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Following is a summary of current people news briefs.
Teenage British activist stages climate protest on Arctic ice floe
Like many of her generation, Mya-Rose Craig feels strongly that adults have failed to take the urgent action needed to tackle global warming and so she has headed to the Arctic Ocean to protest. Armed with a placard reading ‘Youth Strike for Climate”, the 18-year-old British activist is staging the most northerly protest in a series of youth strikes worldwide.
Bill Murray, the Doobie Brothers and those ‘ugly’ golf shirts
Musicians have long protested about politicians using their songs during campaign rallies, but actor Bill Murray has now found himself in the crosshairs of a complaint by the Doobie Brothers. The idiosyncratic “Ghostbusters” star was hit with an unconventional letter this week from the band over Murray’s use of the song “Listen to the Music” in ads for the actor’s line of whimsical golf apparel.
Eleven-year-old climate activist leads beach cleanup in Hong Kong
Lance Lau, an 11-year-old Hong Kong climate activist, has been called the Chinese territory’s answer to Greta Thunberg. Before his school shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Lau would get to school an hour early every Friday to take time to talk to fellow pupils and their parents about what he describes as an irreversible climate crisis.
For Ugandan activist, COVID curbs set new hurdle in climate fight
In a run-down residential compound in Kampala, Vanessa Nakate thrusts her fist in the air as she rallies 30 young demonstrators to defend their planet against climate change. “What do we want?” she shouts, to a ragged chorus of “climate justice”. The youngest protester, two-year-old Manvir Ssozi, sucks his thumb as he flaps a placard that reads: “Money will be … useless on a dead planet.”
Van Morrison takes fans back to magic time in coronavirus-shrouded London
Veteran singer Van Morrison blew away the coronavirus blues in London on Friday night with a performance of stirring and soulful music that transported fans back to happier times – and kept the spirit of live music alive. Morrison, who turned 75 last month, has courted controversy in recent weeks with comments scorning scientists’ analysis of the coronavirus and complaining about government restrictions on peoples’ freedoms.
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