines for front-line health workers, long-term care residents and workers, the elderly and Indigenous communities.

In the second stage, as additional vaccines and supplies become available, vaccines will be offered to residents and staff of all shared living settings, as well as essential service workers at high risk of infection.

Ipsos poll – Dec 31, 2020

Canada has recently secured an additional 20 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine, which are expected to be distributed this year.

According to the deals signed so far, Canada has ordered the world’s largest number of COVID-19 vaccine doses per capita, but there is growing pressure and concern over the pace of the country’s rollout.

“It’s fantastic that the government’s been able to access as much vaccine as they have been able to access, but it’s really quite a bit later than what Canadians’ expectations are about when they’re personally going to be able to get vaccinated,” Bricker said.

“So there’s a big gap that the governments, both provincial and federal, are going to have to deal with when it comes to what Canadians are expecting.”

READ MORE: When is it my turn? A coast-to-coast look at COVID-19 vaccine rollout

Even if it is made available to them, 12 per cent of Canadians say they will refuse to take the vaccine.

Bricker said this is a small percentage of the population that are either people who have already had COVID-19 and feel they have developed some form of immunity, those in remote locations or the group of anti-vaxxers.

Then there is also hesitancy among some Canadians, with 15 per cent saying they would want to wait until next year or beyond to get the shot.

Bricker said he expected that number will decline over the course of the year as people see more of their friends, relatives and neighbours get vaccinated.

Exclusive Global News Ipsos polls are protected by copyright. The information and/or data may only be rebroadcast or republished with full and proper credit and attribution to “Global News Ipsos.” This poll was conducted between January 5 and 6, 2021, with a sample of 1,000 Canadians aged 18+ from Ipsos’ online panel. The precision of Ipsos online polls is measured using a credibility interval. This poll is accurate to within ± 3.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20, had all Canadians aged 18+ been poll