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Montreal health-care workers seek changes to testing protocols after repeat positive tests

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globalnews.ca

Two Montreal health-care workers who have tested positive repeatedly for the novel coronavirus for more than a month are asking the government to change their testing protocols.

They say they are frustrated and believe the current rules are unnecessarily keeping them at home. Melanie Fournier’s only access to the world has been from behind her living room window for the past 27 days, where she’s been stuck ever since she was diagnosed with COVID-19. “It’s very, very frustrating at the most because I feel great, I feel like I could be out there, I feel like could be doing things, I feel like I could be getting some fresh air — but I can’t,” Fournier said.

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MUNICH (AP) - Vice President Kamala Harris warned Russia on Saturday that it will face "unprecedented" financial penalties if it invades Ukraine and predicted that such an attack would draw European allies closer to the United States.Harris spoke at the annual Munich Security Conference the day after President Joe Biden said he was "convinced" that Russia's Vladimir Putin has made the decision to invade neighboring Ukraine."Let me be clear, I can say with absolute certainty: If Russia further invades Ukraine, the United States, together with our allies and partners, will impose significant, and unprecedented economic costs," Harris said.Harris aimed to make the case to a largely European audience that the West has "strength through unity" and that an invasion would likely lead to an even bigger NATO presence on Russia’s doorstep.Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimea Peninsula in 2014, and pro-Russia separatists have been fighting Ukrainian forces in the country’s east for almost eight years. The United States and the European Union previously sanctioned Russia over its seizure of Crimea.Western fears of an invasion have escalated in recent months as Russia amassed more than 150,000 troops near Ukraine's borders.RELATED: What's happening between Russia and Ukraine? Things to know as tension grinds onHarris said the Biden administration, along with its allies, had tried to engage with Moscow in good faith to find a diplomatic resolution but that effort was not met by the Kremlin in good faith."Russia continues to say it is ready to talk while at the same time it narrows the avenues for diplomacy," Harris said.
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