Hello, Warren Murray here, pleased to be bringing you this Thursday briefing.
Joe Biden has spent the first hours of his presidency addressing America’s crisis at home and rebuilding its leadership in the world with a series of executive actions, including rejoining the Paris climate accord, calling a halt to Donald Trump’s border wall, initiating urgent action on Covid-19 and renewing US membership of the World Health Organization. If you didn’t catch the inauguration proceedings yesterday afternoon here is a faithful account from Lauren Gambino in Washington. Don’t miss inaugural poet Amanda Gorman’s recitation of her poem The Hill We Climb. “This is America’s day,” Biden said, gazing across the sprawl of the capital city’s national monuments, guarded by a military garrison unprecedented in modern times and devoid of spectators because of the pandemic. “This is democracy’s day”:
London buses turned into ambulances to ease Covid strain
NHS staff are preparing to transport patients using two London buses that have been converted into makeshift ambulances, in another sign of the strain Covid is putting on the capital’s health services.
Most of the seats on the single-decker buses have been removed so that each can carry four patients, in an attempt to relieve the intense pressure on hospitals and the London ambulance service.
Go-Ahead, the bus company which owns the vehicles, has loaned them to the NHS in the capital to help transfer patients, including to the reopened London Nightingale field hospital:
China’s regional authorities are under pressure to improve their response to the outbreak. Yesterday 16 officials were formally disciplined.
Today, the Global Times reports public security officers are investigating a Hebei village official after he reportedly had a villager tied to a tree. The man had insisted on entering a locked-down area to buy cigarettes, the report said.
“The Party chief of the village, surnamed Yan, instructed anti-epidemic workers on duty at the scene to tie Cao to a tree and verbally abused him, according to a notice released by the local government on Wednesday morning.”
A video circulating on social media showed three anti-epidemic workers wearing red jackets tying an elderly man to a tree while another worker scolded him, saying, “You dare to walk around… son of a bitch… how can you still hang around at this critical time!”
Yan is under investigation for allegedly imposing illegal restrictions on another person’s freedom, and has been suspended, the notice said.
More on China now:
Beijing is under partial lockdown after China reported 144 new cases on Wednesday, including 126 locally transmitted infections.
Among the local cases, 68 were in Heilongjiang province, 33 in Jilin, 20 in Hebei, and two in Beijing. There were also 113 asymptomatic cases, which are counted separately.
The two cases in Beijing’s Daxing district were found to be of the UK variant of the virus, the head of the city’s health authority said. As a result, all 1.6 million residents of Daxing are banned from leaving the city without special permission and a negative Covid-19 test.
Residents in five Daxing neighbourhoods have been ordered to stay inside their homes. School students have been told to study at home, gatherings of more than 50 are banned, and people have been told to postpone weddings and simplify funerals.
Millions of people in other provinces are already under varying lockdown conditions as authorities grapple with the latest outbreak, the worst since early 2020, albeit still in far small numbers.
The national health commission has also announced strict new rules for migrant workers returning to their home villages for the Spring festival, which starts next month. The commission is also encouraging colleges, universities and businesses to stagger the start of holidays and classes.
Beijing News reported: “After returning home, 14 days of home health monitoring will be carried out. During the period, there will be no social gathering, and nucleic acid testing will be carried out every seven days.”
Each street and neighbourhood committee is responsible for implementing the new system and managing the returning residents, including registration and health monitoring.
Once a dashing young senator, now a lion in winter, Joe Biden walked up the presidential lectern he could finally call his own after half a century of striving.
The message that the 46th US president wanted to send a pained nation was the one that has defined his own life in the face of incalculable personal and political loss: resilience.
“We will press forward with speed and urgency, for we have much to do in this winter of peril and possibility,” Biden told the audience at the US Capitol in Washington on Wednesday, as the sun finally broke through clouds that had brought fleeting snow. “Much to repair. Much to restore. Much to heal. Much to build. And much to gain.”
That winter of peril includes a raging pandemic that has killed more than 400,000 Americans and a fraying body politic: two weeks after a mob encouraged by Donald Trump sacked the Capitol, this could no longer be described as a peaceful transfer of power.
Now it is Biden’s great misfortune to have realised, at 78 years old, a lifetime ambition at a moment of what he called “the cascading crises of our era”. It is also his good fortune to have no alternative but to think big and aim high. The quintessentially moderate, middle-of-the-road candidate might go down as radical and transformational because that is what the moment demands: