To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts ![]() Today’s Top Stories from NBC News TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we're taking a closer look at what experts say is the link between the omicron variant and global vaccine inequality. Tiger Woods says he will "never" play golf full time again. Plus, decades after her death, American-born superstar Josephine Baker will be awarded one of France's highest honors today.
Here's what we're watching this Tuesday morning. ![]() For almost as long as Covid-19 has been around, scientists, academics and campaigners have called on wealthy nations to share vaccines around the world — not only to protect people in those countries, but also to reduce the risk of new mutant variants emerging that could evade vaccines for everyone.
Those sounding the alarm have repeated the same mantra: No one is safe until everyone is safe.
Despite these warnings, this is exactly what appears to have happened, some of these experts say. The new omicron variant emerged in southern Africa with a large number of mutations that experts say may allow it to transmit more easily and possibly reduce existing immunity.
"Africa right now is essentially a superincubator," said Andrea Taylor, assistant director of programs at the Duke Global Health Innovation Center, a leading authority on global vaccine supply.
And the emergence of a new variant “is exactly what experts have been warning about for months," she said. Read the full story here.
More on the omicron variant here:
Tuesday's Top Stories
One renewable energy company is looking to take advantage of Nevada's nearly year-round sunshine and abundance of space to build a large-scale solar field. But community members and conservationists fear the green energy project could destroy thousands of miles of untouched land. An investigation into the deaths of Robert Loggins in 2018 and his mother Debbie Loggins in 2005 shows how persuading police to stop using hogties and prone-position restraints has proved hard in small-town Mississippi. Almost 400 years after the first English ship arrived on its golden shores, the former British colony woke up Tuesday as a republic after an event that included fireworks, dancing, Rihanna, Prince Charles — and the island’s first president being sworn in. The legendary performer and entertainer was U.S.-born, but became a French citizen in 1937 and acted as a spy for the French Resistance when the Nazis occupied France during World War II. Also in the News
Editor's Pick
![]() The E.U. pays for almost every aspect of Libya's often lethal migrant detention system, an investigation found, including the boats that fire on migrant rafts. One Fun Thing
Is three days in a pub with an Oasis tribute band too long? Definitely Maybe.
They slept on couches or on the floor at The Tan Hill Inn in Yorkshire, England — more than 200 miles north of London — after snow and fallen power lines blocked nearby roads starting Friday.
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