CNA – Singers Billie Eilish and Harry Styles (pic below, AP) as well as rapper Kanye West and group Swedish House Mafia are among the line-up for this year’s Coachella, organisers said on January 13, as the music festival returns after three years.
One of the world’s biggest music festivals, Coachella was last held in 2019 and scrapped in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Organisers said in June the open-air festival, held in the California desert, would return over the weekends of April 15–17 and April 22–24 this year.
Styles, Eilish and West were announced as headline acts in a line-up poster on the Coachella website and social media pages, with the former One Direction singer performing on both Fridays.
Eilish and West, who changed his name to Ye last year, will perform on the two Saturdays and Sundays respectively.
The festival line-up also includes singers Arlo Parks and Phoebe Bridgers, Italian Eurovision Song Contest winners Maneskin, rappers Megan Thee Stallion and 21 Savage as well as hip hop duo Run The Jewels and DJ Fatboy Slim.
AMSTERDAM (AP) – As stores in Amsterdam and across the Netherlands cautiously re-opened after weeks of being under a coronavirus lockdown, the Dutch capital’s mood was lightened further on Saturday by dashes of colour from thousands of free bunches of tulips being handed out.
National Tulip Day is usually marked by an improvised flower garden in front of the royal palace on the capital’s central Dam Square. But with pandemic lockdown measures continuing to restrict large public gatherings, organisers this year took to Amsterdam’s World Heritage-listed canals to hand out their flowers.
The event is held each year to celebrate the start of the growing season for the iconic flowers, a major export for Dutch farmers.
“It is a gloomy and uncertain time for many people with the ongoing pandemic,” Chairman of Tulip Promotion Netherlands Arjan Smit, which is an association of hundreds of Dutch growers.
“So we’re going to provide some joy. We hope to create many happy faces by handing out tulip bouquets.”
Dutch flower and plant auctioneer Royal FloraHolland had record sales in 2021 of EUR5.6 billion thanks to higher prices for plants and cut flowers.
People wait on bridges for a free bouquet of tulips in Amsterdam, Netherlands. PHOTOS: APA woman catches a free bouquet of tulipsGrowers hand out free tulips to peopleDutch actor Andre van Duin poses on a boat full of free bouquets of tulips
ROME (AFP) – An Italian police union has objected to officers being given pink coronavirus masks, warning they do not go with their uniforms and “risk damaging the institution’s image”.
In a letter to the National Chief of Police, published online on Thursday, the head of the SAP union urged action against what he called the “perplexing” choice of colour of the FFP2 masks.
Stefano Paoloni said police managers must “preserve the decorum of their officers, ensuring they are not ordered to carry out institutional activities with protective devices (masks) in a colour that is eccentric to the uniform and risks damaging the image of the institution”.
He suggested other colours such as white, blue or black would be suitable, to go with a uniform that is largely blue.
In an accompanying note cited by the Italian media, the union said it had no particular issue with pink, but said officers’ uniforms were regulated.
On Twitter, Deputy Infrastructures Minister Teresa Bellanova said there was “nothing undignified about wearing a coloured mask”.
“Respect for uniforms does not come from the colours, but from the comportment and way of working of the men and women who wear them.”
THE WASHINGTON POST – Cooks across the Caribbean and Latin America have for centuries turned stewed black beans into a delicious art. Hundreds of dishes are based on the nutritious staple, which is indigenous to the Americas.
“In the New World, the remains of beans were found in a Peruvian Andean cave dated to 6000BC Mentions of black beans show up in the writings of ancient Mayans,” wrote my editor Joe Yonan, in Cool Beans: The Ultimate Guide to Cooking with the World’s Most Versatile Plant-Based Protein.
Traditional Brazilian feijoada marries the velvety bean and a crunchy topping of toasted cassava flour and meat. Colombian and Venezuelan cooks season black beans with onions, garlic, sweet peppers and bay leaves. Peruvians add vinegar for frijoles escabechados.
Mexican cooks infuse frijoles negros de olla with chillies for a touch of heat. Throughout Central America, cooks top stewed black beans with chopped raw onion, cilantro or simple salsas. Cuban black beans often start with a sofrito and are especially pungent with garlic and cilantro. Haitian cooks add fresh coconut and puree the stewed beans into the sauce known as sos pwa nwa.
This recipe, for coconut and black bean soup with a mango and avocado salsa, is an homage to this legacy.
Coconut black bean soup with mango-avocado salsa. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST
It starts with sauteed onions and garlic, plus tomato paste and cumin – a sort of cheater sofrito. Cooked or canned black beans go in next, along with canned coconut milk. The inky broth turns a stylish grey and is tinted pale scarlet with a bit of ground chillies.
Puree half of this mixture, then be sure to heat it through and season it well. You may wish to add more salt or spice, a squeeze of lime or splash of vinegar. Then, referencing Mexican and Central American traditions and Caribbean fruits, I suggest a salsa topping, a slightly sweet and acidic salad of mango, avocado, red onion, cilantro and lime juice. It’s lush and bright and offsets the density of this satisfying soup.
COCONUT BLACK BEAN SOUP WITH MANGO-AVOCADO SALSA
Ingredients For the salsa
– One small red onion
– One ripe mango, peeled, pitted and diced
– One ripe avocado, peeled, pitted and diced
– Three sprigs fresh cilantro, chopped
– One tablespoon fresh lime juice, plus more as needed
– Fine salt
For the soup
– One tablespoon coconut or vegetable oil
– Two cloves garlic, minced or finely grated
– Two tablespoons tomato paste
– One teaspoon ground cumin
– Half teaspoon ground chillies or smoked or hot paprika
– Two cans black beans, preferably no salt added, drained and rinsed
– One can coconut milk
– Three-quarter cup water or vegetable stock
– Half teaspoon fine salt, plus more as needed
Directions
Halve the onion. Grate one half on the large holes of a grater and set aside. Dice the other half.
Make the mango-avocado salsa: In a small bowl, combine the diced red onion, mango, avocado, cilantro and lime juice. Stir, and taste. Add more lime juice and/or a pinch of salt, if desired.
In a medium saucepan over high heat, heat the oil until it shimmers. Add the grated onion and cook, stirring with a wooden spoon, until it begins to look transparent and just starts to brown, about two minutes.
Add the garlic, tomato paste, cumin and ground chillies or paprika, and cook, stirring occasionally, until fragrant, about one minute. Stir in the black beans, coconut milk and water or broth.
Bring to a boil and cook for five minutes. Add the salt, then taste, adding more, if needed.
Cook for another five minutes, stirring occasionally, then, using an immersion blender, partially puree the beans until the soup looks half creamy and half chunky, with some coconutty broth holding it all together. (To puree in a standing blender, using a ladle, transfer about half of the soup to a blender jar. Remove the vent in the blender’s lid to allow steam to escape and loosely cover it with a towel to prevent splatter. Blend on low until smooth, then stir the pureed soup back into the pot).
Ladle the soup into bowls, top with the mango salsa and serve, with extra salsa on the side.
SINGAPORE (AFP) – South Korean teenager Kim Joo-hyung held his nerve to sink a birdie on the first playoff hole and win The Singapore International yesterday.
It was the 19-year-old’s second win on the Asian Tour and lifted him atop the Order of Merit, with the concluding Singapore Open left to be played on the pandemic-delayed Asian Tour 2020-21 season next week.
The 14-year-old Thai amateur Ratchanon Chantananuwat, playing in his first professional event outside Thailand, signed for a 69 to finish in third.
Kim started the day at Tanah Merah Country Club two shots back of Rattanon Wannasrichan but overtook the lead as he fired three successive birdies starting from the par-four seven after the Thai stumbled with two opening bogeys.
The teenager was leading by two shots with two holes left to play before dropping a shot on 17. Rattanon forced the playoff by closing with a birdie on 18 for an even-par 72 after Kim could only settle for par.
With both players ending regulation play with matching four-day totals of four-under-par 284, it was back to the par-five 18, where Kim eventually sealed his second Tour victory after his 2019 breakthrough in India.
“This second win has got to be a lot harder than the first one, only because it’s a tough golf course and everyone played their hearts out,” said Kim.
“It was a grind today and I’m just very lucky to be on top.”
Institut Tahfiz Al-Quran Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah began enrolment for its ‘Aliyah Qira’at diploma (2022-2025 session) from today.
It is open to all Muslim citizens and permanent residents.
Applicants should obtain Jayyid in at least three subjects in the Brunei Religious Education Certificate (SPUB) exam or at least three credits in the Brunei Cambridge GCE ‘O’ Level (including Bahasa Melayu and Arabic Language).
Applicants must also pass an interview for the ‘Aliyah Qira’at diploma enrolment, and have a health account from a recognised government health centre.
Qualified foreign nationals (whose parents work at a government department or private sector in Brunei Darussalam) can apply in writing to the Board Chairman of Institut Tahfiz Al-Quran Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah, through the principal of the institute.
The enrolment form can be obtained at the institute’s office at Simpang 175, Jalan Raja Isteri Pengiran Anak Hajah Saleha, Bandar Seri Begawan during office hours or download the form from the Ministry of Religious Affairs website at www.kheu gov.bn. The deadline to return the form is February 22 at 4pm.
UPI – A Colorado sheriff’s deputy called to help wrangle a loose horse climbed onto the panicking equine’s back and rode the animal back to its home.
The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office said Deputy Ian Sebold was among those who responded to a call about a loose horse wandering through busy roads in Centennial.
The sheriff’s office said in a Facebook post that the horse “tried to make a clean getaway but Deputy Sebold was much too quick”.
“The cowboy cop responded to the call, wrangled the horse, jumped on its back and rode it to safety,” the post said.
Sebold said the horse was panicking when he arrived on the scene.
“I saw the horse crossing the road, and it’s a four-lane major roadway. I could tell he was terrified,” Sebold told McClatchy News. “A citizen was walking nearby, trying to stop traffic to allow him to get across. “You could see in his face, he didn’t know what to do on a major roadway. He just wanted to go home, but didn’t know how to get there.”
Sebold and other deputies were able to corner the horse in an apartment complex parking lot.
“With no trailer to take him home, the simplest idea was to ride him back,” Sebold said.
“There was no saddle, no halter, but I got a boost – old school way – and hopped on.
“To me, the biggest question was how to get this horse safely out of a major residential area. We were not walking those 2.6 miles.”
Other deputies provided an escort with their vehicles to allow Sebold to safely ride the horse back to its home.
BEIJING (XINHUA) – China’s e-commerce logistics sector reported moderate growth last year, according to an industry survey jointly undertaken by the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing and e-commerce giant JD.com.
The survey showed that the index tracking e-commerce logistics activities averaged 110.3 points in 2021, up 2.4 percentage points from the previous year and was close to the 2019 average.
The total demand for e-commerce logistics rose relatively fast last year, with the sub-index tracking the total business volume coming in at 126.6 points, up 3.4 percentage points from 2020.
The business volume in rural areas maintained its growth momentum, with the sub-index standing at 125.9 points on average in 2021, up 7.6 points from the previous year.
In December last year, the index tracking e-commerce logistics activities stood at 108.8 points, down 0.7 percentage points from that in November.
The survey predicted that e-commerce logistics demand will recover in the near term as the Spring Festival approaches.
THE KOREA HERALD – Momoland dropped the digital single Yummy Yummy Love on Friday.
“Thinking that we’re meeting our fans after a long while made me feel nervous and excited as if we’re debuting,” said JooE through agency MLD Entertainment.
It has been a year since the group’s last release but the time went by quickly as they put a lot of thought and effort into returning with a different, unique concept, explained Nayun.
The result is a funky and sweet style that is expressed through the groovy dance tune.
It is a candid take on sweet love, and listeners will instantly hum along, according to Hyebin, adding that collaborating with Natti Natasha, a Latin pop star, was an unforgettable experience. The new single also comes with catchy and easy-to-learn dance moves.
Nancy picked one that looks as if they are blowing trumpets while Jane chose making an ‘L’ with fingers when the group sings “Are you ready for love like this?” as the most memorable bit of choreography.
K-pop girl group Momoland. PHOTO: TWITTER/MOMOLAND
STRASBOURG, FRANCE (AP) – A World Health Organization (WHO) official warned last week of a “closing window of opportunity” for European countries to prevent their healthcare systems from being overwhelmed as the Omicron variant produces near-vertical growth in coronavirus infections.
In France, Britain and Spain, nations with comparatively strong national health programmes, that window may already be closed.
The director of an intensive care unit (ICU) at a hospital in Strasbourg is turning patients away. A surgeon at a London hospital describes a critical delay in a man’s cancer diagnosis. Spain is seeing its determination to prevent a system collapse tested as Omicron keeps medical personnel off work.
“There are a lot of patients we can’t admit, and it’s the non-COVID patients who are the collateral victims of all this,” said Dr Julie Helms, who runs the ICU at Strasbourg University Hospital in far eastern France.
Two years into the pandemic, with the exceptionally contagious omicron impacting public services of various kinds, the variant’s effect on medical facilities has many reevaluating the resilience of public health systems that are considered essential to providing equal care.
The problem, experts said, is that few health systems built up enough flexibility to handle a crisis like the coronavirus before it emerged, while repeated infection spikes have kept the rest too preoccupied to implement changes during the long emergency.
ABOVE & BELOW: Nurses caring for a COVID-19 patient in the infectious disease ward of the Strasbourg University Hospital, eastern France; and a paramedic opens the doors of an ambulance to take a patient into the Royal London Hospital in the Whitechapel area of east London. PHOTOS: AP
Medical staff observing a minute of silence while protesting a lack of resources outside the Strasbourg University Hospital
Hospital admissions per capita right now are as high in France, Italy and Spain as they were last spring, when the three countries had lockdowns or other restrictive measures in place. England’s hospitalisation rate of people with COVID-19 for the week ending on January 9 was slightly higher than it was in early February 2021, before most residents were vaccinated.
This time, there are no lockdowns. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, a population health research organisation based at the University of Washington, predicted that more than half of the people in WHO Europe’s 53-country region will be infected with Omicron within two months.
That includes doctors, nurses and technicians at public hospitals.
About 15 per cent of the Strasbourg hospital system’s staff of 13,000 was out this week. In some hospitals, the employee absentee rate is 20 per cent. Schedules are made and reset to plug gaps; patients whose needs aren’t critical must wait.
The French public hospital’s 26 ICU beds are almost all occupied by unvaccinated patients, people “who refuse care, who refuse the medicine or who demand medicines that have no effectiveness”, Helms said.
She denied 12 requests for admission last Tuesday, and 10 last Wednesday night.
“When you have three patients for a single bed, we try to take the one who has the best odds of benefiting from it,” Helms said.
In Britain, like France, Omicron is causing cracks in the health system even though the variant appears to cause milder illness than its predecessors. The British government this month assigned military personnel, including medics, to fill in at London hospitals, adding to the ranks of service members already helping administer vaccines and
operate ambulances.
At the Royal Free Hospital in London, Dr Leye Ajayi described a patient who faced delays in his initial cancer diagnosis.
“Unfortunately, when we eventually got round to seeing the patient, his cancer had already spread,” Ajayi told Sky News. “So we’re now dealing with a young patient in his mid-50s who, perhaps if we’d seen him a year ago, could have offered curative surgery. We’re now dealing with palliative care.”
Nearly 13,000 patients in England were forced to wait on stretchers more than 12 hours before a hospital bed opened, according to figures released last week from the National Health Service.
Britain has a backlog of around 5.9 million people awaiting cancer screenings, scheduled surgeries and other planned care. Some experts estimated that figure could double in the next three years.
“We need to focus on why performance has continued to fall and struggle for years and build the solutions to drive improvement in both the short and long term,” said President of the Society for Acute Medicine Dr Tim Cooksley.
Having the capacity to accommodate a surge is crucial, and it’s just this surge capacity that many in Europe were surprised to learn their countries lacked. The people in a position to turn that around were the same ones dealing with the crisis daily.
In the midst of the first wave, in April 2020, WHO’s Europe office put out a how-to guide for health systems to build slack into their systems for new outbreaks, including identifying a temporary health workforce.
“Despite the fact that countries thought they were prepared for a pandemic that might come along, they were not. So it’s building the ship as it sails,” said Dr David Heymann, who previously led the WHO’s infectious diseases department.
But France had been cutting back hospital beds – and doctors and nurses – for years before the pandemic. Building it back up in a matter of months proved too much when the current wave infected hospital staff by the hundreds each day. Even allowing symptomatic COVID-19-positive health workers to report for work hasn’t been enough.
Britain’s NHS Confederation, a membership organisation for sponsors and providers, said the public health service went into the pandemic with a shortage of 100,000 health workers that has only worsened.
The first wave of the pandemic pushed Spain’s health system to its limit. Hospitals improvised ways to treat more patients by setting up ICUs in operating rooms, gymnasiums and libraries. The public witnessed, appalled, retirees dying in nursing homes without ever being taken to state hospitals that were already well over capacity.
After that, the Spanish government vowed not to let such a collapse happen again.
Working with regional health departments, it designed what officials call “elasticity plans” to deal with sudden variations in service demands, especially in ICUs.
The idea is that hospitals have the equipment and, in theory, the personnel, to increase capacity depending on the need. But critics of government health policy said they’ve warned for years of inadequate hospital staffing, a key driver of the difficulty delivering care in the current wave.
“The key thing is flexibility, having flexible buildings that can expand, having staff that are flexible in terms of accepting task shifting, having flexibility in terms of sharing loads more of a regional structure,” said public health professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Dr Martin McKee.
Ultimately, though, McLee said: “A bed is an item of furniture. What counts is the staff around it,” McKee said.
Helms, the Strasbourg intensive care doctor, knows that all too well. Her unit has space for 30 beds. But it has only enough staff to care for the patients in the 26 beds currently occupied, a situation unlikely to change quickly after Omicron burns through the region.
In the same hospital’s infectious diseases unit, frantic schedulers are borrowing staff from elsewhere in the facility, even if it means non-COVID-19 patients get less care.
“We’re still in the middle of a complex epidemic that is changing every day. It’s hard to imagine what we need to build for the future for other epidemics, but we’re going to have to reflect on the system of how we organise care,” said Dr Nicolas Lefebvre, who runs the infectious diseases unit at the Strasbourg hospital.
He said Europe is prepared to handle isolated outbreaks as it has in the past, but the pandemic has exposed weakened foundations across entire health systems, even those considered among the world’s best.
Head of the French Hospital Federation Frédéric Valletoux said policymakers at the national level are acutely aware of the problem now. For 2022, the federation has requested more resources from nursing staff on up.
“The difficulty in our system is to shake things up, especially when we’re in the heart of the crisis,” Valletoux said.