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Football and falls as first humanoid robot games launch in China
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'Like hell': Indoor heat overwhelms Saudi Arabia's cooks, bakers
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On VJ day, king pays tribute to UK veterans, warns of war's 'true cost'
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Bayern's Bundesliga crown up for grabs after rocky summer
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Arsenal face revamped Man Utd as new-look Liverpool open Premier League season
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South Korea president vows to build 'military trust' with North
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'Never again': Indigenous Bolivians sour on socialism
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Indonesia's president touts economy, social welfare drive
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World plastic pollution treaty talks collapse with no deal
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Facing US tariffs, India's Modi vows self-reliance
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Trump to meet Putin in high-stakes Alaska summit
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Indian rescuers scour debris after 60 killed in flood
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Ivory Coast village reburies relatives as rising sea engulfs cemetery
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Stressed UK teens seek influencers' help for exams success
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National Guard deploys 800 personnel for DC mission, says Pentagon
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Japan emperor expresses 'deep remorse' 80 years after WWII
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With waters at 32C, Mediterranean tropicalisation shifts into high gear
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Historic Swedish church being moved as giant mine casts growing shadow
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Malawi's restless youth challenged to vote in September polls
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Indonesian roof tilers flex muscles to keep local industry alive
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World's first humanoid robot games begin in China
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Scott Barrett returns to lead All Blacks against Argentina
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Five things to know about Nigeria's oil sector
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New compromise but still no deal at plastic pollution talks
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France's Cernousek seizes lead at LPGA Portland Classic
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Putin-Trump summit: What each side wants
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Desperate Myanmar villagers scavenge for food as hunger bites
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Asia stocks mixed before US-Russia summit
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Putin hails North Korean troops as 'heroic' in letter to Kim
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Fleeing the heat, tourists explore Rome at night, underground
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Online cockfighting thrives in Philippines despite ban and murders
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Keeping cool with colours -- Vienna museum paints asphalt to fight heat
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Raising the bar: Nepal's emerging cocktail culture
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El Salvador plans 600 mass trials for suspected gang members
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Trump's tariffs drown Brazil's fish industry
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Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai's collusion trial resumes after delay
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Britain's Princess Anne turns 75 with typically minimal fuss
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Japan posts modest growth despite US tariffs
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Rugby Championship kicks off amid uncertain future
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Israeli far-right minister backs contentious West Bank settlement plan
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Hot putter carries MacIntyre to three-shot lead at BMW Championship
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'Ridiculous': How Washington residents view the new troops in town
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Global plastic pollution treaty talks extended in 'haze' of confusion
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Trump's tariffs have not reduced Panama Canal traffic -- yet
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YouTube turns to AI to spot children posing as adults
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Sky's the limit for Duplantis ahead of 'super-sick' Tokyo worlds
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New clashes in Serbia as political crisis escalates
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Sinner swamps Auger-Aliassime in Cincinnati power display
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California to change election maps to counter Texas, governor says
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Apple Watch gets revamped blood oxygen feature

After three years, Covid 'here to stay'
While the World Health Organization hopes Covid-19 will soon no longer be considered a public health emergency, it has warned the virus itself is here to stay.
Three years after the first case was identified in China in December 2019, experts say the world must learn the lessons of this pandemic to prepare for potential future outbreaks.
- Is the pandemic nearly over? -
"We have come a long way. We are hopeful that at some point next year, we will be able to say that Covid-19 is no longer a global health emergency," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Wednesday.
"This virus will not go away. It's here to stay and all countries will need to learn to manage it alongside other respiratory illnesses," he added.
Around 90 percent of the global population now have some level of immunity against Covid, either through vaccination or previous infection, the WHO estimates.
The weekly death toll is around a fifth of what it was a year ago and the remaining deaths are largely among those who are not fully vaccinated, it says.
The WHO's emergency committee on Covid will meet in January to discuss the criteria for whether it still constitutes a public health emergency of international concern.
- Can Covid be eradicated? -
Some experts anticipate that Covid will eventually move from a pandemic to an endemic stage, in which it would continue to circulate widely and spark regular resurgences, as is currently the case with seasonal flu.
But there are a number of reasons why the total eradication of Covid looks unlikely.
Smallpox meanwhile remains the only human infectious disease to be officially eradicated, which was declared by the WHO in 1980.
"To eradicate a virus, the disease must be clinically visible, there must be no animal reservoir, and there must be a highly effective vaccine that offers life-long protection," French microbiologist Philippe Sansonetti told a conference at France's Pasteur Institute last week.
"Covid-19 ticks all the wrong the boxes," he added.
For Covid, isolation measures are undermined by the fact that some infected people exhibit no symptoms, meaning they are not aware they should isolate.
Unlike smallpox, Covid can be transmitted to animals, where it can circulate before later reinfecting humans, creating a virus reservoir that is difficult to snuff out.
And while Covid vaccines help prevent against severe forms of the disease, they offer little protection against reinfection -- and their effectiveness wanes with time, meaning booster doses are required.
- Biggest risks ahead? -
Etienne Simon-Loriere, head of the Pasteur Institute's evolutionary genomics of RNA viruses unit, said that "currently the virus is being allowed to circulate far too much".
Every new infection raises the chance the virus could mutate to become more transmissible or severe, he warned.
"Even if we would all like to believe it, we have no reason to think that it will become more friendly," Simon-Loriere said.
And there is a looming threat that new infectious diseases could jump from animals over into humans.
Since the emergence of SARS, MERS and Covid, "a good dozen coronaviruses have been found in bats that could potentially infect humans," warned Arnaud Fontanet, a specialist in emerging diseases at the Pasteur Institute.
More than 60 percent of emerging diseases are zoonotic, meaning they can be transmitted between humans and animals.
The risk from zoonotic diseases has increased due to human-induced upheavals to the animal world including deforestation, climate change and mass livestock farming.
- Preparation for next pandemic? -
Fontanet said that in the case of a possible future pandemic, "a lot can and must be done at the beginning of the outbreak".
He gave the example of Denmark, which imposed a lockdown early during the first wave of the Covid pandemic, allowing it to later lift the measure more quickly.
Another key factor is the ability to quickly test for emerging diseases, allowing those infected to isolate as soon as possible.
"Unfortunately, today we are still reacting, not anticipating," Fontanet said.
The 194 WHO member states have agreed to start thrashing out an early draft of a pandemic treaty in February aiming to ensure the flawed response that turned Covid into a global crisis does not happen again.
W.Lapointe--BTB