Here are five things you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic this Sunday morning. We'll have another update for you on Monday morning.
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1. PM to unveil winter plan for England
Boris Johnson is due to outline plans for booster vaccine doses and contingency measures if the NHS is at risk of being overwhelmed as part of his Covid Winter Plan for England on Tuesday. Government sources said further lockdowns are not being considered but officials are looking at measures that could be needed if cases rose sharply.
2. Union calls for Army help to cut A&E waits
The head of a union representing ambulance staff has said the Army should be brought in and "pop-up wards" set up outside Accident and Emergency departments as patients face hours-long waits at Scotland's hospitals.
3. Travellers to Wales to get wider choice of Covid tests
Up to now, people travelling to Wales from abroad have been required to buy PCR tests from the NHS at a cost of £68, although private companies were offering them from about £50. But from 21 September, people will have a wider choice of PCR tests, the Welsh government has announced.
4. Sri Lanka faces food shortages
Shelves at state-run supermarkets are running low - with some even empty - and customers report queuing for hours to buy items such as sugar, rice, lentils and milk powder in Sri Lanka. It comes as the country imposed tight lockdown measures to stop the spread of coronavirus. The government has denied there are shortages and blames the media for stoking fears.
5. Free gig tickets with jabs in Belfast
A queue stretched out of the door of one of Belfast's best-known music venues on Saturday, but the star attraction at the Limelight was a pop-up vaccine clinic, not a performer. The clinic was part of Northern Ireland's push to increase the numbers of young people getting their jab, from 72% of 18- to 29-year-olds to a figure closer to the 90% uptake for the total adult population.