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Harry also said today that the world was at the 'beginning of the mental health awakening' and spoke about 'continuing to pioneer the conversation'. It comes after his brother Prince William yesterday told how his job as an air ambulance helicopter pilot caused him a mental health crisis when he helped to rescue a seriously injured child - but he continued to work in the role. The 37-year-old prince's comments may be seen by some as referring to how he and wife Meghan Markle (centre, at Westminster Abbey in March 2020) stepped down as senior royals last year and left Britain for North America before claiming his family cut him off financially.
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The Duke of Sussex, who lives in an £11million mansion in California and has a series of endorsement deals with companies that pay him to represent their brands, said people should leave their jobs to put their happiness first.
Prince Harry today advised people who feel 'stuck in jobs that don't bring them joy' to quit and said leaving work was something to be 'celebrated', nearly two years after his acrimonious departure from the Royal Family. But British scientists, including the Government's own, have warned the Government against the narrative that it's a weaker strain, claiming that it could put significant pressure on the NHS by virtue of the fact it can infect more people.
Doctors in South Africa have insisted that most patients suffer only mild illness, with the US' top Covid expert Dr Anthony Fauci claiming today it 'doesn't look like there's a great degree of severity to it'. In total, there are 46,000 Covid infections on average each day in the UK and data from the Covid Genomics UK Consortium (COG-UK) suggests Omicron is already behind around one in 60 of them.
There were 11,125 cases yesterday, marking a fivefold rise in a week. There has been a meteoric rise in infections in South Africa in the fortnight since it alerted the world to Omicron's existence on November 24. Professor Hunter said he expected it to become the dominant variant 'probably within the next weeks or a month', based on how rapidly it is outpacing Delta in the South African epicentre. There have been only 246 official Omicron cases confirmed in the UK so far, but there are likely more than a thousand already, according to Professor Paul Hunter, an epidemiologist at the University of East Anglia. Real-world data suggests the highly-evolved variant is three-and-a-half times more likely to infect people than Delta because of its combination of vaccine resistance, increased infectiousness and antibody escape. The judge condemned their 'appalling and inexplicable conduct'. On Monday, Judge Mark Lucraft QC rejected an appeal for the officers to be spared custody, jailing each of the men for two years and nine months. Let me know who doesn't want to see.' Jaffer, 47, of Hornchurch, east London, and Lewis, 33, from Colchester, Essex, pleaded guilty to misconduct in a public office.
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The officers also described the victims as 'dead birds' in WhatsApp groups Lewis wrote: 'Unfortunately I'm sat next to two dead birds full of stab wounds.' Jaffer posted on another WhatsApp group: 'I have pictures of the two dead victims. Instead, they breached the cordon to take photographs of the bodies, which were then shared with colleagues and members of the public on WhatsApp One was a 'selfie-style' image which included Lewis's face superimposed on it.
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Pc Deniz Jaffer (right) and Pc Jamie Lewis (left) were assigned to guard the scene overnight after Ms Henry, 46, and Ms Smallman, 27, (centre) were found dead in bushes in Fryent Country Park, Wembley, north-west London. Two police officers who took pictures of the bodies of murdered sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman have been jailed for two years and nine months each.