Pandemic Having More Impact on U.S. Hospitals Than Thought: Study

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FRIDAY, May 29, 2020 (HealthDay News) — Hospitalized COVID-19 patients in the United States spend more time in the hospital and are more likely to require intensive care than patients in China, a new study says.

The findings suggest that the coronavirus pandemic may be putting greater strain on U.S. hospitals than previously assumed, according to researchers.

“The hospital resources needed to meet the needs of severely ill patients are substantial,” said lead author Joseph Lewnard, an assistant professor of epidemiology at the University of California, Berkeley.

“We found that observations from China may not provide a sufficient basis for anticipating the U.S. health care demand,” he said in a university news release.

Lewnard and his colleagues analyzed the medical records of nearly 1,300 Kaiser Permanente members in California and Washington state who were hospitalized with confirmed cases of COVID-19 between the start of the year and early April.

Of those, 42% required intensive care, and 18% died of COVID-19. Estimates from China suggested that about 30% of hospitalized COVID-19 patients will require intensive care.

The researchers said their findings show the need to gather data in different regions and health care settings worldwide. They warned against relying on models based on data from other countries.

“The spread of COVID-19 and its impact on local health care systems show differences across the world,” said study co-author Vincent Liu, a research scientist at the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in Northern California.

He pointed out that health care systems differ and their capabilities and structure affect local response. As a result, it’s important to understand how local data compare to the experience seen in other countries.

The study also provided more evidence that older people are hit hardest by COVID-19. About 50% of hospitalizations were among adults 60 and older, and 25% among adults 73 and older.

And men seemed to be at greater risk than women. Hospitalized men older than 80 had a 58% risk of death, while the risk was 32% among hospitalized women of the same age.

The study did have some positive findings, showing that social distancing measures are successfully “flattening the curve” of new coronavirus transmission.

“Those efforts are going to be critical for this next phase, in which social distancing measures are gradually relaxed,” Liu said in the release. “We need our communities to stay really engaged, because these data show that even the actions of individuals and small groups can really impact the spread of the virus.”

The study was published online May 26 in the BMJ.

— Robert Preidt

MedicalNews
Copyright © 2020 HealthDay. All rights reserved.





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SOURCE: University of California, Berkeley, news release, May 26, 2020

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India Positive | Students Develop Belt That Reminds Users To Maintain Social Distance

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Gujarat Technological University students have created a belt that enforces social distancing rules.

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Mike Pence Gets A Blunt Reminder After ‘Let Their Voices Be Heard’ Tweet

Twitter users took Vice President Mike Pence to task on Friday over his tweets about the death of George Floyd ― an unarmed Black man who died on Monday in Minneapolis after a police officer knelt on his neck ― and the protests that have since spread across the country.

“We have no tolerance for racism in America. We have no tolerance for violence inspired by racism,” Pence wrote in one tweet, adding in another: “We condemn violence against property or persons. We will always stand for the right of Americans to peacefully protest and let their voices be heard.”

Many critics accused Pence of hypocrisy, noting how he walked out of an NFL game between the Indianapolis Colts and the San Francisco 49ers in 2017 in protest at the 49ers players who took a knee during the national anthem.

The athletes were powerfully yet peacefully protesting police brutality and systemic racial injustice, following the lead of former 49er Colin Kaepernick.

Others scolded Pence for putting the word “property” before the word “persons” in his post:



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Ministry of External Affairs Asks Some Officials to Quarantine after 2 Test Positive for Covid-19: Report

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Representative image. (Reuters)

A person who tested positive worked as a consultant in the ministry’s Central Europe division in New Delhi, while the other worked as a legal officer in the law division.

  • Reuters New Delhi
  • Last Updated: May 30, 2020, 12:05 AM IST

At least two people working at the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) have tested positive for COVID-19, and the government has asked several officials to self-quarantine as a precaution, according to a source and internal emails seen by Reuters.

A person who tested positive worked as a consultant in the ministry’s Central Europe division in New Delhi, while the other worked as a legal officer in the law division, the emails showed.

“As per protocol, all members of the CE Division have been asked to go for self quarantine for 14 days and work from home,” the ministry advised in an internal email on May 27, which was reviewed by Reuters.

In a separate email on Friday, all officials who came into direct contact with the legal officer, who tested positive for the coronavirus, were also asked to self-quarantine.

The ministry did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment.

It was not immediately clear how many officials have been asked to self-quarantine.

The ministry is involved in many of India’s critical coronavirus relief efforts, especially those relating to the evacuation of Indian citizens stranded overseas. It has ordered sanitisation of rooms occupied by the Central Europe and legal division and those nearby, the source with knowledge of the matter said.

Last month, about 500 people entered self-isolation in staff quarters of India’s presidential palace after a family member of a sanitation worker living in employee quarters tested positive.

The number of COVID-19 cases are steadily rising in India. Government data on Friday showed nearly 1,66,000 have now tested positive for the virus, of which 4,706 have died.







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Centre Asks States to Streamline Inter-state Movement of Personnel Engaged in Locust Control

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Locusts swarm above a mango tree orchard in Muzaffargarh, Pakistan, Friday, May 29, 2020.

(AP Photo/Tariq Qureshi)

All states and union territories have also been issued an advisory along with standard operating procedures (SOPs) for handling the locust problem, the agriculture ministry said in a statement.

  • PTI New Delhi
  • Last Updated: May 30, 2020, 12:03 AM IST

Amid threat of locust swarms travelling as far as Bihar, the Centre on Friday asked states to streamline inter-state movement of personnel engaged in controlling the spread of the crop-damaging migratory pests.

All states and union territories have also been issued an advisory along with standard operating procedures (SOPs) for handling the locust problem, the agriculture ministry said in a statement.

Locust control measures that started since April 11 are underway in affected states in northern India.

In its May 27 letter written to all states, the Union Home Ministry has given “necessary instructions to streamline the inter-state movement facility for the personnel engaged in locust control works,” the statement said.

Under both State and National Disaster Response Fund, the Centre has included hiring of vehicles, machines and chemicals used in containment of locust control.

The quantum of assistance will be limited to the actual expenditure incurred on these items. However, expenditure should not exceed 25 per cent of the State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF) allocation for the year, it added.

Meanwhile, in a video conference with all state governments, Agriculture Secretary Sanjay Aggarwal updated them about the status of the locust problem and control measures being undertaken.

The states were also informed about the latest update of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) which has said locusts could reach as far as Bihar and Odisha in the coming months.

So far, locust control operations have been done in 377 spots covering 53,997 hectares in six states.

The control measures were undertaken in 15 locations in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh on Friday.

These locations were in the districts of Jaipur, Dausa, Bikaner, Jodhpur, Barmer, Chittorgarh, Sri Ganganagar (Rajasthan) and Niwari and Shivpuri (Madhya Pradesh).

The Madhya Pradesh government also undertook control operations at five locations — one each in districts of Satna, Balaghat, Niwari, Raisen and Shivpuri.

“No crop loss is reported,” the ministry added.



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US cops break ‘blue wall of silence’ for George Floyd’s death

Many police officers across the United States have condemned the actions of theofficers involved in the death of George Floyd.

But it is just the latest in a series of deaths of unarmed Black men at the hands of law enforcement.

Al Jazeera’s Gabriel Elizondo reports from New York.

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Explained: Why George Floyd’s death has sparked violent protests in the US

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By: Explained Desk |

Published: May 30, 2020 11:42:59 am





In this May 29, 2020, photo, a check-cashing business burns during protests in Minneapolis. Protests continued following the death of George Floyd, who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

US President Donald Trump threatened the use of force in dealing with protests against the death of George Floyd, referring to participants as “thugs” on Twitter. “Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” the president said Friday.

Within hours, Twitter flagged the post for “glorifying violence” but let it remain visible in the public’s interest “to remain accessible.”

Floyd, a 46-year-old African American man, died in Minneapolis on Monday while he was being restrained by the police. Video footage of the incident, which was broadcast by the media and went viral on social media platforms, showed an officer kneeling on Floyd’s neck as he gasped for breath.

Four policemen have since been fired, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has been called in to conduct a federal civil rights probe. The officer who pinned him to the ground, Derek Chauvin, has been charged with third degree murder.

The death has triggered violent unrest in Minneapolis, leading to a state of peacetime emergency being declared in Minnesota state as well as the activation of its National Guard. Protests have also taken place in other parts of the US, including in California, New York, Ohio and Colorado.

The incident once again brought to the fore concerns over the law enforcement’s bias against the African American minority, with Floyd’s death being cited as the most recent incident of racially-driven police brutality.

Explained: Why George Floyd’s death has sparked violent protests in the US A protester carries a US flag upside, a sign of distress, next to a burning building Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo: Julio Cortez)

George Floyd’s death

Floyd, a Minnesota resident, was arrested on Monday after he was accused of using a counterfeit $20 note at a local deli. According to the police, Floyd “physically resisted” the arrest after he was told to exit his car, a claim that was belied by mobile phone footage recorded by several passers-by. A white police officer then went on to restrain Floyd, and kneeled on his neck for at least seven minutes despite the 46-year-old gasping for breath and repeatedly saying “I can’t breathe”. The officer remained in that position even after Floyd became unconscious. His unresponsive body was then taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

The local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) called the incident “public lynching without a rope.”

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said, “Being black in America should not be a death sentence. For five minutes, we watched a white officer press his knee into a black man’s neck… When you hear someone calling for help, you’re supposed to help. This officer failed in the most basic, human sense.”

Race and police violence in the US

Floyd’s repeated cry for help, “I can’t breathe”, while being restrained prompted comparisons between the incident and the death of Eric Garner in 2014. Garner, an unarmed African American man, had uttered the same words 11 times as he was held in a chokehold by a police officer in New York City before he died.

‘I can’t breathe’ has now become a rallying cry among protesters.

Also read | CNN crew arrested while reporting on Minneapolis protests

Other high profile deaths include the 2016 shooting of Philando Castile, a 32-year-old black man shot seven times at close range during a traffic stop, also in Minnesota, just after he had informed the police officer, Jeronimo Yanez, that he was carrying a gun. Yanez was acquitted of all charges in 2017. The incident became viral after Castile’s girlfriend streamed part of the incident on Facebook.

Another incident from 2016 that caused a furore was when police pinned to the ground and shot 37-year-old Alton Sterling outside a convenience store in Louisiana where he was selling CDs.

Explained: Why George Floyd’s death has sparked violent protests in the US Protestors demonstrate outside of a burning Minneapolis 3rd Police Precinct, Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo: John Minchillo)

According to a study conducted by The Guardian in 2016, the rate of fatal shootings by the police per million people was the highest for the Native American (10.13) and Black (6.6) racial groups; white people had a rate of 2.9. A Washington Post database showed that African Americans were 2.5 times more likely to be killed by a police officer than white people.

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A study in the American Journal of Public Health from 2018 also found the mortality rate by police for black men to be much higher– at 1.9-2.4 per 1 lakh people compared to 0.6-0.7 for white men.

The Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement

In 2013, after the acquittal of a civilian who fatally shot teenager Trayvon Martin in Florida the year before, the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter began trending on social media, and a movement against systemic violence against the African American community sprung up.

Black Lives Matter achieved national fame in 2014 during protests against the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown– the latter also being a case of fatal police shooting. The movement, started by three African American women, expanded across the US and invited public interest internationally. BLM is largely decentralised and does not have a formal hierarchy.

The movement has been criticised by alt-right commentators in the US. Some of BLM’s opponents have responded with their own counter-campaigns such as “All Lives Matter” and “Blue Lives Matter”.

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Mayhem in Minneapolis: Officer charged with murder in death of George Floyd

Anguish and anger over the death of George Floyd erupted across the US hours after the former Minneapolis officer seen in video with his knee on Floyd’s neck was arrested and charged with murder.

Demonstrators funneled their anguish in cities like Atlanta, New York and Washington into chants, signs and outbreaks of violence, smashing windows and setting vehicles ablaze.

A large group of protestors gathered outside the gates of the White House in Washington, chanting George Floyd’s name and demanding justice for his death at the hands of police. It lead to the White House going into lockdown.

People march from the George Floyd vigil at Peninsula Park towards the Justice Centre downtown in Portland, Oregon. (Dave Killen/The Oregonian via AP)
Demonstrators march at 5th Avenue and Marion Street in downtown Seattle to show solidarity with Minneapolis and protesting police brutality. (Amanda Snyder /The Seattle Times via AP)
Police officers fire rubber bullets during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Los Angeles. Floyd died in police custody Monday in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

There were also chants of “I can’t breathe”, the words Mr Floyd said as a police officer kneeled on his neck before he died.

In Minneapolis a gas station is on fire, with the city in curfew and emergency services fearful of reaching areas to put out the flames.

• In one of the most chaotic protests Atlanta has seen in years, demonstrators smashed windows of police cars outside CNN Center, which houses Precinct 5 of the Atlanta Police Department. At least one squad car was set on fire. Police in riot gear helped other force protesters back to Centennial Olympic Park.

A check-cashing business burns Friday, May 29, 2020, in Minneapolis. (AP/AAP)

• Minneapolis and St. Paul are under a curfew instituted after days of protests marked by looting and arson. Few people paid attention.

• In Washington, DC, a protest outside the White House briefly caused the building to be placed on lockdown. It has since been lifted and the Secret Service has reopened entrances and exits to the White House campus for both staff and media.

• In New York, protesters and police clashed in various incidents Friday night outside the Barclays Center with protesters throwing water bottles, what appeared to be a bottle of paint and more at police officers. At least 12 people were arrested, police said.

• Detroit Police have arrested nine people, one of whom tried to run over an officer with a car, Chief James Craig said.

• Protests also took place in at least 25 other cities, including Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and New Orleans.

Police officers control the crowd after a Police vehicle is set ablaze after protesters rally at the Barclays Center over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis Friday, May 29, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) (AP/AAP)
A US Secret Service officer stands inside the fence at the White House as demonstrators protest the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in police custody in Minneapolis, Friday, May 29, 2020, in Washington. ((AP Photo/Alex Brandon))

Derek Chauvin charged with murder

A Minnesota prosecutor charged Derek Chauvin with third-degree murder and manslaughter in the restraint death of Floyd on Friday afternoon (Saturday morning AEST).

Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman said he may yet bring more charges against the ex-officer.

Floyd, 46, died in the city he moved to for a better life, his last moments caught on video. (CNN)

The arrest comes the morning after protesters torched a police station that officers abandoned during a third night of violence.

Livestream video showed protesters entering the building and burn it to the ground.

The message from the President has been taken as a call to arms for a nation on the edge.

“Trump said when the looting starts, the shooting starts, and everyone is taking that as a threat,” a protester told 9News US correspondent Time Arvier.

“We are not out here to loot, we are not out here to do none of the chaos and stuff, we are just out here to protest and stand up for a life that was lost, that was taken unjustly.”

The violence isn’t expected to subside any time soon with protesters predicting the riots will continue until all four officers are convicted.

A protester carries a US flag upside, a sign of distress, next to a burning building in Minneapolis. (AP)
People enter a looted Office Depot Friday, May 29, 2020, in Minneapolis. Protests continued following the death of George Floyd, who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. ((AP Photo/John Minchillo))

“People are still going to act out. People are still mad. People have to release their anger, you know. It is the people who are supposed to protect us that did this,” another protestor said.

Floyd’s death ignites protests around the US

Although Minneapolis remains the epicentre of the protests, a number of other cities have all erupted in fury.

In the latest events sparked by Floyd’s death, hundreds of protestors shut down a major highway in San Jose in California.

Helicopter video showed traffic at a standstill on the southbound lanes of 101 in San Jose highway while some protestors were seen attacking cars.

Protestors block major highway in San Jose. May 30, 2020. (9News)
May 29, 2020 – Atlanta – After a peaceful march the Georgia State Capitol that swelled into the hundreds, protestors returned to the area around the Centennial Olympic Park and CNN center where some confronted police, who sprayed some demonstrators with pepper spray. They carried signs and chanted their messages of outrage over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Alyssa Pointer / alyssa.pointer@ajc.com (AP/AAP)
A protester holds a sign advising social distancing in front of police officers during a protest over the death of George Floyd Friday, May 29, 2020, in Los Angeles. Floyd died in police custody Monday in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) (AP/AAP)

In Ohio, officers have used pepper spray on protestors after a statehouse came under attack.

Seven people have been shot in Kentucky as the violence escalated overnight.

Concerning scenes from New York were also captures overnight with at least 72 people arrested.

Other locations impacts include Pheonix, Denver, Louisville, Memphis and Columbus.

Family of George Floyd speak out

Floyd’s uncle Selwyn Jones denounced the violent protests following his nephew’s death, calling them “absolutely outlandish”.

Tony L. Clark holds a photo of George Floyd on Thursday in Minneapolis.
Tony L. Clark holds a photo of George Floyd on Thursday in Minneapolis. (AP)
Minnesota state troopers provide protection as firefighters battle a fire after another night of protests, fires and looting over the arrest of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis. (AP)

“I think that is absolutely outlandish for them to destroy their own city, their own home, to make a point,” Jones told the Rapid City Journal in South Dakota.

“I don’t think the point that they’re trying to make is the point that we’re trying to make.”

Jones, who plans to attend peaceful demonstrations on Saturday, said people who have reacted with violent protest and looting are “taking advantage of a bad situation to express anger”.

Earlier, as smoke still drifted over Minneapolis on Friday morning, the state’s governor admitted an “abject failure” in response to a week of violent protests, and called for swift justice for police involved in the death of Mr Floyd.

The fires in US cities are still burning

This morning, US President Donald Trump said the death of George Floyd “should never have happened”.

“We are determined that justice be served,” he said.

But he also warned against further unrest.

“We can’t allow a situation like what happened in Minneapolis to descend into lawless anarchy and chaos,” Mr Trump said.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said the state would take over the response and that it’s time to show respect and dignity to those who are suffering.

“Minneapolis and St Paul are on fire. The fire is still smoldering in our streets. The ashes are symbolic of decades and generations of pain, of anguish unheard,” Walz said.

“Now generations of pain is manifesting itself in front of the world — and the world is watching.”

Political leaders raise their voice

Earlier, Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said he had spoken with the family of George Floyd and is calling for justice.

In a brief appearance online the former Vice President blamed systemic racism, which he called “an open wound” on American society, for Floyd’s death. He says it’s time for deep and lasting police reform.

Biden also took an indirect swipe at President Donald Trump without naming him, saying it was, “No time for incendiary tweets. No time to incite violence.”

Protesters burn the Minneapolis Police Department 3rd Precinct during protests. (AAP/TANNEN MAURY)

A night of flames and violence

Dozens of fires were also set in nearby St Paul, where nearly 200 businesses were damaged or looted.

Protests spread across the US, fuelled by outrage over Floyd’s death, and years of violence against African Americans at the hands of police.

Demonstrators clashed with officers in New York and blocked traffic in Columbus, Ohio, and Denver.

Trump threatened to bring Minneapolis “under control”, calling the protesters “thugs” and tweeting that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts”.

The tweet drew another warning from Twitter, which said the comment violated the platform’s rules, but the company did not remove it.

Trump also blasted the “total lack of leadership” in Minneapolis.

A visibly tired and frustrated Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey made his first public appearance of the night early Friday at City Hall and took responsibility for evacuating the precinct, saying it had become too dangerous for officers.

As Frey continued, a reporter cut across loudly with a question: “What’s the plan here?”

“With regard to?” Frey responded. Then he added: “There is a lot of pain and anger right now in our city. I understand that … What we have seen over the past several hours and past couple of nights here in terms of looting is unacceptable.”

He defended the city’s lack of engagement with looters — only a handful of arrests across the first two nights of violence — and said, “We are doing absolutely everything that we can to keep the peace.”

He said National Guard members were stationed in locations to help stem looting, including at banks, grocery stores and pharmacies.

May 29, 2020 – Atlanta – After a peaceful march the Georgia State Capitol that swelled into the hundreds, protestors returned to the area around the Centennial Olympic Park and CNN center where some confronted police, who sprayed some demonstrators with pepper spray. They carried signs and chanted their messages of outrage over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Alyssa Pointer / alyssa.pointer@ajc.com (AP/AAP)

CNN reporter and crew arrested

The Minnesota State Patrol said the journalists were among four people arrested as troopers were “clearing the streets and restoring order,” and they were released after being confirmed to be media members. CNN said on Twitter that the arrests were “a clear violation of their First Amendment rights.”

Firefighters worked Friday to contain a number of blazes as National Guard troops blocked access to streets where businesses had been damaged. They marched side by side and block by block as they expanded a perimeter around a heavily damaged area.

Protests first erupted Tuesday, a day after Floyd’s death in a confrontation with police captured on widely seen citizen video. In the footage, Floyd can be seen pleading as officer Derek Chauvin presses his knee against him. As minutes pass, Floyd slowly stops talking and moving.

Police officers face off with protestors near Barclays Center after a rally over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis Friday, May 29, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) (AP/AAP)

Governor Tim Walz activated the National Guard at the Minneapolis mayor’s request. The Guard tweeted minutes after the precinct burned that it had activated more than 500 soldiers across the metro area. A couple dozen Guard members, armed with assault-style rifles, blocked a street Friday morning near a Target store that has sustained heavy damage by looters.

The Guard said a “key objective” was to make sure firefighters could respond to calls, and said in a follow-up tweet that soldiers would assist the Minneapolis Fire Department. But no move was made to put out the 3rd Precinct fire. Assistant Fire Chief Bryan Tyner said fire crews could not safely respond to blazes at the precinct station and some surrounding buildings.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey speaks during a news conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (AP)

Earlier Thursday, dozens of businesses across the Twin Cities boarded up their windows and doors in an effort to prevent looting, with Minneapolis-based Target announcing it was temporarily closing two dozen area stores. Minneapolis shut down nearly its entire light-rail system and all bus service through Sunday out of safety concerns.

By Thursday night, hundreds of demonstrators returned to the Minneapolis neighbourhood at the centre of the violence. Demonstrators carried clothing mannequins from a looted Target and threw them onto a burning car.

Elsewhere in Minneapolis, thousands of peaceful demonstrators marched through the streets calling for justice.

Protestors demonstrate in front of police in riot gear in St. Paul, Minnesota. (AP)

‘We’re burning our own neighbourhood’

Local leaders repeatedly urged demonstrators to avoid violence.

“Please stay home. Please do not come here to protest. Please keep the focus on George Floyd, on advancing our movement and on preventing this from ever happening again,” tweeted St Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, who is black.

Erika Atson, 20, was among thousands of people who gathered outside government offices in downtown Minneapolis, where organisers had called for a peaceful protest. Many protesters wore masks because of the coronavirus pandemic, but there were few attempts at social distancing.

Atson, who is black, described seeing her 14- and 11-year-old brothers tackled by Minneapolis police years ago because officers mistakenly presumed the boys had guns. She said she had been at “every single protest” since Floyd’s death and worried about raising children who could be vulnerable in police encounters.

A protestor douses her face with milk after being exposed to tear gas fired by police in St. Paul, Minnesota. (AP)
Protesters burn the Minneapolis Police Department 3rd Precinct during protests over the Minneapolis, Minnesota arrest of George Floyd, who later died in police custody. (AAP/TANNEN MAURY)

“We don’t want to be here fighting against anyone. We don’t want anyone to be hurt. We don’t want to cause any damages,” she said. “We just want the police officer to be held accountable.”

The group marched peacefully for three hours before another confrontation with police broke out, though details were scarce.

After calling in the Guard on Thursday, Walz urged widespread changes in the wake of Floyd’s death.

“It is time to rebuild. Rebuild the city, rebuild our justice system and rebuild the relationship between law enforcement and those they’re charged to protect,” Walz said.

Among the casualties of the protests: a six-story building under construction that was to provide nearly 200 apartments of affordable housing.

Seen from Hiawatha Avenue, a large fire burns Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Minneapolis. (David Joles/Star Tribune via AP)
Protestors demonstrate outside of a burning Minneapolis 3rd Police Precinct in Minneapolis. (AP)

“We’re burning our own neighbourhood,” said a distraught Deona Brown, a 24-year-old woman standing with a friend outside the precinct station, where a small group of protesters were shouting at a dozen or so stone-faced police officers in riot gear. “This is where we live, where we shop, and they destroyed it.”

“What that cop did was wrong, but I’m scared now,” Brown said.

Others in the crowd saw something different in the wreckage.

Protesters destroyed property “because the system is broken,” said a young man who identified himself only by his nickname, Cash, and who said he had been in the streets during the violence. He dismissed the idea that the destruction would hurt residents of the largely black neighbourhood.

“They’re making money off of us,” he said angrily of the owners of the destroyed stores. He laughed when asked if he had joined in the looting or violence. “I didn’t break anything.”

Protesters are continuing to clash with police with an official department building being set alight, forcing officers to flee. (AP)
A police building was set alight by protesters in Minneapolis near where Geroge floyd died earlier this week. (AP)

In New York City, protesters defied New York’s coronavirus prohibition on public gatherings Thursday, clashing with police, while demonstrators blocked traffic in downtown Denver and downtown Columbus. A day earlier, demonstrators had taken to the streets in Los Angeles and Memphis.

In Louisville, Kentucky, police confirmed that at least seven people had been shot Thursday night as protesters demanded justice for Breonna Taylor, a black woman who was fatally shot by police in her home in March.

Anger over the killing extended to Africa, where the head of the African Union Commission on Friday rejected “continuing discriminatory practices against black citizens of the USA.” In a series of tweets, Moussa Faki Mahamat urged the “total elimination” of all forms of racism in the US.

Young men stand atop a burning car in the Target parking lot E. Lake St. during a third night of unrest following the death of George Floyd while in Minneapolis police custody. (Edward Washington,cq/Star Tribune via AP)

In Mississippi, the mayor of the community of Petal resisted calls to resign following his remarks about Floyd’s death. Hal Marx, a Republican, asked on Twitter: “Why in the world would anyone choose to become a police officer in our society today?” In a follow-up tweet, he said he “didn’t see anything unreasonable.”

The city on Thursday released a transcript of the 911 call that brought police to the grocery store where Floyd was arrested. The caller described someone paying with a counterfeit bill, with workers rushing outside to find the man sitting on a van. The caller described the man as “awfully drunk” and said he was “not in control of himself.”

Asked by the 911 operator whether the man was “under the influence of something,” the caller said: “Something like that, yes. He is not acting right.” Police said Floyd matched the caller’s description of the suspect.

A protester hurls a huge rock at a police car after a stabbing during Minneapolis riots.
A protester hurls a huge rock at a police car after a stabbing during Minneapolis riots. (9News)
Armed police respond after a man was stabbed during riots in Minneapolis.
Armed police respond after a man was stabbed during riots in Minneapolis. (9News)

State and federal authorities are investigating Floyd’s death.

Chauvin, the officer who knelt on Floyd’s neck, was fired Tuesday, along with three other officers involved in the arrest.

“It can’t be ‘normal.’ If we want our children to grow up in a nation that lives up to its highest ideals, we can and must be better,” Obama said in a statement.

A protester throws an object at police during the violence. (AP)

Obama said it will mainly fall on officials in Minnesota to ensure Floyd’s death is fully investigated “and that justice is ultimately done”.

“But it falls on all of us, regardless of our race or station — including the majority of men and women in law enforcement who take pride in doing their tough job the right way, every day — to work together to create a ‘new normal’ in which the legacy of bigotry and unequal treatment no longer infects our institutions or our hearts,” Obama continued.

A man holds a sign as riots over the death of George Floyd escalate,
A man holds a sign as riots over the death of George Floyd escalate, (9News)

Reported with CNN and AP

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Global report: new clues about how coronavirus formed as US severs ties with WHO

Scientists claim to have unearthed more clues about how the new coronavirus could have spread from bats through pangolins and into humans as the number of infections worldwide neared six million.

Writing in the journal Covid-19 Science Advances, researchers said that an examination of the closest relative of the virus found that it was circulating in bats but lacked the protein needed to bind to human cells.

The US-based scientists said this ability could have been acquired from a virus found in pangolins – a scaly mammal that is one of the most illegally trafficked animals on the planet.

Dr Elena Giorgi, one of the study’s lead authors, of Los Alamos national laboratory, said people had already looked at the pangolin link but scientists were still divided about their role in the evolution of Sars-Cov-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

“In our study, we demonstrated that indeed Sars-Cov-2 has a rich evolutionary history that included a reshuffling of genetic material between bat and pangolin coronavirus before it acquired its ability to jump to humans,” she said, adding that “close proximity of animals of different species in a wet market setting may increase the potential for cross-species spillover infections”.

The study still doesn’t confirm the pangolin as the animal that passed the virus to humans, but it adds weight to previous studies that have suggested it may have been involved.

However, Prof Edward Holmes, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Sydney in Australia, said more work on the subject was needed. “There is a clear evolutionary gap between Sars-Cov-2 and its closest relatives found to date in bat and pangolins,” he said. “The only way this gap will be filled is through more wildlife sampling.”

The findings came as Donald Trump announced that the US was severing its ties with the World Health Organisation because it had “failed to reform”.

In a speech at the White House devoted mainly to attacking China for its alleged shortcomings in tackling the initial outbreak of coronavirus, Trump said: “We will be today terminating our relationship with the World Health Organization and redirecting those funds to other worldwide and deserving urgent global public health needs.”

The US is the biggest funder of the global health body, paying about $450m in membership dues and voluntary contributions for specific programmes.

It comes as deaths in the US climbed to more than 102,000 with 1,747,000 infections, by far the biggest total in the world.

It emerged on Friday that one person who attended the controversial mass pool parties in the Ozarks last weekend had tested positive for the virus. Authorities said they wanted to inform other people who were also at the gatherings of the risk.

There was another large spike in deaths in Brazil, where more than 27,000 people have died from the disease and which has the world’s second highest number of cases on 465,000.

There were also big surges in reported deaths in Russia and Iran on Friday. The former suffered its biggest daily increase in deaths – 232 in 24 hours – bringing the nationwide total to 4,374 while the latter identified more coronavirus cases in a day than in any time since early April; 2,819 more people tested positive on Friday.

Egypt registered 1,289 new cases and 34 deaths, the health ministry has said, marking another record of daily increases on both counts despite stricter curfew rules.

Other developments across the world include:

  • A leading UK government adviser has warned that it is too early to lift lockdown restrictions as planned next month because the number of new infections is still too high. John Edmunds, a professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said he wanted the level of new cases to “driven down further” before larger gatherings are allowed as the government has said it wants to do. Tory MPs are still being bombarded by constituents with calls for Boris Johnson’s top adviser to quit after he appeared to breach lockdown rules.

  • Restrictions continue to be lifted to some degree across Europe, with thousands flocking to open-air cinemas to see films together for the first time in weeks.

  • In Australia, where states are expected to move to relax the rules to allow gatherings of more people from Monday, anti-vaccine protesters gathered in several cities to warn that they believed Covid-19 was a “scam”.

  • Also in Australia, scientists are examining the sewage waste in a town in Queensland where a 30-year-old man died this week from the virus. Nathan Turner is the youngest victim in the country so far and the case has baffled experts because he had not left the remote town of Blackwater.

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Louisville Cop Fires Pepper Pellets At TV Journalist During Live Broadcast

A Kentucky police officer was filmed calmly squeezing off pepper pellets at a TV news reporter in the middle of a live broadcast on protests in downtown Louisville Friday night over recent killings during police actions there and in Minneapolis.

Reporter Kaitlin Rust’s camera operator filmed the officer aiming straight at both of them during a report on WAVE 3 News. Rust began screaming: “I’m getting shot! Rubber bullets! Rubber bullets!”

“Katie, are you OK?” asked the news anchor back at the station. 

“It’s OK, it’s OK. It’s those pepper bullets,” Rust responded. Pepper balls contain chemicals similar to pepper spray and are shot in pellets. She was apparently struck during the broadcast, according to the news station.

Asked who the police were aiming at, Rust responded: “At us! Directly at us!” — though she had no idea why.

Though hundreds of protesters were gathered nearby, Rust and the camera operator were in a clearing, and there didn’t appear to be any problems in the immediate area. Rust had told the news anchors that she had followed police directions about where to stand. 

A police spokesperson confirmed that Rust had likely been struck by pepper balls because the department doesn’t use rubber bullets, WAVE 3 reported. But apparently no explanation for the shooting was provided.

Early Friday in Minneapolis, Minnesota State Patrol officers arrested CNN correspondent Omar Jimenez, his producer and two members of his crew while they were broadcasting live from protests there over the death Monday of George Floyd, a Black man who stopped breathing as a white police officer knelt on his neck.

Cameras kept rolling as Jimenez was placed in handcuffs and taken away after politely telling officers the crew would go wherever they instructed. The crew was released about two hours later. 

Louisville has been wracked by protests over the deaths of Floyd and of Breonna Taylor, a black EMT in Louisville. Taylor was fatally shot in her home by plainclothes police who were executing a “no-knock” search warrant in a drug case March 13. The man they were seeking reportedly didn’t live in the building and was already in custody.

Seven people were shot and two were hospitalized at protests Thursday night in Louisville, WAVE News reported. Protests appeared to be growing violent late Friday.

Earlier in the day, Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer announced no-knock warrants would be suspended.



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