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12 000 nouveaux cas identifiés en 24h en France
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Covid : ce qu il faut retenir de la journée du dimanche 3 janvier
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Five cheers for 2021 By Mark Leonard
LONDON ― A lot of chickens came home to roost this year. The COVID-19 pandemic was not some random thunderbolt from out of the blue, but rather a man-made natural disaster, holding up a mirror to so many of our bad habits and dangerous ― indeed, lethal ― practices.
After all, the coronavirus transmission from bats to humans was a product of mass urbanization and destructive encroachment on natural habitats, and its rapid spread was a result of over-industrialization, frenetic trade, and contemporary travel habits. Likewise, the world s inability to come together to contain the crisis reflects the extent to which governance capacity lags behind hyper-globalization.
The new decade started jubilantly, but the light quickly went out shortly after 2020 began.
The novel coronavirus, which causes COVID-19, snuck up and crashed down in a destructive wave across the globe.
The world radically changed March 11, when the World Health Organization officially declared a global pandemic.
Scientists and researchers scrambled to learn about the virus, create tests, and find a vaccine to stop it in its tracks.
Travelers rushed to get home as borders closed. Lockdowns turned cities into ghost towns, and many LGBTQ people were isolated or trapped in dangerous family situations. Businesses that could went virtual, but other sectors crumbled, and frontline workers from doctors to grocery clerks stared an invisible enemy down. Millions of people lost their jobs and became dependent on the government and organizations to help them survive.
Orban s visit to Ukraine remains on agenda - Kuleba 2 min read
The visit of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban to Kyiv and his meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky remains on the agenda, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said. This visit has not been removed from the agenda. Moreover, I assure you that the President of Ukraine is ready to hold such a meeting. But it must be meaningful and reset relations. And the task of the diplomats is now to come to this moment. We are open for this meeting. I will say more, we want them to meet, we want to eliminate all misunderstandings with Hungary, Kuleba said in an interview with TSN, published on Wednesday.
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