Finally someone from WHO who actually makes sense

Leongsam

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https://www.magic.co.nz/home/news/2...r-approach-to-covid-as-sweden--who-speci.html

NZ should move to similar approach to COVID as Sweden: WHO special envoy Dr David Nabarro suggests

coronavirus 26/08/2020



On the show today Ryan had an amazing interview with Dr David Nabarro, a special envoy of The World Health Organisation (one of six) specializing in COVID-19.

Dr Nabarro had plenty of praise for the New Zealand Government and the NZ people for reacting quickly and without hesitation to the initial threat of COVID-19, but says that now we should be looking to alternative methods of moving forward in our response to COVID-19. Nabarro says we wouldn’t be remiss to model our future approach off of what Sweden is doing now.
 
WHO and UN are fast becoming irrelevant organizations infested with Red Marxists from CCP.
 
Everyone just eager to get on with their life. But gahmen prevents them from doing it.
 
Europe is opening up.

25 Aug 2020 // Airport Analysis // No Comments »

Amsterdam busiest in Europe with 835 daily flights, Eurocontrol shows; we explore Schiphol’s network
Amsterdam busiest in Europe with 835 daily flights, Eurocontrol shows; we explore Schiphol’s network

Amsterdam was Europe’s busiest airport on 21 August with 835 movements, Eurocontrol data confirms. This includes passenger, cargo, bizjets, and more.
Schiphol, the location for the face-to-face part of Routes Reconnected, is often the continent’s top airport in this coronavirus world, but it is great to see it continuing.
On this August day, Amsterdam’s total flights were just over half that experienced on the same day last year.
The Netherlands’ total traffic, excluding overflights, was down by 46.1% YOY, behind only Lithuania, Albania, Canaries, Norway, and Luxembourg.


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KLM now has 444 movements at Amsterdam; 45 airlines operating
Amsterdam’s position is from KLM having a larger number of movements (444 on this day) than most other full-service operators. Only Turkish Airlines (744), Air France (541), and Lufthansa (501) had more, Eurocontrol data shows.
Amsterdam has also welcomed back dozens of airlines, with 45 passenger carriers operating on 21 August across 167 routes. (At week level, it was 63 airlines.)
It is clearly coming back, especially for LCCs, with their movements down by just 38% YOY.
OAG shows that Amsterdam’s top-10 airlines by movements on 21 August 2020 were KLM, Transavia, easyJet, TUI, Turkish Airlines, Vueling, Air France, Delta, Lufthansa, and British Airways.
Combined, these 10 had 85% of the airport’s movements on this day.
Vueling, for example, had 14, so seven departures: one each to Malaga, Alicante, Rome Fiumicino, Palma, and Valencia, and two to Barcelona
 
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