Senin, 29 Januari 2024

Stormont power-sharing in sight as Northern Ireland DUP accepts post-Brexit deal - The Guardian

The Democratic Unionist party has endorsed a deal with the UK government to restore power-sharing in Northern Ireland, paving an end to two years of political deadlock.

Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said the party would revive the mothballed Stormont executive and assembly once the government tabled promised legislation.

“I am pleased to report that the party executive has now endorsed the proposals that I have put to the party,” he told a press conference early on Tuesday after facing down hardline opponents in a dramatic and chaotic five-hour meeting of the party’s 130-member executive. “The result was clear, the DUP has been decisive, I have been mandated to move forward.”

The DUP collapsed Stormont in February 2022 in protest at post-Brexit trading arrangements that it said undermined Northern Ireland’s position in the UK. The impasse left civil servants to run Northern Ireland on a form of auto-pilot amid a fiscal crisis, crumbling public services, strikes and doubts about whether devolved government would ever return.

However the boycott proved popular with DUP supporters and bolstered its electoral position, complicating Donaldson’s effort to abandon the protest.

Tuesday morning’s breakthrough paves the way for Sinn Féin, which overtook the DUP as the biggest party in the 2022 assembly election, to take the first minister post for the first time under its deputy leader, Michelle O’Neill – a historic, if symbolic precedent. A DUP member will be eligible to be deputy first minister, a post with equal power but less prestige.

Sinn Féin’s leader, Mary Lou McDonald, expressed optimism Stormont could return before an 8 February legislative deadline for forming an administration. “Sinn Féin will now engage with the parties and both governments to ensure we now all press on without delay,” she said.

Donaldson said the deal – yet to be published – would safeguard Northern Ireland’s place in the UK and restore its place in the UK internal market. “It will remove checks for goods moving within the UK and remaining in Northern Ireland and will end Northern Ireland automatically following future EU laws,” he said.

Conservative MPs will scrutinise the deal, once published, for any sign that Downing Street has weakened the ability to diverge from EU rules.

Rishi Sunak’s administration would need to deliver legislative commitments it made to the DUP before the party would revive power-sharing, said Donaldson. “The package of measures will require a significant number of actions to be taken and we look forward with confidence to their ongoing implementation, according to an agreed timeline.”

On that basis the DUP would support convoking the Northern Ireland assembly to elect a speaker and facilitate the nomination of ministers, said Donaldson.

The Northern Ireland secretary, Chris Heaton-Harris, who presided over months of tortuous negotiations with the DUP, welcomed the news and said London would keep its side of the bargain. “I now believe that all the conditions are in place for the assembly to return, the parties entitled to form an executive are meeting tomorrow to discuss these matters and I hope to be able to finalise this deal with the political parties as soon as possible.”

Dublin, Brussels and Washington will also welcome the restoration of Stormont, a central plank of the 1998 Good Friday agreement. Many Northern Ireland nurses, teachers, bus drivers and other public sector workers will also welcome a revived executive, which is a condition to unlock a £3.3bn financial package from London.

Donaldson’s victory – and possibly his leadership – will be tested in coming days by hardliners who consider the deal a betrayal that will weaken the union, raising the prospect of a party split. Donaldson did not reveal the size of the majority in favour of the deal.

Senior figures in the DUP, including Sammy Wilson and Nigel Dodds, had warned against a compromise that would merely tweak the Irish Sea border. Dozens of protesters, some holding union jack flags and signs saying “Stop DUP sellout”, picketed the meeting, which ended shortly before 1am.

The Traditional Unionist Voice party and Jamie Bryson, a prominent loyalist, denounced Donaldson. The meeting was supposed to have been confidential but Bryson live-tweeted it, suggesting he had sources inside the room. “There’s only one betrayal, and it is of the mandate given to the DUP,” Bryson tweeted.

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2024-01-30 04:01:00Z
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Wembley fire: Around 125 firefighters tackle blaze in block of flats - Evening Standard

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Wembley fire: Around 125 firefighters tackle blaze in block of flats  Evening StandardView Full coverage on Google News
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2024-01-30 03:59:10Z
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Archbishop of Canterbury attacks Rishi Sunak's 'damaging' Rwanda plan - The Independent

Rishi Sunak’s proposed Rwanda asylum law has cleared its first major hurdle in the House of Lords, but faces a bruising ride as the Archbishop of Canterbury warned it is “leading the nation down a damaging path”.

Justin Welby made a rare intervention into politics by speaking out in the Lords on Monday evening, against the legislation aimed at sending asylum seekers on one-way flights to the African country. The Church of England’s most senior cleric insisted that Britain “can do better than this bill” as he condemned the Sunak’s government’s “pick and choose” approach to international law.

A barrage of criticism was levelled at the government’s Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill, during its lengthy second reading debate in the upper chamber, with accusations that it was immoral, repugnant and an attempt to “legislate a lie”.

The Archbishop of Canterbury speaking in the Lords

Mr Sunak has told peers to listen to “the will of the people” as he tries to push his Rwanda scheme through parliament in time to get deportation flights started for the spring.

Only 11 right-wing rebel Tory MPs voted against the “weak” legislation in the Commons – but it faces a bigger test in the Lords, where many members have expressed unease about the safety of Rwanda.

While the Bill survived a Liberal Democrat-led bid to derail it on Monday, the unelected chamber is certain to seek numerous changes, putting them on a collision course with the Tory administration and an extended tussle between the Commons and Lords during “ping-pong”. Peers voted 206 to 84 against the blocking motion, a majority of 122.

Speaking ahead of the second-reading stage vote, the Archbishop of Canterbury told the Lords: “We can as a nation do better than this bill.”

“With this bill, the government is continuing to seek good objectives in the wrong way – leading the nation down a damaging path,” the faith leader added.

Rev Welby called Rwanda as a “wonderful country”, adding: “My complaint is not with Rwanda, nor with its people – it has overcome challenges that this House cannot begin to imagine.”

But the cross-bench peer insisted that Mr Sunak’s bill would “outsource our legal and moral responsibility for refugees and asylum seekers” when other countries “far poorer than we are already supporting multitudes more than we are now”.

He also argued that “pick and choose approach to international law undermines our global standing and offends against the principle of universality”.

Rishi Sunak insists his Rwanda bill will help him deliver his ‘stop the boats’ pledge

Rev Welby added: “It is damaging for asylum seekers in need of protection, and safe and legal routes. It is damaging for this country’s reputation … It is damaging in respect of constitutional principles and the rule of law.”

The senior Liberal Democrat peer Lord German urged fellow peers to vote down the Rwanda bill at the second reading stage. However, Rev Welby said he would not vote against the government on Monday evening. With the government widely expected to win tonight’s vote, peers are waiting to amend the legislation at the next stage.

First blood was drawn on the bill in the Lords last week, when peers backed by 214 votes to 171 an unprecedented move seeking to delay a treaty with Rwanda which forms part of the government’s plan.

The unelected second chamber backed calls for parliament to not approve the pact until ministers can show the country is safe. However, unlike the Commons – which has the power to delay ratification of a treaty – the Lords can only advise.

The ex-Tory cabinet minister Kenneth Clarke said he could not support the Rwanda bill – warning that its powers to overrule the courts on Rwanda’s safety set a “very dangerous constitutional provision”.

Lord Clarke told peers about “the risks of moving towards an elective dictatorship in this country” – arguing that there ought to be “constitutional limits on any branch of government in a liberal democratic society such as ours”.

And in a scathing speech, former Labour home secretary Lord David Blunkett, said the Tory plan was all about “virtue signalling” to hardline voters and demonising the courts, the Lords and the opposition.

He also pointed out that far-right Italian Giorgia Meloni had a similar plan to deport asylum seekers to African nations. “What sort of county are we?” he asked.

Earlier on Monday, Mr Sunak’s official spokesman said the bill remained the “right thing to do” to tackle people smugglers and deter asylum seekers from crossing the Channel.

“It is also the fair thing to do both for taxpayers and for those individuals seeking to come here through safe and legal routes who see their place jumped by those who can afford to make crossings on small boats,” said the No 10 official.

Meanwhile, the number of migrants who made unauthorised Channel crossings of the Channel this year passed 1,000 after more than 300 made the journey at the weekend.

The asylum scheme comes with a £290m, bill but a series of legal challenges has meant no flights have taken off since it was first proposed in 2022, when Boris Johnson was in No 10.

Under the plan, people who cross the Channel in small boats could be removed to Rwanda rather than being allowed to seek asylum in the UK. The legislation, along with the recently signed treaty with Kigali, is aimed at ensuring the scheme is legally watertight.

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2024-01-29 22:27:39Z
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Teenage boys killed in Bristol stabbing pictured - The Independent

The devastated family members of two teenage boys who were killed in a horrifying double-stabbing have told how their “lives will never be the same” - as police announced two more arrests.

Football fan Mason Rist, 15, and “kind soul” Max Dixon, 16, were stabbed in Bristol on Saturday night by a group of attackers who are said to have fled the scene in a car.

A resident who was first on the scene after the brutal attack told how Mason had begged her for help as he lay fatally injured in her former partner’s arms. Kirsty Kidd told The Independent: “We tried everything, I just wanted them to be ok.”

She added: “It could have been anyone including my own children, that’s the scary part.”

Avon and Somerset Police have launched a murder investigation following the killings in the Knowle West area of the city. A 44-year-old man and a 15-year-old boy were arrested shortly after the incident and remain in police custody. Detectives revealed on Monday they have arrested two more men aged 20 and 22.

This morning, Mason’s devastated grandmother visited the scene of the attack, where flowers, cards and candles have been left for the teenagers

Gail Iles revealed the youngster was a devoted Liverpool fan who tragically lost his dad Shayne Rist to Covid. She said it would be nice if the club sent a representative in tribute to the boy, adding: “It is so tragic.”

In a tribute shared on Facebook, a woman believed to be Max’s mum told how her life has been ripped apart by the tragedy.

“Devastated, our lives will never be the same without you my boy,” Leanne Ekland posted, alongside a picture of the smiling teen.

Max Dixon, 16, and Mason Rist, 15

Max’s heartbroken sister Kayleigh also posted an emotional tribute on Facebook on Sunday, which said: “My baby brother… one of a kind you are.

“You sleep tight. A beautiful, kind soul gone. Just taken 16 years so young and innocent oh my heart is broken.

“I really hope you know how much we love you. How much I love you. You will be missed kiddo I’ll always look out for you in every sunset, shine bright lil’ bro.”

A mother, who did not want to be named, said she knew both Mason and Max through her daughter who attended Knowle Park Primary School with them.

She said they were “lovely kids” and that the community had been left devastated by the news of their deaths.

“People are scared to be outside today,” she told The Independent. “It is complete shock. How can two kids be attacked like this in the place where they live?”

Tributes at the scene in Bristol

Tributes, candles and a family picture were left at the scene

Ms Kidd, 30, was first on the scene with her former partner Scott Lovell, 31, following the stabbing at outside their home at around 11.20pm.

“I was sleeping in the front room and I heard a massive noise outside. I looked out and I saw the person [Mason] being stabbed,” she said.

“My ex-partner went to him and his first leg gave way and then both this legs gave way and he fell into Scott’s arms. He said ‘help me’.

“I then came out with a pillow and put his head on it before police arrived. When they took him away I was so scared for him as I saw his injuries. And when they later told me he had died I was devastated.”

Ms Kidd revealed she has received a message of thanks from Max’s sister Kayleigh, adding: “We tried everything, I just wanted them to be ok.”

The mum-of-five said her eldest - aged nine - had only come in the house a few minutes before the incident.

Charlie Hicks, 21, lives next to where Mason collapsed to the ground. He told The Independent: “I found out from the sound of the police and ambulance outside. I was going to bed. I looked outside the window and I saw him [Mason] on the floor with people around him.

“They [Max and Mason] are both innocent kids. They are nice, Max loved his football and played for Park Knowle FC. It’s just so tragic this can happened, everyone is in shock.”

Police said the victims sustained stab wounds and were taken to two hospitals - Southmead Hospital and Bristol Royal Hospital for Children - by ambulance, where they died in the early hours of Sunday morning.

At a packed meeting of residents on Monday, concerns were raised over escalating violence in post code wars between the Knowle West and Hartcliffe areas of south Bristol – amid fears the teens were “caught in the crossfire” of the turf wars.

Andy Pearce, 73, said: “I think they happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time - that’s the tragic thing about all of this, it could have happened to anyone’s children. I don’t think they were targeted, they were attacked because they were living here.

“There was a rivalry between the areas [Knowle West and Hartcliffe] in the 70s but nothing this. It’s got worse over the past few years.”

Molly Morgan, 20, who lives on Ilminster Avenue, heard the sirens following the attack before walking up to find the area on her road cordoned off. She said: “It’s quite scary to think this could happen to anyone here.”

A vigil was held near the scene of the attack on Sunday, where people lit candles and placed flowers for the victims.

Tributes include flowers with messages reading “Mason and Max Rest in peace”, a sign stating “Stop knife crime RIP boys” and a note from Oasis Academy John Williams reading: “In loving memory of Mason and Max, gone but never forgotten”.

Meanwhile, a GoFundMe fundraising page has been launched to “give these two little boys the send of they deserve”.

People lit candles at a vigil for the boys on Sunday night

Candles and a card at the vigil on Sunday

Football coach Scott Alden wrote a tribute to Max on Facebook: “I had the pleasure of knowing you and coaching you since you were a young boy, you were the cheekiest, happy, funniest boy a very talented footballer who loved his family and friends.

“I’m so sorry this happened to you, the world is a cruel and dangerous place now.”

The tributes come as Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said tackling knife crime requires a “laser focus” as he called for the nation to “roll up our sleeves” and take action.

Responding to news of the latest tragedy during a visit to Warrington, he told broadcasters: “This is devastating for the family and friends of these two youngsters. I have teenage children myself. I cannot even imagine what it’s like for the family and friends.”

Hew added: “We can’t carry on with these awful stories of knife crime. We have to roll up our sleeves and do something about it.”

Detectives said they were trying to establish “what possible motives could sit behind such an appalling crime,” with over 100 officers working around the clock and more arrests expected.

Bristol Commander Superintendent Mark Runacres said: “It is with great sadness that we confirm the names of the two young boys, Mason Rist and Max Dixon, who died following the incident on Saturday night.

“Any death is awful, but the loss of Mason and Max, who had their whole lives in front of them, is particularly tragic and my heart breaks for the families who have to endure such unimaginable pain and suffering. Our thoughts remain with them during this time.”

He added: “Our investigation is progressing well, with four people arrested so far and more arrests are to come. We are committed to doing everything we can to hold to account those responsible for this horrendous crime and to provide answers to Max’s and Mason’s families.”

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2024-01-29 16:48:25Z
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Watch: King Charles leaves hospital after prostate procedure - The Telegraph

The King has been released from hospital after successful treatment for an enlarged prostate.

The King and Queen were photographed walking to their car as they departed the London Clinic after Charles had been treated in the same hospital as his daughter-in-law the Princess of Wales

The pair, dressed smartly and beaming, waved to well-wishers outside the hospital at 3pm. As he left, the King was heard to say that he was “grateful for everyone’s kind wishes”,  thanking the crowd that had gathered outside.

He has been in hospital for three nights, longer than the overnight stay initially expected. Aides have emphasised his determination to work from home, continuing with his red boxes and even mooting the idea of bringing paperwork to his bed.

It is understood he will require around a month off public engagements – the longest he has been off duty as monarch.

Charles spent three nights in the same hospital as the Princess of Wales
Charles spent three nights in the same hospital as the Princess of Wales Credit: Heathcliff O’Malley

A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: “The King was this afternoon discharged from hospital following planned medical treatment and has rescheduled forthcoming public engagements to allow for a period of private recuperation.

“He would like to thank the medical team and all those involved in supporting his hospital visit, and is grateful for all the kind messages he has received in recent days.”

The 75-year-old has generally enjoyed good health, other than sporting injuries as a younger man. In 2008, he had a non-cancerous growth removed from the bridge of his nose in a minor, routine procedure, and underwent a hernia operation in 2003.

He has had Covid twice, but suffered only mild symptoms and continued to work through it.

The King was heard thanking well-wishers outside the hospital
The King was heard thanking well-wishers outside the hospital Credit: Heathcliff O’Malley

On Friday morning, he was admitted to the London Clinic for treatment for an enlarged prostate. The Queen was with him, and he is understood to have visited the Princess of Wales before his surgery. 

The Princess had been recuperating at the London Clinic after undergoing abdominal surgery last week, and was discharged on Monday.

The King received his diagnosis nearly two weeks ago, approving a statement from Buckingham Palace to give details of his condition in the hope of raising awareness of its symptoms. 

NHS England said that after Charles shared news of the diagnosis, the “enlarged prostate” page on the NHS website received 26,170 visits in 48 hours, including another 9,760 visits on Thursday, compared with a daily average of 1,400 visits earlier in the week.

Prostate Cancer UK had 8,025 visits to its online risk check service, of which 6,800 were noted as high risk, more than double the previous day.

The King waves to well-wishers as he leaves the London Clinic after treatment
The King waves to well-wishers as he leaves the London Clinic after treatment Credit: Heathcliff O’Malley

On Jan 17, a spokesman for the monarch said: “In common with thousands of men each year, the King has sought treatment for an enlarged prostate. 

At the time, the King was at his Scottish residence at Birkhall, Aberdeenshire, and had cancelled a handful of engagements as a result of advice from doctors. He has since been at Sandringham and Clarence House as he awaited his treatment.

After his diagnosis, the Queen said the King was “fine” and “looking forward to getting back to work”. She visited him five times in hospital.

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2024-01-29 15:59:00Z
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Starmer says Sunak needs the help of 'grown-ups in the room' Labour to get gradual smoking ban through Commons – politics live - The Guardian

Keir Starmer has criticised Rishi Sunak for not imposing a ban on disposable vapes earlier. Asked if he supported the PM’s announcement, Starmer told journalists:

Yes, I support the banning of disposable vapes, not least because of the impact they have on children.

We’ve been calling for this for two years. So I do have a question for the government, which is why has it taken two years to get to this stage? We’ve wasted two years.

Starmer also suggested that Rishi Sunak was only allowing his MPs a free vote on this because he could not get them to back him. He said:

I’ve also got concerns that apparently the prime minister is going to give his MPs a free vote, because he doesn’t think that he’s able to hold his own team together.

Luckily the Labour party will always act in the national interest. We will vote for it and so this measure will go through. It’ll only go through because the Labour party is the grown-up in the room and is prepared to act in the national interest and vote for this important measure.

Sunak argues that, in allowing his MPs a free vote, he is following precedent. (See 11.13am.)

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During his evidence to the UK Covid inquiry in Edinburgh this morning, Michael Gove, who was Cabinet Office minister during the pandemic, in charge of relations with the devolved governments, and who is now levelling up secretary, repeatedly sought to downplay claims that relations between the UK and Scottish governments during Covid were fractious or dysfunctional. (See 11.37am.)

But even Gove could not claim it was all sweet harmony. Here are some of the excerpts from his evidence about the tensions.

  • Gove said the SNP did not want inter-governmental relations to work. Mark Drakeford, the Welsh first minister, did, he said. But he went on: “With the best will in the world the SNP don’t want inter-government relations to work.”

No, I don’t believe they are politically motivated in everything they do. I think, I have great respect for the professionalism with which many [Scottish government] ministers conducted themselves. I do believe their overwhelming motivation was to protect the people of Scotland from a virus.

However, there are and were occasions when the [Scottish government] was thinking politically, as we can see, and of course it is the case the SNP has a political mission to achieve Scotland’s independence, ie destroy the United Kingdom and it would be naive not to be aware that highly skilled politicians, including those at the top of the Scottish government, might well see what they perceive to be political advantage at certain points.

Some of the language used, the desire to have ‘a good old-fashioned rammy with the UK government’ and some of the other language used, which I shan’t repeat now, does lead me to believe that at that point, there was a desire to pursue differentiation for the sake of advancing a political agenda.

  • He said it was an understatement to say that Boris Johnson and Nicola Sturgeon were not soulmates. In his witness statement Gove said Sturgeon, the then first minister, and Johnson, the then PM, were not soulmates. Asked if this was “something of an understatement”, Gove replied:

Understatement is sometimes the most effective means of communication.

  • He said Sturgeon caused “irritation” in No 10 when she announced on 12 March 2020 that she wanted to ban gatherings of more than 500 people in Scotland. He said that was “divergent” from what had been agreed at an earlier UK Cobra meeting.

Keir Starmer has hinted that the Iceland supermarket boss Richard Walker could play a role supporting a Labour government.

He made the comment as he visited a branch of Iceland in Warrington, after Walker, a former Tory donor, used an article in the Guardian to decare his support for Labour.

Commenting on Walker’s endorsement, Starmer said:

I’m delighted at the reason he’s come out for the Labour party, because he recognised that we’re a changed Labour party, that we’re pro-working people, we’re serious about the cost-of-living crisis and about stability and long-term strategy.

I think it further cements the real profound way in which the Labour party has changed under my leadership, as we go into this all-important year of the general election.

Asked about a potential job for Walker in a Labour government, Starmer replied:

Richard Walker is wanting to work with us. He’s made it absolutely clear why he supports us and we’ll continue to talk to him.

Keir Starmer has criticised Rishi Sunak for not imposing a ban on disposable vapes earlier. Asked if he supported the PM’s announcement, Starmer told journalists:

Yes, I support the banning of disposable vapes, not least because of the impact they have on children.

We’ve been calling for this for two years. So I do have a question for the government, which is why has it taken two years to get to this stage? We’ve wasted two years.

Starmer also suggested that Rishi Sunak was only allowing his MPs a free vote on this because he could not get them to back him. He said:

I’ve also got concerns that apparently the prime minister is going to give his MPs a free vote, because he doesn’t think that he’s able to hold his own team together.

Luckily the Labour party will always act in the national interest. We will vote for it and so this measure will go through. It’ll only go through because the Labour party is the grown-up in the room and is prepared to act in the national interest and vote for this important measure.

Sunak argues that, in allowing his MPs a free vote, he is following precedent. (See 11.13am.)

Downing Street said this morning that it did not think any UK aid funding had gone to Hamas.

Asked about claims that up to a dozen staff at the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), which is part-funded by Britain, were involved in the Hamas massacre of Israelis on 7 October, the PM’s spokesperson said:

We have tight controls and agreements and due diligence on how the funding is used, as you would expect, but it’s right in light of these allegations that we conduct a further investigation with our allies and seek the reassurance that will be required in order to allow funding to continue.

The spokesperson said that the UK committed £16m to UNRWA after the Hamas attack, but that that money had now been disbursed. He said no further money would be allocated while the Hamas link was being investigated.

An independent inquiry into claims of corruption and illegality linked to the finances at the controversial Teesworks development is expected to be published later today, PA Media reports. PA says:

Rishi Sunak appeared to confirm the report’s imminent release during a visit to the north-east, saying it would be “published later on”.

It comes amid speculation the long-awaited review will clear Teesworks and the region’s Conservative mayor Ben Houchen of wrongdoing.

The prime minister defended the “rigorous process” behind the government-commissioned probe, which has faced criticism over the lack of involvement of the public spending watchdog.

The National Audit Office (NAO) was not tasked with leading the investigation ordered by levelling up secretary Michael Gove last year, with an independent panel made up of three local authority officers from elsewhere in the country set up instead.

The conclusion of the inquiry has been delayed several times, having initially been expected last summer.

At the No 10 lobby briefing the PM’s spokesperson said the UK agreed with the US’s assessment that the drone attack on the US base in Jordan, which killed three people and left more than 24 injured, was carried out by “radical Iran-backed militant groups operating in Syria and Iraq”.

Justin Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, is one of more than 70 peers on the list to speak in the second reading debate in the Lords on the Rwanda bill. He is a fierce critic of the government’s Rwanda bill and when peers were debating the illegal migration bill last year (a precursor of the bill being debated today, subject to very similar legal and human rights objections), he denounced it as immoral.

Asked how the government would respond if he made similar comments today, the PM’s spokesperson said:

This bill is a key part of how we stop violent criminal gangs targeting vulnerable people that has led to too many deaths in the English Channel.

That is the right thing to do, it is also the fair thing to do, both for taxpayers and for those individuals seeking to come here through safe and legal routes who see their place jumped by those who can afford to make crossings on small boats.

We’ve worked very carefully both on the bill and the treaty in coordination with the Rwanda government and we continue to believe that this bill is the right way forward to get the flights off the ground and to stop the boats.

One of the most controversial bills passed last year was the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act, which is designed to ensure that in key public services, if unions stage a strike, some staff will have to carry on working to ensure that a basic level of service is provided. The legislation was partly designed to minimimise the disruption caused by rail strikes.

But, in the rail industry at least, the legislation is not working as planned. It relies on employers, not the government, deciding to activate the MSL powers and, in strike action starting today, the train companies have decided not to, because they don’t want to further antagonise the unions.

As Gwyn Topham explains in his story:

The set of strikes was expected to be the first test of the minimum service levels legislation, designed to allow train operators to run 40% of the normal timetable. Only LNER, one of the three operators directly run by the Department for Transport, planned to use the new powers to demand that drivers break the strike. An immediate escalation by Aslef, which called five additional days of strikes at LNER, prompted a climbdown.

Rail industry bosses as well as unions had made clear their reservations in consultations and select committee hearings ahead of the strike laws being introduced, which could also be applied in health, education and firefighters disputes. Labour has said it will immediately repeal the laws if elected.

This has particularly enraged the Daily Mail, which has splashed on a story about rail bosses getting big bonuses despite not using the new law.

At the Downing Street lobby briefing the PM’s spokesperson said rail companies should be using the MSL powers. Asked if the government was disappointed that they were not being used, the spokesperson replied:

Yes. It is obviously something that we, and the public, expect to be used.

It is ultimately up to train operators to effectively manage their services. We have been as clear as possible they should be ready to use all powers available to them to reduce the impact of rail strikes on passengers.

Veterans who left the armed forces before December 2018 can now apply online for a veteran’s card, the government has announced. After testing, a digital application website has gone live. The card enables veterans “to easily verify their veteran status to access support and services from government, charities, and local authorities”.

In his Inside Politics briefing for the Financial Times, Stephen Bush argues that a gradual ban on smoking will be Rishi Sunak’s most lasting legacy. He explains:

Given that the median UK voter is very fond of bans, I think it is unlikely, to put it mildly, that these changes will ever be reversed by a future government. Certainly they are not going to be overturned by a Labour administration: on the whole, Labour MPs are much more supportive of these measures than Conservative counterparts. (If you want to get a Labour MP to say something nice about the prime minister, ask them what they think of his anti-smoking measures.)

The depth of support for these policies on the opposition benches is one reason why they will a) pass into law and b) come with the risk of a large Tory rebellion. It’s a free hit in lots of ways if you are a Conservative MP who wants to show a bit of libertarian leg.

But regardless, these measures will overcome the opposition and endure. Don’t bet on either libertarian Conservatives or liberal Labour MPs having the numbers or influence to turn around what will almost certainly be Sunak’s most lasting legacy on the UK.

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Teenage boys killed in Bristol stabbing pictured - The Independent

The devastated family members of two teenage boys who were killed in a horrifying double-stabbing have told how their “lives will never be the same”.

Football fan Mason Rist, 15, and “kind soul” Max Dixon, 16, were stabbed in Bristol on Saturday night by a group of attackers who are said to have fled the scene in a car.

A resident who was first on the scene after the brutal attack told how Mason had begged her for help as he lay fatally injured in her arms. Kirsty Kidd told The Independent: “We tried everything, I just wanted them to be ok.”

She added: “It could have been anyone including my own children, that’s the scary part.”

Avon and Somerset Police have launched a murder investigation following the killings in the Knowle West area of the city. A 44-year-old man and a 15-year-old boy have been arrested and are in custody.

This morning, Mason’s devastated grandmother visited the scene of the attack, where flowers, cards and candles have been left for the teenagers

Gail Iles revealed the youngster was a devoted Liverpool fan who tragically lost his dad Shayne Rist to Covid. She said it would be nice if the club sent a representative in tribute to the boy, adding: “It is so tragic.”

In a tribute shared on Facebook, a woman believed to be Max’s mum told how her life has been ripped apart by the tragedy.

“Devastated, our lives will never be the same without you my boy,” Leanne Ekland posted, alongside a picture of the smiling teen.

Max Dixon, 16, and Mason Rist, 15

Max’s heartbroken sister Kayleigh also posted an emotional tribute on Facebook on Sunday, which said: “My baby brother… one of a kind you are.

“You sleep tight. A beautiful, kind soul gone. Just taken 16 years so young and innocent oh my heart is broken.

“I really hope you know how much we love you. How much I love you. You will be missed kiddo I’ll always look out for you in every sunset, shine bright lil’ bro.”

A mother, who did not want to be named, said she knew both Mason and Max through her daughter who attended Knowle Park Primary School with them.

She said they were “lovely kids” and that the community had been left devastated by the news of their deaths.

“People are scared to be outside today,” she told The Independent. “It is complete shock. How can two kids be attacked like this in the place where they live?”

Tributes at the scene in Bristol

Tributes, candles and a family picture were left at the scene

Ms Kidd, 30, was first on the scene with her partner Scott Lovell, 31, following the stabbing at outside their home at around 11.20pm.

“I was sleeping in the front room and I heard a massive noise outside. I looked out and I saw the person [Mason] being stabbed,” she said.

“My partner went to him and his first leg gave way and then both this legs gave way and he fell into Scott’s arms. He said ‘help me’.

“I then came out with a pillow and put his head on it before police arrived. When they took him away I was so scared for him as I saw his injuries. And when they later told me he had died I was devastated.”

Ms Kidd revealed she has received a message of thanks from Max’s sister Kayleigh, adding: “We tried everything, I just wanted them to be ok.”

The mum-of-five said her eldest aged nine had only come in the house a few minutes before the incident.

Charlie Hicks, 21, lives next to where Mason collapsed to the ground. He told The Independent: “I found out from the sound of the police and ambulance outside. I was going to bed. I looked outside the window and I saw him [Mason] on the floor with people around him.

“They [Max and Mason] are both innocent kids. They are nice, Max loved his football and played for Park Knowle FC. It’s just so tragic this can happened, everyone is in shock.”

Police said the victims sustained stab wounds and were taken to two hospitals - Southmead Hospital and Bristol Royal Hospital for Children - by ambulance, where they died in the early hours of Sunday morning.

A vigil was held near the scene of the attack on Sunday, where people lit candles and placed flowers for the victims.

Tributes include flowers with messages reading “Mason and Max Rest in peace”, a sign stating “Stop knife crime RIP boys” and a note from Oasis Academy John Williams reading: “In loving memory of Mason and Max, gone but never forgotten”.

Meanwhile, a GoFundMe fundraising page has been launched to “give these two little boys the send of they deserve”.

People lit candles at a vigil for the boys on Sunday night

Candles and a card at the vigil on Sunday

Football coach Scott Alden wrote a tribute to Max on Facebook: “I had the pleasure of knowing you and coaching you since you were a young boy, you were the cheekiest, happy, funniest boy a very talented footballer who loved his family and friends.

“I’m so sorry this happened to you, the world is a cruel and dangerous place now.”

The tributes come as Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said tackling knife crime requires a “laser focus” as he called for the nation to “roll up our sleeves” and take action.

Responding to news of the latest tragedy during a visit to Warrington, he told broadcasters: “This is devastating for the family and friends of these two youngsters. I have teenage children myself. I cannot even imagine what it’s like for the family and friends.”

Hew added: “We can’t carry on with these awful stories of knife crime. We have to roll up our sleeves and do something about it.”

Detectives said further suspects are being sought and it is not yet known whether the attackers and victims were known to each other. Officers also want to speak to passengers on a bus which was on Ilminster Avenue at the time of the attack.

Bristol Commander Superintendent Mark Runacres said: “This is an incredibly shocking and tragic incident where two young boys, who had their whole lives ahead of them, have sadly died.

“Our collective thoughts are with their families at what is undoubtedly a very difficult time. Specialist family liaison officers will now be assigned to the families to provide them with support and keep them updated on the investigation.”

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