Selasa, 31 Agustus 2021

NHS to roll out new cholesterol-lowering drug that 'could save 30,000 lives' - Sky News

Hundreds of thousands of people will soon have access to a cholesterol-lowering drug that could save 30,000 lives within the next decade, it has been announced.

The NHS will make the treatment available to 300,000 patients with high cholesterol and a history of cardiovascular disease over the next three years.

The number of people benefiting from the new medication, inclisiran, could rise to nearly half a million beyond that initial period, bosses say.

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August: NHS faces huge backlog in wake of pandemic

The drug, which could prevent about 55,000 heart attacks and strokes, is delivered as an injection twice a year and can be used alongside existing treatments like statins.

Heart disease is the world's biggest killer and accounts for a quarter of all deaths in England each year, claiming about 140,000 lives.

More than 40% of people in the nation have high cholesterol, which puts them at significant risk of developing heart disease.

About 6.5 million adults in England are currently taking drugs for the condition.

More on Drugs

Inclisiran will be administered as an injection in GP surgeries rather than hospitals to make it more convenient for patients.

After the first dose, the treatment will be given again after three months and then twice a year.

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June: Effect of lockdowns on life-saving treatment

Amanda Pritchard, chief executive of the NHS, said the rollout is part of the NHS's commitment to "using cutting-edge treatments to save and improve patients' lives".

"Heart disease is still one of the major killer conditions, so it is fantastic that we now have such an effective and convenient treatment for those living with dangerously high cholesterol levels," she said.

"This world-leading deal for the rollout of inclisiran will save lives and enable hundreds of thousands of people to benefit from this revolutionary treatment, while also being fair to taxpayers."

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May: NHS backlog leaves GP surgeries struggling

The treatment's rollout follows clinical trials that showed that the drug lowers the level of a type of fatty substance called LDL-C found in the blood by boosting the liver's ability to remove it.

High levels of LDL-C make people more likely to suffer a heart attack or stroke.

"Unprecedented" large quantities of the drug were secured in order to keep its cost "affordable", the NHS said.

Jules Payne, chief executive of HEART UK, welcomed the rollout, calling the medicine "an additional tool in the armour against cardiovascular disease".

"High cholesterol is very common and a major cause of cardiovascular disease, but the lack of symptoms means the first sign of the problem is often a heart attack," he added.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the "life-saving new treatment will make a difference to hundreds of thousands of people across England", and he added: "This is a huge step forward in tackling the scourge of heart disease, which tragically kills thousands every year."

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2021-08-31 23:52:52Z
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Afghanistan: The questions facing Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab - BBC News

Dominic Raab
Reuters

On Wednesday, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will be grilled by the Foreign Affairs Committee over his handling of the UK's withdrawal from Afghanistan.

Here are some of the questions Mr Raab could face:

How many people have been left behind in Afghanistan?

Since April, more than 17,000 people have been evacuated from Afghanistan by the UK.

Around 5,000 were UK nationals, while the rest were mostly Afghans who worked for the British government, supported under the Afghanistan Relocation Assistance Policy (Arap).

Civilian evacuations came to an end at the weekend and Mr Raab has said it is difficult to ascertain how many people have been left behind, although he estimated that a few hundred British nationals still remain in the country.

Last week, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said there were around 800 to 1,100 Afghans eligible to come to the UK under the Arap scheme who would not be able to make it out of the country.

Mr Raab dismissed claims from MPs that there could be as many as 7,000 Arap-eligible applicants left behind.

The foreign secretary can expect MPs to push him on the most recent figures.

What will happen to Afghans trying to leave the country?

Kabul Airport
Reuters

In addition to the Arap scheme, the UK says its Afghan Citizens' Resettlement Scheme aims to allow 5,000 Afghans to settle in the UK, with the long-term goal a total of 20,000.

However, with the UK's airlift evacuations at an end, those hoping to leave may have to resort to escaping into neighbouring countries by land.

These journeys could be dangerous and would entail passing through Taliban checkpoints.

There is also no guarantee bordering countries would be willing to let in Afghan refugees or that the Taliban would let people leave.

Given the UK no longer has a diplomatic presence in Afghanistan, will it struggle to process resettlement claims from Afghans?

The UK has suggested it will try to process resettlement claims in neighbouring countries but will people have to risk making a potentially dangerous journey out of Afghanistan before they know if they are eligible to move to the UK?

Does the UK have deals with countries neighbouring Afghanistan?

The German Foreign Minister, Heiko Mass, has just completed a visit to the region taking in Turkey, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Pakistan and Qatar.

Germany says Uzbekistan has agreed to allow those identified to be at-risk to be flown in and on to Germany once flights restart from Kabul.

Speaking to the BBC on Tuesday, Mr Raab said he had spoken to all of the main third countries where the government expect people to flee and was "making sure we have got the practical arrangements to be able to identify those that are eligible so that they can get across the border".

Mr Raab could be pushed on the specifics of his contacts with countries in the region and whether any agreements have been put in place.

Why was the government's intelligence wrong?

Taliban patrols
EPA

The speed of the Taliban's advance to Kabul took many countries by surprise.

Mr Raab has acknowledged that the UK's assessment was "clearly wrong" but pointed out that other countries also failed to predict the pace at which the Afghan government would collapse.

He has also said intelligence gathering was not the Foreign Office's "lead responsibility"; however MPs will still want to know how the UK government got its assessment wrong.

Why were sensitive documents left in the UK embassy in Kabul?

Last week, The Times reported that documents with the contact details of Afghans working for - or applying to work for - the UK had been left behind at the British embassy in Kabul after staff evacuated the building.

It came as a UN report warned that the Taliban had been conducting door-to-door searches to find and threaten people who had worked for Nato forces or the previous Afghan government.

The Foreign Office insisted "every effort" was made to destroy sensitive embassy papers and that it had helped three of the affected families to safety.

MPs may seek assurances that others whose details were left behind have been offered help.

Should Mr Raab have returned from holiday sooner?

Earlier this month, Mr Raab faced criticism for being on holiday as the Taliban advanced on Kabul.

He has denied reports he was asked to return to the UK on 13 August but instead chose to remain abroad until 15 August.

Mr Raab subsequently admitted that "with hindsight" he would not have gone away, but dismissed suggestions he was "lounging on the beach" as nonsense, saying he was focused on the evacuation operation and the stability of Kabul airport.

Has the retreat from Afghanistan left the UK diminished and at greater risk than before?

Brize Norton airport
PA Media

The decision to end the foreign involvement in Afghanistan was made by President Joe Biden.

The UK had no part in it. Boris Johnson's government was not even able to get the US to extend the airlift by a few days, and it couldn't assemble a group of other countries that could keep the airport open.

So MPs may want to know if this leaves the UK looking like a weaker power, unable to act independently if the US isn't involved.

And what about the threat that extremists will again have a haven in Afghanistan?

The Taliban's links with al-Qaeda are well known, it still has groups listed by the US as terrorist organisations in its ranks today and there are others, such as IS-K, now at large in Afghanistan too.

So MPs may want to know what the UK will realistically be able to do, to try to prevent new security threats emerging in the region now UK forces have had to leave, the UK's allies have been defeated, the UK has no bases in neighbouring countries, and no official relationship with Afghanistan's new rulers.

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2021-08-31 23:07:59Z
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'Life-saving' twice-yearly injections can replace daily statin tablets for thousands - Daily Mail

Statins in a jab: 'Life-saving' twice-yearly injections can replace daily tablets for thousands of patients after approval by watchdog

  • National Institute for Health and Care Excellence approved cholesterol-lowering jabs
  • Hundreds of thousands will receive the jabs from their GP twice a year
  • The drug treatment cuts levels of 'bad' LDL cholesterol by around 50 per cent

Hundreds of thousands of people will receive cholesterol-lowering jabs from their GP twice a year as an alternative to statins, it was announced today.

The ‘game-changing’ treatment, called inclisiran, is now rolled out on the NHS after it was approved by the UK’s medical watchdog.

The drug cuts levels of ‘bad’ LDL cholesterol – a fatty substance which collects in blood vessels – by about 50 per cent, making it as effective as high-dose statins. It is delivered by injection once every six months, saving patients the need to take daily statin tablets.

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) has initially approved the jab only for patients with high cholesterol who already have heart disease or have had a heart attack or stroke – about 300,000 in total.

Hundreds of thousands of people will receive cholesterol-lowering jabs from their GP twice a year as an alternative to statins, it was announced today (stock image)

Hundreds of thousands of people will receive cholesterol-lowering jabs from their GP twice a year as an alternative to statins, it was announced today (stock image)

Experts claimed it will save around 30,000 lives and prevent 55,000 heart attacks and strokes within the next decade.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the ‘life-saving’ treatment was a ‘huge step forward in tackling the scourge of heart disease’. Patients will be injected by nurses at GP surgeries across England, with a second dose three months later and then injections twice a year. Inclisiran is more effective if taken alongside statins – but it can be used on its own for those who do not tolerate the pills.

Research is ongoing to see if the drug could be used on a preventative basis to benefit millions who are at risk of heart problems.

High cholesterol affects around two in five adults and is a major cause of heart disease, which is responsible for one in four deaths in England.

Some 8million adults in the UK are prescribed statins – but some are put off by its side effects, such as headaches and the hassle of taking a pill every day.

Inclisiran is the first convenient and effective alternative to the pills. The drug helps the liver remove cholesterol from the blood by blocking the production of a protein called PCSK9 which reduces the organ’s ability to remove cholesterol.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the ¿life-saving¿ treatment was a ¿huge step forward in tackling the scourge of heart disease¿

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the ‘life-saving’ treatment was a ‘huge step forward in tackling the scourge of heart disease’

Inclisiran is usually sold for nearly £2,000 per dose, meaning it would cost around £4,000 a year per patient. But NHS England said it had negotiated a confidential ‘world-leading’ deal with the manufacturer Novartis, and 300,000 patients will receive the drug over the next three years. Statins cost around £20 a year per patient.

NHS boss Amanda Pritchard said the deal will ‘enable hundreds of thousands of people to benefit from this revolutionary treatment, while also being fair to taxpayers’.

Meindert Boysen, deputy chief executive of Nice, said: ‘Inclisiran represents a potential game-changer in preventing thousands of people from dying prematurely from heart attacks and strokes.’

Professor Kausik Ray, from Imperial College London, who led research into the drug, said: ‘It’s great news for patients. It will reduce their medication burden and offer convenience.’

Working women heart risk 

The trend towards more full-time working among women may have raised their risk of heart attack and stroke, a Swiss study has suggested.

Stress, sleep disorders and fatigue have risen at an ‘alarming’ rate among this group in recent decades, experts warn.

These factors contribute to cardiovascular disease, alongside smoking, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. Scientists from the University of Zurich analysed data on 22,000 men and women from 2007, 2012 and 2017 as the number of women working full-time rose from 39 to 44 per cent.

Meanwhile, those suffering work stress rose from 59 per cent in 2012 to 66 per cent in 2017 with the increases bigger in women. The results will be shown at the European Stroke Organisation Conference.

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2021-08-31 23:01:06Z
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Afghan heroes who risked lives helping UK troops are given permission to live here indefinitely - Daily Mail

A welcome to make us proud: Relief as 10,000 Afghan heroes who risked their lives helping UK troops are given permission to live here indefinitely

  • Home Office said the status would be granted immediately to 10,000 refugees
  • Johnson said decision reflected 'immense debt' owed to those who helped UK
  • Policy has been codenamed Operation Warm Welcome and will be indefinite 

Thousands of Afghans who risked their lives to help British forces will be allowed to live and work indefinitely in the UK.

The Home Office last night said the coveted status would be granted immediately – and automatically – to around 10,000 refugees.

It will allow them to work and enrol their children in school as they try to build a new life here.

The decision fast-tracks a process that can take years and with only a limited right to remain.

Boris Johnson said the policy reflected the ‘immense debt’ owed to translators and others who had helped the UK military during the 20-year engagement.

Thousands of Afghans who risked their lives to help British forces will be allowed to live and work indefinitely in the UK. Pictured: Afghan refugees arrive at Heathrow Airport, London

Thousands of Afghans who risked their lives to help British forces will be allowed to live and work indefinitely in the UK. Pictured: Afghan refugees arrive at Heathrow Airport, London

The Home Office said the coveted status would be granted immediately – and automatically – to around 10,000 refugees. Pictured: Afghan refugees arriving into Heathrow last week

The Home Office said the coveted status would be granted immediately – and automatically – to around 10,000 refugees. Pictured: Afghan refugees arriving into Heathrow last week

A Whitehall source said that the package, codenamed Operation Warm Welcome, was ‘the least we could do’ following the chaotic and bloody withdrawal from Afghanistan.

Ministers are still however under pressure to do more to help hundreds, and possibly thousands, of Afghans now in hiding from Taliban reprisals for helping British troops. 

Its leaders have claimed they will not seek revenge but militants yesterday raided the homes of former translators in Kabul.

Former interpreters told the Mail they were living in fear for their lives after failing to secure a place among the 10,000 flown to Britain.

A 35-year-old who has qualified for relocation to the UK said: ‘No one believes the Taliban’s words of forgiveness. We helped the British kill and capture their men.

‘We provided the intelligence to fight against them. We questioned their captured and injured – so it is simple that they will want revenge.’

Refugees from Afghanistan arrive on a evacuation flight at Heathrow Airport on August 26
Refugees from Afghanistan arrive on a evacuation flight at Heathrow Airport on August 26

Refugees from Afghanistan arrive on a evacuation flight at Heathrow Airport on August 26

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab yesterday denied reports that more than 7,000 Afghans with links to UK forces had been left behind, but was unable to provide another figure.

He said the number of British citizens left in Afghanistan was in ‘the low hundreds’, following the evacuation of more than 15,000 people in the second half of August.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said around 300 Afghans granted refuge in the UK had been left behind, along with 700 relatives.

Normally, asylum seekers are banned from working while their claims are assessed. They are entitled to minimal financial support if they would ‘otherwise be destitute’.

Permission to work may be granted only if their claim has not been processed within a year through no fault of their own.

If they are eventually granted leave to remain it is typically capped at five years.

Dominic Raab (pictured with Borish Johnson) denied reports that more than 7,000 Afghans with links to UK forces had been left behind but was unable to provide another figure

Dominic Raab (pictured with Borish Johnson) denied reports that more than 7,000 Afghans with links to UK forces had been left behind but was unable to provide another figure 

By contrast, those who have served British forces will immediately be granted indefinite leave to remain, which brings with it the right to work and the option to apply for British citizenship.

Those eligible under the Afghanistan Relocations and Assistance Policy will also be eligible for immediate access to NHS services.

Councils have been offered a modest £5million to help with housing. Officials said they were working with more than 100 town halls and had so far found accommodation for more than 2,000 people.

Councils will be given an extra £12million to provide additional school places for Afghan children and further funding will be provided to create 300 university places.

Arrivals from Afghanistan will also be offered the Covid vaccine and given access to a portal where members of the public will be able to share offers of work and housing and make donations.

A Whitehall source last night told the Mail the package was ‘likely’ to be extended to 20,000 Afghans expected to come under a wider resettlement scheme – but this has not been decided.

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2021-08-31 23:00:06Z
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Afghanistan: UK in talks with Taliban to ensure Britons get safe passage out of country - Sky News

The UK is in talks with the Taliban to ensure Britons can safely leave Afghanistan, the government has said.

Its special representative for Afghan transition, Sir Simon Gass, has met senior members of the hardline Islamist group in Doha, Qatar.

They also discussed safe passage for Afghans who have worked with the UK over the last 20 years.

Sir Simon Gass. Pic: EPA/Rex/Shutterstock
Image: Sir Simon Gass has met senior Taliban members. File pic: EPA/Rex/Shutterstock

A Downing Street spokesperson said: "The prime minister's special representative for Afghan transition, Simon Gass, has travelled to Doha and is meeting with senior Taliban representatives to underline the importance of safe passage out of Afghanistan for British nationals, and those Afghans who have worked with us over the past 20 years."

It comes as Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab admitted it will be a "challenge" for Britons left in Afghanistan to find a route to the UK.

He told Sky News the number of Britons who had not been flown out as part of the now-finished UK evacuation was in the "low hundreds".

Mr Raab acknowledged it was "unclear" when the airport in Afghanistan's capital, Kabul, would operate again and advised those who still sought to leave the country to find a route to the UK via neighbouring countries.

More on Afghanistan

More than 17,000 British nationals, Afghans who worked with the UK, and other vulnerable people, have been evacuated from the country since April, the foreign secretary said.

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Taliban celebrates as US troops depart

Of the UK nationals remaining in Afghanistan, Mr Raab said: "Most of those are difficult cases where it's not clear around eligibility because they're undocumented.

"We've now put in place the arrangements with third countries, or we're putting them in place.

"I've spoken to some of the key third countries, so have other ministers, to make sure we can have a workable route through for those outstanding cases."

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Destroyed military planes and vehicles left by US

Asked whether his advice for those UK nationals still in Afghanistan would be for them to head across one of the country's borders, Mr Raab added: "It depends if they are eligible or not and, of course, we're in contact with them to be able to establish that.

"That's made more difficult because we don't have the base at the airport.

"Certainly if they're eligible British nationals, there are embassies in those third countries - whether it's Pakistan or one of the stans."

Mr Raab said the UK would hold the Taliban to its "explicit assurances" that it "must allow safe passage not just for our nationals but other Afghans, particularly vulnerable ones, who wish to leave".

Taliban forces patrol near the entrance gate of Hamid Karzai International Airport, a day after U.S troops withdrawal, in Kabul, Afghanistan August 31, 2021. REUTERS/Stringer
Image: Taliban forces patrol near the entrance gate of Hamid Karzai International Airport

He also said there was "a degree of scepticism" about the group's "capacity" to run Kabul's airport "safely".

"We know that some countries are trying to help them with that effectively functional capacity," he said.

"Of course the previous government had air traffic controllers and things like that. But at what stage that will be ready and viable for international travel, at this point, is unclear."

He added: "What support they get and how quickly they can then salvage a functional operational capacity remains to be seen.

"Which is why we're making sure - working with those third countries, working with our embassies - that, actually, if people can get to the border, we can process those cases."

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2021-08-31 21:00:00Z
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Afghanistan: Dominic Raab blames Ministry of Defence over 'clearly wrong' intelligence - The Times

Downing Street has insisted that Boris Johnson has “full confidence” in Dominic Raab as the foreign secretary blamed military intelligence failures for the west’s humiliation in Kabul.

As internal government recriminations intensified, Raab pointed the finger at the Ministry of Defence and the Home Office as he appeared to question the entire basis of Britain’s 20-year Afghan campaign.

Raab said that the military predictions about the speed of the Taliban takeover were “clearly wrong” and that Britain had not been “realistic” over 20 years about its ability to nation-build in Afghanistan.

Government briefings have suggested that Raab will be sacked over Britain’s chaotic departure from Afghanistan, but he dismissed anonymous critics today as “lacking in any credibility whatsoever”.

Johnson’s spokesman said that there were “no

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2021-08-31 16:00:00Z
52781851698615

Dominic Raab: Number of Brits left in Afghanistan in 'low hundreds' - Daily Mail

Dominic Raab says the number of Brits left behind in Afghanistan is in the 'low hundreds' amid claims 9,000 British allies may be stranded

  • Dominic Raab said number of British nationals in Afghanistan in 'low hundreds'
  • He said the UK had brought home 5,000 British nationals since April this year
  • However, it remains unclear how many UK allies have been left behind in Kabul 

The number of British nationals left behind in Afghanistan is in the 'low hundreds', the Foreign Secretary said today. 

Dominic Raab said the number of Brits still in the country is 'now down at a very low level' after 5,000 were brought home since April this year. 

However, it remains unclear how many Afghan citizens who worked for the British Government are stranded after the withdrawal of Western forces was completed. 

Ministers had suggested last week that approximately 1,000 Afghans who were eligible to come to the UK may not make it out. 

Dominic Raab said the number of Brits still in Afghanistan is 'now down at a very low level' after 5,000 were brought home since April this year

Dominic Raab said the number of Brits still in Afghanistan is 'now down at a very low level' after 5,000 were brought home since April this year

It remains unclear how many Afghan citizens who worked for the British Government are stranded after the withdrawal of Western forces was completed

It remains unclear how many Afghan citizens who worked for the British Government are stranded after the withdrawal of Western forces was completed

But Whitehall sources told The Guardian that the figure could actually be about 9,000. 

The Government has not given a concrete figure, with Foreign Office Minister James Cleverly saying yesterday that it was 'impossible' to put a number on how many people have been left behind.       

Asked how many eligible people had been left in the country by the UK, Mr Raab told Sky News: 'Look, of course, we lament the fact that anyone will be left behind.

'I would just say that since April when we have been planning and instituting this, over 17,000 British nationals, Afghan workers, vulnerable special cases are out.

'I know that the number of UK nationals, the particular responsibility of the Foreign Office, is now down at a very low level.'

Asked if he could be more specific on how many British nationals were still in the country, he said: 'Well, low hundreds given that we have taken in total 5,000 out, and most of those are difficult cases where it is not clear around eligibility because they are undocumented.

'We have now put in place the arrangements with third countries, or we are putting them in place.

'I have spoken to some of the key third countries, so have other ministers, to make sure that we can make sure that we can have a workable route through for those outstanding cases.

He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: 'It's very difficult to give you a firm figure. I can tell you that for UK nationals we've secured since April over 5,000, and we're in the low hundreds (remaining).' 

It is unclear how many of those British nationals who are still in the country have decided to stay of their own volition.  

The Government has suggested that eligible people could cross into a third country next to Afghanistan in order to get to Britain now the airlift operation out of Kabul has ended. 

But Mr Raab conceded that such journeys could be a 'challenge', telling Sky News: 'Well, that is a challenge which is why we are holding very squarely the Taliban to their explicit assurances, they have made them bilaterally to us, they have made them to other countries… that they must allow safe passage, not just for our nationals but other Afghans, particularly vulnerable ones, who wish to leave.'


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2021-08-31 15:23:09Z
52781851216120

Safety of UK uncertain after Afghanistan withdrawal, Dominic Raab admits - ITV News

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  1. Safety of UK uncertain after Afghanistan withdrawal, Dominic Raab admits  ITV News
  2. Afghanistan: Dominic Raab says UK must face new Taliban reality  BBC News
  3. Questions Raab needs to address as he faces MPs over Afghanistan  The Guardian
  4. Dominic Raab really does think his own personal failures on Afghanistan are ‘silly season stuff’  The Independent
  5. Under-fire Dominic Raab warns Taliban they will be 'judged on their actions' towards fleeing Afghans  Daily Mail
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-08-31 15:18:39Z
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Boris Johnson away from Downing Street for four-night break in west England - but 'continuing to work' - Sky News

Boris Johnson is spending this week away from Downing Street in the west of England with family - but Number 10 insisted he was "continuing to work" and declined to describe the trip as a holiday.

Following the conclusion of the UK's evacuation efforts in Afghanistan, Mr Johnson left Downing Street on Sunday and is due to return on Thursday.

"The prime minister is away for the next two days in the west of England but is continuing to work and will be back in the office in Downing Street on Thursday," Mr Johnson's official spokesman said on Tuesday.

"He left on Sunday, I believe."

The prime minister has been holidaying in Scotland. Pic: Carrie Symonds
Image: The prime minister with his son Wilfred on holiday in Scotland last year. Pic: Carrie Symonds

Asked if the prime minister's four-night trip constituted a holiday, the spokesman said: "He is away, as I say, out of the office for a couple of days, but he is working."

Number 10 said Mr Johnson "continues to lead the overall government response" to the Afghanistan crisis.

But Downing Street would not confirm whether Mr Johnson's wife, Carrie, or the couple's son, Wilfred, were with him.

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It follows a row over Dominic Raab's holiday to Crete, during which the foreign secretary was reported to have spent time on the beach as Afghanistan's capital Kabul fell to the Taliban.

Mr Johnson was also previously criticised this month for attempting a break away from London - which he later cut short - amid Afghanistan's takeover by the extremist group.

19/08/2021. London, United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab calls Wang Yi, the Chinese Foreign Minister to discuss Afghanistan from his office at the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office in London. Pic: Simon Dawson/Downing St
Image: Dominic Raab was criticised for being in Crete as Afghanistan fell to the Taliban Pic: Simon Dawson/Downing St

Number 10 usually confirms whether a prime minister taking time away from Downing Street is on holiday.

Mr Johnson's predecessor, Theresa May, enjoyed walking holidays in Wales and Switzerland while in power.

And Mr Johnson and his now wife (then Carrie Symonds) themselves enjoyed a break in Mustique following the Conservatives' general election victory in December 2019 - a trip for which the prime minister was later criticised over his failure to properly disclose how it was funded.

Last year, the couple spent time on holiday in Scotland with Wilfred.

Earlier this month, Mr Johnson was reportedly spotted at Taunton station as he cut short time away from London after just one day to deal with the Afghanistan crisis.

The prime minister owns a one-fifth share of a property in Somerset, the county where he spent much of his childhood.

The Johnson family are said to own a 500-acre farm in Somerset, where some of them - including the prime minister's father Stanley - reportedly stayed during the coronavirus lockdown last year.

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2021-08-31 12:28:09Z
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Afghanistan: Dominic Raab blames Ministry of Defence over 'clearly wrong' intelligence - The Times

Dominic Raab has blamed military intelligence failures for the West’s humiliation in Kabul, intensifying an internal government blame game.

The foreign secretary said the Ministry of Defence’s predictions of the speed of the Taliban takeover were “clearly wrong”.

Government briefings have suggested that Raab will be sacked over Britain’s chaotic departure from Afghanistan, but he dismissed anonymous critics today as “lacking in any credibility whatsoever”.

Raab will appear before the Commons foreign affairs committee tomorrow to be questioned about his handling of the crisis, where he is likely to say that other government departments need to take their share of the blame.

This morning he pointed the finger at the UK military and at the US for underestimating the strength of the Taliban, saying

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2021-08-31 11:00:00Z
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Geronimo the alpaca killed by government vets 'to prevent spread of disease' - Sky News

Geronimo the alpaca has been killed by vets under orders from the government.

The animal was put down after being taken from its farm in Gloucestershire, days before a destruction warrant ordering its death was due to expire on 4 September.

The alpaca had twice tested positive for bovine tuberculosis.

A statement by the government said: "bTB-positive alpaca known as 'Geronimo' has been euthanised to prevent the spread of disease."

Chief veterinary officer Christine Middlemiss called it a "terribly sad situation" and said "our sympathies remain with all those affected by this devastating disease".

She added: "No one wants to have to cull infected animals if it can be avoided, but we need to follow the scientific evidence and cull animals that have tested positive for bTB to minimise spread of this insidious disease and ultimately eradicate the biggest threat to animal health in this country.

Three people, who arrived with a police escort, surround Geronimo the Alpaca
Image: The officials from the Animal and Plant Health Agency were there to execute a court warrant

"Not only is this essential to protect the livelihoods of our farming industry and rural communities, but it is also necessary avoid more TB cases in humans."

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Downing Street has expressed sympathy for the animal and its owner Helen MacDonald, who has been fighting to save it for the last four years.

The prime minister's official spokesman said: "It's obviously highly distressing for someone to lose animals to TB and that's a situation that farmers sadly have to face.

Workers from the Animal and Plant Health Agency lead Geronimo the Alpaca at Shepherds Close Farm in Wooton Under Edge, Gloucestershire, before the animal was taken away on a trailer to an undisclosed location.
Image: The prime minister has expressed sympathy for the animal

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Geronimo the alpaca removed from pen

"Our sympathies are with Ms Macdonald and any others that are affected by this terrible disease."

Avon and Somerset Police officers arrived at the site in Wickwar, South Gloucestershire alongside three people dressed in blue overalls, masks and goggles, just before 11am.

The force later confirmed it was supporting the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) in executing a court warrant.

Other alpacas on the farm, which are not in the same pen, gathered nearby after the officers arrived before running off to another part of the farm.

While officers were there Ms MacDonald tweeted further pleas to save the animal.

She posted: "DEFRA have arrived! We are asking once again for an urgent meeting with George Eustice. Please don't execute Geronimo" and "@BorisJohnson STOP THIS NOW GERONIMO IS HEALTHY."

Supporters have been camping out at the farm for weeks in case officials from the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) arrived to destroy the alpaca.

Some spoke to officers this morning. Liz Stacey was briefly arrested after spraying officers with a water pistol, but was quickly de-arrested.

She told Sky News: "The police arrived in force. It was a totally disproportionate… they were determined to carry out that this heinous crime, you know, there was no way that Geronimo had TB.

"For four years [he's been a] healthy, happy animal on this farm. And it was just disgusting."

A force spokesman said: "We can confirm officers are in attendance at a farm in the Wickwar area of South Gloucestershire this morning to support the Animal and Plant Health Agency, who are executing a court warrant.

"We'll always support our partner agencies to carry out their lawful duties, and our role is to prevent a breach of the peace and to ensure public safety is protected."

Ms Macdonald's legal fight to save her animal has been going on since the alpaca first tested positive for bovine tuberculosis in September 2017.

Geronimo the alpaca at Shepherds Close Farm in Wooton Under Edge, Gloucestershire. A court is due to decide whether Geornimo can be granted a stay of execution from his destruction in order for further evidence to be produced. Helen Macdonald, the owner of Geronimo - who has twice tested positive for bovine TB - has lodged an urgent application for a temporary injunction at the High Court in London to prevent her beloved pet being put down. Picture date: Wednesday August 18, 2021.
Image: Geronimo has twice tested positive for bovine tuberculosis

She argued that the Enferplex test used on Geronmio was fundamentally flawed and said Geronimo tested positive because he had repeatedly been primed with tuberculin - a purified protein derivative of bovine TB bacteria.

The veterinary nurse, who farms alpacas at her home, received support from around the world - with more than 140,000 people signing a petition against Geronimo's destruction.

Earlier this month, a High Court judge refused her lawyer's application for a temporary injunction to stop the destruction order and reopen the case.

As well as alpacas, badgers have been a victim of the fight against bovine TB, with mass culling employed to stop the spread since 2013, sparking a huge public backlash.

Defra said a post-mortem examination of Geronimo will now be carried out by veterinary pathologists from the APHA, followed by a bacteriological culture of selected tissue samples, which can take up to three months to process.

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2021-08-31 10:56:14Z
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