Chicago's Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx faces criticism for handling of recent crime spree
Attorney Andrew Stoltmann provides insight to Chicago's rising crime rates and runaway looting.
Added security detail will be deployed for six more months, and cost tax payers millions
The presenter's husband has been in hospital since March last year.
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The warning came as the UK reported a record number of daily deaths for the second time in a week.
Knowsley in Merseyside currently has the highest rate of new coronavirus infections, with a seven-day rolling rate of 1,136 cases per 100,000 people.
Texas senator appears to believe accord only benefits residents of French capital and attracts vicious rebuke from comedian Seth Rogen over role in inciting Capitol riot
Kate shared a frank update on her husband's condition.
Britain and the European Union are at odds over the British government's refusal to grant EU representatives' full diplomatic status in London after Brexit. An EU member state for 46 years, Britain voted in a 2016 referendum to leave, and completed its tortuous journey out of the bloc on Dec. 31, when Brexit fully took effect. The BBC reported that the Foreign Office was refusing to grant the same diplomatic status and privileges to EU Ambassador Joao Vale de Almeida and his team as it gives to envoys of countries, on the basis that the EU is not a nation state.
The average London house price has broken the £500,000 barrier for the first time, according to official figures, as stamp duty cut has fuelled sales despite many movers escaping to the country. Reports have suggested that people looking for new homes during the pandemic have tended to move out of cities in pursuit of gardens and more space, but figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed that prices grew by 9.7 per cent in the capital in the year to November. This was higher than the 7.6 per cent annual increase seen nationwide, as average prices hit a record high of £250,000. The ONS said that demand for property in inner-London is likely influenced by a broader range of factors than the rest of the UK as it has a relatively high proportion of properties bought for investment, including by cash buyers and overseas investors. High property prices also means that demand could be particularly responsive to the temporary stamp duty holiday, it added. Two London boroughs - Kensington and Chelsea, and Brent - recorded annual house price growth of more than 20 per cent. Nick Leeming, chairman of Jackson-Stops, the estate agents, said: “The market was firing on all cylinders in November and our own branch data reflected this, with completions across our national network up 71 per cent in November in comparison to three months prior. “In particular, prices in London have rebounded strongly, partly driven by a return of international buyers returning to areas such as Kensington and Chelsea, to beat the additional foreign buyer tax due to be introduced in April.” There have been calls to extend the stamp duty holiday beyond March because of fears that some buyers who are already part way through the process could miss out. Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics warned that there was a clear scenario in which house prices “reversed some of their recent gains” in the next year. He said the eventual withdrawal of the furlough scheme, mortgage payment holidays and the return of the stamp duty threshold to its former level "likely would leave house prices about two per cent lower by the end of the year than at present".
Here is the latest data on infection rates in each part of England.
Vaccines that use harmless viruses as a delivery mechanism are vulnerable to being attacked by our immune system – but experimenting with how they are given could get around this.
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Video of a rare snow devil at Stowe Mountain Resort, Vermont, was posted to Twitter on January 18.Benjamin Trachtenberg recorded a video that shows lines of skiers standing still as the snow devil sweeps through the group. Trachtenberg told Storyful that the snow devil lasted for close to 30 seconds and did not injure the large group.Certified broadcast meteorologist Tyler Jankoski said on his Twitter post that the weather event can be called a snow devil or a “snownado”. According to the World Meteorological Organization, snow devil is “a very rare phenomenon.” Credit: Benjamin Trachtenberg via Storyful
Two controversial figures forced to stand down as federal government set for reboot
Officers in North Wales say ‘people who do not live locally’ are travelling to area hit by heavy rainfall
Israel is currently the only country to have vaccinated more than a third of the population.
Michel Barnier has warned that there is “always a risk” that other European countries will follow Brexit Britain and leave the EU. The EU’s chief negotiator said there was still “anger” against Brussels in many regions of Europe. He said that Brexit had exposed the dangers and consequences of leaving the bloc but said it was up to the EU to prove that membership of the bloc was worthwhile. “We have to draw the lessons of Brexit. We have to understand why 52 percent of the British people voted against Europe [...] ” It is obviously too late for the UK but it is not too late for the other member states,” Mr Barnier said. He said, “Today, in many regions, there is this anger, the same feeling against Europe, the same problem to understand what we’re doing at the European level,” he said. “We have to be vigilant because it is always a risk for the future,” he added, “This risk can be combated by the proof that it is clearly a better situation to be inside the EU than outside.” “Brexit has exposed the consequences of leaving the EU for all to see,” he said, ““Even though we have a deal the UK’s choices mean that there will be inevitable short-term and long-term consequences.” He added, “Together, we can build a Europe that not only protects but also inspires. A Europe that Europeans would never dream of leaving. “Why should we leave the EU debate to anti EU parties? For all those who believe in the European project this is not the time to sit back and to be complacent.” Mr Barnier said he had noted British plans to diverge from EU rules such as the Working Time Directive after Brexit. “We are not surprised because we are not naive,” Mr Barnier said. The important thing for the EU was that Britain’s new found regulatory freedom did not become “a tool for dumping against us.” If Britain was to undercut EU standards to gain an unfair competitive advantage over European businesses, Mr Barnier said, the bloc would not hesitate to use remedial measures, which could include tariffs, in the trade deal. “In that case we will use the tools included in the treaty,” he said. Mr Barnier is soon to step down as the EU’s chief negotiator to become a special advisor to Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission. His focus will be on the implementation of the Withdrawal Agreement and ratification of the Brexit trade deal. From March, he plans to return to French politics. He was speaking after being named European of the Year by the European Movement Ireland.
Fire broke out in an under-construction building at the site of the Serum Institute of India but vaccine production will not be affected, officials say
President says he will not reveal details until speaking to predecessor
GPs want to accelerate Scotland's vaccine roll-out by bypassing health boards and ordering their stocks themselves, the Telegraph can disclose as it emerged 600,000 doses have arrived in the country. The British Medical Association (BMA) yesterday asked Prof Alison Strath, the Scottish Government's interim chief pharmaceutical officer, to consider allowing family doctors to "directly" order the supplies they need to vaccinate their patients. Dr Andrew Buist, chair of the BMA's Scottish GP's committee, said the move would "streamline" the process for them getting the vaccine as Nicola Sturgeon aims to "ramp up" the pace of delivery. Family doctors are currently forced to place their orders with their local health boards and Dr Buist said that sometimes the doses arrive as promised, but other times they do not. He added: "We should cut out unnecessary layers and steps." He said some practices were still yet to receive any of their requested doses even though the First Minister has promised all over-80s will be vaccinated by the first week of February.