✋Scientists say it's time to accept that there was no way of stopping the virus spreading through the entire population, and monitoring people with mild symptoms was no longer helpful
💉Prof Pollard, who led the Oxford vaccine team, said it was clear that the delta variant can infect people who have been vaccinated.
Which made herd immunity impossible to reach.
🇩🇪It comes as Germany announce the end of free testing, with the provision set to stop from Oct 11
🔴A lawsuit has been filed against Prince Andrew in New York, seeking damages for allegedly sexually abusing Virginia Roberts Giuffre when she was underage.
From taking the stand to ignoring the claim, @Telegraph assesses Prince Andrew's options.
Quite possibly. Virginia Giuffre (nee Roberts) has claimed in court papers filed in a New York civil court that the Prince sexually abused her 20 years ago on three separate occasions: in London, New York and in the US Virgin Islands
❌Will Prince Andrew take the stand in New York?
Unlikely. That’s not an attractive proposition since a cross-examination of Prince Andrew is unlikely to go well.
🦠After nearly two years of scientific endeavour, which has given us multiple vaccines and drugs to fight coronavirus - we’re still not completely sure how Covid spreads or how to stop it
One of the biggest arguments between scientists is whether the virus is truly airborne.
⚖️Understanding how and why the virus spreads is crucial for determining which control measures are effective at breaking the chain of transmission, and which are needlessly disruptive
🌬️Airborne transmission
The case for airborne transmission comes from observational evidence which shows that people confined to closed environments have inexplicably become infected.
Experts also point to super-spreader events that have produced multiple infections
🔴Botanists claim South Africans and Kenyans are being exploited by foreign criminals to dig up hundreds of rare African species.
🌵The plants then supply voracious Asian, European and North American demand
🗣️"The Asian market for these plants is insatiable. It is gigantic," said Dr Cornelia Klak, from the department of biological sciences at the University of Cape Town, South Africa