News
Boris Johnson’s support of Covid lab leak theory is significant
For once, Johnson may have performed a public service
September 29, 2024 5:57 pm(Updated 5:58 pm)
Boris Johnson is publishing his memoir, timed to coincide with the Conservative Party conference, in his usual attention-seeking manner and written in his familiar gratingly-florid style.
Political autobiographies tend to be solipsistic attempts to shore up their author’s place in history so most are very dreary. Given Johnson’s shameful record in office, his selfishness and his sorry relationship to the truth, his book would not normally serve as anything more than a sad reminder of his party’s descent into stupidity that led to such brutal rejection by the electorate.
Yet one nugget leaps out: his suggestion the Covid-19 pandemic was sparked by some kind of leak from a laboratory in Wuhan rather than zoonotic transmission from an animal species.
“The awful thing about the whole Covid catastrophe is that it appears to have been entirely man-made, in all its aspects,” he writes. “It now looks overwhelmingly likely that the mutation was the result of some botched experiment in a Chinese lab. Some scientists were clearly splicing bits of virus together like the witches in Macbeth – eye of bat and toe of frog – and oops, the frisky little critter jumped out of the test tube and started replicating all over the world.”
This allegation, reported by The Mail on Sunday, is significant since Johnson was prime minister when a strange new coronavirus erupted in that central Chinese city, spreading death, fear and economic devastation around the planet (and nearly causing his own demise).
The former prime minister becomes the highest profile leader after Donald Trump to state this suspicion in public, although it has become an increasingly widely-held public view in the 55 months since I first began probing China’s cover-up of Covid’s birth.
Like the former United States president, Johnson is a politician with a history of deceit who is detested by many foes. But that does not mean he is always wrong.
It would be good to think we have learned from the daft tribalism that has clouded the debate over Covid’s origins since the outcome is so important to guard against another pandemic.
Johnson’s statement, coming from such a pivotal source, should spark serious exploration of the issues at last in Britain. Politicians, civil servants, key scientists and the intelligence agencies need to be put on the spot and quizzed under oath over their knowledge of the outbreak – especially given all the mounting evidence of an organised attempt at the highest levels to stifle debate over the origins by branding the idea of a laboratory leak as “conspiracy theory”.
Last week, Professor Kevin Fong, former national clinical adviser in emergency preparedness at NHS England, described the pandemic as the “biggest national emergency this country has faced since World War Two” as he spoke movingly – and often tearfully – about the medical response at the Covid hearings.
This inquiry is costing taxpayers £200m. Yet when former cabinet minister Michael Gove – another central player in Britain’s response – said “there is a significant body of judgement that believes that the virus itself was man made”, he was shut down quickly for straying into this “somewhat divisive issue”.
This is unacceptable. There is not enough space to run through the complex debate here, suffice to say there is no definitive proof yet over the origins. Intense efforts to find a host creature that might have led a virus from bats living hundreds of miles away to cross over into humans in Wuhan – with attempts to blame creatures such as pangolins and racoon dogs – have led to suggestions that the virus erupted in a wet market.
This tired theory – which keeps bouncing back like a bad penny – has been firmly rejected by China’s authorities and the world’s top coronavirologist. It does not match evidence on earliest cases, nor much research trying to date first infections.
The alternative case – raised by Johnson – has grown steadily stronger with each crumb of evidence. There was always valid suspicion over a pandemic erupting in the city that is home to the world’s foremost research lab for Sars-like viruses, especially when it was found to have known concerns over safety practices.
This lab collected thousands of bat viruses from southern China and south-east Asia, but hid its database. It carried out high-risk “gain-of-function” research to boost infectivity of coronaviruses in low-level security environments, derided as “wild west” even by its funders in Washington.
And we learned that shortly before the pandemic, Wuhan scientists proposed with their partners in the United States to create viruses with the defining feature of Covid’s virus – the “furin cleavage site” that enables more efficient entry into human cells and is not found on similar types of coronavirus. This lab leak theory was shored up by a series of shocking leaks and revelations swirling around some of the most prominent figures pushing the zoonotic case.
Yet this impassioned debate even divides intelligence agencies in the United States – although at least Washington has made some efforts to establish the truth, even if the discussions in Congress have been depressingly partisan.
In Britain there has been only a thudding official silence, despite similar concerns over the role of some leading scientists and institutions – including Sir Patrick Vallance, recently appointed science minister by the Labour Government.
Science relies on openness and the vigorous clash of ideas. Yet the issues at stake here go beyond the core question of what caused Covid-19 and the role of Beijing in covering up the initial outbreak, which inflamed the impact with terrible and tragic consequences.
They raise questions over regulation of risky experiments, the role of Western funding bodies, the behaviour of leading scientists, the failures of global public health bodies, the duplicity of academic journals, the patsy reporting of naive journalists, even the corruption of universities by Chinese cash.
Behind all this lies the stench of elitist arrogance and kowtowing of democratic institutions towards a repulsive dictatorship. For once, Johnson may have performed a public service.
News
Sophie Turner’s Joan is just Sansa Stark with shoulder pads
As Sansa Stark in Game of Thrones, Sophie Turner excelled as a pure soul in a morally depraved medieval universe. In lightweight but enjoyable biopic Joan, she portrays another underdog heroine once again travelling to a bygone era. Sporting a Bananarama haircut, she plays real-life 1980s jewel chief Joan Hannington, Thatcher-era London’s so-called “Criminal Godmother.”
Turner’s Hannington is Sansa with an EastEnders accent and a fashion upgrade – rather than princess frocks, it’s pastel blouses and mammoth shoulder pads.
But her Joan is also a hot streak of contradictions under the clobber and the eye makeup. She’s a loving mum but someone who will endanger her future with her daughter by stealing a car so that she can visit the child in foster care (an actual incident detailed in Hannington’s memoir, I Am What I Am: The True Story of Britain’s Most Notorious Jewel Thief). And while Turner puts great effort into playing her as an oppressed woman with a heart of gold, Joan is undeniably enthusiastic about her descent into criminality.
Joan is part giddy heist, part social drama, and the two genres combine unevenly in a series that feels torn between escapism and the desire to be something grittier.
Turner’s character is introduced as a frightened victim of an abusive criminal boyfriend, Gary (Nick Blood), who does a runner after falling out with the wrong people. Joan is left to answer for his deeds and when gangsters break in and threaten her, she puts her daughter into care and flees from the seaside town of Herne Bay in Kent to London, where she eventually bags a job selling expensive necklaces to posh women. There, she finds another calling: pinching the jewels by swallowing them whole and retrieving the stash with the help of an olive oil laxative (a scene that mercifully takes place off-camera).
Turner is best when playing Joan as a female version of George Clooney in Ocean’s Eleven. Charming and with a knack for accents, she disarms her pervy boss at the jewellers – but rather than submit to his advances, she gulps down those diamonds from the stock room and pegs it. Later, she falls in with charming antique dealer Boisie (Frank Dillane), a cad with useful underworld connections.
Where Turner struggles and Joan stutters is when it tries to go all Ken Loach. Turner struggles to get under the skin of a woman brought up in care and betrayed by all the men in her life – she lacks the acting heft. These scenes are a box-ticking exercise – it’s as if they have been included simply because they feature in Hannington’s memoir, rather than out of any genuine desire to explore Joan’s traumas.
Joan also fails to lay the groundwork for the character’s transformation into a natural-born criminal. She is introduced as the lead character in a dour kitchen sink drama. But when she overhears a posh woman nattering to a pal in a London park, she can effortlessly mimic the accent and eventually wangle her way into that jewellers job. Her display of chameleonic powers arrives completely out of the blue.
Switching between these japes and scenes of dark social realism is disconcerting, though the drama does a great job evoking 1980s London. Outrageous fashions, naff music (The Style Council feature early on), and retro cars conjure visions of fluffy dice and ZX Spectrums. It’s a fantasy version of the decade – but one which Joan explores with gusto. It’s when it tries to be bleak and realistic that the wheels come off.
‘Joan’ continues tomorrow at 9pm on ITV1
Money
Labour could scrap criminal prosecutions for failing to pay BBC licence fee
CRIMINAL prosecutions for failing to pay the BBC licence fee could be scrapped by Labour.
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy is understood to be “concerned” by the disproportionate number of women being punished.
And there is agreement between Ms Nandy and Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood that taxpayers should not have to fork out for the “administrative burden”.
Almost 1,000 Brits are prosecuted every week for ignoring the £169.50 annual fee.
Seventy per cent are women.
They are more likely to be poorly paid, coping with single families or taking charge of household bills — and also more likely to be at home when investigators call.
But last night an insider said prosecutions will continue until at least 2027, when the BBC’s Royal Charter is due for renewal.
Ministers will then meet Beeb bosses to “explore options” for new funding models.
These are set to include decriminalisation.
Last year half a million people stopped paying as they opted for US-based subscription services instead.
At the same time former Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer branded criminal prosecutions “morally indefensible in modern times”.
A TV Licensing spokesman said: “We have a duty to enforce the law.
“But we have made considerable efforts to help people get licensed and offer help and support.
“Our focus on collecting the licence fee fairly and efficiently.”
News
Strictly 'fix' row erupts as first elimination sparks fury among fans
Strictly Come Dancing viewers have been left outraged after the first elimination of the series saw a fan-favourite booted off the show
Money
We found a mundane mug gathering dust in a loft for 20 years – now it’s sold for £13,500 due to unique detail
A MUNDANE ceramic mug left inside a loft for 20 years has been sold at an auction for a whopping £13,500 because of one unique detail.
The 87-year-old souvenir cup was designed by British artist Eric Ravilious for Wedgwood to mark the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1937.
It is said to be a rare example because of its unique yellow and green detailing which had sat undisturbed in a box in the vendor’s loft since the late 1990s.
Adapted from a previous version intended to mark King Edward VIII taking the throne before his abdication, the design features celebratory fireworks and the royal coat of arms.
The mug was given an estimate of £800 when it went under the hammer at Gildings Auctioneers in Market Harborough, Leics earlier this week.
But it smashed its estimate and sold to a private buyer for £13,500 – more than 16 times its guide price.
Gildings director Will Gilding said: “We’re thrilled to achieve this astonishing result for this very special mug which although highly collectable, is still intrinsically just a mundane household item.
“We were unable to find any other examples of this particular colourway, which also has a slightly differently shaped rim to the other mugs in the sale, so this one may well be unique.
“As a result, we knew it had the potential to soar far beyond its guide price.
“But for the hammer to go down at £13,500 is truly remarkable and just goes to show the magic that can happen when two determined collectors identify a must-have treasure.”
The cup was from a collection of five of Ravilious’s 1937 Wedgwood coronation mugs – and was kept inside an attic for 20 years.
Three of the mugs in more commonly seen but still sought-after turquoise, blue and pink-based colourways sold for £270, £360 and £2,700 respectively.
Another blue version made for the planned coronation of Edward VIII fetched £480.
Born in 1903, Eric Ravilious was a highly regarded Sussex-based painter, designer, book illustrator and wood engraver.
He is best known for his modernist watercolour interpretations of English landscapes and World War II scenes, some of which are displayed in the Imperial War Museum in London.
In December 1939 Ravilious became an official World War Two war artist with the rank of Honorary Captain in the Royal Marines.
On September 2, 1942, he joined one of three aircraft dispatched on a search and rescue mission for a plane that had failed to return to RAF Kaldadarnes in Iceland.
The aircraft he boarded also failed to return, and he and the four-man crew were recorded as lost in action four days later, making him the first of three British war artists to die in active service during World War Two.
Will added: “This vanishingly rare example of a striking design by a renowned artist who suffered a tragic wartime death was sold in very good condition given its age and ceramic nature.
“Such is the power of its scarcity, and the demand for works by Ravilious, this high quality but relatively inexpensive souvenir has taken on a previously unimagined value several decades later.
“When I brought the gavel down, I think everyone in the room felt like we needed a cup of tea to calm us all down – not least the buyer – but in a slightly more affordable mug.”
News
Nasrallah funeral shrouded in secrecy to avoid being targeted by Israel
The body of the Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah was recovered from the rubble of an Israeli airstrike on Sunday, setting the stage for a dramatic funeral in the coming days.
Najib Mikati, the Lebanese prime minister, said the funeral would be marked by a national holiday, with three days of official mourning starting Monday despite growing fears of an Israeli ground invasion.
Nasralla’s body was removed intact from the blast scene on Saturday, his death caused by blunt trauma, said the Lebanese authorities.
Although a Shia Muslim, he was revered across the Palestinian world and was regarded by many as a pan-Arab leader.
His funeral – like his many televised speeches – is likely to garner considerable attention across the region and may be exploited by anti-Israeli forces as a rallying point.
It could also ignite brewing secular tensions in Lebanon where Shia, Sunni, Druze, Christian and other sects live in fine balance cheek by jowl.
From 1975 to 1990, Lebanon was mired in a vicious civil war fought on sectarian lines and some fear a repeat.
It was also reported on Sunday the bombs used to destroy the subterranean compound he was hiding in were US-made bunker-busting bombs, each weighing 2000 pounds, something that may also increase tensions in and the threat to US assets and citizens in the region.
Fighting continued on at least three fronts across the region on Sunday.
Israeli airstrikes continued across Lebanon on Sunday and the streets in much of the Lebanese capital remained deserted, with most shops and cafés closed.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah launched a barrage of at least 35 rockets at northern Israel early on Sunday evening.
According to the IDF, 10 rockets were launched toward Western Galilee with several impacts identified.
Another 25 rockets were launched toward the Haifa Bay area, setting off sirens in Acre but falling only in open areas.
Israel was reported to have sent special forces troops into Southern Lebanon in a “limited” ground incursion, while IDF tanks were pictured gathering in the border area, suggesting a larger offensive could be imminent.
Israel’s official war aims now include returning some 60,000 citizens in the north to their homes along the border, something most analysts believe will not be possible without troops on the ground in southern Lebanon.
An Israeli official told The Telegraph that the special forces troops were targeting Hezbollah military infrastructure, including weapons sites and command and control centres, in a bid to push them away from the border.
“They are targeting key sites which have been built across the border zone,” the source said.
An Israeli intelligence source told The Telegraph that the IDF was moving quickly in the wake of the assassination of Nasrallah in a bid to leverage its advantage.
“The question now is what the US will do, and I just hope the US doesn’t get involved and pull us back,” he said.
The source added: “Until now, the US has done nothing but interfere, both with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, holding us back in a bid to seek a diplomatic solution when we need to push forward militarily if we stand any chance of defeating Hezbollah and returning the citizens of the north.”
Sources in the Israeli defence establishment have become increasingly critical of the United States in recent weeks.
The United States initially went out of its way to deny involvement in the killing of Nasrallah, angering many Israelis.
It has since said his killing would bring a “measure of justice” to his victims, including many US citizens.
While Israel remains tight-lipped about its ground operations, Andrew Fox, a former British army officer, said Israel likely targeting known Hezbollah positions and attempting to clear the area of munitions and missile launch sites.
But the operation comes with considerable risks.
“The incursion is going to turn the neutral [Lebanese] population against them and cause a lot of damage and condemnation. But if you don’t hold ground, Hezbollah will just re-infiltrate,” Mr Fox told The Telegraph.
A senior IDF official told The Telegraph the operation was necessary because Hezbollah was flouting UN Security Council resolution 1701, which ended the last war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.
“The whole freedom of movement for Unifil (United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon) is gone. They are faced with roadblocks by Hezbollah, turned around, and they don’t challenge this,” the source said, referring to the United Nations peacekeeping mission there.
Resolution 1701 states that there should be no armed non-state groups between the UN-delineated line of withdrawal between Lebanon and Israel and the Litani River, which flows between three and 18 miles north of the Israeli border.
The resolution also called for Hezbollah and other armed in the area, such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, to disarm.
Israel accuses Hezbollah of effectively taking over multiple towns and villages in the demilitarised since 2006 and using the residents as human shields for its large weapon stockpiles.
A tit-for-tat war that broke out when Hezbollah rocketed Israel on October 8 last year has seen the worst violence on the border since the 2006 war.
Around 200,000 people have been displaced on both sides of the border, with hundreds of thousands more fleeing southern Lebanon in the wake of Israel’s accelerated campaign.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, warned Iran and its proxies on Saturday that Israel would respond forcibly to attacks on its territory.
“If someone rises up to kill you, kill him first”, he said, before adding: “There is no place in Iran or the Middle East that the long arm of Israel cannot reach”.
Money
Five savvy ways to give your old winter coats a new lease of life
THERE is a chill in the air and before you know it you will be reaching for a winter coat.
But instead of splurging at the shops for something new, take a look at these creative ideas to breathe new life into your trusty old jacket.
STEAMY SOLUTION: One way to freshen up your coat at home is to use steam.
Hang your coat in the bathroom while you take a hot shower. The steam should release any creases and revive the fabric, hopefully giving it that just-bought appearance.
If you have a handheld steamer, a quick pass over your coat can make it look polished.
BOBBLE BUSTER: Those pesky fabric bobbles can make even the nicest coat look worn out.
But instead of buying an expensive bobble remover, grab an old razor and gently shave the surface of your coat.
This trick works particularly well on wool and knit fabrics.
BUTTON UP: If your coat’s buttons are looking dirty, mix vinegar with water, then scrub them with an old toothbrush. If the buttons are beyond cleaning, replace them.
You can often find inexpensive buttons at charity shops or thrift stores.
PIT STOP: Worried about sweaty armpit stains on your coat? A simple mixture of lemon juice and baking soda can work wonders.
Test a little on a hidden area of fabric first and check it after five minutes.
If OK, then spray the mixture on the underarm areas of your coat, let it sit for a few minutes, and wipe it clean with a damp cloth.
The natural cleaning properties of lemon and baking soda should lift stubborn sweat stains.
SOCK SAVER: If your padded coat has lost some of its puff, there’s an easy fix. Restuff it with old socks to give it back some volume.
For an extra update, try adding a new belt to adjust the fit slightly. Small alterations can make a big difference to your coat.
- All prices correct at time of going to press. Deals and offers subject to availability.
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