Wednesday, December 22nd, 2021
Two soldiers and four civilians are killed in clashes between the Kurdish SDF and the Turkish-backed SNA in Tell Tamer. (The New Arab)
The Saudi-led coalition kills over 280 Houthi combatants in airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Al Jawf and Marib governorates of Yemen. (Arab News)
The University of Hong Kong demolishes the Pillar of Shame overnight, a momument dedicated to the victims of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre in China. (Hong Kong Free Press)
Madagascar’s police minister Serge Gellé is rescued after swimming for 12 hours to shore after his helicopter crashed off the country’s northern coast during the boat accident rescue operation. President Andry Rajoelina hails Gellé’s survival. (Deutsche Welle)
The United Kingdom reports a record 106,122 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, the first time that the country has reported more than 100,000 new cases in a single day. (The Independent)
The Austrian government announces a series of new restrictions, including closing restaurants at 10 p.m. beginning on December 27, discourage large-scale New Year’s Eve celebrations, capacity restrictions of indoor and outdoor events, and imposing strict entry requirements for travellers from the UK, Denmark, Norway, and the Netherlands where the Omicron variant is already dominant in an effort to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and its variant. (AP)
Prime Minister Alexander De Croo announces that, due to the spread of the Omicron variant, water parks, cinemas, theatres and concert halls will be closed, and all indoor events and outdoor events using a tent will be banned. Additionally, shopping will only be allowed in pairs and professional and amateur sport events will be held without spectators. These measures will begin on December 26. (The Brussels Times)
The Turkish Health ministry approves the emergency use of the country’s first homegrown COVID-19 vaccine named Turkovac. (Anadolu Agency)
The Food and Drug Administration grants emergency use authorization for Pfizer‘s antiviral COVID-19 oral pill named Paxlovid for at-risk people over the age of 12 years, becoming the first at-home oral treatment to be approved by the FDA. (NBC News)
Nigeria destroys 1,066,214 doses of the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine with short shelf lives that expired in November. (Punch)
Tunisia begins to implement the usage of a mandatory COVID-19 vaccination pass in order to enter cafés, state institutions, banks, and shopping centres despite popular opposition and criticism from Amnesty International. (Barron’s)
Western Australia will become the first state and territory to mandate a booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine for essential, mining, and healthcare workers, due to the spread of the Omicron variant. (News.com.au)
A landowner and an earthmoving business each face 126 charges for the deaths of 70 koalas last year at a partially cleared tree plantation in Cape Bridgewater, Victoria, Australia. (BBC News)
Italy bans fur farming and orders all remaining mink farms to shut down by June 2022, while a ban on breeding animals for their fur becomes effective immediately. (Greek Reporter)
The End Thursday
Japan reports its first locally transmitted cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in three people in Osaka Prefecture who had no travel history. (The Japan Times)
Biden says government to distribute 500 million home COVID tests
President Biden on Tuesday unveiled his plans for fighting the fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant, saying his administration would buy 500 million rapid COVID-19 tests and send them to Americans free of charge. He also said the government would set up more vaccination and testing sites, and dispatch 1,000 military medical personnel to help overwhelmed hospitals manage a surge of infected patients. Biden also tried to comfort Americans frustrated after two years of the pandemic, with no end in sight. “We all want this to be over, but we’re still in it,” Biden said. Still, he said, vaccinated people should feel comfortable spending the holidays with friends and family. Health officials in Texas reported what was believed to be the first U.S. death from Omicron.
Trump ally Michael Flynn sues Jan. 6 committee Michael Flynn, who served as former President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, filed a lawsuit in Florida on Tuesday seeking to block the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack from obtaining his phone records. Flynn argued the committee’s subpoena was too broad and sought to punish him for constitutionally protected speech. He also claimed the panel “has no authority to conduct business because it is not a duly constituted Select Committee,” although an appeals court has ruled the committee was set up properly and has the right to obtain White House records Trump was trying to keep secret. The committee has called for Flynn to provide information regarding a “command center” at Washington’s Willard Hotel that oversaw efforts to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss. REUTERS
Biden promises to work with Manchin to ‘get something done’ President Biden vowed Tuesday that he and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) would work out their differences on a major spending package to expand the social safety net and the fight against climate change. Manchin this week said he couldn’t support Biden’s $2 trillion Build Back Better proposal, effectively killing it just days after offering a counterproposal that reportedly came in around $1.8 trillion. Democrats need Manchin’s vote, along with every other Democrat’s, to pass the measure in the 50-50 Senate. Biden told reporters at the White House that he didn’t hold a grudge against the more conservative Democrat, but that he would keep working to push through policies that would help families and lift people out of poverty. “Sen. Manchin and I are going to get something done,” Biden said. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Israel approves 4th COVID vaccine shot for people over 60 Israelis over age 60 and medical teams who have received a COVID-19 vaccine and a booster will be eligible for a fourth shot to increase their protection against the highly infectious Omicron variant, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett announced Tuesday. Studies have shown that the new, fast-spreading strain is resistant to initial vaccination, but that boosters can restore significant protection. “The citizens of Israel were the first in the world to receive the third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and we are continuing to pioneer with the fourth dose as well,” Bennett said. He urged all eligible people to “go and get vaccinated.” Israel’s pandemic expert committee recommended making the additional doses available. People with compromised immune systems also will be eligible. THE GUARDIAN
Walter Reed military scientists test vaccine that could protect against Omicron Scientists at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research spent nearly two years developing a COVID-19 vaccine that should protect against the new Omicron variant, plus all past and presumably future SARS-origin coronaviruses, Defense One reported Tuesday. The Spike Ferritin Nanoparticle (SpFN) vaccine showed promising results in animal trials and Phase 1 human trials that wrapped up this month; it still must undergo Phase 2 and Phase 3 human trials. “We decided to take a look at the long game rather than just only focusing on the original emergence of SARS, and instead understand that viruses mutate,” said Dr. Kayvon Modjarrad, director of Walter Reed’s infectious diseases branch. “Our platform and approach will equip people to be prepared for that.” DEFENSE ONE
Population growth fell to record low in 1st year of pandemic U.S. population growth fell to the lowest rate in the nation’s history during the first year of the coronavirus pandemic, according to estimates released Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau. The population increased by 392,665, or about 0.1 percent, from July 2020 to July 2021, bringing the country’s population to 331.8 million people, the Census Bureau said. It was the first year since 1937 that the population increased by less than one million people. The slowdown came as the pandemic curbed immigration, delayed pregnancies, and caused hundreds of thousands of deaths beyond what would normally have been expected. “I was expecting low growth but nothing this low,” said William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution’s metropolitan policy program, Brookings Metro. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NHL says it won’t participate in Olympics due to COVID concerns The National Hockey League announced Tuesday that its players will not participate in the Beijing Winter Olympics in February. The league has also announced that it plans to pause its season starting Wednesday, ahead of its Christmas break, due to COVID-19 concerns, which have intensified as the new Omicron variant spreads explosively around the world. The NHL is the first major sports league in North America to halt is season because of the fast-spreading Omicron strain. Before the announcement, the league had already postponed 50 games due to COVID-19 cases. Ten teams had shut down by Monday night, and 15 percent of the league’s players were under pandemic protocols. ESPN
Kellogg workers approve contract ending 11-week strike Kellogg’s workers voted on Tuesday to ratify a tentative labor contract, ending a strike at four cereal plants that began in early October. The contract covers about 1,400 employees at Kellogg plants in Michigan, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee who are represented by the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers, and Grain Millers International Union. Union president Anthony Shelton said the agreement “makes gains and does not include concessions.” Kellogg said the contract gives all workers immediate wage increases and cost of living adjustments, as well as a faster and clearer track to higher wages for new hires. Kellogg CEO Steve Cahillane said the employees will go back to work on Monday. The company had hired outside workers to help keep the plants operating during the strike. CBS NEWS
Jury finds Harvard professor guilty of hiding payments from China A Boston jury on Tuesday found Harvard professor Charles Lieber guilty of hiding ties to China. Lieber, a 62-year-old nanoscience expert, had pleaded not guilty to charges of filing false tax returns, making false statements, and failing to report on a foreign bank account in China, but was found guilty on all six counts. Lieber’s defense attorney Marc Mukasey had argued that prosecutors lacked proof that Lieber “willfully” hid payments he received or lied, and emphasized that Lieber wasn’t accused of illegally transferring technology to China. Prosecutors said Lieber tried to protect his career and reputation by hiding his involvement in China’s Thousand Talents Plan, which aims to recruit people with knowledge of foreign intellectual property to China. NPR
Biden considers lifting travel ban imposed to slow Omicron’s arrival President Biden said Tuesday that he is considering lifting a month-old travel ban he imposed on foreign travelers arriving from South Africa and seven other southern African countries to slow the spread of the new Omicron coronavirus variant first detected in South Africa. Omicron has since surpassed Delta as the dominant coronavirus variant in the United States. “Remember why I said we put the travel ban on. It was to see how much time we had before it hit here,” Biden said. “But we’re past that now.” He said the federal government would distribute 500 million free at-home COVID-19 tests under a campaign to contain Omicron. New cases have fallen in South Africa, suggesting Omicron infections might have peaked there. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Walgreens, CVS limit at-home COVID test purchases as demand spikes Walgreens and CVS said Tuesday they are limiting purchases of at-home COVID-19 testing kits due to a surge in demand as the Omicron coronavirus variant spreads quickly across the United States. The nation’s two largest pharmacy chains have seen some stores run out of the tests in recent days. “To ensure equitable access to tests both in store and digitally, we’ve added a limit of six test kits per purchase,” CVS said in a statement. CVS has more than 9,900 U.S. stores, although nearly 10 percent are scheduled to be closed over the next three years. Walgreens asked customers for patience as “we continue to navigate the evolving pandemic environment,” Walgreens President John Standley said. CNN
2021 Tuesday, December 21st, 2021
The Saudi-led coalition launches airstrikes on Sanaa International Airport in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. The air raid targeted six sites, including places used for “launching drone attacks”, according to a statement from the coalition. (Reuters)
The French Army announces that they killed Soumana Boura, a leading member of the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, the previous day. Boura was involved in the killings of six French aid workers and their two Nigerien guides in a mass shooting in August 2020 in Kouré, Niger. (Al Jazeera)
The TPLF withdraws all its troops from the Afar and Amhara regions of Ethiopia. (PM News)
The Standing Committee on Vaccination recommends the shortening of the interval between the second dose and booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to three months and urges all citizens over the age of 18 to receive a booster dose of an mRNA-based vaccine after receiving their first two doses in order to reduce the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (Politico.eu)
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and 16 state premiers agree to tighten the restrictions beginning on December 28, including limiting the number of people in private gatherings to 10 and banning spectators at large-scale musical, sporting and cultural events due to concerns related to the spread of the Omicron variant. (Deutsche Welle)
Prime Minister António Costa announces that nightclubs and bars will be closed and all people will work from home for at least two weeks beginning on December 25 in order to reduce the spread of COVID-19. There will also be capacity restrictions at shops and people will require a negative COVID-19 test in order to enter events. (Bloomberg)
The Swedish government announces that several new measures will begin on December 23, including limiting the number of people at private gatherings to 50, requiring the use of a vaccination pass for public events with a capacity of more than 500 people, and recommending work from home where possible, due to an increase in the number of COVID-19 cases. (Reuters)
The European Commission announces a binding proposal that will make the EU Digital COVID Certificate only valid for for travel within the European Union for nine months without a booster dose after a person’s primary vaccination schedule in order to standardize different travel requirements in the member states. The new rules will be mandatory for all 27 EU member states beginning on February 1. (RFI)
The Health ministry recommends that Israelis over the age of 60 years and healthcare workers should receive a fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, becoming the world’s first country to administer a fourth dose of the vaccine. The move is welcomed by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett. (Sky News)
Israel reports its first confirmed death related to the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a man in his 60s with pre-existing health conditions who died at the Soroka Medical Center in Beersheba. (The Times of Israel)
The Philippine Food and Drug Administration reduces the interval of the COVID-19 vaccine booster dose to three months for people who received a two-dose vaccine and two months for people who received a single-dose vaccine in order to reduce the effects of variants. (GMA News)
The End Wednesday
Tuesday, December 21st, 2021
Omicron surges, accounting for 73 percent of new COVID cases The new Omicron coronavirus variant has spread explosively and now accounts for 73 percent of U.S. cases, after increasing six-fold in one week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday. Cities across the United States on Monday continued to step up restrictions to combat the surge, as rising Omicron infections added to ongoing cases from the previously dominant Delta strain. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu (D) announced that the city, one of many where cases are spiking, would require proof of vaccination for people entering some indoor spaces, including restaurants and gyms. Washington, D.C., revived an indoor mask mandate as daily infections jumped to three times the level seen at the beginning of December. THE NEW YORK TIMES
EPA tightens auto pollution rule to cut carbon emissions The Environmental Protection Agency on Monday announced that it had finalized a rule cutting limits on tailpipe emissions to reduce climate-warming carbon dioxide pollution. The change requires U.S. vehicles to get an average of 55 miles per gallon of gasoline by 2026, the tightest standard yet and an increase from about 38 miles per gallon today. The new rule will prevent the release of 3.1 billion tons of carbon dioxide through 2050, the EPA said. The change essentially restores an Obama administration standard, which called for automakers to hit an average of 51 miles per gallon by 2025 but was cut back by the Trump administration to about 44 miles per gallon. THE NEW YORK TIMES
EPA unveils tightest auto pollution rule ever The Environmental Protection Agency on Monday announced that it had finalized a rule tightening tailpipe emission limits to reduce climate-warming carbon dioxide pollution. The change requires U.S. vehicles to get an average of 55 miles per gallon of gasoline by 2026, the tightest standard yet and up from about 38 miles per gallon today. The reduction would prevent the release of 3.1 billion tons of carbon dioxide through 2050. The change restores an Obama administration policy that called for automakers to hit an average of 51 miles per gallon by 2025, but was rolled back by the Trump administration. President Biden is expected to rely on such regulations to reduce emissions as Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) essentially blocks a spending bill that includes climate funding. THE NEW YORK TIMES
Three inmates are executed by hanging, marking the first time executions under Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government and the first in the country in nearly two years. One was the perpetrator of a 2004 mass stabbing in which he killed seven of his relatives. (Reuters)
The French Army says that yesterday they killed Soumana Boura, a leading member of the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, involved in the killings of six French aid workers and their two Nigerien guides in a mass shooting in August 2020 in Kouré, Niger. (Al Jazeera)
Manchin says White House staff poisoned talks and rejected spending counteroffer Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) hit back Monday against White House staffers who accused him of breaking a promise by rejecting President Biden’s $2 trillion Build Back Better plan. Manchin said Biden aides were the ones who poisoned negotiations. Manchin, whose vote Democrats must have to pass the bill in the evenly divided Senate, objected to the cost. He had proposed an alternative $1.8 trillion package that included universal prekindergarten for 10 years, expanding Obamacare, and providing hundreds of billions of dollars for climate measures, The Washington Post reported Monday, citing three people familiar with the matter. But his counteroffer left out extending the expiring expanded child tax credit, a key part of Biden’s economic stimulus that has dramatically reduced child poverty. THE WASHINGTON POST
The Saudi-led coalition launches airstrikes on Sanaa International Airport in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. The air raid targets six sites, including places used for “launching drone attacks”, according to the coalition. (Reuters)
The TPLF withdraws all its troops from the Afar and Amhara regions of Ethiopia. (PM News)
Previous to the nationwide mandate, the provinces of Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Santa Fe, Río Negro and Santiago del Estero become the first to implement the “sanitary pass” for massive events and public attention offices. The mandate applies to all above 13 years old and requires at least one dose to enter those places. (Página/12)
Kenya’s COVID-19 infection rate reaches an all-time high. (Business Daily Africa)
Thailand reinstates its mandatory hotel quarantine between 7 to 10 days for all incoming foreign travellers and suspends the “sandbox” program for other places outside Phuket after the country reported its first locally transmitted case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (Rappler)
Last 12 missionaries kidnapped in Haiti made daring escape, group says The last 12 of the 17 U.S. and Canadian missionaries kidnapped by a gang in Haiti in October were not released, but freed themselves in a daring escape last week, Christian Aid Ministries said Monday. Five others were released earlier under unspecified circumstances. The last 12 captives, including an infant and 3-year-old child, escaped last Wednesday night and walked about 10 miles through difficult gang territory and “eventually found someone who helped to make a phone call for help,” the Ohio-based missionary group said. “They were finally free.” The 400 Mawozo gang had captured the group as the missionaries were returning from a visit to an orphanage, and demanded $1 million per person in ransom. It was not immediately clear whether any ransom was paid. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jury starts deliberating in ex-officer’s trial for Daunte Wright’s death Jury deliberations began Monday after prosecutors and defense attorneys gave closing arguments in the manslaughter trial of former Minnesota police officer Kim Potter, who fatally shot Black motorist Daunte Wright while yelling “Taser” in April. Potter, who faces first- and second-degree manslaughter charges, is accused of recklessly handling her gun and killing Wright, 20. She said during the trial that she didn’t mean to shoot Wright and was sorry. Defense attorney Earl Gray said Wright died during the traffic-stop-turned-arrest due to his own “rash and reckless conduct.” Prosecutor Erin Eldridge said Potter was responsible for what happened even if she mistakenly shot Write when she meant to stun him with her Taser. “Accidents can still be crimes,” he said. USA TODAY
Alex Jones sues Jan. 6 committee and says he’ll plead the 5th Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, a vocal backer of former President Donald Trump and operator of the far-right Infowars website, has filed a lawsuit against the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, seeking to block the panel from obtaining his phone records and forcing him to testify next month. Jones has said he plans to assert his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, and that the committee rejected his offer to provide written answers to their questions. He also said he does not intend to produce any documents because he feels his “journalistic activity” is protected under the First Amendment. Jones is the latest of several Trump supporters who have sued the panel. POLITICO
Philippines typhoon death toll rises further, exceeding 300 The death toll in the Philippines from Super Typhoon Rai continued to rise on Monday and early Tuesday, reaching at least 375 people as search crews reached more devastated areas. The storm crashed into the country’s southeastern islands on Thursday with high winds and heavy rains. Rescue teams said they had encountered “complete carnage” in some coastal areas left without power, phone service, or sufficient drinking water. “There are some areas that look like it has been bombed worse than World War II,” the chair of the Philippines Red Cross, Richard Gordon, told the BBC. The governor of the Dinagat Islands, Arlene Bag-ao, said on Facebook that the “fields and boats of our farmers and fisherfolk have been decimated.” RAPPLER
Report says glaciers melting fastest in Himalayas Himalayan glaciers are melting at an “exceptional” rate that is outpacing the loss of glaciers in other parts of the world, according to a peer-reviewed study published Monday in the journal Scientific Reports. The Himalayan mountains, often referred to as the “third pole,” are home to the third-largest collection of glaciers after Antarctica and the Arctic. Researchers, using satellite images and digital models, found that the Himalayas’ 15,000 glaciers had shrunk by about 40 percent from the peak during the so-called Little Ice Age 400 to 700 years ago. Current losses are at least 10 times the average rate of past centuries, with recent acceleration coinciding “with human-induced climate change,” said report author Jonathan Carrivick, deputy head of the University of Leeds School of Geography. NATURE
Biden administration offers 20,000 more visas for temporary winter workers The Biden administration will make 20,000 more seasonal, H-2B guest-worker visas available for employers this winter to help address labor shortages, the Department of Homeland Security announced Monday. The new allotment added to the 33,000 visas already set aside for landscapers, hotels, ski resorts, and other seasonal employers for the winter hiring season. They are available for people hired by March 31. H-2B visas can go to foreign workers entering the United States to fill temporary non-agricultural jobs. “DHS is taking action to protect American businesses and create opportunities that will expand lawful pathways to the United States for workers” from Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Haiti, said Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in a statement. CNN
California sues Walmart over hazardous waste disposal California prosecutors on Monday filed a lawsuit accusing Walmart of illegally dumping toxic waste in state landfills. California Attorney General Rob Bonta said the retail giant throws out a million batteries, aerosol insect-killer cans, cleaning supplies, and other hazardous waste every year. “When a big box store disposes of unwanted goods, just like the rest of us, they need to do so properly. Unfortunately, Walmart — the largest company in the world by revenue — has failed to do that on a grand scale here in California,” Bonta said. Walmart, which has more than 300 stores in California, called the lawsuit “unjustified.” The company paid $25 million to settle a similar lawsuit in 2010, and agreed to stop the dumping in California landfills unequipped for hazardous waste. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
‘Spider-Man’ producer warned Tom Holland and Zendaya against dating There’s nothing like young, forbidden Spider-Man love. Spider-Man: No Way Home producer Amy Pascal has revealed she tried — and failed — to stop Tom Holland and Zendaya from dating in real life after they were cast as on-screen love interests Peter Parker and MJ. Funnily enough, they’re actually the third consecutive set of Spider-Man actors to date off screen, as Andrew Garfield dated his Spider-Man love interest Emma Stone and Tobey Maguire dated the original MJ, Kirsten Dunst. “I took Tom and Zendaya aside, separately, when we first cast them and gave them a lecture,” Pascal told The New York Times. “Don’t go there — just don’t. Try not to. I gave the same advice to Andrew and Emma. It can just complicate things, you know? And they all ignored me.” Either that, or Pascal has wanted to pair them all up and is just the master of reverse psychology. E! ONLINE
Jennifer Lopez denies being mad at Ben Affleck over his Jennifer Garner comments Please don’t put in the newspaper that I got mad, Jennifer Lopez says. Lopez has shot down reports she’s upset with Ben Affleck over his recent comments about his ex-wife Jennifer Garner. For those just joining us in this debacle, Affleck recently told Howard Stern that “part of why I started drinking” was because he felt “trapped” in his marriage to Garner, and he suggested he would still be drinking if they were married today. Soon after, Page Six claimed Lopez was “pissed,” with a source saying, “She is getting pulled into this because she is dating him. She doesn’t want to be dragged into this.” But Lopez is now denying this, telling People, “This story is simply not true. It is not how I feel.” She added, “I couldn’t have more respect for Ben as a father, a co-parent, and a person.” Affleck has since said his original comments about Garner were taken out of context, slamming “clickbait” headlines about them. PEOPLE
‘X-Men’ director Bryan Singer faces new abuse allegations from former assistant Bryan Singer, director of films like X-Men and Bohemian Rhapsody, is facing even more allegations of abuse. This time, Singer’s former assistant Blake Stuerman came forward in a piece published Monday by Variety, alleging he was a victim of “mental and emotional abuse” by the filmmaker. They reportedly began a sexual relationship when Stuerman was 18 and Singer was 43, and Stuerman says that during their first sexual encounter, he was drunk and “didn’t know I was allowed to say no.” He accuses Singer of emotional abuse that “would frequently trigger panic attacks” and also alleges he once witnessed Singer “violently” attack a guest at his house. Singer has previously faced allegations of sexually abusing underage boys, and he hasn’t released a movie since he was replaced as director of Bohemian Rhapsody. He denied the allegations through his lawyer, claiming Stuerman “simply has an axe to grind.” VARIETY
Monday, December 20th, 2021
Health officials warn of potential record COVID surge Leading public health officials said Sunday that the U.S. is likely to face record numbers of new coronavirus infections and hospitalizations as the Omicron variant spreads explosively. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Biden administration’s top health-care adviser, said on CNN’s State of the Union that the “extraordinary” transmissibility of the new strain will cause “a significant stress” on some hospitals, “particularly in those areas where you have a low level of vaccination.” Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said on CBS News’ Face the Nation that the nation could soon see a million new Omicron cases a day, far beyond the record of about 250,000 new daily cases set in January, although it was unclear how many of those cases would require hospitalization. THE WASHINGTON POST
Warren, Booker test positive in breakthrough COVID cases Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) said Sunday that they had tested positive the coronavirus. Warren said via her official Twitter account that she was experiencing mild COVID-19 symptoms. Warren, who lost her older brother to the virus in May 2020, is fully vaccinated and has received a booster shot. She said the fact that she was vaccinated and boosted had protected her from more severe illness. With U.S. infections surging, Warren urged everyone to “get the vaccine and the booster as soon as possible — together, we can save lives.” Booker also has been vaccinated and boosted, and said his symptoms were “relatively mild.” CNN
The United States reports its first confirmed death related to the Omicron variant in a unvaccinated man in his 50s in Harris County, Texas who had underlying health issues. (U.S. News and World Report)
The governments of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo reveal that they have captured 35 rebels and destroyed numerous enemy strongholds within the past week. (Voice of America)
The Israeli Defense Forces reveal that they have captured more than 100 members of the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, amid a recent increase in tensions between the two groups. (Times of Israel)
The death toll from the fuel tank truck explosion in Cap-Haïtien, Haiti, six days ago rises to 90. (Al Jazeera)
Israel’s government agrees to ban all travel to Germany, Italy, Belgium, Hungary, Morocco, Portugal, Canada, Switzerland, Turkey, and the U.S. without special permission beginning on December 22 due to the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (NBC News)
Kuwait will require incoming travellers who fully vaccinated against COVID-19 more than nine months ago to receive booster dose beginning from January 2 and also requires them to self-isolate for 10 days unless they received a negative PCR test within 72 hours of their arrival beginning from December 26. (Times of Oman)
Germany bans all travel from the United Kingdom and imposes a mandatory 14-day quarantine and proof of a negative PCR test from the previous 48 hours for German residents and citizens returning from the UK, amid the spread of the Omicron variant in Britain. (Euronews)
The United Kingdom ends its travel ban on Angola, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. (Times of India)
The European Commission authorizes the use of the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine after the European Medicines Agency recommended the use of the vaccine, becoming the fifth vaccine to be approved for use by the European Union. (Euronews)
Quebec closes all bars, gyms, spas, cinemas, and concert halls as well as suspends in-person learning and mandates remote working after the province reported a record 4,857 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (Global News)
Poland and Lithuania join Ukraine in calling for stronger Western sanctions on Russia, with Polish President Andrzej Duda saying that “everything must be done” to prevent a potential Russian invasion of Ukraine, and that he was “absolutely against any policy of concessions to Russia”. (RFE/RL)
Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby says a small Department of Defense team has returned from Ukraine after assessing the country’s air defences. (The Drive)
The trial of Aung San Suu Kyi is delayed by Burmese courts until December 27. (Al Jazeera)
Egyptian blogger and activist Alaa Abdel Fattah is sentenced to five years in prison by Egyptian authorities for spreading fake news. His family continues to protest the verdict. (Al Jazeera)
The Nagaland Legislative Assembly publicly demands that the Government of India repeal the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, which has been in effect since 1958. This comes after a massacre occurred in Mon district, Nagaland on December 4. (Sangai Express)
The End Tuesday
An investigation by the BBC discovers that a massacre of 40 civilians took place in July 2021, in Kani Township, a People’s Defence Force stronghold in Sagaing Region. (BBC News)
Manchin says he won’t vote for Biden’s spending proposal Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said Sunday he will not vote for President Biden’s $2 trillion Build Back Better spending and tax bill, which would expand the social safety net and fight climate change. Manchin, a key centrist swing vote, has objected to the cost. The White House and leading congressional Democrats have been negotiating with Manchin to seek his support, which they must have to push the bill through the evenly divided Senate. “I can’t get there,” he said on Fox News Sunday. “This is a no.” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Manchin was reneging on a promise with his “sudden and inexplicable” reversal, noting that as recently as Tuesday he had pledged to work out a compromise with the White House. THE NEW YORK TIMES
Moderna says booster dose effective against Omicron in lab study Moderna said early Monday that a third dose of its COVID-19 vaccine significantly increased immune responses against the Omicron variant in lab tests, adding more preliminary evidence that booster shots restore protections eroded by the new variant. Moderna said the half-dose it has been using as a booster increases levels of neutralizing antibodies, a first line of defense against the coronavirus, 37-fold versus pre-booster levels. Pfizer reported earlier that its third dose boosted neutralizing antibodies against Omicron more than 25-fold. The lab results have not yet been confirmed in real-world studies. Pfizer and Moderna have both reported that their original two-dose regimens were not very effective at preventing Omicron infections, though they do significantly cut down on severe illness and hospitalization. USA TODAY
Chile elects 35-year-old leftist Gabriel Boric as president Gabriel Boric, a leftist millennial who gained influence during anti-government protests, won Chile’s presidential election Sunday after a polarizing campaign against conservative lawmaker José Antonio Kast, a fan of Brazil’s far-right President Jair Bolsonaro who has been likened to Donald Trump. Boric was ahead by 10 percentage points with more than half of the votes counted. During the campaign, Kast tried to scare voters by saying Boric would be controlled by allies in Chile’s Communist Party, and would destroy the South American nation’s stable and advanced economy. Boric, surrounded by thousands of mostly young supporters, repeated promises to fight climate change and no longer “permit that the poor keep paying the price of Chile’s inequality.” When Boric, 35, takes office in March, he will be Chile’s youngest modern president. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai tells newspaper she never accused anyone of sexual assault Chinese tennis champion Peng Shuai reversed her allegation that a former Chinese Communist Party leader sexually assaulted her, telling Chinese-language Singaporean newspaper Lianhe Zaobao in a Sunday interview that there were “a lot of misunderstandings” about the November social media post in which she made the claim. “I have never said or written that anyone sexually assaulted me,” Peng told Lianhe Zaobao. “This point must be emphasized very clearly.” She also said she personally wrote the Chinese version of an email to the Women’s Tennis Association retracting her accusation against former Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli and assuring the WTA that everything is fine. The WTA said it welcomed Peng’s appearance “in a public setting,” but reiterated its “call for a full, fair, and transparent investigation.” THE NEW YORK TIMES
Rapper Drakeo the Ruler fatally stabbed at festival West Coast rapper Drakeo the Ruler was stabbed to death Saturday during a fight at a Los Angeles festival, a publicist for the late performer confirmed on Sunday. He was 28. The stabbing occurred near the Banc of California Stadium in Exposition Park, the festival venue. Drakeo the Ruler, whose real name was Darrell Caldwell, had been scheduled to take the stage at 8:30 p.m. Saturday during the Once Upon a Time in L.A. festival. Several other artists, including 50 Cent and Snoop Dogg, also were appearing. Organizers called off the rest of the show after the rapper’s death. In February, Caldwell released “The Truth Hurts,” his biggest album yet. He said in a statement early this year that the album covers “everything that I have gone through,” including spending much of his youth in correctional facilities. THE NEW YORK TIMES
‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ crushes expectations with a $253 million debut Spider-Man: No Way Home smashed box office expectations over its debut weekend, bringing in $253 million in ticket sales at 4,336 North American theaters. It was by far the biggest opening weekend for any film since the coronavirus pandemic started. In an era when COVID-19 fears force studios to release many films for streaming and theaters simultaneously, Tom Rothman, Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group chairman and CEO, said the Sony comic-book sequel’s success reaffirmed “the unmatched cultural impact that exclusive theatrical films can have when they are made and marketed with vision and resolve.” The new Spider-Man film is the first movie released during the pandemic to bring in more than $100 million in a weekend. VARIETY
Goldman Sachs cuts economic growth forecast after Manchin’s bombshell Goldman Sachs cut its forecast for U.S. economic growth to 2 percent for the first quarter of 2022, down from 3 percent, after Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) announced on Fox News Sunday that he would not vote for his party’s $2 trillion Build Back Better domestic spending legislation. He sent an aide to let the White House and congressional leadership know less than a half an hour before going on air to drop his bombshell. Republican moderates who voted for the bipartisan infrastructure deal Manchin helped negotiate were thrilled with the news, but congressional Democrats and the White House were not. Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) quickly released a new framework for a more narrowly focused Build Back Better plan. POLITICO
Musk says he’ll pay $11 billion in 2021 taxes Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, the world’s richest person, tweeted on Sunday that he will pay $11 billion in 2021 taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. Bloomberg News calculated that Musk will owe the IRS more than $10 billion on his taxes this year if he exercises all of his stock options that will expire in 2022. If the figures are accurate, it could be the largest individual payment the IRS has ever collected. Musk already has sold millions of Tesla shares to raise the money to cover his looming tax bill. Tesla shares have soared by more than 2,300 percent in the last five years. In November, Musk polled his Twitter followers to get their opinions on whether he should sell 10 percent of his Tesla stake. Since then, Tesla’s stock has fallen by nearly 25 percent. BLOOMBERG
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