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(KGTV) ¡ª U.S. citizens traveling to Europe will have to be mindful of new visa rules after 2021.Starting on Jan. 21, 2021, Americans will need a ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorization System) visa when traveling to a European Schengen-zone country, which includes Germany, France, Spain, Sweden, and Italy. Though, travelers heading to Ireland or the United Kingdom will not need the new visa.The visa will cost a one-time fee of about €7, or about to , according to a release from the European Union. The move is meant to improve security, "to avoid any further problems with illegal migration and terrorism," the ETIAS visa website says.Currently, U.S. citizens traveling to Europe for 90 days or less do not need a visa. Eventually, the new visa will be required for short-stay travel as well.To apply for a visa, Americans will need a valid passport, an email account, and a credit or debit card. Passports must be valid for three months beyond the period of an individual's intended stay.Americans will be required to have a ETIAS visa valid for three years when entering European Schengen-zone countries. The visa is a multiple-entry visa, allowing access to multiple countries. Minors must also apply for the visa.For more information on how to apply for the ETIAS visa, visit their website here. 1331
¡¡¡¡(KGTV/WXYZ) - Less than two months after a report said Toys 'R' Us would close many of its U.S. stores, a new report said the toy store is considering closing all stores. 178
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A 2-month-old baby who died of a birth defect had also contracted COVID-19.According to a report from the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner, the baby was born with gastroschisis ¡ª a birth defect where a baby is born with intestines located outside the body.The medical examiner's report notes that the baby was born at 37 weeks with the defect. On Sept. 8, after going home from a surgery, the child developed vomiting and diarrhea and was diagnosed with COVID-19.He was pronounced deceased at a hospital after developing acute respiratory symptoms. According to the report, COVID-19 caused the baby's recent issues.News of the child's death broke last Wednesday in an interview with the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) Chief Medical Executive Dr. Joneigh Khaldun. Khaldun warned that children are not immune to the virus. They still can ¡ª and are likely to ¡ª pass it on to others.Across the U.S., about 800 children have been diagnosed with Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C), a disease associated with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), MIS-C is a condition where different body parts can become inflamed, including the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes, or gastrointestinal organs.DHSS says that a person's death is considered to be "COVID-19-associated" if a person has tested positive for the virus, died of natural causes and one of the following is true:The death is within 30 days of onset of COVID-19.If the death is more than 30 days from onset, the certifying physician identifies COVID-19 as a contributing factor to death.Editor's note: This story has been updated with more information regarding the child's cause of death. While the child's death is still considered to be a COVID-19-associated death, more context has been added to the story.This story was originally published by WXYZ in Detroit. 1914
¡¡¡¡(KGTV) - On Friday, Attorney and Deputy Director of ACLU¡¯s National Immigrants¡¯ Rights Project Lee Gelernt spoke to ABC 10News about how his staff members have not found the parents of 545 children nationwide who were separated by the Trump Administration.¡°We have found hundreds of others but there remains [to be] hundreds who we have not found,¡± he said in a Zoom interview.Earlier this week, the ACLU revealed the numbers to San Diego Federal Court Judge Dana Sabraw in a new filing for a case stemming from a lawsuit brought by the ACLU, challenging the president's practice of asylum-seeking family separations, which were put into place after he took over office. ¡°We then had to go door to door on the ground in Central America looking for these parents. [It was a] painstaking, dangerous process. We were making some progress but ultimately the pandemic hit and that slowed things down,¡± he added.Gelernt said the children are now living with relatives and foster families in the U.S., after they were released from government detention. He added that the ACLU will continue searching for their parents and advocating for their return. ¡°We think that given what these families have gone through, their children ripped away from them, they deserve legal status in the United States,¡± he said.ABC 10News reached out to ICE for comment, which referred us to DHS. We are waiting for a reply.A status conference is set for Dec. 4. 1442
¡¡¡¡¡°Good trouble¡± with my brothers and sisters- organized by @untilfreedom.Arrested for peacefully protesting. While Breonnas Taylor¡¯s murderers are still out on the street.#ArrestTheCops #JusticeForBreonna#BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/GmJUjl7Ezv¡ª Kenny Stills (@KSTiLLS) July 15, 2020 294
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