Corvus Bulletin 11:Mind Your Pi’s and Rho’s (Covid Inquiry June-Dec 2023)

“I am listening to them. Their loss will be recognised” (Baroness Hallett)

Bereaved Families

The UK covid inquiry officially began August 2022. After the resignation of Lady Poole and 4 senior lawyers, the Scottish inquiry finally got underway 22nd October 2023. Chair Lord Brailsford pledged to place the impact on people’s lives central. Ahead of UK public hearings mid-June, Prof. Pollard of Ox Vax (remember him?) told Newsnight not enough was being done to prepare for future pandemics. On QT, Ayesha said we must learn lessons, Lord Sumpter complained Sweden had already done theirs and government didn’t have a legal leg to stand on and, Cabinet Office (CO) bidding to block their release, weirdo tory minister Lee Rowley claimed WhatsApp messages were irrelevant.

Baroness Halibut started by promising an ‘investigation the nation deserves’ with answers to the 3 main questions of preparedness, response and lessons for the future*. ‘Excluded from sharing key evidence’, Bereaved Families lined up outside holding photos of deceased relatives. Praising their ‘dignified vigil’, Halibut assured them she listened but hoped they’d understand the difficult balance she had to strike.

On preparedness, David Cameroon didn’t accept previous underinvestment in the NHS but confessed to prioritising flu over other respiratory viruses. George Osborne didn’t regret austerity, while former CMO Sally Davies said there weren’t enough medical staff and lockdowns damaged a whole generation of children. Mark Drakeford blamed issues in Welsh care homes on Brexit dominating cabinet meetings.

Amidst the interminable blame-game, The Cock turned into the new Captain Hindsight. He deflected questions by putting the onus on everyone else for unreadiness and lack of medicines. Saying a no-deal Brexit was a distraction, he apologised for all fatalities and understood why people didn’t accept that. He then went to talk to Bereaved Families leaving actress Lorelei King, whose brother died of covid, in tears. The next day he attested that with the benefit of hindsight, an earlier first lockdown could have saved many lives, regretted not overruling advice on asymptomatic transmission and denied lying but admitted the evidence was now clear that Van Dam was right to say the ‘protective ring around care homes’ was a broken circle. Pointing to a toxic culture for needing someone to blame, he called The Scumbag a ‘malign actor’. The Scumbag tweeted he spoke rubbish. Ex-NHS CE Simon Stevens subsequently declared The Cock wanted to decide who lived and died rather than top medics.

At Phase 2 in November, former deputy CO sec Helen MacNamara who Scumbag called a cunt**, said government had no real-life experience or ‘business as usual’ model early 2020. No input from women in Number 10 nor CO meant they became effectively ‘invisible overnight’ and covid policy gaps (e.g., childcare). Told there was a plan 10 days before lockdown, she hadn’t seen one and feared thousands dead, akin to a ‘dystopian nightmare’. She returned from having covid 2nd April to find Boris absent with it and drafted a document on how to manage when he was ill. She stated restrictions were never followed in Downing St. but as she was fined for attending a lockdown party and brought the karaoke machine to aide Hannah Young’s leaving do 18th June 2020 as featured in the Channel 4 Partygate film, should have known better!

Lord Mark Sedwill, CO sec until autumn 2020, apologised for recommending ‘chicken pox’ parties to boost herd immunity and, so far up Bori’s arse, ‘his ankles were brown’, had pressed The Bumbler to sack The Cock. He was replaced by Simon Case who likened working in Number 10 to ‘taming wild animals’.

The Glove-Puppet apologised to Bereaved Families for mistakes, agreed lockdowns came too late, criticised tiers and said the impact on children wasn’t considered. Loath to criticise Boris in retrospect, he felt they all deserved a share. Rabid Raab disagreed with Saj that The Scumbag made Bori’s decisions. Thicky Harries admitted infected patients were discharged to care homes and claimed she warned government to safeguard kids. On Newscast, ex-civil servant Jill Rutter found ‘precautionary principles’ interesting; politicians wanting certainty before acting effectively dumped on scientists and PHE. Health threats not treated the same as others like terrorism, it was suggested that UKHSA should sit on the National Security Council.

As part of module 2, the inquiry asked if measures such as social restrictions and lockdowns were in the public interest. Pat Vallance’s diary revealed ‘Number 10 in chaos as usual’ and Boris viewed the pandemic as nature’s way of getting rid of old people. He also dismissed long-covid as ‘bollocks’. Ex mandarin Alex Thomas described an ‘anxious, chaotic and divided’ relationship between CO and No. 10 in the early days. Illustrating dysfunctionality at heart of government, Hugo Keith QC disclosed messages between Simon Case and Boris, autumn 2020: SC: always told Dom real PM but Carrie really in charge.BJ: How true, Smiley face. SC: We look like a terrible joke, I can’t cope with this. I’m going home.

The PM ‘changing strategic direction every day’, Case reached the end of his tether, took sick leave and didn’t attend the inquiry due to a ‘medical issue’ ‘Deeply sorry’ for sending the BYOB garden party e-mail May 2020, former PP Martin Reynolds said government couldn’t deal with the crisis and wrote in his diary that Boris was a weak and ineffective PM. He revealed a ‘shit list’ of people for the chop – it was shit because Scumbag wasn’t on it! Agreeing there was no plan, Boris dithered and took too long imposing lockdown, Lee Cain said it was the wrong crisis for the PMs skillset (whatever that was) but it was a huge undertaking. Keith read The Scumbag’s messages out calling government ‘useless fuck-pigs, cunts and morons’. Dom replied that minister’s incompetence was far worse than his Pi’s and Rho’s. Lord Lister disclosed Boris volunteered to be jabbed with covid live on TV. Meanwhile, claiming to have changed his phone several times and not backed them up, Rishi Rich failed to handover messages from his time as chancellor.

All the bods appeared in what was dubbed Science Week, to reveal the burden of overwork and death threats. Vallance said Boris was bamboozled by The Science and ignored advice on restrictions, believed tiers ineffective and ‘eat out to help out’ which he wasn’t consulted on, helped the spread. The Scumbag ‘happy to see people die’, diary notes showed ministers’ surprise when the CMO piped up. Chris Witless agreed the pandemic preparedness plan wasn’t useful, although lack of data and testing early March 2020 was the big problem. Lockdown #1 a bit late, there were no good options and he advised Van Dam to wait for more data before declaring an epidemic. With hindsight, they could have done things differently. ‘Absolutely not’ consulted on ‘eat out to help out’, Van Dam found out about it on telly and felt allowing mass gatherings spring 2020 ‘unhelpful’. At PMQs, Gareth Thomas asked why Vallance said Rishi didn’t take his advice but 2 years ago, Boris declared they always followed The Science. Rishi spouted the usual lies.

Mass media coverage patchy, a BBC News presenter speaking MLE (Multicultural London English) was almost unintelligible. On Newscast, Laura K. thought the inquiry confirmed how bad things were with government almost imploding, Brexit creating factions and civil servants struggling to grapple with policy. Jo Co asked her Daily Politics panel: who was to blame for the toxic culture – Boris or The Scumbag? Err, the PM appointed them! Due to the 3-cunt rule, HIGNFY used country house instead to ridicule the goings-on. Positing the inquiry was a waste of time, Jeremy Vine queried why it didn’t investigate if covid originated in a Chinese lab. Because that’s not what it’s about you idiot! Even more idiotic, a caller declared the hearings a disgrace and an insult to the bereaved and hoped they didn’t get paid. I suggested she didn’t know what an inquiry was, but Phil reckoned many people didn’t want to contemplate culpability. Others had all-but forgotten about it as evinced by my visit to an elderly neighbour. When I knocked on her door in October, she felt unwell. “Can I help?” “No, I’m waiting for it to work through; it’s one of those things; you know, that thing everyone had 3 years ago and we had to wear masks.” “Covid?” “That’s it!”

Still being grilled in December, The Cock said he resigned over his affair with Gina Colander as he was accountable for not following the rules and that sooner lockdowns could have prevented school closures Jan 2021. He praised Liverpool mayor Joe Anderson for cooperation and regretted he was no longer with us – Joe tweeted he just took his pulse and was still here! Criticising Bunman for putting politics before health by failing to agree a support package, Bunman retorted the problem was with Cock. Attending in person, Bunman complained of London-centric decision-making and fellow Metro Mayor Khan whinged of exclusion.

Boris in GTFC Bobble Hat

Allegedly preparing for a year, Boris appeared at the inquiry for 2 days early December, arriving under cover of darkness at 7.00 a.m. sporting a GTFC bobble hat – much to the chagrin of Grimbarians. ‘Deeply sorry’ for pain, loss and suffering, 4 protestors brandishing papers reading ‘the dead can’t hear your apologies’ were ejected. The Bumbler admitted to male-dominated meetings and misjudging scale: “It would certainly be fair to say of me, the entire Whitehall establishment, scientific community…we underestimated the scale and the pace of the challenge…We should have collectively twigged much sooner. I should have twigged.” Defending the overall approach, he denied excess UK deaths second only to Italy, said he didn’t sack The Cock (who’d gone off to do ‘Who Dares Wins’) because he was ‘intellectually able’ and doing his best, conceded tiers didn’t work leading to lockdown #2, was perplexed at scientists’ claims of being unaware of ‘eat out to help out’ and denied advocating letting the virus rip. Not reconciled with deaths, he knew from experience how horrid it was and focused on saving lives. Regretful of Partygate, he claimed public perception of events was a million miles from what actually happened. CO losing its legal challenge to block full release of his documents, a pleased Halibut expected to receive material pronto, but Boris forgot his old phone’s passcode. Needing help to retrieve it, he couldn’t explain why messages disappeared and blathered about WhatsApp going down and coming back up again with data erased.

Rishi apologised to all sufferers but defended ‘eat out to help out’ which he didn’t believe was risky and denied not consulting medics. Panned for putting money before lives, some claimed it saved the hospitality sector, others that it made little difference. Unaware The Treasury was called a death squad, he repeatedly said ‘I don’t recall’ before the inquiry was adjourned until 2024.

Outside the inquiry, a plethora of evidence emerged, proving cronies still got away with it. A study by the Best for Britain group found government wasted £100bn over 4 years on ‘crony contracts’, ‘duff deals’ and ‘outrageous outgoings’ including £15bn on unusable PPE, £140m on the unlawful Rwanda deal, £2bn scrapping HS2, and ½ bn on unused post-Brexit custom inspection sites. £14.9bn PPE written off, plus £3.3bn for TIT, PAC found no proper controls and an inventory impossible 3 years on. Chair Meg Hillier understood pressures at the pandemic’s outset, but lax controls and finance didn’t help, creating a huge challenge of what to do with stockpiles. Finding UKHSA unable to prepare auditable accounts and Jenny Harries lacking ‘technical experience’, Jenny countered she was working with DHSC to overcome ‘inherited’ financial challenges.

On a Medi pro documentary, Michelle Moan confessed she knew about the PPE deal but it was nowt to do with her. She then informed Laura K. that while she lied, she did nothing wrong or illegal. Hubby Doug Barrowman confirmed Moan could be a beneficiary of the £60m profit:’ that’s what you do when you make money’ (splutter!) Wondering who thought the interview was a good idea, Wes Streeting railed at people getting away with ripping the country off and reiterated labour plans for a covid corruption commissioner. Amidst a criminal suit, Oliver Dowdy insisted there was no cronyism in awarding contracts. Rishi said he took the issue incredibly seriously and denied Moan had told government of her involvement. Keir called it ‘a shocking disgrace from top to bottom’.

Babylon Healthcare, which The Cock gave £20m DOH money to for the ‘doctor in your pocket’ app, went bust. There were calls to investigate Leeds company Clipper Logistics £130m subcontracts to distribute PPE. A spokesperson insisted there was no connection to boss Mr Parkin personally donating dosh to the tories. Tom Moore charity trustee and daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore was paid ‘thousands’ to attend charity events. The money went to Maytrix Group (her and hubbies’ company). Instructed to demolish the Captain Tom Foundation Building in their garden, she was reduced to using public spas.

In other news, The Met belatedly issued 24 fines over the Jingle & Mingle do and paid compo to 2 women arrested at the Clapham Common vigil for breaking coronavirus laws. Patsy Stevenson and Dania Al-Obeid didn’t know they’d met there.

Plans for annual covid boosters were unveiled in August. Despite limited info, not yet a variant of concern and only 3 UK cases, Omicron version BA.2.86 aka Pirola, caused covid and flu jabs to be brought forward to 11th September. Not being over 65, immunosuppressed or care workers, we didn’t qualify and couldn’t buy it even if we could afford to, as Mike Gammon seemed to think we should (at least not yet). The NHS whinged of short notice and begged government to plan better next year. As the number of cases rose to 36, most in a Norfolk care home (one hospitalised, all recovered), UKHSA believed there was some community transmission and urged the eligible to get jabbed. Telly doctor Chris re-emerged to tell BBC Breakfast Pirola had 30 mutations and might bypass immunity but be less hazardous to health. By November, subvariant JN.1had spread to 12 countries. Originating in Denmark, the name Pirola combined Greek letters Pi and Rho, and also happened to be Spanish Galician slang for male anatomy!

Covid and flu still rose in the UK at the end of 2023 but there was less than 2022. Meanwhile, China’s first winter without lockdown since 2020 brought low immunity, lots of flu and inundated hospitals. WHO demanded they release data. Covid vaccine mRNA developers Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman shared the Nobel prize for medicine. Moderna planned dual vaccines by 2025, and treble ones the year after. Prompted by the emergence of long covid, further research uncovered long colds causing coughing, tummy ache and diarrhoea for up to 4 weeks. As we were ill most of December, I wondered if we had it.

The NHS’ 75th anniversary was celebrated in July with a service at Westminster Abbey, a Tom Hardy bedtime story and suspension of the hardship fund and counselling service due to overwhelming demand. Mary Parsons who administered the first covid vaccine, wished people recognised it was ‘such a treasure’: “We don’t know what we’ve lost until we lose it.” First NHS baby Aneira Thomas agreed we took it for granted. Meanwhile, millions waited for treatment as Rishi’s promise to reduce the lists floundered, alongside his other daft priorities.

*Covid inquiry areas and modules- 4 underway:

  1. Resilience and preparedness
  2. Core UK decision-making and political governance
  3. Impact on healthcare systems
  4. Vaccines and therapeutics (including anti-virals)

Others to be announced included: The care sector, PPE procurement, Test and trace, Government business and financial response, Health inequalities and the impact of Covid-19, Education, children and young people, Other public services (including frontline delivery by key workers).

**Scumbag said of MacNamara “I don’t care how it’s done but that woman must be out of our hair – we cannot keep dealing with this horrific meltdown of the British state while dodging stilettos from that cunt.” Disappointed Boris didn’t pull Cummings up on his ‘violent and misogynistic language’, MacNamara responded: ‘It’s horrible to read, and both surprising and not surprising.‘

Part 33 – A Design For Life

High Noon

Composite Panorama

Debilitation continued for most of the following week.  I spent most of the time in bed, only venturing down occasionally. Phil also still felt rubbish but kept me fed and watered.  Monday, a watery sun peeked between grey clouds, signifying rain was on the way.  As the leaves on the trees turned from orange to brown, I was glad I’d captured them on camera before the inevitable fall.  Among the writing and blog-posting, I unusually slept briefly in the afternoon which was nice.

Only 11% of people told to self-isolate by TIT did so.  It was suggested police get details of flouters from DoH and issue fines.  The BMA said it would deter people from getting tested.  Wales announced a ‘firebreak lockdown’ from Friday for 2 weeks, officially cancelling Halloween and Bonfire night.  Barnier agreed to ‘intensified talks on legal texts’ of the Brexit agreement.  What did that mean?  Newsnight included an analysis of Kier, declaring him a man of mystery.  Diane Abbot blamed his mum for instilling a vision of pre-destination by calling him Kier.  A more interesting section featured Margaret Calvert, designer of the road signage.  Never giving it much thought before, the clear simplicity struck me as amazing.  Subsequent additions hadn’t met the high art standard of her work, particularly the stunted horses and frogs.

Tuesday morning, I awoke from a good sleep to the sound of traffic in the rain, lulling me back into a gentle doze.  However, this didn’t help in the debilitation stakes and I remained in bed.  Phil went to the co-op for a top-up shop and found a fresh cream cake in the reduced section.  Obviously intended to cheer me up, I’d planned a day of healthy snacking but felt compelled to eat it before it soured.  “How awful, being forced to eat cream cake.”  He laughed.  It’s a hard life!

440 people lost their lives to Covid-19 in the previous week, now doubling every week.  Awaiting pistols at High Noon, the deadline for Manchester came and went.  With no agreement, tier 3 restrictions were imposed, effective from midnight Thursday with only £22m extra, towards local TIT and protecting the vulnerable. GMC said they needed 90m, but would settle for the ‘bare minimum’ of 65m.  The government offer of £60m was perhaps churlishly turned down by Burnman who said Boris promised ‘levelling up’ when residents of the red wall voted Tory in the last election, but this was ‘levelling down.’  Even Young Conservatives berated the government for betraying the north.  Meanwhile, South Yorks agreed a deal for tier 3, to come into force at 12.01 a.m. Saturday and Ireland announced a 4-week lockdown from midnight Wednesday, aka level 5 of a ‘framework for living with the virus.’

In an idiotic call to business leaders, Boris left after 15 minutes and The Glove-Puppet said leaving the EU was “like moving house.”  Capitalists were unimpressed.  When would they learn The Bumbler wasn’t up to the job?  All he could do was waffle and not back up his hyperbole with concrete action, let alone any strategic planning for life after Brexit.

Black Holes and Revelations

Supermassive Black Hole

I woke several times during the night and eventually gave up on proper sleep on a wet Wednesday, simultaneously fatigued, achy, sneezy, and burpy.  Nevertheless, I made a big effort to bathe and dress in time for the Ocado delivery.  Able to return bags for the first time since March, I was instructed to put them into 1 single bag.  “How many can you squash in there?” asked Phil.  The driver then stuffed them into another clean bag.  “Bags in a bag in a bag,” I quipped.

By the time we’d sorted the shopping, it was lunchtime.  Exhausted by the chore, I  took a sandwich back to bed and bemoaned my plight of a spending another week and a half of my life being ill.

On the anniversary of Spanish Flu arriving in Britain in 1918, Keir confronted Boris at PMQs, asking what was the exit strategy for tier 3 areas?  Was it related to the R rate?  No answer.   Metro revealed that the government bypassed Burnman by offering dosh separately to each of the Manchester metro leaders.  Bolton was the first to say yes.  Marcus Rashford’s petition led to a Labour motion on free dinners for kids during half-term.  It Failed to pass, as only a handful of tory backbenchers voted yes.  Channelling the SWP, Angela Rayner called a fellow GMC MP ‘scum’.  She was right but shouldn’t have said it out loud.  She later apologised.  Debate on Jeremy Vine the next morning led to us discussing how the benefits system was carefully designed to not be enough to live on.  Tory scum either didn’t know this or chose to ignore it when they wittered on about how ‘generous’ it was.  In the wake of the debacle, Rashford, fast becoming an icon, divulged information on which MPs voted against the motion and where to get free food. Cafes and councils across the nation stepped in, as did Leeds United, making the government look like a right bunch of c…ts.  Over the weekend, pressure mounted as paediatricians joined the call and rival footballer Rahim Sterling founded a charity to help disadvantaged kids.

In what the Daily Mail called a ‘farcical session of the commons home affairs committee’, Police Chief in charge of the pandemic, Owen Weatherkill, revealed he didn’t understand the rules in the different tiers as it was too confusing.  Proving his point, he seemed unaware that indoor mixing was banned under tier 2, as did Lancs Police Chief Andy Toads: “The big one for me moving from tier 2 to 3 is your household not mixing with others inside ….”  Chair Yvette Coop pointed out mixing indoors was banned in both tiers.

The valley looked fuzzy on Thursday as mizzle obscured the hills.  I still felt ill and depressed but had to clean the bedroom.  I only managed the bare minimum before exhaustion took over.  Following refreshments, I did some work on my novel but had to stop with another bout of fatigue – it would take 10 years to write at this rate!   Phil again insisted on doing the catering.  I perked up after dinner and settled on the sofa to watch a telly film.  But as my sore throat returned and my temperature rose, I had to go back to bed.

TIT still got worse week on week, with a record low of 59.6% people reached, when 101,000 positive tests were reported.  Labour called it an ‘interstellar-sized black hole’.  Did they mean supermassive?  Figures from regions suggested local teams reached 94.8% and York started their own.  On Newscast, ex-chancellor George Osborne incredibly claimed the NHS hadn’t been underfunded when he was in charge and took no responsibility for the unpreparedness of hospitals at the start of the pandemic – splutter!  Coventry joined other West Mid towns in tier 2.  Rishi Rich dished out more dosh for tier 2 areas; JSS extended to cover all jobs, not just ‘viable’ ones; staff now only had to work 20% of their normal hours to get 73% pay (or 1 day a week), and employers only had to pay 5%.  Also, £2,200 per month was offered to businesses affected by shorter hours, back-dated to the start of local restrictions.  Critics accused him of only extending the earlier offer now that London had gone into tier 2.  He promised tier 3 measures were temporary but gave no timescale.  Apparently unbeknown to our local leaders, government discussed West Yorks moving up to tier 3.  Not reported on Look North, they concentrated on South Yorks, making us wonder anew about the obsession with soft play areas; must be big business in those parts.  Maureen, a Barnsley councillor, became the Brenda of the pandemic saying “I don’t give a sod.” (about lockdown).

Friday marked the anniversary of creation, in 4004 BC, according to Archbishop James Usher.  “He did the maths,” said Phil, “making everyone well gel hence coming up with all those other theories such as evolution, the creation of black holes and the big bang”.  Both still ailing, I spent the day in bedtweaking the journal and the evening watching films.

Croeso I Gymru

Croeso I Gymru

Ahead of the Welsh lockdown that night, last-minute clarification came from the First Minister that supermarkets could only sell essential items.  Shopping trolley police on standby! 

The row rumbled on over the weekend.  The devolved administration insisted stopping supermarkets selling non-essentials was ‘a matter of fairness’ (to small shops).  As Tesco cordoned off tampons, they then said the rules were being misinterpreted and were intended to prevent people spending too long in the supermarket – make your mind up! 

Fright Night films at Chester FC were cancelled as the cinema screen was in England but the loos in Wales.  Heddlu gave notice that they would stringently enforce the border.  With Halloween and Bonfire Night already looking dicey in England, Sage bod John Edmunds warned a normal Christmas was “wishful thinking.”

Bright Night

Haiga – Changeling i

I’d started to feel better Saturday but still achy and very cold so after breakfast, I tucked myself back in bed and played around with ideas on the laptop, including a haiga.  By 4 o’clock, I was recovered enough to venture down again for a pleasant session of eating, drinking and films.

Mind you, I retired much earlier than usual, even without factoring in the extra hour due to the end of BST.  The advantage of this was being up at a reasonable hour on a sunny Sunday.  Phil forgot the clocks went back and also surfaced earlier than normal.

Being housebound for 2 weeks and eager to see trees other than those out the window before the lovely colours fell off, I suggested a short walk to a favourite woodland always gorgeous in autumn.

On the main road, we noted leaves already on the ground, soggy due to the rain.  A group of young mountain bikers straddling the pavement moved aside for us and exchanged cheery words.  Turning up a lane, we found a shortcut to the wood, where the rocks matched the trees, smudged in green, red, orange and copper.  Microsoft ICE cobbled together an inaccurate panorama, that captured the mood of the scene.  A locked gate meant we were unable to take our usual shortcut through a posh garden and were forced to climb up a horrid stony path.  The lane at the top was very busy with walking groups. We tarried near the wall where tiny moss worlds grew, before continuing up.  Phil complained the incline never ended. “That’s right,”  I told him, “it goes right up to the sky!”  We proceeded into the next village for a rare pub visit.  I took a table outside while he went in to order pints, brought out by the daughter of a friend.  She’d left her previous job after 16 years and I asked why.  “Just needed a change.”  Phi had trouble scanning his card so donned the mask again to pay inside – at least they took cash too unlike some places

Supping the beer, my hands got cold and I was glad of the gloves in my pocket.  Grey clouds threatened rain, then they parted and it became bright again, albeit with not much daylight left.  The ale went right through me, thus It was my turn for the palaver of face-coverings to go to the loo.  We walked back quickly before twilight.  In the longer night, a wobbly moon set behind the trees atop the hills.

Watching the news, we realised we had been very lucky with the weather.  The rest of the UK had suffered more rain while the valley remained dry for once.  Coppers told a Manchester pub that a large slice of pizza  didn’t qualify as a ‘substantial meal.’  Since when were they dinner police?  With only 11% complying, a reduction in self-isolation advice was being considered, to 10 or 7 days – where was The Science to back that up?  Spain was the first European nation to reach over 1m cases, and introduced a state of emergency until May!  Italy opted for a looser lockdown; table service would stop at 6, gyms would shut, and people discouraged to move around, leading to a violent protest in Rome.  A group of 7 ‘violent’ Stowaways tried to hijack the Nave Andromeda, a ship anchored near the IOW.  After a 10-hour stand-off, the SBS intervened to rescue the crew.

Tired from the walk, I couldn’t sleep that night.  Brightness had returned, prompting me to peep through the curtains.  Stars twinkled in the deep indigo sky, accompanied by the distinctive red dot of Mars.

Reference:

i. My  haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com