BUT, now a directive is out that all Ukrainian refugees don't need any Covid pass or test to board any trains i Europe, just everybody else.
That seems to be the policy for air travel as well. I was just checking the requirements for the uninjected to go from Portugal to the UK and the usual PCR/antigen tests and passenger locator form are mandatory to and fro, UNLESS you come from Ukraine or Russia, then you don't need to do anything! See this UK website:

Ukraine or Russia​

If you began your journey in Ukraine or Russia, you do not need to:
  • complete a passenger locator form
  • take a COVID-19 test before travel to England or book a PCR test to take on arrival
 
An Epoch Times locked article:

Children in China Diagnosed With Leukemia After Taking Chinese Vaccines

After receiving her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, Li Jun’s 4-year-old developed a fever and coughs, which quickly subsided after intravenous therapy at the hospital. But after the second shot, the father could tell something was wrong.

Swelling appeared around his daughter’s eyes and did not go away. For weeks, the girl complained about pains on her legs, where bruises started to emerge seemingly out of nowhere. In January, a few weeks after the second dose, the 4-year-old was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

“My baby was perfectly healthy before the vaccine dose,” Li (an alias), from China’s north-central Gansu Province, told The Epoch Times. “I took her for a health check. Everything was normal.”
 
Here's a very recent interview with Catherine Austin Fitts. She discusses the biolabs and their many uses. Says that slow poisoning is a huge business and has been for a very long time, believes it was done to her in particular. As usual, she covers many subjects in depth, outlining what she knows and does not know.
 

PARIS, March 12 (Reuters) - France is to start offering a fourth COVID-19 vaccination shot to people over 80 years old who had their previous booster dose more than three months ago, French Prime Minister Jean Castex told daily Le Parisien in an interview published on Saturday.

The prime minister had said in January that France was ready to launch a campaign for fourth vaccine shots, or second booster, as soon as health authorities gave the green light. read more

In the interview with Le Parisien, Castex said a rebound in coronavirus infections would not change the government's plans to ease COVID restrictions from Monday, since pressure on French hospitals continued to ease. read more

https://www.france24.com/en/france/...se-as-france-prepares-to-lift-restrictionsThe latest upturn in infections is cause for concern as France prepares to lift most Covid-19 restrictions on Monday, with some health workers lamenting a premature move dictated by political imperatives ahead of the country’s presidential election.

Crowded out by the war in Ukraine and France’s looming presidential contest, Covid-19 has all but vanished from the French news in recent weeks. And yet the pandemic that brought the world to a standstill in 2020 is far from over.

In fact, after weeks of steady decline, Covid infections are creeping up again, according to the public health body, Santé publique France. The number of new infections topped 73,000 on Friday, up from 60,000 a week before. The more accurate 7-day average pointed to almost 70,000 new cases per day – a 20% increase week-on-week.

The national average conceals significant regional disparities, says Guillaume Rozier, founder of the government-sponsored website CovidTracker, establishing a link between the uptick in cases and French regions’ staggered return to school after the winter holidays.
“The rise in cases is most apparent in northern France and along the Mediterranean coast, roughly corresponding to the areas where children returned to school earliest (on February 21),” he explained.

The schools’ rentrée is known to drive infections as pupils, teachers and parents mingle after the Winter break. Health experts have also flagged a slackening of social distancing measures as people lower their guard.



Another potential infection driver is the spread of Omicron’s BA.2 subvariant, which early studies suggest could be up to 30% more infectious than the strain that was prevalent so far.

Off with their masks

France is not alone in registering an uptick in cases, with Germany, Britain and the Netherlands reporting similar trends. However, like its European peers, the French government is determined to stick to its timetable to lift restrictions.

'Now is not the time to do this', UK expert says of move to ease Covid restrictions

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Video: Nine minutes plus (from the British lockdown agenda)

Rules requiring people to show a Covid-19 vaccine passport to access venues will be lifted on Monday, March 14, just under a month before the country’s presidential election. So will the requirement to wear face masks indoors.

Henceforth, the face coverings that have become a symbol of the pandemic will be required only on public transport, in hospitals and in care homes for the elderly – marking a major policy shift that some experts and health workers have described as premature.

“France’s health minister had said the move would be conditional on a number of health indicators. But it seems that sticking to the timetable is now the priority,” said the Swiss-based epidemiologist Antoine Flahaut, referring to Health Minister Olivier Véran’s claim that restrictions would only be lifted if the incidence rate – the number of new cases per 100,000 people – stayed below 500 (it is now at 546).

The government is also short of its target of bringing the number of patients in ICU below 1,500. The number has only recently slipped below the 2,000-mark, its lowest level since early December.

Politics trumping health concerns

According to Jérôme Marty, who heads the doctors’ union UFML, the decision to lift restrictions is both untimely and misguided, driven by political imperatives.

“It wouldn’t have bothered me if infections were falling, but clearly it’s not the case. Moreover, we’re dropping face masks without implementing any parallel measures to ventilate closed spaces and prevent viral concentrations,” he told FRANCE 24. “With the presidential campaign in full swing, the motive is clearly political, not sanitary.”

>> Read more: In vaccine-sceptic France, candidates walk tightrope on Covid measures

The fear is that hospitalisations could also start edging up again, as is already the case in the UK, though France’s high vaccination rate and the arrival of spring should help ease the pressure on hospitals.

“The public can count on better vaccine protection and greater knowledge of the virus than in the past,” said Marty. “The problem is that we still have five million people who are not vaccinated and some 300,000 who are immunocompromised.”

Overcoming vaccine scepticism in the Caribbean

Health workers are particularly concerned about the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, where the number of new cases has once again crossed the alert threshold.

So far, only 45% of Guadeloupeans have received a first vaccine jab. Less than a quarter of the population has completed its vaccination with three doses. Local officials are hoping to overcome widespread vaccine scepticism with the introduction of the Novavax jab, a more traditional vaccine compared with the messenger RNA types used so far.

Anti-vaccination protesters attack Guadeloupe hospital staff
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01:23 Video

Announcing the territory’s 1,000th hospital death from Covid-19 in late February, local health workers lamented a “carnage without precedent since Guadeloupe’s cholera epidemic of 1865-6”.

As the head of the World Health Organisation, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, warned on Wednesday, “this pandemic is far from over”.

This article has been adapted from the original in French.

The above article seems to have been scrubbed...🤔

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As we know the Hollywood crowd are big proponents of the Vax. But, that does not mean that Hurt was.

William Hurt, who became a top leading man in the 1980s, winning an Oscar for 1985’s “Kiss of the Spider Woman” and starring in “The Big Chill” and “Body Heat,” died Sunday of natural causes. He was 71. Hurt’s death was confirmed to Variety by his friend, Gerry Byrne.
His son Will said in a statement, “It is with great sadness that the Hurt family mourns the passing of William Hurt, beloved father and Oscar winning actor, on March 13, 2022, one week before his 72nd birthday. He died peacefully, among family, of natural causes.”

Hurt was nominated for four Oscars over the course of his long career, scoring two best actor nominations for “Broadcast News” and “Children of a Lesser God” and a supporting actor nod for less than 10 minutes of screen time in “A History of Violence.” He was one of the most heralded performers of the 1980s, becoming something of a cerebral sex symbol and a reluctant, albeit bankable, movie star.

Hurt later transitioned into character roles in the 1990s and successfully alternated between big screen projects and television, scoring Emmy nominations for his work as a whistleblower in “Damages” and his portrayal of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson in “Too Big to Fail.”

More recently, Hurt became well known to a younger generation of movie lovers with his portrayal of the no-nonsense General Thaddeus Ross in 2008’s “The Incredible Hulk.” He later reprised the role in “Captain America: Civil War” and “Avengers: Infinity War,” “Avengers: Endgame” and “Black Widow.”


Hurt was born March 20, 1950 in Washington, D.C. His mother, Claire Isabel, worked at Time Inc., and his father Alfred Hurt (1910–1996), was a career bureaucrat, working for the United States Agency for International Development and the State Department. His parents separated when he was 6 years old, and his mother remarried Henry Luce III, the son of Time Magazine publisher Henry Luce.

Raised in relative privilege, Hurt went on to attend Tufts University, where he studied theology, before moving to Juilliard to study acting. After appearing on stage, Hurt secured a lead role in “Altered States,” playing a troubled scientist in Ken Russell’s offbeat film, a notable entry in the body horror genre. But a year later, Hurt achieved a new level of prominence, appearing opposite Kathleen Turner in “Body Heat,” a steamy noir that updated the kind of treachery and double-crossing seen in the likes of “The Big Sleep” and “Double Indemnity” with a bracing sexuality. It transformed both performers, who positively ignited on screen, into major stars. Hurt followed that with another lead role in “Gorky Park” and was part of the ensemble of “The Big Chill,” a drama about a group of friends reuniting that became a touchstone for the baby boomer generation.

That was all a lead up to one of the most stunning periods of dominance ever enjoyed by a movie star. From 1986 to 1988, Hurt was nominated for three consecutive best actor Oscars, winning for his portrayal of a gay window dresser in Hector Babenco’s “The Kiss of the Spider Woman.” Roger Ebert, writing in the Chicago Sun Times, praised Hurt’s work, crediting him with creating “…a character utterly unlike anyone else he has ever played — a frankly theatrical character, exaggerated and mannered — and yet he never seems to be reaching for effects.” His Oscar-nominated work in “Children of a Lesser God” and “Broadcast News,” playing a teacher at a school for the deaf and an affable, slightly dim-witted newsman, showcased his range. The commercial and critical success of those films rocketed Hurt to the A-list, but he didn’t seem to relish the celebrity.

“It’s not right that my privacy is invaded to the extent that it is,” Hurt told the New York Times during a 1989 interview. “I’m a very private man, and I have the right to be. I never said that because I was an actor you can have my privacy, you can steal my soul. You can’t.”

Perhaps it was that aversion to notoriety that led Hurt to turn some major movies over the course of his career, with the actor passing on opportunities to star in the likes of “Jurassic Park” and “Misery.” His time in the spotlight also coincided with a period of personal trouble for the actor, one in which he struggled with drugs and alcohol.

“I was utterly miserable and, finally, I had been miserable enough, long enough, and I said, ‘I’m finished, I can’t hack it, can’t do it,'” Hurt told the Washington Post in 1989, remembering the time before he went to rehab.

A relationship with Marlee Matlin, his co-star in “Children of a Lesser God,” was troubled. Matlin later wrote in a memoir that Hurt was emotionally and physically abusive to her. In a statement at the time, Hurt, through a spokesperson, said: “My own recollection is that we both apologized and both did a great deal to heal our lives. Of course, I did and do apologize for any pain I caused. And I know we have both grown. I wish Marlee and her family nothing but good.”

The 1990s proved to be a less fruitful time for Hurt professionally. He earned raves for his work in “The Doctor” as an arrogant surgeon who undergoes a change-of-heart after experiencing health struggles, but other films such as “Second Chances” and “Until the End of the World” failed to generate much attention. A rare attempt at popcorn entertainment with 1998’s big-screen adaptation of “Lost in Space” was a modest hit, but didn’t earn enough money to spawn a franchise and Hurt looked miserable throughout the movie.

He also appeared in the TV mini-series version of “Dune,” in Steven Spielberg’s “A.I. Artificial Intelligence” and in M. Night Shyamalan’s “The Village.”

As the aughts dawned, Hurt, his blonde hair thinning, seemed to settle into life in supporting roles, scoring scenery stealing turns as an urbane spy in “The Good Shepherd,” a demanding father in “Into the Wild,” and, most memorably, as a sinister mob boss in “A History of Violence.” His role in the latter film, in which he admits to his hit man brother that “when mom brought you home from the hospital, I tried to strangle you in your crib,” was a master class is doing a lot with a little bit of screen time.

Hurt was married to the actress Mary Beth Hurt from 1971 to 1982 and was married to Heidi Henderson from 1989 to 1991.

I just tested positive for COVID. I’ve had a scratchy throat for a couple days, but am feeling fine otherwise. Michelle and I are grateful to be vaccinated and boosted, and she has tested negative," Obama wrote on Twitter.

"It’s a reminder to get vaccinated if you haven’t already, even as cases go down," the former president urged.


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Obama has been a strong proponent of vaccines since they've become available. He has also been a strong proponent of public health measures such as masking and social distancing meant to slow the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19.

He is among a number of high-profile politicians who have contracted the virus at some point throughout the pandemic. Nearly 150 members of Congress have caught the disease, according to GovTrack, a public accountability project.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that 65.2% of U.S. adults are fully vaccinated and 44.3% of the fully vaccinated have received a booster shot. The CDC relaxed its guidelines for indoor masking in late February, taking a more holistic approach that meant the vast majority of Americans live in areas without the recommendation for indoor masking in public.

'AMPLE ROOM FOR UNCERTAINTY': As COVID cases rise again in Europe, could US see the same?
DYING FOR CARE: When does a nursing home COVID-19 death count? It's complicated.

Contributing: The Associated Press
Follow Matthew Brown on Twitter @mrbrownsir.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Former President Barack Obama tests positive for COVID-19, says he's 'feeling fine'

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As of today in France :

No more masks to be worn indoors (except on public transport).
°End of the vaccination pass (except in health establishments, old people's homes and establishments for people with disabilities where the "health pass" remains mandatory).
°End of the wearing of masks in class in schools, colleges and high schools.
°End of the protocol in companies and the obligation to wear a mask.

"Health pass

°Since 14 March, the "vaccination pass" has been suspended until further notice in all places where it was required (places of leisure and culture, commercial catering activities, trade fairs and exhibitions, etc.).
°However, the "health pass" remains in force in health establishments, retirement homes and establishments for people with disabilities.
 
As of today in France :

No more masks to be worn indoors (except on public transport).
°End of the vaccination pass (except in health establishments, old people's homes and establishments for people with disabilities where the "health pass" remains mandatory).
°End of the wearing of masks in class in schools, colleges and high schools.
°End of the protocol in companies and the obligation to wear a mask.

"Health pass

°Since 14 March, the "vaccination pass" has been suspended until further notice in all places where it was required (places of leisure and culture, commercial catering activities, trade fairs and exhibitions, etc.).
°However, the "health pass" remains in force in health establishments, retirement homes and establishments for people with disabilities.

It is beyond frustrating to me that vaxx passes are being quietly scrubbed all over the world, while Canada's quisling WEF government intransigently refuses to scrap the travel mandate.

I just got news that much of my family is gathering at my grandparents' place in a few weeks; of course, I can't go, as the moment I enter the country I cannot leave it.

Two years of this nonsense now and I'd be lying if I said it wasn't getting to me.
 
The WHO pandemic treaty (or accord as some would prefer to call it), stating WHO will take over control of all nations' pandemic management in future, is here challenged by The World Council for Health Law and Activism Committee. I've been reading about this WHO initiative and grinding my teeth over it - of all the dangerous but not out of character undertakings this was a stand-out even at this time.

1. The Open Letter from World Health Council:

"FIRST OPEN LETTER ON THE WHO'S PANDEMIC TREATY. ...... The World Council for Health (WCH), a coalition of scientists, doctors, lawyers, and civil society advocacy organizations, opposes the World Health Organisation (WHO)’s moves to implement a power grab in the form of a global pandemic agreement, while the world’s attention is diverted by the latest crisis."

From this WCH open letter, inviting support in their opposition to the WHO plan, addressed to basically everyone, organizations and individuals alike:

"If you or your organisation want to support World Council for Health in this crucial campaign:
Link to the open letter: First Open Letter on the WHO's Pandemic Treaty

2. A Nature article linked in the open letter:

The more informative article, embedded in the WCH call for support is this, from Nature in December 2021.

World commits to a pandemic-response pact: what’s next

Here's a key excerpt from the Nature article.

"Many presidents and prime ministers ignored WHO recommendations regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and have not been held accountable for their actions, according to several analyses. For this reason, the European Council and Tedros, along with representatives of a number of countries, including Germany, France and South Africa, have expressed their strong support for a legally binding pandemic treaty."

3. The second Nature article, linked in the first Nature article:

HOWEVER... another Nature article from May 2021 comes out with so much propoganda and lack of comprehension about the real failings in dealing with Covid-19 that I see that Nature is definitely on the side of the WHO here. Nature is repeating we need another level to oversee pandemic responses, this time from high, middle and low-income countries that will whip everybody into line. It involves vaccines. Quelle surprise.... and more power for the WHO to declare a pandemic.

How the world failed to curb COVID
 
(CNN) A Florida judge on Monday blocked the release of certain records related to the death investigation of actor and comedian Bob Saget.

According to court minutes obtained by CNN affiliate WKMG, Ninth Judicial Circuit Judge Vincent Chiu granted the Saget family's petition for the permanent injuction.

The judge's decision came nearly a month after Saget's family filed a lawsuit to block the release of some records, citing privacy concerns, as CNN previously reported.

"The entire Saget family is grateful that the Judge granted their request for an injunction to preserve Bob's dignity, as well as their privacy rights, especially after suffering this unexpected and tragic loss. We are pleased this issue has been resolved, and the healing process can continue to move forward. All of the prayers and well wishes continuously extended to the family are beyond appreciated," Saget family attorney Brian Bieber said in a statement to CNN.


Saget, 65, was found dead in his hotel room in Orlando, Florida, in January. The Orange County Medical Examiner's Office determined that his death was accidental, most likely due to him falling backward and striking his head.

On Monday, a source familiar with the investigation told CNN The Orange County, Fla., Sheriff's Department completed its investigation into Saget's death and issued a final report on the matter.

The report's findings are consistent with the medical examiner's initial ruling that Saget's death was accidental in nature, according to the source, who is not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.

The document is subject to the court order barring the release of any new information about the comedian's death
"There are no surprises in the report," the source said.

Saget's widow Kelly Rizzo and her three daughters last month filed a lawsuit against Orange County's sheriff and the medical examiner's office, requesting that some investigation records related to the death be exempt from being revealed publicly because of their graphic nature in how they portray the late actor.

"In the process of these investigations, Defendants created records which include photographs, video recordings, audio recordings, statutorily protected autopsy information, and all other statutorily protected information," the lawsuit stated. "Upon information and belief, some of these Records graphically depict Mr. Saget, his likeness or features, or parts of him, and were made by Defendants during Defendants' investigations."

The family argues in the lawsuit that the release of this information -- whether through a public records request or any other avenue -- would cause them to "suffer irreparable harm in the form of extreme mental pain, anguish, and emotional distress."




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More evidence Covid was tinkered with in a lab? Now scientists find virus contains tiny chunk of DNA that matches sequence patented by Moderna THREE YEARS before pandemic began

Whilst you were distracted by the Battle for Ukraine, Documents were published confirming Moderna created the Covid-19 Virus

On February 23 the Daily Mail ran an article showing that Moderna has patented the 19 base letter (nucleotide) sequence which codes for the Furin Cleavage site in Covid-19.

They cited a Paper by Scientists in India, Switzerland, Italy and the US (cautiously entitled: MSH3 Homology and Potential Recombination Link to SARS-CoV-2 Furin Cleavage Site) in which they calculated that the chances of a 19 nucleotide sequence patented by Moderna randomly appearing in Covid-19 in circumstances where it does not appear anywhere else in nature are 1 in 3 trillion.

But they failed to make the obvious deduction there from. Had they made said obvious deduction I fear that might have been the last scientific deduction they ever got published!

They decided to investigate the RNA sequence for the Furin cleavage site in the Covid-19 Spike Protein to see if it occurred anywhere else in nature. .

READ MORE
 
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