Covid-19 and Commonsense
The African Queen
One morning I was sitting in the lounge at Devonshire House, with its fitted wool carpets and chintz sofas. I was drinking the tea that our steward, Nasser, had brought me. I heard movement in a corner of the room, and thought it must be Nasser cleaning there. But looking round, I saw nobody. Puzzled, I got up and walked towards that corner. Rounding a settee, I nearly stood upon a thin, green snake. About four feet long and just the thickness of your thumb, it was a bright, almost lime green colour. There was not much wedge shape to its head, which rather tapered from its neck. Its tongue was flickering toward me, perhaps a foot away, its head raised only slightly off the floor. I took a step backwards. In response it too retreated, at surprising speed, and zipped up the inside of the curtains.
April 14, 2021
By Craig MURRAY
Below is the story of my day touring Tema with Prince Philip, in this chapter from my book “The Catholic Orangemen of Togo”. You may be surprised to read that I rather liked him.
The African Queen
One morning I was sitting in the lounge at Devonshire House, with its fitted wool carpets and chintz sofas. I was drinking the tea that our steward, Nasser, had brought me. I heard movement in a corner of the room, and thought it must be Nasser cleaning there. But looking round, I saw nobody. Puzzled, I got up and walked towards that corner. Rounding a settee, I nearly stood upon a thin, green snake. About four feet long and just the thickness of your thumb, it was a bright, almost lime green colour. There was not much wedge shape to its head, which rather tapered from its neck. Its tongue was flickering toward me, perhaps a foot away, its head raised only slightly off the floor. I took a step backwards. In response it too retreated, at surprising spee
Daily Monitor
Thursday February 11 2021
Summary
The justices led by the then Deputy Chief Justice Alfonse Owiny-Dollo ruled that it would be a breach of contract entered with the electorate at the start of the current term in May 2016.
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Debate on the Constitutional Amendment Bill No 1, 2019, faced another setback yesterday after MPs failed to proceed without functioning iPads.
The Bill, which seeks to amend about 30 Articles of the 1995 Constitution, was moved in December 2019 by Ndorwa East MP Wilfred Niwagaba, who is also the Shadow Attorney General.
The debate did not ensue after Speaker Rebecca Kadaga promised to give guidance on how to proceed during the plenary session.
Labour s Miliband forced into embarrassing on-air apology in car crash BBC interview Oli Smith
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The Labour Party were forced into a humiliating apology this morning following a senior frontbencher s embarrassing remarks on the Covid crisis. Ed Miliband apologised on the BBC s Andrew Marr show for remarks made by Lord Falconer, the Shadow Attorney General. Speaking to a group of lawyers this week, the Labour frontbencher said the pandemic was a gift that keeps on giving .
Andrew Marr quizzes Labour s Ed Miliband on vaccine passports
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Lord Falconer used the phrase when introducing a webinar on the changes in the law during the Covid pandemic.