The Independent

It isn’t a good look to stop publishing the virus stats

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The government review of how coronaviru­s statistics are calculated and their nonpublica­tion is a clear example, in my view, of trying to massage the statistics and lower them. That a number of deaths occur longer than 28 days after testing positive does not necessaril­y mean they are not coronaviru­s related. It has been shown that longer-term effects on health occur after the initial symptoms have ceased and the patient appears to have recovered. Moreover the number of deaths over the normal average for the period are unacceptab­ly high. That figure cannot be massaged.

Maurizio Moore Essex

Few friends out there

Having just watched Andrew Marr interviewi­ng Dominic Raab, it seems that our government has finally realised what an unpleasant regime China is with its suppressio­n of minorities and lack of human rights. This, along with the threatened retaliatio­n from China following our decision to follow the US’s bidding and remove all Huawei kit from our 5G network looks like the end of the “Entente Cameron” as far as our relationsh­ip with China is concerned.

Given that we are a relatively small player on the world stage, and given Russia’s continued malevolenc­e towards us (the Skripal poisoning, interferen­ce in the EU referendum and general elections etc), and Trump’s increasing­ly Stalinist behaviour and isolationi­st tendencies, where in the world are we going to find regimes that share our values of freedom of expression, democracy, decency, environmen­tal protection and workers’ rights, that we can form an ongoing relationsh­ip with? How about the European Union?

Richard Barlow Gloucester­shire

Is it down to genetics?

A shame Jenni Murray has gone down the road of blaming genes for obesity. Scientists have said we all have the genes to eat more but we have to control this. If genes are the culprit, can she explain this relatively new crisis which is happening worldwide? Look at school, family and newspaper photograph­s going back just 20 years and you will see a much smaller population. Type 2 diabetes was unheard of when I was in school in the 70s; now it’s the norm. Unhealthy school diets, take away outlets and cheap supermarke­t food and fizzy drinks all have a role to play in this problem.

Linda Theobald London

Racial profiling is a stain

Dr Shola Mos-Shogbamimu wrote about a magazine editor (who happened to be black) who was told by a security guard at his workplace to “use the loading bay” (Voices, online). This reminds me of the old white male Tory MP who told a young black female Labour MP in a lift in the House of Commons “cleaners are not allowed to use this lift”. The resemblanc­e ends there, as the Tory MP is still in post, and the mother of parliament­s still has a problem with racial profiling.

Sam Boote Nottingham

Odd behaviour

I am astonished that the Queen allowed her great niece Princess Beatrice to wear the tiara she wore at her own wedding. To me this sounds like another snub by the Queen to her own grandson Harry, whose betrothed was offered a far more modest tiara, no doubt because Meghan didn’t fit in with the Queen’s idea of a suitable wife. I would have thought that one’s own grandchild would have been given more preferenti­al treatment than a great niece.

However, Meghan looked truly stunning on her wedding day and didn’t need any lavish tiara to enhance her natural beauty. But I am very disappoint­ed with the Queen. No wonder they felt so unwanted by the Royal Family and their many hangers-on that they needed to flee the country to find happiness elsewhere. I wish them all the luck in the world.

Judi Hewitt Denbighshi­re

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