Connect with us

முக்கியச் செய்திகள்

WHO declares Ebola outbreak in DR Congo a global health emergency

Published

on

The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo a public health emergency of international concern.

The agency said the outbreak in DR Congo's eastern Ituri province, which has seen around 246 suspected cases and 80 deaths reported, does not meet the criteria of a pandemic emergency.

But it warned it could potentially be "a much larger outbreak" than what is currently being detected and reported, with significant risk of local and regional spread.

The current strain of Ebola is caused by the Bundibugyo virus, the health agency said, for which there are no approved drugs or vaccines.

Early symptoms include fever, muscle pain, fatigue, headache and sore throat, and are followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, a rash and bleeding.

The WHO said there are now eight laboratory-confirmed cases of the virus, with other suspected cases and deaths across three health zones including Bunia the capital of Ituri province, and the gold-mining towns of Mongwalu and Rwampara.

One case of the virus has been confirmed in the capital Kinshasa, believed to be in a patient returning from Ituri.

The global health agency added the virus has spread beyond DR Congo, with two confirmed cases reported in neighbouring Uganda. Ugandan officials said a 59-year-old man who died on Thursday had tested positive.

In a statement, the Ugandan government said the patient who died was a Congolese citizen whose body has already been returned to DR Congo.

The WHO said the ongoing security situation and humanitarian crisis in DR Congo, combined with high population mobility, the urban location of the hotspot, and the large number of informal healthcare facilities in the region increased the risk of spread.

Countries bordering the DR Congo are considered high risk due to trade and travel.

The WHO advised that DR Congo and Uganda establish emergency operation centres to monitor, trace, and implement infection-prevention measures.

To minimise spread, the health agency said confirmed cases should be immediately isolated and treated until two Bundibugyo virus-specific tests conducted at least 48 hours apart are negative.

For countries bordering regions with confirmed cases, governments should enhance surveillance and health reporting.

The WHO added that countries outside the affected region should not close their borders or restrict travel and trade as "such measures are usually implemented out of fear and have no basis in science".

WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned there are currently "significant uncertainties to the true number of infected persons and geographic spread" of the outbreak.

Ebola was first discovered in 1976 in what is now DR Congo, and is thought to have spread from bats. This is the 17th outbreak of the deadly viral disease in the country.

It is spread through direct contact with bodily fluids and through broken skin, causing severe bleeding and organ failure.

There is no proven cure for Ebola, with the average fatality rate is around 50%, according to the WHO.

Africa CDC previously said it was concerned by the high risk of further spread due to the urban settings of Rwampara and Bunia, and mining activities in Mongwalu.

The health agency's executive director Dr Jean Kaseya added that "significant population movement" between the affected areas and neighbouring countries also meant regional co-ordination was essential.

Around 15,000 people have died from the virus in African countries over the past 50 years.

DR Congo's deadliest outbreak was between 2018 and 2020, during which nearly 2,300 people died.

Last year, 45 people died after an outbreak in a remote region.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c2l2p0wwzzdo?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

முக்கியச் செய்திகள்

Robert paid £726 to skip the driving test waiting list. New laws mean others won't be able to

Published

on

Robert Kamugisha had been desperate to sit his driving test. But the waiting list stretched for months, and every week without a licence meant more pressure – financially and personally.

So when he was offered earlier test dates for a hefty fee, he took the risk.

The 21-year-old criminology student from Croydon spent most of his savings – £726 – on three test slots, all bought through resellers who snap up appointments and sell them on at inflated prices. The actual cost to take a test is £62.

New government rules now mean only a learner driver can book their own test, part of a crackdown on third party operators using bots to hoover up thousands of slots. But it was too late for Robert.

"I spent most of my savings," he tells the BBC after passing in December, on his third attempt. "I felt like I was being scammed."

Driving instructors say the black market trade has exploded as waiting times across the UK have soared, and thousands of learner drivers have struggled to get driving tests without a long wait.

Figures provided to the BBC from the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) earlier this week revealed the national average wait time for a practical driving test in April 2026 in Great Britain was 22.3 weeks.

Across the nations, Scotland's wait time was 22.9 weeks, in England it was 22.7 weeks, and Wales was slightly shorter at 17.3 weeks.

Robert says his driving instructor encouraged him to use a reseller to secure an earlier test date, reassuring him it was legitimate. The reseller logged in with Robert's details, booked the test, and the DVSA sent him a confirmation.

"Once I got the booking confirmation, that's when I felt a bit of relief," Robert tells the BBC after contacting BBC Your Voice. "The expense though was crazy."

Robert paid £242 per test, plus £150 each time to use his instructor's car, bringing his total cost to £1,176 – a figure that does not include the cost of his lessons.

Sophie Stuchfield, a driving instructor from Watford, tells the BBC the black market has taken advantage of the demand for earlier test slots.

"People have found ways to manipulate the system to be able to book thousands of driving tests themselves to then be able to resell on for a massively high inflated fee," she adds.

The use of automated booking programmes, or bots, has plagued the DVSA booking system since a huge test backlog built up during the pandemic.

Illicit operators moved in to exploit the demand and used bots to book tests on the official website and resell them.

Sophie has been added to messaging lists where third parties advertise driving tests for sale around Britain for hundreds of pounds.

"I've had 3,341 messages from people trying to sell me driving tests," Sophie says.

"Many people [learner drivers] message me on social media telling me that they are being asked to pay £200, £250, £300 for a driving test and sometimes it's unfortunately from their own instructor."

Sophie has refused to charge learners extra fees on the day of their driving tests to use her car, which has angered other instructors in her area who do.

She says some instructors wait until a week before a learner's test to tell them it's an extra £300 on test day to use their car.

"I've had phone calls from other local driving instructors in this area and they're asking me why do I not charge a fee to take someone on a driving test?"

"My response is always, 'I don't believe I should,'" she says. "I already feel sorry for that person on how much they're having to spend on learning to drive."

The new rules introduced this week mean it is now against the law for anyone apart from the learner driver to book their driving test with the DVSA and the government hopes this will stop third parties accessing the booking system using learner drivers details.

From now, it means anyone selling or changing a test on someone else's behalf will be breaking the law.

Those rules won't have a direct impact on waiting times for test slots, but should result in fewer wasted tests and help the DVSA measure where real demand is – helping the agency divert resources to testing centres that need it most.

But Carly Brookfield, chief executive of the Driving Instructors Association, doubts the changes will fix the problem.

She says the rule change scapegoats the majority of instructors who were doing the right thing, and she is already hearing reports of frustrated learners who now cannot be assisted by their instructor to book a test.

"There have been things the agency's done that have been productive to stop the rot of the bots," she tells the BBC. "But the reality is we've also got this massive test supply issue that if there's not enough tests going in, people will still not be able to get a test anywhere."

Simon Lightwood, the Minister for Roads and Buses, said the government had inherited record waiting times and a huge backlog of learners waiting for tests, with the system seeing too many people paying over the odds to third-party touts.

"But we're taking action and seeing results, delivering almost two million tests over the past year, more than 158,000 extra tests since June 2025, and military driving examiners now on the ground helping boost capacity across the country," he added.

Further changes will be introduced in June which will allow learners to swap their driving tests to only three of their local test centres.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx219pn5g70o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

Continue Reading

முக்கியச் செய்திகள்

Soprano Dame Felicity Lott dies aged 79

Published

on

Dame Felicity Lott, one of Britain's best-loved sopranos, has died at the age of 79.

The singer died on 15 May after a recent interview she gave to the BBC in which she announced she had been diagnosed with terminal cancer.

The acclaimed soprano built an international career spanning four decades, in which she performed at opera houses and concert halls around the world, singing works by composers including Richard Strauss, Schubert and Mozart.

Dame Felicity's agent told the BBC that "in her work, she was sublime; inhabiting every performance with precision, depth and beauty".

"But it was her humanity and kindness that really touched people… [We] will miss her warmth, sparkle and gloriously self-deprecating humour," the agent said.

Dame Felicity lived with "her illness with great dignity and acceptance" and "was characteristically classy and elegant to the end", the agent added.

Born on 8 May, 1947 in Cheltenham, Dame Felicity was musical from an early age.

At five-years-old she was playing the piano and by 12 she was singing and playing violin.

She went on to study at the Royal Academy of Music, and made her operatic debut and breakthrough role as a last minute stand-in as the character Pamina in Mozart's The Magic Flute in 1975.

At home, she was seen frequently on television, sang regularly at the BBC Proms and was made a Dame in 1996.

She was also the recipient of the Légion d'Honneur, France's highest cultural award.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpqp1938d8do?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

Continue Reading

முக்கியச் செய்திகள்

The British White Lotus? A group trip goes wrong in BBC drama Two Weeks in August

Published

on

"It's a group holiday gone wrong," says actress Jessica Raine about new BBC drama Two Weeks in August.

Set on a sun-soaked Greek island, the drama follows a group of university friends reuniting for a long-awaited summer holiday.

Now older, the friends are still connected, but marriage, children and mental health struggles have reshaped their relationships.

Beneath the cocktails, boat trips and villa life, tensions simmer and emotions rise. Then an illicit kiss threatens to change their lives forever.

For its cast, the series felt instantly recognisable. "I've been on this holiday," says Damien Molony. "I know who these people are."

At the center is Zoe, played by Raine, a teacher and mother quietly struggling under the pressure of holding everything together.

Molony plays her husband Dan, whose depression hangs heavily over the trip, as cracks in their marriage begin to show.

Raine says she was drawn in by the script's exploration of modern expectations placed on women.

"I think it chimes really well with my generation of people-pleasing," she says.

"There's this idea that in order to be a 'good woman', you have to sacrifice yourself for your children or your husband… and the notion that you can have it all is a complete lie."

Molony says he was initially struck by how dark his character's early scenes felt when he first read the scripts.

"I didn't know it was a comedy at first," exclaims the Irish actor. "It felt quite tragic." He describes Dan as someone who is visibly struggling but unable to express it in a way that helps him.

"He's constantly trying to smile for the camera," he says. "But he doesn't really know how anymore."

From the outset, Dan's dark and emotional scenes put into motion a series of events that strain the wider group.

Antonia Thomas, who plays Jess, says the series captures what happens when people who once knew each other intimately realise how much they've changed.

"There's a real hopefulness about booking a nice villa somewhere and thinking everyone's going to have a great time together," says Antonia.

"But people change. They're not the same people they were 10 years ago."

Thomas says that gap between expectation and reality creates a particular tension within the group.

"It becomes a kind of pressure cooker," she explains. "Everyone falls back into old roles, even if they don't fit anymore."

She adds that Jess's place in the group reflects that sense of quiet disconnection, "She tries to connect, but doesn't always get it right."

You wouldn't be wrong to think of Two Weeks in August as something of a British White Lotus, a comparison its writer Catherine Shepherd has addressed.

Speaking in a recent interview with the Royal Television Society, Shepherd said that the tone and intent of the two shows are different.

She said that "the White Lotus is about people who are super rich", whereas Two Weeks in August focuses on "relatively normal people with normal concerns".

That distinction is key to the series' tone, less glossy satire and more grounded discomfort. Filmed in Malta and Gozo, the series also stars Leila Farzad and Hugh Skinner, whose performances lean further into the show's dark comedy.

For Nicholas Pinnock, who plays successful actor Solomon, that realism is what makes the show feel distinctly British in its outlook.

"There's a real stiff upper lip Britishness about it," he says. "People are trying to avoid the thing that's staring them in the face and brushing things under the carpet until eventually it all ignites."

But as the holiday begins to unravel, Two Weeks in August gradually weaves in Greek mythology increasing the group's tense dynamic.

For Raine, that was one of the script's biggest surprises. "It sort of sideswipes you," she says. "You're not expecting it."

The actress also points to the mythological figures known as The Fates or Moirai, who appear throughout the series and become increasingly central to Zoe's emotional unravelling.

In Greek mythology The Fates are three women who control the thread of human life, deciding how long a person lives.

"It's scary," she says. "She starts seeing them in the corner of her eye, almost like ghosts."

Two Weeks in August will air on BBC One and BBC iPlayer on the 23rd May.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy0252zn0vno?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 by 7Tamil Media, All rights reserved.