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The prime minister says the effectiveness of the vaccine rollout will determine whether the 21 June lockdown lifting can go ahead - as the UK reported the highest number of daily COVID cases in four months.
Cascada Cascada (; Spanish for Waterfall) is a German dance music act founded in 2004 by singer Natalie Horler, DJ Manian and DJ Yanou. They are best known for their hit singles "Everytime We Touch", "What Hurts the Most" and "Evacuate the Dancefloor". Cascada have sold over 30 million albums worldwide, an estimated 15 million digital downloads, and have an estimated net worth of over 7 million. Cascada represented Germany at the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 in Malmö, Sweden. While being one of the most successful acts of the dance music genre itself, Cascada were named the most successful German act of the 21st century.
Racey Racey were a British pop group, formed in 1976 in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, England, by Clive Wilson and Phil Fursdon. They achieved success in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with hits such as "Lay Your Love on Me" and "Some Girls". Their 1979 song "Kitty" was an international hit for Toni Basil in 1981, who kept the song's melody and structure but changed the lyric slightly to describe the narrator's preoccupation with a man named "Mickey" rather than a woman named Kitty.
Search COVID-19: Boris Johnson to call on G7 to vaccinate world against coronavirus by end of next year Boris Johnson is planning to use the UK's presidency of the group to push for global vaccination coverage within the next 18 months. When he meets fellow G7 leaders face-to-face on Friday - including President Joe Biden for the first time since his election win - Mr Johnson will call on them to "rise to the greatest challenge of the post-war era" to stop the coronavirus pandemic, which has infected at least 172 million people and killed more than 3.7 million worldwide. Mr Johnson said: "The world is looking to us to rise to the greatest challenge of the post-war era: defeating
Prince Charles praised the personal courage and sacrifice of those who died in the D-Day landings as a new British memorial was unveiled on the 77th anniversary of the historic operation.