H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Boris Johnson took four days off as NHS warned Covid could ‘overwhelm’ system

about 13 hours ago
A picture


Boris Johnson took four days off from official government business during a key period in the UK’s Covid preparation when the NHS was bracing to be “overwhelmed” by the virus.Official disclosure for the period in February 2020 – described by the Covid inquiry as a “lost month” in the country’s crisis response – reveal Johnson enjoyed an extended break during the half-term holidays at Chevening, a governmental estate in Kent, where he spent time walking his dog and taking motorcycle rides.The former prime minister was questioned on his activities between 14 and 24 February 2020 when he appeared at the inquiry in December 2023.He said: “There wasn’t a long holiday that I took.I was working throughout the period and the tempo did increase.

”But official activity logs appear to undermine evidence that Johnson gave under oath.The files suggest that Johnson did not conduct any official government business on 15, 16, 17 and 21 February.Instead, he appears to have spent time walking his jack russell dog, Dilyn, in Chevening’s 1,416 hectare (3,500 acre) grounds, riding a motorbike given to him by his now wife, Carrie, and hosting friends and family for lunches, dinners and overnight stays.Entries in the logs for 14 to 24 February make no reference to Johnson working on the Covid response, although he said he had discussed the virus on scheduled calls with other world leaders.The Covid inquiry this week concluded that the UK’s response to the virus was “too little, too late” and the introduction of a lockdown just a week earlier on 16 March could have saved more than 20,000 lives.

It described February 2020 as a “lost month” and said the response to the virus was essentially halted during the half-term holidays,The report added that there was a “toxic and chaotic” culture in Downing Street under Johnson,It found there were no cabinet meetings between 14 and 25 February,Johnson was not briefed “to any significant extent” on the virus during this period and received no daily updates, its report concluded,It added: “Mr Johnson should have appreciated sooner that this was an emergency that required prime ministerial leadership to inject urgency into the response.

”The details of Johnson’s activities are revealed in an official government document contained in the Boris Files, a cache of leaked documents,The files have been seen by the Guardian after they were obtained by the transparency group Distributed Denial of Secrets,On 21 February, as Johnson biked and walked around Chevening, the British government was briefed on a new cluster of 16 cases in northern Italy,Officials were told that seven patients were in intensive care and none had travelled to China, prompting fears that the virus could no longer be contained,On the same day, NHS England noted that “even with continued mitigation work” it could become “overwhelmed” before the virus peaked unless the government made “significant interventions to flatten the curve” but lockdown measures were not implemented in England for more than four weeks.

Johnson was not briefed and the logs indicate he did not join any calls about the escalating situation in Europe.However, they show he enjoyed a four-hour dinner with Catherine Humphrey, a friend of his wife’s who would later be a witness at the couple’s wedding in May 2021.The inquiry, chaired by retired judge and crossbench peer Heather Hallett, said the Italian outbreak “should have prompted urgent planning” in the UK, including by devolved administrations.However, its report added: “Instead, the governments did not take the pandemic seriously enough until it was too late.February 2020 was a lost month.

”The files indicate that Johnson carried out just two full days of work during his Chevening break, on 19 and 20 February.He held a 20 minute call with US president Donald Trump on 20 February, during which he said the virus and its origins were discussed.The logs say this was followed by a three-hour dinner with Henry Newman, Simone Finn and Josh Grimstone, former government officials understood to be close friends of his wife.On 18 February, Johnson worked for just 40 minutes, joining a call with Chinese president Xi Jinping, the documents suggest.Johnson told the inquiry that one purpose of the call was to “compare notes” on Covid.

Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionHe missed a meeting of the Cobra emergency committee, which was convened to discuss Covid and was chaired by then health secretary, Matt Hancock.While Johnson entertained his late mother, Charlotte Johnson, and his now mother-in-law, Josephine McAfee, over lunch at Chevening, the government’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty told the Cobra meeting it was possible the Covid outbreak could escalate to a global pandemic.On 22 February, Johnson worked on his ministerial boxes for about 90 minutes before hosting family in his Downing Street flat and walking in St James’ Park as the Italian government prepared to put part of the country into lockdown after its first Covid death.Johnson then spent time shopping in Sevenoaks, before returning to Chevening.He travelled back to Downing Street on 23 February, after spending several hours on ministerial boxes.

By this point, the UK had 13 confirmed cases of Covid.The government announced the first lockdown in England on 23 March.By this time, confirmed cases of the virus in the UK had reached 6,726 and there had been 336 deaths.Covid was listed on the death certificates of about 227,000 people between March 2020 and May 2023.Joe Hurst, the spokesperson for the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK, said the revelations in the Guardian are “horrific” and provide “further evidence that he [Johnson] wasn’t taking Covid seriously, that he was ignoring the warnings he was getting and putting himself ahead of the country at that time.

It vindicates further the report that came out on Thursday.”He added: “It sounds like he has questions to answer about how truthful he was in front of the inquiry.”Hurst said the Guardian’s reporting was describing “gross misconduct in public office and a total abdication of his [Johnson’s] role and of his primary objective, as prime minister, of keeping people safe.That’s certainly how the families feel and that’s what the inquiry has said as well.“It will be devastating for the families to read, and horrific.

It further vindicates the reasons they were calling for the inquiry in the first place,”Johnson declined to comment,Additional reporting by Donna FergusonThe best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know,If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods,Secure Messaging in the Guardian appThe Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.

Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs,This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said,If you don't already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu,Select ‘Secure Messaging’,SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and postIf you can safely use the Tor network without being observed or monitored, you can send messages and documents to the Guardian via our SecureDrop platform.

Finally, our guide at theguardian.com/tips lists several ways to contact us securely, and discusses the pros and cons of each.
technologySee all
A picture

Xania Monet’s music is the stuff of nightmares. Thankfully her AI ‘clankers’ will be limited to this cultural moment | Van Badham

Xania Monet is the latest digital nightmare to emerge from a hellscape of AI content production. No wonder she’s popular … but how long will it last?The music iteration of AI “actor” Tilly Norwood, Xania is a composite product manufactured of digital tools: in this case, a photorealistic avatar accompanied by a sound that computers have generated to resemble that of a human voice singing words.Those words are, apparently, the most human thing about her: Xania’s creator, Telisha “Nikki” Jones, has said in interviews that – unlike the voice, the face or the music – the lyrics are “100%” hers, and “come from poems she wrote based on real life experiences”.Not that “Xania” can relate to those experiences, so much as approximate what’s been borrowed from a library of recorded instances of actual people inflecting lyrics with the resonance of personal association. Some notes may sound like Christina Aguilera, some sound like Beyoncé, but – unlike any of her influences – Xania “herself” is never going to mourn, fear, risk anything for the cause of justice, make a difficult second album, explore her sexuality, confront the reality of ageing, wank, eat a cupcake or die

2 days ago
A picture

French authorities investigate alleged Holocaust denial posts on Elon Musk’s Grok AI

French public prosecutors are investigating allegations by government ministers and human rights groups that Grok, Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, made statements denying the Holocaust.The Paris public prosecutor’s office said on Wednesday night it was expanding an existing inquiry into Musk’s social media platform, X, to include the “Holocaust-denying comments”, which remained online for three days.Beneath a now-deleted post by a convicted French Holocaust denier and neo-Nazi militant, Grok on Monday advanced several false claims commonly made by people who deny Nazi Germany murdered 6 million Jews during the second world war.The chatbot said in French that the gas chambers at the Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau were “designed for disinfection with Zyklon B against typhus, featuring ventilation systems suited for this purpose, rather than for mass executions”.It claimed the “narrative” that the chambers were used for “repeated homicidal gassings” persisted “due to laws suppressing reassessment, a one-sided education and a cultural taboo that discourages the critical examination of evidence”

3 days ago
A picture

‘We excel at every phase of AI’: Nvidia CEO quells Wall Street fears of AI bubble amid market selloff

Global share markets rose after Nvidia posted third-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street estimates, assuaging for now concerns about whether the high-flying valuations of AI firms had peaked.On Wednesday, all eyes were on Nvidia, the bellwether for the AI industry and the most valuable publicly traded company in the world, with analysts and investors hoping the chipmaker’s third-quarter earnings would dampen fears that a bubble was forming in the sector.Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, opened the earnings call with an attempt to dispel those concerns, saying that there was a major transformation happening in AI, and Nvidia was foundational to that transformation.“There’s been a lot of talk about an AI bubble,” said Huang. “From our vantage point, we see something very different

3 days ago
A picture

Nvidia earnings: Wall Street sighs with relief after AI wave doesn’t crash

Markets expectations around Wednesday’s quarterly earnings report by the most valuable publicly traded company in the world had risen to a fever pitch. Anxiety over billions in investment in artificial intelligence pervaded, in part because the US has been starved of reliable economic data by the recent government shutdown.Investors hoped that both questions would be in part answered by Nvidia’s earnings and by a jobs report due on Thursday morning.“This is a ‘So goes Nvidia, so goes the market’ kind of report,” Scott Martin, chief investment officer at Kingsview Wealth Management, told Bloomberg in a concise summary of market sentiment.The prospect of a market mood swing had built in advance of the earnings call, with options markets anticipating Nvidia’s shares could move 6%, or $280bn in value, up or down

3 days ago
A picture

Uber hit with legal demands to halt use of AI-driven pay systems

Uber has been hit with legal demands to stop using its artificial intelligence driven pay systems, which have been blamed for significantly reducing the incomes of the ride hailing app’s drivers.A letter before action – sent to the US company by the non-profit foundation, Worker Info Exchange (WIE), on Wednesday – is understood to allege that the ride hailing app has breached European data protection law by varying driver pay rates through its controversial algorithm.James Farrar, the director of WIE, said: “Uber has leveraged artificial intelligence and machine learning to implement deeply intrusive and exploitative pay-setting systems that have damaged the livelihoods of thousands of drivers.“Through this collective action, we intend to get a fairer deal for drivers and ensure Uber is held financially accountable for the harm caused by this unlawful use of AI.“This case is … about securing transparent, fair and safe working conditions for all platform workers

4 days ago
A picture

TikTok to give users power to reduce amount of AI content on their feeds

TikTok is giving users the power to reduce the amount of artificial intelligence-made content on their feeds, as it revealed the platform hosts more than 1bn AI videos.The change, which is being tested over the next few weeks before a global rollout, comes as new video-generating tools such as OpenAI’s Sora and Google’s Veo 3 have spurred a surge in AI content online.The Guardian revealed in August that nearly one in 10 of the fastest-growing YouTube channels globally only show AI-generated videos. Many qualify as “AI slop”, the term for low-quality, mass-produced content that is often nonsensical or surreal.Jade Nester, TikTok’s European director of public policy for safety and privacy, said: “We know from our community that many people enjoy content made with AI tools, from digital art to science explainers, and we want to give people the power to see more or less of that, based on their own preferences

4 days ago
societySee all
A picture

We know ultra-processed foods are bad for you – but can you spot them? Take our quiz

1 day ago
A picture

How could Reeves hit gambling firms – and are they fearmongering over impact?

2 days ago
A picture

Overseas-trained doctors leaving the UK in record numbers

2 days ago
A picture

Prozac ‘no better than placebo’ for treating children with depression, experts say

2 days ago
A picture

Councils in north of England and Midlands to get more funding in shake-up

2 days ago
A picture

Keeping youths in care out of trouble | Letter

3 days ago