In Vienna, thousands protested on Saturday against restrictions on public life designed to curb the coronavirus pandemic.
Anyone refusing to comply with vaccination status checks could be fined up to €1,450. In Austria, unvaccinated people who breach lockdown rules - which have been extended to December 11 - face fines of up to €500. But world leaders have been implementing extra measures including large fines to encourage populations to get fully vaccinated. No one has died with the new super mutant Omicron Covid variant despite the strain being spotted in 38 countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) has revealed. Thousands of anti-lockdown protestors have descended on the streets of York, Austria and the Netherlands as Europe faces up to a new Covid strain. It comes as harrowing video footage (bottom right) shows Arthur's evil stepmother devouring a McDonald's takeaway while the doomed six-year-old boy starves in the hallway last summer. Emma Tustin and Thomas Hughes (pictured top right) were both jailed for life for their roles in the death of little Arthur, but could face a harsher sentence after Solihull MP Julian Knight warned their case will be passed onto Britain's chief legal advisor. Players wore 'Arthur We Love You' t-shirts in pre-match warmups ahead of Birmingham City FC's Championship clash against Millwall on Saturday, while Coventry City fans also remembered the youngster with applause in the sixth minute of their match against West Brom. Applause rang out from the capacity crowd at West Ham's London Stadium as fans of the Premier League side and league leaders Chelsea shared a touching tribute at the six-minute mark of their match (main). In powerful scenes replicated at stadiums across the country, thousands of football fans marked Arthur Labinjo-Hughes's (left) short life with rousing applause in the sixth-minute of matches. I've never felt that before.' It is understood that William was referring to a car accident which left five-year-old Bobby Hughes (pictured right) brain damaged in 2017. He adds: 'You just feel everyone's pain, everyone's suffering. As he describes it, it was 'like someone had put a key in a lock and opened it without me giving permission to do that'. Overwhelmed by depressive feelings, he says it was as if 'something had changed' inside him. His mental health crisis came after he helped to save the life of a gravely injured boy only a few years older than his son, Prince George (pictured inset left), while working as a helicopter pilot for the air ambulance service (pictured inset centre). In one remarkable display of candour, the Duke (pictured main) vividly describes how his torment after witnessing a devastating accident left him feeling as if 'the whole world was dying'. In a 38-minute podcast, entitled Prince William: Time To Walk, recorded for an Apple audio series, the Royal discusses mental trauma, memorable moments and celebrity encounters.