7.30pm UK news about coronavirus LIVE: Eat Out to Help Out programme ends TODAY when Bolton peaks and deaths succeed at 41501

Eat Out to Help Out brought Chancellor Rishi Sunak to help bring the decadent hospitality sector to life and revive Britain’s closed pubs and restaurants.

Starting with this program, restaurants presented consumers with food and non-alcoholic beverages at half price on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays in August and collected government cash.

Meanwhile, Bolton went through a sudden increase in coronavirus, just days before the blockage improved.

The construction led Bolton Council leader David Greenhalgh to hold an emergency assembly with the council and fitness officials on Tuesday morning.

This occurs when the death toll in the UK has increased from two to a total of 41,501 and reached 335,873.

Follow our blog about coronavirus for the latest news and updates…

UNI FRESHERS WEEK WILL BE VERY DIFFERENT THIS YEAR

The new week will be very different this year thanks to the threat posed by the coronavirus that can barely spread among new students, the Secretary of Education warned.

Education Secretary John Swinney said: “I’m involved in freshman’s week and there have been in-depth discussions between the government, universities, colleges, student unions and the NuS (National Student Union) about what we want to do, set up to verify to make sure that the week of the first year develops from what the maximum academics would have experienced over time.

“We want to be aware of the dangers of large-scale socialization.”

The new rules on the protection of Covid-19 in higher education will be published tomorrow.

COPS SPEND 30 HOURS TRYING TO CLOSE ILLEGAL RAVE BANK ON HOLIDAY

South Wales police had to spend 30 hours beating potential raveurs near Brecon Beacons in Banwen, Wales.

Up to 3000 people from across the UK showed up at the wooden rave and were greeted through a bronze line.

South Wales police criticized the “irresponsible” movements of those who took part in the unlicensed rave and fined two organisers with 10,000 euros each.

THE EU PROPOSES MILLION EUROS FOR THE VACCINE INITIATIVE AGAINST THE CORONAVIRUS

The EU has submitted a contribution of EUR 400 million to a WHO-led COVID-19 vaccination initiative.

The COVAX initiative aims to acquire 2 billion prospective COVID-19 vaccines from various vaccine brands through the end of 2021 and then donate them to each and every country in the world.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus tweeted: “A great thanks to @EU_Commission for their contribution to the COVAX facility and for their commitment to multilateralism.”

It is transparent whether EU states would buy injections under WHO programme

ENGLAND’S GAMES COULD BE CANCELLED

The two League of Nations games can be canceled if part of the England team fights Covid-19.

This would mean that the team could end up wasting any of the matches with Iceland and Denmark.

FA leaders feared coronavirus last week and reportedly five players tested positive, and the Chelsea pair, Mason Mount and Tammy Abraham, who were able to sign up for St George’s Park on Monday, were added.

Man City ace Raheem Sterling needed a check after being at a positive usain Bolt party in Covid-19, was acquitted.

UEFA has showed that England fill their matches unless more than part of the team is governed out.

THE GOVERNMENT PAID CELEBES TO PROMOTE THE TESTING AND TRACE OF THE NHS

The government has paid celebrities and influencers up to $10,000 according to taxpayers’ cash publication to advertise the NHS and tracking system.

A spokesman said the government had a duty to “use every means imaginable” to keep the public informed during the coronavirus.

He said: “Our use of influential people on social media has reached more than seven million people.

“This is just one component of a broader cross of television, radio, social, print and other advertising to make sure the public has the data they need.”

Love Island stars Shaughna Phillips, Josh Denzel and Chris Hughes were among the people who were paid through the Cabinet Office to tell their online subscribers that the COVID-19 check “is free, fast and important to prevent spread.”

US UNI PROF IS ORDERED TO KEEP MORE THAN 500 POSITIVE CASES SECRET FROM CAMPUS

More than 500 academics and staff tested positive for coronavirus for the first five days of categories at the University of Alabama, but teachers were asked to keep their mouths shut.

In an email to the policy department, teachers were explicitly told not to tell their academics if any had a positive elegance.

“Don’t do it for the rest of the class,” it’s read in the email, with the word “no” pointed out.

He went on to say that scholars who tested positive are not considered a threat of exposure if a mask is worn and social distancing is practiced, keeping the rest of the elegance in the dark if someone is positive in their elegance.

Several other emails from other departments reviewed through The Daily Beast warn teachers who object to telling students about a positive classmate or posting about it on social media, even in the most general terms.alleging that this may constitute a violation of the fitness insurance law on portability and liability.

OFFICIAL RUSSIA CLAIMS ‘WEST ACCEPTS MOSCOW HAS THE RIGHT TO APPROVE COVID VACCINE’

A Russian official said comments through a senior US official and Britain’s movements towards an imaginable acceleration of COVID-19 vaccines show that the West now admits it was right to approve a vaccine in August.

Serious protection considerations have been expressed for the Russian Sputnik V vaccine, which won regulatory approval for a COVID-19 vaccine this month after less than two months of human testing.

However, the head of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been in the process ofHus He has since said that he would be willing to skip the general approval procedure for authorizing a vaccine provided that officials are convinced that they are overcoming the risks.

The UK government presented plans last week that would allow the UK medical regulator to grant transitority approval for any coronavirus vaccine before it has been granted a full licence if it meets the standards of protection and quality, Reuters reports.

The director of the Russian Direct Investment Fund, the Russian sovereign wealth fund, which is very concerned about Russia’s vaccination program, Kirill Dmitriev, said the United States and London are now “following exactly Russia’s example.”

“The Western world was surprised by Russia’s past fortune (by generating a possible vaccine) and had to go through 4 steps to settle for the inevitable: denial, anger, depression and, in the end, settling on the road,” he said in a statement.

“Recent statements show that we have already reached the level of depression and that it is now accepted that Russia is the right one.”

THE MYSTERY OF THE TWEETS OF THE AMERICAN POLITICIAN COVID ‘NOT MORTAL’, DESPITE HE DIED LAST MONTH

Relatives who run the Twitter account of former 2012 Republican Presidential candidate Herman Cain tweeted, “It turns out that the virus is not as fatal as the mainstream media claimed.”

Twitter users were baffled because the former owner of Cain’s account died of coronavirus on July 30.

Since then, the tweet has been deleted, the screenshots of the message continue to circulate on the Internet.

According to Forbes, the tweet, which downplayed the severity of the coronavirus, included a link to an article in a list that should be avoided through Apple News.

FOODIES QUEUE FOR WAGAMA BRIGHTON ON THE LAST DAY OF FOOD TO HELP THE PROGRAM

DEATH IN THE UK BY TWO

The death toll in the UK has risen to two today.

According to the government’s website, there have also been 1,406 new cases; this is possibly due to the highest test rates across the country.

Both deaths in England.

CASI One Hundred POSITIVE TESTS AFTER A CHICKEN OUTBREAK THE FACTORY

Nearly 100 employees at a Norfolk poultry plant have tested positive for coronavirus.

Another 16 people tested positive for Covid-19 at Banham Poultry since Thursday, bringing the total number of cases to 96.

Last Friday, the factory’s cutting room closed after the company voluntarily agreed to close a component of its operations and begged 350 workers to isolate themselves.

In an update today, Dr. Louise Smith, Director of Public Health for the Norfolk Council, told the Eastern Daily Press that the plant had been cleaned very well and that the cell check kits were activated for verification.

Several are believed to have performed at James Paget University Hospital in Norfolk.

BRITS BRITS: “IT’S TIME FOR BINGE” AS THE FOOD PATTERN ENDS

The British from all over the country received their faces when Rishi Sunak’s Eat Out to Help Out program came to an end.

The visitors say they will eat as much as imaginable to make the maximum of the program.

One shared a photo of Bruce Bogtrotter of Matilda covered with a chocolate cake, while another said he would take his circle of relatives to dinner to make the most of the last day.

Another joked, “Try to locate as much food as you can imagine on the last day.”

STUDENTS WEARING FACE MASKS IN SCOTLAND ON THE WAY BACK FROM SCHOOLS

TRAVEL TIPS FOR GREECE

Greece has remained on the UK’s safe list, meaning fcO rules allow Britons to enter the country.

The country still has smaller instances of Covid-19 in other vacation locations, however, infections have increased since July 1, when foreign tourists were welcome.

However, the cumulative number of instances consisting of 100,000 inhabitants over a seven-day period consistent with the period is lately 14.9, still well below the 20 instances consisting of 100,000 believed to be the government’s benchmark for enforcing quarantine restrictions.

MORE COVID-19 DEATHS IN HOSPITALS IN ENGLAND

Four other people who tested positive for coronavirus died in a hospital in England, raising the total number of deaths reported in hospitals in England to 29554, NHS England said Monday.

Patients were between 58 and 8 years old and all had a known underlying condition.

The death dates ranged from June to August 29.

Three other deaths were reported with a positive Covid-19 test.

3 YEAR OLD BOY ON FIRE AFTER PLAYING WITH A LIGHTER AND A HAND LIGHTER

A baby lit up in the fireplace while playing with an alcohol-based hand sanitizer for Covid-19 and a lighter.

Three-year-old Captain Chuenbubpha burst into flames at his home in Samut Prakan, Thailand, after the highly flammable gel he was thrown at, which was then lit.

The incident occurred when the captain and his older brother Nonoe, five, were laughing while on their way to their home’s internal school last Wednesday.

The captain was engulfed in flames within seconds of the horror incident.

PASSENGER ON FLIGHT ZANTE ‘FULL OF COVIDIOTS’ SAYS HE IS ‘ANGRY’

A passenger on a TUI flight from Zante, Greece, says he is “angry” with the covidiots after the 193 passengers and the team were asked to isolate themselves.

Passenger Stephanie Whitfield told the BBC: “We have some symptoms, but it’s a cold.We had a little cough, sore throat, headache.I’m angrier than anything,” he added.

“ONLY A HUNDRED PEOPLE WHO WASH THE MASKS CORRECTLY”

A new YouGov ballot shows that only 41% of other people wash the mask correctly.

Only 41% wash them at 60 degrees or more; the decrease in temperatures is enough to kill viruses like Covid-19.

It is worrying that one in seven users of washable and reusable masks has never complied with their policy; is less effective at preventing the spread of the virus.

TWO BRITONS DON’T WASH THEIR MASKS

Two-thirds of Britons don’t wash their hats, a new poll revealed.

After the rule took effect on July 24, the number of other people opting for a mask increased from 38% to 69%.

Although about seven out of ten people wear a reusable face mask, only 32% of them wash it.

Experts say the mask should be washed at 60 degrees Celsius to kill all insects attached to the fabric.

SCOTTISH STUDENTS SHOULD WEAR MASKS TODAY WHEN THE RULES COME INTO EFFECT

The Scottish scholars returned to their offices dressed in face masks.

Measurements are in place in non-unusual spaces and corridors, but in classrooms.

High schools will be required to provide recommendations to all students, however, counselling will be mandatory.

ILLEGAL DELIRIUM BLOCKADE LEAVES 24 IN HOSPITAL

An illegal rave in Norway saw 24 other people taken to hospital with carbon monoxide.

Five were fighting for their lives and two policemen who helped the revelers on one occasion of “caverna rave” in the capital, Oslo, were the poisoners.

It is believed that the portable turbines used to force lighting and sound systems filled the bunker with carbon monoxide that was felt or looked.

About two hundred more people were discovered by the possibility when a police patrol met young people on the street.

“HUNDREDS OF TEACHERS WILL DEFY SCHOOL REOPENING RULES”

A principals union has warned that many schools could remain closed as the government has ordered academics to return to their offices next week.

A survey through the National Association of Heads of Schools has shown that more than 700 schools will not completely reopen in September – instead, scholars will reintegrate or use ‘transition periods’ to bring young other folks back to class.

CALLS COULD REDUCE PRICES BY 41% AT THE END OF THE FOOD PROGRAM

The Wetherspoons pub chain is expected to food and cushy drink costs through up to 41%.

The agreement will continue from September until 11 November.

It occurs when the much-loved Eat Out to Help Out program ends today.

SUN READERS SWEAR TO SEND CHILDREN BACK TO SCHOOL

98% of Sun readers have promised to send their children back to school this week.

We interviewed 730 parents of children after Boris Johnson made the return a priority.

England’s Children’s Commissioner Anne Longfield said parents take a “balanced risk” and added that “young people are not left behind.”

GREAT CANARIA SUPERSPREADER “INFECTA 140”

A “super spreader” of the Spanish continent is believed to be guilty of at least 140 cases on the holiday island of Gran Canaria.

On the island, Gran Canaria continues to lead the number of instances with 3,283 accumulated positives of which 2,481 are active.

The island has registered 171 new ones since last Thursday.

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