Due to the unpredictability of COVID-19, aviation experts do not expect aviation traffic to return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024. Nevertheless, when the aviation industry rebounds, it should work towards building a significantly more sustainable industry than the one we know today. This means putting the industry on a sounder financial footing and making flying less polluted.
Concentration Camps Disregarded in Favour of Money
The Holocaust is no secret to the world. Everyone, at some point, has read, heard, or watched examples the horrific treatment against the European Jewish community. To this day, there are survivors who are still recounting personal accounts of the horrific treatment they endured. The events that occurred have been labelled as ‘the worst crime in human history’, so why are they being replicated in 2020?
Inter-faith Marriages in India: Hate Prevails over Love!
After ferocious reactions from people in India claiming that the advertisement promoted inter-faith marriages and was unnecessarily trying to show the Muslim community as warm and kind when in their opinion, it is not. The reactions also absurdly went on to convey that such inter-faith marriages were illegal in the Indian jurisdiction.
The Impact of Another Lockdown....
What just happened?
In a recent interview, Government Chief Scientific Advisor Sir Patrick Vallance has claimed that the UK is predicted to be facing an increase of 50,000 cases per day in the following month if no further actions are taken into hand. Indeed, cases are already rising in thousands per day, which is causing a lot of stress within the NHS, leading to them being unable to accommodate those who are suffering from serious symptoms of COVID-19.
Get bread-y for it, Irish Supreme Court rules that Subway bread, is not bread
The Condemnation of the “Activist Lawyer”
In a video published on the 27th August, the Home Office dangerously referred to immigration lawyers, who provide impartial legal advice to migrants, as “activist lawyers”. Captioning an animation of deportation flights leaving the UK, the message relayed by the Home Office read that such “activist lawyers” were delaying the removal of illegal migrants.
Did Qualifying as a Lawyer Just Become Easier?
BARBRI, the largest US provider of crammer courses for American state bar exams, has released a report last month condemning the high costs incurred by students in the legal education pathway here in Britain. The research conducted by 'Hook Tangaza' consultants suggests that the existing GDL/LPC route could be costing students on average £25,000 to £38,000 more than a new SQE scheme which is set to come into effect next year
Are flying Taxis Ready to Take Off?
Rising to the Occasion: Drone industry takes to the skies using COVID-19 as leverage
In the bleak times of COVID-19, contactless delivery through using drones can facilitate an effective way to deliver medical supplies, COVID-19 test samples and other medical equipment. Notably, China's Antwork drone delivery start-up already made deliveries of medical supplies to the People’s Hospital of Xingchang in Shaoxing, China. This was to help the hospital respond to the then developing coronavirus emergency in China.
COVID Causes Flights to be Taken Off The Plans
What just happened?
EasyJet has signalled to the government that it may require additional financial support. This comes after the company slashed its winter flight schedule due to plummeting passenger demand. EasyJet has already received a £360m loan from the government, cut 4500 jobs equating to almost a third of its staff and raised £608m from selling aircraft[
UK Shifts up a Gear with Autonomous Vehicles
The UK government and car industry have teamed up to launch a new initiative researching, testing, and trialing driverless car technology within British cities. Dubbed ServCity, this Nissan-backed project forms part of the UK’s £100m ‘Intelligent Mobility’ fund and will run for two and a half years.
Should the UK initiate a two-week circuit breaker?
Covid-19 cases hit a new record of 19,724 on Wednesday creating split opinions on how to manage the virus. [1] SAGE, the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, released a report stating that a two-week circuit breaker at the end of October could halve covid-19 deaths between now and the end of the year.
Offshoring Asylum Seekers- Priti's Plan to Reduce Migration
What just happened?
Downing Street has been considering adopting an Australian offshore detention system. The Foreign Office revealed Downing Street has sought its advice on “negotiating an offshore asylum processing facility similar to the Australian model in Papua New Guinea and Nauru.” If this system is implemented it will raise a series of human rights violations.
The Swift Disbandment of Public Health England
In mid-August this year, Health Secretary Matt Hancock gave an executive order to disband Public Health England. The executive agency will be merged with the NHS Test and Trace programme to form the new National Institute for Health Protection (NIHP), promised for September. Now in October, the new institution is still “pending”, delayed until spring 2021
When Caste Kills. Persecution of the 'Untouchables'.
What has just happened?
8 years after the killing of Jyoti Singh Pandey, famously eulogised as ‘Nirbhaya’ (meaning “fearless”). Hundreds of people have once again gathered in New Delhi to denounce the rape and murder of a young woman in Uttar Pradesh. Sparking outrage in India, a 19-year old Dalit woman died in hospital, after being assaulted by four ‘upper Caste’ men.
Time to Say Goodbye: Phasing out of LIBOR
What has happened?
The London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR) is the interest rate that participating banks offer to other banks for loans on the London market. It is the most widely used benchmark for short-term interest rates globally. [1]
LIBOR is scheduled to be phased out by 2022. A suggested replacement rate is the Sterling Overnight Interbank Average Rate (SONIA) which measures the rate paid by banks on overnight funds. SONIA is calculated as a trimmed mean [2] of rates paid on overnight unsecured wholesale funds.
E-commerce in Mexico; a look into Walmart and Amazon
What has just happened?
The e-commerce sector in Mexico represents a huge investment opportunity for domestic and international firms. Currently, online shopping represents 2% of the country’s $203 billion in annual retail sales. COVID- 19 has accelerated the growth of e-commerce as Walmart de Mexico, the largest retailer in Mexico, e-commerce sales grew 68% in a single quarter.
Student Lockdowns: Imprisoned unfairly or isolated by necessity?
Is Privacy In Cloud Zoom Meetings Becoming Foggy?
New Look VS Landlords: A New image for the High Street.
The fourth and final quarter of the year is often where fellow shopaholics find the biggest and best bargains. Stocking up on seasonal promos, flashing the cash in the Black Friday sales and of course the post-Christmas ‘let’s spend even more of a fortune’ Boxing Day sales. People usually don’t think twice about nipping into their local shopping centre or high street stores, however now that’s not as easy as it sounds.