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Lin-Manuel Miranda will miss the Oscars after his wife tests positive for Covid.
Lin-Manuel Miranda gained’t be attending the Oscars on Sunday, he mentioned on Twitter on Saturday, out of an abundance of warning after his spouse examined optimistic for Covid this weekend. He added that she was “doing high-quality,” and mentioned that he had examined unfavourable.
Mr. Miranda is up for the perfect unique music Academy Award for the music, “Dos Oruguitas” from the Disney musical “Encanto.” It’s the first music he’s written from “starting to finish in Spanish,” he instructed Vulture journal in January.
Moreover his colleagues in “Encanto,” Mr. Miranda says he will even be cheering on the solid and crew of the film, “Tick, Tick … Increase!,” which was Mr. Miranda’s directorial debut. It has acquired two Oscar nominations — one for Andrew Garfield in the perfect actor class and one for greatest movie enhancing.
The final time Mr. Miranda, who created the Broadway musical “Hamilton,” was a nominee on the Oscars was in 2017 for the music, “How Far I’ll Go” from “Moana.” If he wins on Sunday, Mr. Miranda would be part of the small variety of Hollywood heavyweights who’ve EGOT standing — those that have gained an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony — which incorporates Rita Moreno, Audrey Hepburn, Whoopi Goldberg and John Legend.
After final 12 months’s socially distanced Oscars with separated seating areas, film lovers had been hoping for a return to normalcy with this 12 months’s ceremony, again at its longtime dwelling on the Dolby Theatre. (Final 12 months’s present occurred at Union Station in Los Angeles with much less fanfare.) On Friday, the Academy up to date its Covid insurance policies, saying in a press launch that “those that examined optimistic for Covid-19 and are inside a zero to five-day window from the date of their first optimistic take a look at are usually not permitted to attend below any circumstances.”
World
No perjury charges for British soldiers accused of lying in Bloody Sunday probe
- 15 British soldiers accused of lying in an inquiry regarding Bloody Sunday will not be charged with perjury, prosecutors announced Friday.
- Bloody Sunday was one of the deadliest days of the Troubles, a decades-long regional conflict. 13 civilians were killed by members of the British Parachute Regiment in Derry.
- Victims’ families expressed outrage at the decision, with John Kelly — whose brother, Michael, was killed on Bloody Sunday — calling it an “affront to the rule of law.”
Fifteen British soldiers who allegedly lied to an inquiry into Bloody Sunday, one of the deadliest days of the decades-long Northern Ireland conflict, will not face perjury charges, prosecutors said Friday.
There was insufficient evidence to convict the soldiers or a former alleged member of the Irish Republican Army about their testimony before an inquiry into the 1972 killings of 13 civilians by Britain’s Parachute Regiment in Derry, also known as Londonderry, the Public Prosecution Service said.
An initial investigation into the slayings on Jan. 30, 1972 concluded the soldiers were defending themselves from a mob of IRA bombers and gunmen. But a 12-year-long inquiry concluded in 2010 that soldiers unjustifiably opened fire on unarmed and fleeing civilians and then lied about it for decades.
FORMER BRITISH SOLDIER TO STAND TRIAL FOR 1972 ‘BLOODY SUNDAY’ KILLINGS IN NORTHERN IRELAND
Families of the victims were outraged by the decision. John Kelly, whose brother Michael was killed by paratroopers, spoke for the group and called it an “affront to the rule of law.”
“Why is it that the people of Derry cannot forget the events of Bloody Sunday, yet the Parachute Regiment, who caused all of the deaths and injury on that day, apparently cannot recall it?” Kelly said. “The answer to this question is quite simple but painfully obvious: The British Army lied its way through the conflict in the north.”
Although a quarter century has passed since the Good Friday peace accord in 1998 largely put to rest three decades of violence involving Irish republican and British loyalist militants and U.K. soldiers, “the Troubles″ still reverberate. Some 3,600 people were killed — most in Northern Ireland, though the IRA also set off bombs in England.
Only one ex-paratrooper from Bloody Sunday, known as Soldier F, faces prosecution for two murders and five attempted murders. He was among the 15 soldiers who could have faced a perjury charge.
While victims continue to seek justice for past carnage, the possibility of a criminal prosecution could soon vanish.
The British government passed a Legacy and Reconciliation Bill last year that would have given immunity from prosecution for most offenses by militant groups and British soldiers after May 1. But a Belfast judge ruled in February that the bill does not comply with human rights law. The government is appealing the ruling.
Attorney Ciaran Shiels, who represents some of the Bloody Sunday families, said they would not rule out further legal action.
“It is of course regrettable that this decision has been communicated to us only today, some 14 years after the inquiry’s unequivocal findings, but less than two weeks before the effective enactment date of the morally bankrupt legacy legislation designed specifically to allow British Army veterans to escape justice for its criminal actions in the north of Ireland,” Shiels said.
Senior Public Prosecutor John O’Neill said the decision not to bring criminal charges was based on three things: accounts given by soldiers in 1972 were not admissible; much of the evidence the inquiry relied on is not available today; and the inquiry’s conclusion that testimony was false did not always meet the criminal standard of proof.
“I wish to make clear that these decisions not to prosecute in no way undermine the findings of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry that those killed or injured were not posing a threat to any of the soldiers,” O’Neill said.
World
State of the Union: Issues feeding anti-democratic anger
This edition of State of the Union focusses on three issues feeding citizens’ anger with the establishment in the EU and beyond: possible nepotism in the EU Commission, infringement of free speech and Georgia’s controversial “foreign agent” bill
World
Donald Trump Trial: Man Lights Himself on Fire Outside Courthouse During CNN’s Live Coverage
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