The Prince and Princess of Wales were meeting volunteers and staff who worked on events surrounding the state funeralPrince William admitted he got “choked up” after seeing the Paddington Bear tributes to his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II.In his first engagement since her death earlier this month, the Prince of Wales met volunteers and staff who worked on the events surrounding the state funeral. Continue reading...
Company proposes Acas meeting as it threatens to tear up elements of nine-year deal with unionRoyal Mail’s row with employees over pay and conditions has escalated, with the company saying it is prepared to tear up elements of its nine-year deal with workers to push through a modernisation programme, prompting accusations of “Uberisation”.The company has written to the Communications Workers Union to propose that talks should be taken to the arbitration service Acas, but the CWU is yet to respond. Continue reading...
Border guards cite ‘exceptional’ number of people leaving the country after ‘partial mobilisation’ announcementRussia-Ukraine war – latest updatesHours after Vladimir Putin shocked Russia by announcing the first mobilisation since the second world war, Oleg received his draft papers in the mailbox, ordering him to make his way to the local recruitment centre in Kazan, the capital of the Tatarstan republic.As a 29-year-old sergeant in the Russian reserves, Oleg said he always knew that he would be the first in line if a mobilisation was declared, but held out hope that he would not be forced to fight in the war in Ukraine. Continue reading...
Week-old legislation that severely limited procedure likely offended ‘liberty guarantees’ of state constitution, judge saysAn Indiana judge on Thursday blocked enforcement of the state’s abortion ban, putting the new law on hold as clinic operators argue it violates the state constitution.The Owen county judge, Kelsey Hanlon, issued a preliminary injunction against the ban that took effect a week ago. The injunction was sought by clinic operators who argued the state constitution protects abortion access. Continue reading...
Ronson Chan was arrested in September as part of an ongoing crackdown on dissent and free expression in the cityThe head of Hong Kong’s journalists’ association will be allowed to travel to the UK for an Oxford fellowship after a court granted him bail and declined to place restrictions on his movement over a charge of obstructing police officers.Ronson Chan was arrested on 7 September while he was covering a residence meeting at a Hong Kong housing estate. Police allege he refused to provide ID and behaved in an “uncooperative” way despite multiple warnings, and he was charged this week. Chan has claimed innocence, saying he was within his rights to ask police for identification before he produced his. Continue reading...
Celia Marsh’s family say more people will die unless testing throughout food industry is improvedThe family of a woman with a severe dairy allergy who suffered a fatal reaction after eating a “vegan” Pret a Manger wrap contaminated with milk protein have warned that more people will die unless comprehensive testing throughout the food supply chain and better labelling is introduced.Celia Marsh’s family also said they believed the 42-year-old dental nurse would still be alive if a company that made a coconut yoghurt added to the wrap had informed Pret there was a risk it could have been contaminated because it was made in a factory that used milk. Continue reading...
Michoacán state suffers another temblor, felt as far away as Colima, Jalisco and Guerrero statesA powerful magnitude 6.8 earthquake has struck Mexico, causing at least two deaths, damaging buildings and setting off landslides.The earthquake struck at 1.19am on Thursday near the epicenter of a magnitude 7.6 quake that hit three days earlier in the western state of Michoacán. It was also blamed for two deaths. Continue reading...
by Bethan McKernan in Jerusalem and Patrick Wintour D on (#63Y2R)
PM considering breaking with decades of British foreign policy by relocating UK embassy in IsraelLiz Truss has said she is considering relocating the British embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in a controversial move that would break with decades of UK foreign policy in order to follow in the footsteps of Donald Trump.In a meeting on the sidelines of the UN general assembly in New York, the prime minister told Israel’s caretaker leader, Yair Lapid about a “review of the current location” of the building, Downing Street said in a statement. Continue reading...
Du Yingzhe, a well-known tutor at a prestigious teaching academy, accused of abusing at least 19 studentsChinese police have detained a man over the alleged abuse of at least 19 former students at a prestigious tutoring academy, after a viral article outlined one of the country’s most shocking #MeToo cases in years.Du Yingzhe, 40, was a well-known tutor at Shadow Road, which assists high school students to get into the country’s best art and film schools. On Monday Du was accused by a former student of harassing, grooming and raping students, including some who were underage and a 17-year-old girl who fell pregnant. Continue reading...
Exclusive: Five short pieces of video removed from circulation under agreement between broadcasters and Buckingham PalaceBritish television channels gave Buckingham Palace a veto on the use of footage from Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral, indicating the complicated relationship around the media’s coverage of the monarchy.As part of an agreement with news broadcasters, the royal household was given the right to request that particular pieces of footage from the funeral services at Westminster Abbey and Windsor Castle were not used again. Continue reading...
Mayfield has eight ‘scary’ slides, one of which takes riders over the largely forgotten River MedlockManchester’s first new public park for 100 years opened its gates on Wednesday and has eight slides declared “so scary” by delighted children given the first go.One of the slides transports riders over the River Medlock, a largely forgotten Mancunian waterway which has been under concrete there for the last 150 years. Another offers what feels like a near-vertical drop – a tonic for those nostalgic for the days when playgrounds carried a genuine sense of peril. One has been made accessible for children in wheelchairs. Continue reading...
by Lisa O'Carroll Brexit correspondent on (#63Y12)
New Stormont elections are meant to be called soon – but they wouldn’t resolve the protocol standoffThe UK has given a six-month deadline for resolution of talks over the Northern Ireland protocol row, indicating Liz Truss is far more relaxed about the absence of a devolved government in Stormont than previously indicated.An April date for resolution of the Brexit row emerged after a meeting between the US president Joe Biden and the prime minister Liz Truss and coincides with the 25th anniversary of the Belfast Good Friday agreement. Continue reading...
Paul Zwillenberg steps aside for chairman, who is great-grandson of paper’s founder, Harold HarmsworthLord Rothermere is to take over as chief executive of the family newspaper business, which includes the Mail, i and Metro as well as New Scientist magazine, after ending the company’s 90-year run on public markets by taking its slimmed-down portfolio private.The 54-year-old, who chairs the 126-year old Daily Mail & General Trust business, will take over from Paul Zwillenberg, who has led the company for the past six years. Continue reading...
Demographic shift shown in census was expected but will still deliver psychological blow to unionistsCatholics outnumber Protestants in Northern Ireland for the first time, a demographic milestone for a state that was designed a century ago to have a permanent Protestant majority.Results from the 2021 census released on Thursday showed that 45.7% of inhabitants are Catholic or from a Catholic background compared with 43.48% from Protestant or other Christian backgrounds. The 2011 census figures were 45% Catholic and 48% Protestant. Neither bloc is a majority. Continue reading...
by Rebecca Ratcliffe South-east Asia correspondent on (#63XHQ)
Judge upholds conviction of Khieu Samphan, 91, in what is likely to be UN-backed court’s last judgmentCambodia’s UN-backed tribunal for the Khmer Rouge has upheld a genocide conviction against the regime’s last surviving leader, more than 40 years after Pol Pot’s brutal communist regime fell.The tribunal, known as the extraordinary chambers in the courts of Cambodia (ECCC), rejected an appeal by Khieu Samphan, 91, in what was expected to be the final judgment by the court. Khieu Samphan, who was a former head of state, was found guilty of crimes against humanity, and grave breaches of the Geneva conventions, and of the genocide of ethnic minority Vietnamese in 2018. Continue reading...
Malaysian defence contractor fled before sentencing in US over bribery scheme that lasted more than a decade and involved dozens of US navy officersA Malaysian defence contractor nicknamed “Fat Leonard” who orchestrated one of the largest bribery scandals in US military history has been arrested in Venezuela after fleeing before his sentencing, authorities say.The international manhunt for Leonard Glenn Francis ended with his arrest by Venezuelan authorities on Tuesday morning at the Caracas airport as he was about to board an airplane for another country, the US Marshals Service said on Wednesday. Continue reading...
by Robyn Vinter North of England correspondent on (#63XP5)
Fifth of region’s population prevented from taking part in opportunities and communities around them, research findsMore than 3 million people in the north of England are at risk of social exclusion as a result of poor transport services, research has found.A fifth of people living in northern England are prevented from participating in the opportunities and communities around them because of poor mobility and connectivity, according to the report by the devolved government agency Transport for the North (TfN). Continue reading...
Celebrity livestreamer Li Jiaqi returns to screen after nearly four months of silence following a broadcast showcasing a tank-shaped dessertChina’s leading shopping livestreamer, Li Jiaqi, has returned to online commerce platforms almost four months after his feed was suddenly cut, which viewers suspected was linked to the errant appearance of a tank-shaped cake.Li, also known as the Lipstick King for his ability to move huge amounts of product on his sales channels, briefly appeared on Alibaba Group’s Taobao marketplace on Tuesday evening. Continue reading...
UK PM says Russian president’s ‘sabre-rattling’ will not work, as she calls for democratic renewal in UN addressLiz Truss has dismissed as “sabre-rattling” Vladimir Putin’s warning that Russia will use “all the means at our disposal” to protect itself, warning in her UN speech: “This will not work.”The Russian president’s threats in a televised address to the nation appeared to suggest the conflict in Ukraine could spiral into a nuclear crisis, prompting a furious response from world leaders, led by the US president, Joe Biden. Continue reading...
Police launch murder investigation after teenager dies in hospital after assault in FartownPolice have launched a murder investigation after a 15-year-old boy was stabbed outside a school in Huddersfield.Officers received a third-party report at 2.54pm on Wednesday that a teenager had been seriously injured in an assault in Woodhouse Hill, Fartown. Continue reading...
by Denis Campbell Health policy editor on (#63XF5)
The Pharmaceutical Journal found users being offered prescription drugs as diet pillsTikTok has removed postings promoting migraine and epilepsy drugs to under-18s as weight loss aids after criticism that hosting them was a danger to young people’s health.The social media platform, which is popular among teenagers, acted after an investigation by the Pharmaceutical Journal found that users were being offered prescription drugs as diet pills.6% of 10- to 15-year-olds say they are unhappy with life as a whole, up from 4% a decade ago.Many more (12%) say they are not happy at school, a 3% rise on 10 years ago, with older children more likely to hold that view.85% of parents and carers are concerned about how the cost of living crisis will affect their families in the next year. Continue reading...
by Denis Campbell Health policy editor on (#63XF6)
Health experts encourage doctors to talk about nutrition and socio-economic circumstancesChildren’s doctors plan to help poor families cope with the cost of living crisis and its feared impact on health, amid concern that cold homes this winter will lead to serious ill health.In an unusual move, the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) is issuing the UK’s paediatricians with detailed advice on how they can help households in poverty. Continue reading...
by Denis Campbell Health policy editor on (#63XBM)
New health secretary’s demand to improve patient access to GP care in England is immediately criticised by family doctorsNo patient should have to wait more than two weeks to see a GP, the new health secretary will demand , in a move that has already been criticised by family doctors.Thérèse Coffey will on Thursday set out a new “expectation” that everyone seeking an appointment with a GP should get one within 14 days while outlining a major plan to tackle the NHS’s growing crisis. Continue reading...
PM maintains pledge to bring in measures limiting industrial action but denies planning to rip up EU rules on workers’ rightsLiz Truss has told striking workers to “get back to work” as she doubled down on her pledge to bring in measures to limit industrial action within weeks of coming to power.The prime minister suggested that a planned wave of strikes by workers ranging from train drivers to barristers, risked holding the country back during the toughest economic climate in a generation. Continue reading...
After a private meeting with new Met commissioner, Kaba’s mother said she wants ‘justice for her son'The family of Chris Kaba have reiterated their call for “justice” after being shown the bodycam footage of his shooting during a meeting with the new commissioner of the Metropolitan police.Kaba, an unarmed black man, was killed on 5 September after a police pursuit of his car which ended in Streatham Hill, south London. His Audi was hemmed in by two police vehicles in Kirkstall Gardens, a narrow residential street, and one round was fired from a police weapon. Continue reading...
US president’s potential visit next Easter to mark 25th anniversary of Good Friday agreement is ‘absolutely vital’ momentThe UK has a six-month deadline to resolve the Northern Ireland protocol row, with plans afoot for a state visit next year for Joe Biden to mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday agreement.Senior government sources said the date next April represented an “absolutely vital” moment to get the Northern Ireland executive up and running again, with unionist parties blocking the power-sharing institutions as part of a protest against post-Brexit trading rules. Continue reading...
Helena Kennedy KC interviews TSSA officials after Manuel Cortes accused of unwanted touchingAn independent inquiry has been launched into allegations of sexual harassment and bullying at a transport union after specific claims of misconduct against its general secretary.Helena Kennedy KC interviewed current and former union officials this month after she was asked by the TUC to launch an investigation into the Transport Salaried Staffs’ Association (TSSA). Continue reading...
by Nadeem Badshah (now) and Andrew Sparrow (earlier) on (#63WA2)
Prime minister says Putin’s calls for mobilisation ‘are a sure sign his barbaric invasion is failing’Here is some opposition party reaction to the energy support package for business announced by Jacob Rees-Mogg, the business secretary, this morning.Labour says the help has come too late. This is from Jonathan Reynolds, the shadow business secretary.It is farcical that the Tories have been unable to tell businesses at the sharp end of the energy crisis what they plan to do to help them until now. Labour has been calling for support since the start of the year.Businesses have been crying out for detail on these plans and, even now, there are still questions about how much this will cost and who will pay for it.This temporary sticking plaster comes too late for the many small businesses that already closed their doors for the last time because they couldn’t afford soaring bills.The Conservatives have sat on their hands for months while treasured pubs, cafes and high street shops went to the wall.No wonder Jacob Rees-Mogg clearly wished to avoid parliamentary scrutiny on this critical energy crisis support for businesses – there is an energy efficiency-shaped hole at the heart of this plan that needs to be exposed.The cheapest and cleanest energy for businesses is the energy they don’t use – so why is Rees-Mogg’s plan utterly devoid of essential energy efficiency measures to help businesses reduce their dependence on costly fossil fuels, slashing bills and carbon emissions at the same time? Continue reading...
by Aubrey Allegretti Political correspondent on (#63X4V)
Ministers considering deregulation of planning system in some ‘investment zones’The provision of affordable housing as part of wider construction projects could be ditched under plans being considered by ministers to deregulate the planning system in about a dozen “investment zones”.Sources said the controversial move was being contemplated ahead of a mini-budget by the chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, on Friday outlining the government’s growth strategy and promised tax cuts. Continue reading...
Conservative People’s Party leader takes poll hit after undisclosed meetings and accusations about husbandOne of the leading contenders to become Denmark’s next prime minister has stumbled in the polls after revelations of undisclosed meetings and accusations that his husband had made up family links to a former president of the Dominican Republic.Søren Pape Poulsen, the leader of Denmark’s Conservative People’s Party, announced last week that his marriage was over after it emerged that his husband, Josue Medina Vásquez Poulsen, had no biological relationship to a former president of the Dominican Republic whom he had claimed as an uncle. Continue reading...
by Jessica Elgot Chief political correspondent on (#63X1Q)
Shadow health secretary says medics are suffering ‘moral injury’ because they cannot deliver best careWes Streeting has criticised a “gaping hole” in the Conservatives’ forthcoming NHS plan, which he said would do little to address the shortage of doctors, nurses and care workers that is fuelling backlogs and workforce discontent.The shadow health secretary said that doctors and nurses considering industrial action in the coming months were not just concerned about pay, but about the “moral injury” they were suffering because they could not deliver the best care for patients due to staffing and the weight of the demand. Continue reading...
Workers at one factory claim company broke promise of a two-hour breakStaff at 2 Sisters, the food producer that supplies the UK’s biggest supermarkets, have accused the company of breaking its promise of an extended break to watch the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, instead rewarding them with a “disgusting” sausage meat bap.The company, which is based in West Bromwich, said last week that staff would be given two hours to watch the proceedings, after it faced criticism for refusing them extra pay or a day off in lieu for working during the funeral, which had been declared a bank holiday. Continue reading...
PC Jonathon Cobban and ex-officer Joel Borders convicted over WhatsApp messages shared with Sarah Everard’s killerA serving police officer and an ex-colleague have been warned there is a real possibility they will go to jail after being found guilty of sending grossly offensive misogynistic and racist messages in a WhatsApp group that included Sarah Everard’s killer.PC Jonathon Cobban, 35, a Metropolitan police officer, and Joel Borders, 45, had joked about beating and sexually assaulting women, raping a colleague and using Taser weapons on children, their trial had been told. Continue reading...
Investment vehicle of tech disruptor Xavier Niel cites chance to spur ‘streamlining’ of UK telecoms groupThe French telecoms billionaire Xavier Niel has acquired a 2.5% stake in Vodafone, citing opportunities to accelerate a “streamlining” of the London-listed group’s business.Niel, who founded the telecoms company Iliad, has taken the stake through his investment vehicle Atlas Investissement, which said it was “supportive of Vodafone’s publicly stated intention to pursue consolidation opportunities”. Continue reading...