4.49am EST
04:49
All remaining Covid restrictions in Northern Ireland to be lifted and replaced by guidance
Updated
at 6.14am EST
3.14am EST
03:14
Fresh wave of Omicron infections moving towards east of Europe, WHO warns
Updated
at 6.11am EST
3.00am EST
03:00
Novak Djokovic says he would rather miss out on grand slams than be vaccinated against Covid, in his first major interview since being deported from Australia earlier this year due to his vaccination status.
Djokovic told the BBC on Tuesday he was not anti-vaccination in general but believed people had the right to choose whether they were jabbed or not.
Asked if he would miss Wimbledon and the French Open over his vaccine stance, he replied: “That is the price that I’m willing to pay.”
“The principles of decision making on my body are more important than any title or anything else,” Djokovic said. “I’m trying to be in tune with my body as much as I possibly can.”
Djokovic said he had “always been a great student of wellness, wellbeing, health, nutrition”.
“I was never against vaccination. I understand that, globally, everyone is trying to put a big effort into handling this virus and seeing, hopefully, an end soon to this virus,” he said.
The 34-year-old did not rule being vaccinated for Covid in the future – telling the BBC he was keeping his “mind open”.
2.46am EST
02:46
Cook Islands records first case of Covid
One of the last remaining countries without Covid – the small Pacific nation of Cook Islands – has reported its first case of the virus.
The prime minister, Mark Brown, said the first case arrived on an international flight from New Zealand on 10 February.
“While she was asymptomatic, she returned a positive result in just a few hours later. The case been issued an isolation order. The case is travelling with two others, and they will all remain in isolation until they no longer test positive for Covid-19,” Brown said on Monday.
The prime minister said at the weekend there could be “silent transmission” in the country after another traveller tested positive for Covid upon their return to New Zealand, having travelled through the Cook Islands from 31 January to 8 February.
“It is likely that the person who tested positive was infectious while here and further likely that the virus is in our community,” the prime minister said of that case on social media on Saturday.
Updated
at 2.53am EST