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- The Independent
Trump’s post-presidency makeover: Former president losing weight, cutting back on M&Ms and ditching spray tan, report says
‘When I saw him, he looked healthier and in better physical condition than I had seen him in a long time,’ a Trump advisor says
- Reuters
EU, UK step up Northern Ireland talks as EU continues legal action
The European Union insisted on Friday that Britain not change trading rules in Northern Ireland on its own and said it would continue legal action against unilateral British action in the province for as long as necessary. European Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic hosted UK negotiator David Frost for talks on Thursday evening and said that only agreements by joint bodies established by the Brexit divorce deal could provide stability in Northern Ireland. The British-ruled province is in the EU single market for goods to ensure an open border with EU member Ireland and so requires checks on goods coming from other parts of the United Kingdom.
- The Independent
‘We failed him’: Mayor voices sorrow as prosecutors admit 13-year-old Adam Toledo wasn’t holding gun
‘An attorney who works in this office failed to fully inform himself before speaking in court’
- The Independent
SolarWinds: Russian intelligence behind major cyber attack, Raab reveals as US expels diplomats
‘We see what Russia is doing to undermine our democracies’, foreign minister says
- Time
Benedict Cumberbatch Is a Spy With Soul in The Courier —But He's Not the Only Reason to Watch
Cumberbatch plays real life Cold War spy Greville Wynne
- INSIDER
Tributes to 'Harry Potter' actress Helen McCrory are pouring in after news of her death
J.K. Rowling, Cillian Murphy, Bonnie Wright, and Florence Pugh are some of the people who have reacted to the news of Helen McCrory's death.
- The Independent
BLM activist arrested for anti-Asian hate crime in Seattle
‘Thank God the light finally changed and I was able to drive off’, said victim after abuse
- The Independent
North Carolina teacher killed in shoot-out after trying to rob Mexican drug cartel
Barney Harris shot and killed despite wearing bulletproof vest to rob drugs and cash
- The Independent
Can you still get Covid-19 after having the vaccine?
Pfizer is 95 per cent effective in preventing Covid-19 disease and Moderna is 94 per cent effective in preventing Covid-19 disease
- LA Times
Ruling in doping case to keep world's fastest sprinter out of Tokyo Olympics
Facing a two-year ban for missed drug tests, top U.S. sprinter Christian Coleman sees his appeal to the Court of Arbitration for sport fall short.
- BBC
Fyre Festival: Ticket-holders to receive money from $2m class action settlement
Ticket-holders of the now infamous 2017 music festival that never happened will get some money back.
- The Independent
Sean Hannity blasted for calling Adam Toledo a ‘13-year-old man’
A guest on Hannity’s Fox News show had previously referred to Kyle Rittenhouse, who was 17 at the time, as a ‘little boy’
- Yahoo News
U.S. government formally blames Russian spies for SolarWinds breach
The White House on Thursday accused the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, or SVR, of orchestrating the recent massive breach that affected private sector networks and U.S. government agencies through the IT monitoring software made by SolarWinds.
- Charlotte Observer
Hornets’ Rozier: Don’t be ‘soft,’ but this NBA season is brutal on every player’s body
Charlotte Hornets will be decimated by injury against the Brooklyn Nets.
- LA Times
Free food and tickets: How China's trying to boost lagging vaccination rates
While China pushes a complacent population toward vaccination, a health official's suggestion to mix vaccines broaches sensitive political territory.
- The Telegraph
Exclusive: Priti Patel was warned about Heathrow queues crisis last year
Priti Patel's officials were repeatedly warned last year about the growing crisis over queues at Heathrow forcing passengers to wait for hours. The airport wrote twice to the Home Office – in August and December – to say urgent action was needed, including more Border Force staff to tackle lengthening queues that meant planes had to be delayed and passengers held on board jets. The disclosure follows a warning on Wednesday by Chris Garton, Heathrow's chief solutions officer, that the situation had become "untenable" as passengers faced queues of up to six hours despite arrivals being more than 80 per cent below normal. There is growing alarm that the new rules requiring 100 per cent checks on all passengers' locator forms will lead to chaos when international travel begins to resume in earnest from May 17 unless the process is computerised and extra resources deployed. "Maximum queue times are exceeding three hours almost every day, and at times reach six and a half hours despite 86 per cent fewer passengers. It is inhumane for Border Force to keep people waiting so long," said a Heathrow source. "The Home Office must simplify and automate processes and adequately resource Border Force in the meantime." Last August, Heathrow wrote to the Home Office warning that queues were already up to two hours and there was an "urgent need" to ensure passengers filled out their forms correctly before they arrived at immigration control desks. Border Force officials warned this week that just one passenger without a properly completed form could delay a queue by 30 to 40 minutes. In December, Heathrow repeated its warning from last summer, saying queues had hit three hours, forcing it to "slow inbound traffic and hold passengers on board". The row came as the boss of TUI, Europe's largest tour company, said successful vaccine programmes would prevent another washout for summer holidaymakers. "We are optimistic about the summer," said Friedrich Joussen, whose company owns a fleet of aircraft, cruise ships and a chain of travel agencies. Mr Joussen said bookings in March alone had hit 2.8 million, and as a result the company expected to operate up to 75 per cent of its normal schedule for the summer season. "We are still confident that we will have a decent summer," he added, pointing to coronavirus vaccination programmes in the UK, US and Europe. The company, which sells holidays to 180 different countries, suffered heavy losses during the pandemic.
- The Independent
Police identify Indianapolis shooter as former FedEx employee 19-year-old Brandon Scott Hole
The FBI have reportedly seized evidence from an Indianapolis home
- The Independent
Ted Cruz among six Republicans to vote down bill to end anti-Asian hate crimes
The lawmakers voted with a majority of 92 against 6 in the Senate
- The Independent
CNN crew member collapses as Daunte Wright protesters pelt reporters with bottle and eggs
‘A bottle of water knocked you out? Hahahaha’
- Reuters Videos
TSMC books 19% Q1 growth, chip shortage to last
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, or TSMC, on Thursday (April 14) said it is doing all it can to increase productivityand alleviate a worldwide chip shortage.But it warned tight supplies will likely continue into next year.The world's biggest contract chipmaker reported a 19.4% rise in first-quarter profit off the back of strong chip demand amid a global shift to home working.TSMC, whose clients include Apple and Qualcomm, had already flagged "multiple years of growth opportunities" as the global health crisis fuelled demand for advanced chips to power devices such as smartphones and laptops.Business was boosted by the chip shortage that initially forced automakers to cut production.But it's now also hurting manufacturers of smartphones, laptops and other appliances too.On Thursday, TSMC said it expects the chip shortage for its auto clients to be greatly reduced from the next quarter.TSMC said this month it plans to invest $100 billion over the next three years to increase capacity at its plants.Its shares have risen about 16% so far this year and were up over a percent on Thursday.