IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
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IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Karine Jean-Pierre
    Karine Jean-Pierre “Americans have the right to peacefully protest. Forcibly taking over a building is not peaceful.” 13 hours ago
  • Janet Yellen
    Janet Yellen “Treasury has consistently warned that companies will face significant consequences for providing material support for Russia's war, and the U.S. is imposing them today on almost 300 targets.” 13 hours ago
  • Catherine Russell
    Catherine Russell “Over 200 days of war have already killed or maimed tens of thousands of children in Gaza. For hundreds of thousands of children in the border city of Rafah, there is added fear of an escalated military operation that would bring catastrophe on top of catastrophe for children. Nearly all of the some 600,000 children now crammed into Rafah are either injured, sick, malnourished, traumatised or living with disabilities.” 13 hours ago
  • Eric Adams
    Eric Adams “We cannot allow what should be a lawful protest to turn into a violent spectacle that saves and serves no purpose. There's no place for acts of hate in our city. I want to continue to commend the professionalism of the police department and to thank Columbia University. It was a tough decision, we understood that. But with the very clear evidence of their observation and the clear evidence from our intelligence division, that they understood it was time to move and the action had to end and we brought it to a peaceful conclusion.” 21 hours ago
  • Sergei Shoigu
    Sergei Shoigu “To maintain the required pace of the offensive … it is necessary to increase the volume and quality of weapons and military equipment supplied to the troops, primarily weapons.” 22 hours ago
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Covid-19 in Brazil

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive related to the Context Covid-19 in Brazil.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“They're protesting about many things: the government's downplaying of the pandemic, the president's spurning of health safety measures, the slow rollout of vaccines, which has picked up in the last couple of weeks. But still Brazil was a country that should not have had these problems because it is a country that is usually prepared for mass vaccination.”

author
Al Jazeera’s journalist reporting from Rio de Janeiro
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“A crucial pillar in public health security is governance. But in Brazil, we've lost governance. This is vital not just internally but also externally in order to guarantee sufficient medical imports.”

author
Epidemiologist and professor at the public University of Sao Paulo (USP)
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“The P1 variant is serious. Brazil could also spin out new, even more dangerous variants. The more people infected with the virus, the more mutations we're going to see.”

author
Epidemiologist, adjunct senior fellow at the Federation of American Scientists
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“The virus has become 'synchronised' in the whole country, with intensive care units in several states at over 90 percent capacity. The only way out is accelerating our vaccine drive and national coordinated COVID protocols.”

author
Epidemiologist and Researcher at Fundação Oswaldo Cruz in Rio de Janeiro
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“To this day, Brazil doesn't have a national plan to combat Covid-19. I don't think there is any other leader who is so obtuse[Jair Bolsonaro], so backward, who has such a mistaken and warped vision of reality as the president of Brazil. History will condemn these people.”

author
Former health minister in Brazil
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“I'm well, normal. I even want to take a walk around here, but I can't due to medical recommendations. I thought I had it before, given my very dynamic activity. I'm president and on the combat lines. I like to be in the middle of the people.”

author
President of Brazil
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“A straightforward Google search is enough to find numerous images of the defendant Jair Messias Bolsonaro moving around Brasília and the surrounding federal district without using a mask and exposing others to the spread of this infirmity that has caused a nationwide upheaval ... That’s to say, the president is constitutionally obliged to follow the country’s existing laws, as well as promote the wellbeing of the population, which means taking the necessary measures to … prevent the propagation of a virus that is spreading rapidly and often silently. No one, not even the head of the executive, is above the constitution and laws of the republic”

author
Federal judge in Brazil
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“There is a lot of regional inequality in our public health system and a shortage of professionals in the interior. That creates many health care deserts, with people going long distances to get attention. When they leave the hospital, the virus can go with them.”

author
Executive director of Brazil’s Institute for Health Policy Studies
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“The challenge is ultimately political, requiring continuous engagement by Brazilian society as a whole. Brazil as a country must come together to give a clear answer to the ‘So what?’ by its President. He needs to drastically change course or must be the next to go”

author
Editorial piece
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“It's probably the only country in the world with a major political crisis in the midst of a pandemic. It's hard to imagine a worse scenario. The country is walking toward the abyss.”

author
Political scientist from the Getulio Vargas Foundation, a university in Sao Paulo (Brazil)
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“We have to face this virus, but face it like a man, dammit, not a boy. We have to face it with reality. That's life. We're all going to die someday. We have to take precautions with the elderly, with people who are at high risk. But protecting jobs is essential.”

author
President of Brazil
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