Senin, 27 Juni 2022

Boris Johnson to push through Northern Ireland Protocol Bill 'by end of year' — follow latest - The Times

Boris Johnson says he wants to force through controversial Brexit legislation by the end of the year and insists questions about his leadership are “settled”.

As MP vote today on a law that would unilaterally override parts of the Brexit deal, the prime minister said world leaders were not challenging him over the issue.

“The interesting thing is how little this conversation is being had,” he claimed at the G7 summit in Bavaria.

The government’s Northern Ireland protocol bill has its second reading in the Commons this afternoon, with ministers saying it will fix problems that are damaging trade with the rest of the UK.

Johnson argues that the proposals — which would set different rules for goods due to remain in the UK, while checks continue on goods destined for the EU — will solve the problem “without in any way endangering the EU single market”.

He said that Britain was trying to “fix something that I think is very important to our country, which is the balance of the Belfast, Good Friday agreement and you’ve got one tradition, one community that feels that things really aren’t working in a way that they like or understand”.

Despite fears of a trade war with the EU if the bill passes, Johnson said “we can do it fairly rapidly”. Asked if that meant this year, he said: “Yes we could do it very fast.” He stressed it would be “even better” if the EU changed its position in negotiation, insisting “we remain optimistic” about the potential for a revised deal.

With questions swirling about his leadership and MPs openly urging the cabinet to revolt against him, Johnson dismissed efforts by his own party to unseat him. Referring to a confidence vote in which four in ten Conservative MPs opposed him, he said: “We settled that a couple of weeks ago.”

Aside from the political discussions at the G7 summit, the wives of some of the leaders, including Carrie Johnson, watched a demonstration of summer training techniques for cross-country skiing.

The EU Council president's partner, Amelie Derbaudrenghien; Britta Ernst, the wife of Olaf Scholz; Carrie Johnson; and Emmanuel Macron’s wife, Brigitte, at Elmauer Alm Mountain Restaurant today

The EU Council president's partner, Amelie Derbaudrenghien; Britta Ernst, the wife of Olaf Scholz; Carrie Johnson; and Emmanuel Macron’s wife, Brigitte, at Elmauer Alm Mountain Restaurant today

MICHAELA/REUTERS

3 hours ago

6.30pm

Overriding NI bill is illegal, says May

Theresa May has warned her successor that the EU were unlikely to meaningfully engage with him after the confidence vote

Theresa May has warned her successor that the EU were unlikely to meaningfully engage with him after the confidence vote

JESSICA TAYLOR/UK PARLIAMENT/REUTERS

The government’s plan to override the Northern Ireland Brexit bill is illegal under international law, won’t achieve its aims and will reduce Britain’s standing in the world, Theresa May has said.

In an excoriating Commons attack the former prime minister said she could not support legislation to override the Northern Ireland protocol being debated for the first time today.

“As a patriot I would not want to do anything that would diminish this country in the eyes of the world,” she said. “I have to say to the government that this bill is not in my view legal in international law, it will not achieve its aims and it will diminish the standing of the United Kingdom in the eyes of the world and I cannot support it.”

In a jibe at Johnson she suggested that after this month’s confidence vote the EU was unlikely to meaningfully engage with her successor — preferring instead to wait for a new Conservative leader.

“My experience was that the EU looks very carefully at the political situation in any country,” she said. “I discovered after I had faced a no confidence vote, despite having won, they then start to ask themselves — is it really worth negotiating with these people?’

7 hours ago

1.55pm

‘If Ukraine wins, you all win’ — Zelensky’s plea for support

President Zelensky has appealed to western leaders for more weaponry, urging them not to let Russia’s invasion “drag on over winter”.

Addressing G7 leaders via video he said that “if Ukraine wins, you all win” and pleaded for more ammunition and missiles to force Russia back.

President Zelensky addressed G7 leaders at the summit in the Bavarian Alps via a video link

In a joint statement the leaders pledged their “unwavering commitment” to Ukraine after concerns that some in Europe wanted to pressure Zelensky to cut a deal with Russia.

Zelensky told G7 leaders that “we will only negotiate from a position of strength” on territory. Boris Johnson has insisted that Russia must be ejected from Ukraine.

The G7 promised to “align and expand targeted sanctions” aimed at Russia’s arms industry as negotiations continued on oil and gold.

8 hours ago

12.50pm

Nato response force to increase to more than 300,000

Jens Stoltenberg said today that more military exercises will take place in the Baltic states

Jens Stoltenberg said today that more military exercises will take place in the Baltic states

KENZO TRIBOUILLARD/GETTY IMAGES

Jens Stoltenberg, the secretary general of Nato, said that western nations would make clear that Russia was now considered the “most significant and direct threat to our security” as the alliance significantly bolsters its forces held at high readiness.

At a press conference before a Nato summit in Madrid this week, he said it would agree to increase its 40,000-strong response force to more than 300,000 as part of the biggest overhaul of collective defence since the Cold War.

Multinational battle groups already stationed in Nato’s eastern flank will also be increased by several thousand troops to brigade-sized forces. A standard Nato brigade consists of approximately 3,200 to 5,500 troops. At present Britain leads the so-called “enhanced forward presence” unit in Estonia, with two battle groups each comprising close to 1,000 personnel.

More exercises will take place and equipment will be pre-positioned in countries including the Baltic states, Stoltenberg said.

Nato’s new “strategic concept” — effectively a blueprint on the threats and challenges it faces over the next decade — will also address the rising threat from China for the first time.

9 hours ago

12.00pm

PM likens Russia to Nazi Germany

Boris Johnson declared that “the price of freedom is worth paying” as he braced Britain for a long and costly struggle against Russia (Chris Smyth writes).

Comparing the battle against Russian aggression to fighting the Nazis, the prime minister insisted that giving ground on Ukraine would embolden China to invade Taiwan and that “strategic endurance” would lead to long-term prosperity.

He dismissed his critics, saying he had a “new mandate” from the confidence vote in which four in ten of his MPs tried to remove him, but did not repeat his ambition to remain in Downing Street beyond 2030.

He told the BBC there had been no discussion among world leaders of pressing Ukraine to cede territory in order to ease a global cost of living crisis. “No one here at the G7 can really see any alternative to simply supporting them in regaining their sovereignty,” he said.

Amid rising fuel and food prices, Johnson sought to reassure Britain that “the economic impacts on the UK will start to abate” but insisted there could be no compromise.

“Imagine if we allowed Putin to get away with the violent acquisition of huge chunks of another country, a sovereign, independent territory, the lessons for that would be absolutely chilling in all of the countries of the former Soviet Union, you can see what’s happening in the Baltic countries already,” he said, adding that the effects would also be felt in east Asia.

Asked if there was any limit on the costs Britain would bear to help Ukraine, Johnson said: “I think that sometimes the price of freedom is worth paying ... it took the democracies, in the middle of the last century, a long time to recognise that they had to resist tyranny and aggression ... it was very expensive.

“But what it bought in the end, with the defeat of the dictators, particularly of Nazi Germany, it bought decades and decades of stability, a world order that relied on a rules-based international system.”

10 hours ago

10.45am

Johnson strikes Ukraine pact with Macron

President Macron and Boris Johnson held a bilateral meeting during the G7 summit

President Macron and Boris Johnson held a bilateral meeting during the G7 summit

BENOIT TESSIER/REUTERS

Boris Johnson and President Macron agreed to hold an Anglo-French summit to improve ties after pledging to help Ukraine to mount a military “surge” against Russia.

The two men’s relationship has been fraught but yesterday the prime minister jokingly referred to it as “le bromance” and said they were “100 per cent aligned”. Although Britain has previously questioned France’s commitment to Ukraine, during a bilateral meeting at the G7 summit the pair agreed that the outright defeat of Russia remained the best outcome.

If that failed Macron said that they needed to put President Zelensky in the best position to strike a deal. Johnson was said to be effusive after he emerged from the meeting because Macron’s firm line on Ukraine exceeded British expectations. Johnson spoke of his love for the French people and Macron spoke of his love for the British. The pair deliberately kept clear of issues they have clashed on in the past.

Read the full article here.

The prime minister’s wife, Carrie, and the French president’s wife, Brigitte, greeted each other warmly today before watching a demonstration of summer training techniques for cross-country skiing.

Carrie Johnson and Brigitte Macron at Elmauer Alm, near Garmisch-Partenkirchen, this morning

Carrie Johnson and Brigitte Macron at Elmauer Alm, near Garmisch-Partenkirchen, this morning

MICHAELA REHLE/REUTERS

11 hours ago

9.45am

G7 looks to raise pressure on Kremlin with Russian oil price cap

The Yang Mei Hu oil tanker at the crude oil terminal Kozmino near Nakhodka, Russia. China continues to buy Russian crude, in contrast to the approach of western countries

The Yang Mei Hu oil tanker at the crude oil terminal Kozmino near Nakhodka, Russia. China continues to buy Russian crude, in contrast to the approach of western countries

TATIANA MEEL/REUTERS

The G7 is considering an American proposal to effectively cap the price that can be paid for Russian oil as it seeks to ratchet up the pressure on Moscow over the invasion of Ukraine (Emily Gosden writes).

America has already banned imports of oil from Russia, with Britain pledging to do so by the end of the year and the European Union banning seaborne imports by the end of this year.

However, there are concerns over the extent to which such bans are hurting the Kremlin’s finances as countries such as China and India continue to buy Russian crude and a squeeze on supplies in the West pushes up the price of oil.

Read the full article here.

12 hours ago

9.30am

Johnson to rally G7 behind Ukraine as Zelensky addresses summit

Boris Johnson was up early this morning in glorious alpine sunshine, heading to Ferchensee lake near the Schloss Elmau in Bavaria for a swim with his wife, Carrie. A peaceful dip may well turn out to be the high point of his day: he will attempt to show leadership on the world stage by rallying the G7 summit behind Ukraine, while at the same time instructing MPs at home to rip up parts of the Brexit deal he signed, as his backbenchers openly implore cabinet ministers to oust him.

President Zelensky is addressing world leaders at the summit today via video as Johnson tries to sell a plan to get grain out of Ukraine by insuring commercial shipping to break the Russian Black Sea blockade and repairing the country’s railways.

Boris Johnson gives a thumbs-up as President Zelensky addresses world leaders at the G7 summit

Boris Johnson gives a thumbs-up as President Zelensky addresses world leaders at the G7 summit

BENOIT TESSIER/GETTY IMAGES

Back in London, George Eustice, the environment secretary, was forced to defend what he acknowledged had been a “choppy and turbulent” six months and defuse a row created by Johnson’s stated desire to remain in No 10 into the 2030s.

Eustice told Times Radio that Johnson would “like to go on and on”, a wish that has infuriated the prime minister’s critics, but argued that “prime ministers can’t win” when talking about their date of departure.

“They either say that they want to carry on and they’ve got a lot to do and they want to keep going. And that’s what obviously Margaret Thatcher said and what Boris Johnson is perceived to have said. Or like Tony Blair, they say they’re not going to go on and on and people spend years arguing about the date of their departure.”

After four in ten Tory MPs voted to oust Johnson, Eustice insisted the party had “put that vote behind us” and was uniting behind the prime minister.

This is true in the sense that backbenchers, denied another vote for a year under present rules, have now moved on to urging members of the cabinet to force Johnson out.

Damian Green, who was deputy prime minister under Theresa May, told Channel 4: “I think if this long agony for everyone concerned, from the PM down, is to be brought to a head ... then maybe somebody in the cabinet might wish to take some action.”

William Wragg, vice-chairman of the 1922 Committee, told the BBC last night: “The sense of disappointment that there is on the back benches towards the cabinet is palpable because you would have expected for some of them at least to show a bit of backbone.”

12 hours ago

9.00am

PM’s battles at home and abroad

Good morning and welcome to The Times’s live coverage of today’s politics as Boris Johnson pushes for his Ukraine grain plan on the world stage, while his future as prime minister is still in doubt at home.

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2022-06-27 17:30:00Z
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Barristers walk out of courts in strike over pay - BBC

Barristers in wigs picket outside the Old Bailey in central LondonPA Media

Barristers in criminal cases have gone on strike across England and Wales in a long-running dispute over pay.

Eight out of 10 cases at London's Old Bailey were disrupted by the walkout, barristers outside the court said.

Justice Secretary Dominic Raab said the strikes will "delay justice", as courts already face a backlog of 58,000 cases.

Barristers have rejected a proposed 15% rise in their fees for undertaking legal aid work and will be taking action over the next four weeks.

Members of the Criminal Bar Association (CBA) have said this is too low and called for a minimum 25% wage increase.

Jo Sidhu QC, chair of the CBA, said they had already lost a quarter of specialist criminal barristers over the last five years, with 300 leaving last year.

Criminal barristers strike action
PA Media

Kirsty Brimelow QC, deputy chair of the CBA, said the proposed rise in legal aid fees would not be introduced until the end of next year.

By then, she told the BBC, it would be too late to help and would not do enough to stem the flow of junior barristers leaving the bar.

Under the legal aid system, the government pays for barristers to ensure suspects who cannot afford lawyers are properly advised and represented.

The government sets pay rates for barristers doing legal aid work.

Dozens of barristers have been rallying outside the Old Bailey in their robes and wigs, as two murder trials at the court - one involving a teenage suspect - were unable to get under way.

Others have been striking outside a number of high-profile courts, including Birmingham, Manchester, Cardiff and Bristol Crown Courts.

Those joining picket lines have been warned by the most senior judge in England and Wales, The Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett, that they could face disciplinary proceedings for misconduct if they don't turn up to court.

Criminal Bar Association chair Jo Sidhu with a megaphone surrounded by barristers outside the Old Bailey
Reuters

Downing Street urged barristers to agree to the proposed 15% pay rise, which a spokesperson said would see a typical barrister earn around £7,000 more a year.

But Ms Brimelow, speaking outside Manchester Crown Court, told the BBC the system had run on "good will" for a long time, including throughout the pandemic, with junior barristers working "ridiculous hours."

She said the issue had been "caused by government, not by barristers."

The strikes start with walkouts on Monday and Tuesday and, for four weeks, increase by one day each week until a five-day strike is held from Monday 18 July to Friday 22 July.

line

How much do criminal lawyers earn?

Barristers are self-employed and often perceived as highly-paid.

The median salary for a criminal barrister in the year 2019-20 was £79,800, according to an independent review.

But that figure falls to a range of £55,900 to £62,900 once expenses are accounted for.

Meanwhile, new criminal barristers can earn as little as £9,000 once costs, including transport, are factored in, while some barristers say the time they spend preparing cases means their hourly earnings are below minimum wage.

Barristers with zero, one or two years of practise earned a median of £25,100 before expenses and a net figure of £18,800 after expenses.

Lawyers who work in other areas, such as private corporate law, can expect to earn £100,000 a year from very early in their careers.

Chart showing how much criminal barristers get paid
line

Junior barristers are working for a "pittance" - and sometimes for nothing at all if cases are adjourned, barrister and author Chris Daw told BBC News.

He said that the 15% pay rise proposed by the government would not "touch the sides" and will be "wiped out by inflation" by the time it comes into effect.

If nothing changes, he said strike action could go on until August "or beyond".

The number of lawyers working in criminal justice - both barristers who appear before judges in courts and solicitors who instruct them - has declined over the last decade, as many say they cannot make a living when they take on cases funded by legal aid.

line

'Not enough to pay my bills'

Claire Stevenson

Junior criminal barrister Claire Stevenson says she finds out which court she'll be attending the day before - and any case could include reading hundreds of pages of documents.

"It may be that you have to spend the whole night reading... to ensure that you are acting in the best interests of your client," she tells the BBC.

Criminal barristers get paid for their preparation and the trial, as well as additional payments per day worked.

But she says lots of other unseen work means they're not paid enough: "People think you turn up on the day of the trial good to go - you don't."

When she began her career a few years ago she was paid about £12,000 a year, but since then has started working in other areas of law as the money "just simply wasn't enough to pay my bills".

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Infographic showing key numbers from the barristers' strike

There were 567 criminal trials, including 60 sexual offence cases, unable to go ahead last year as there were no barristers to prosecute and defend them, according to Ms Brimelow.

And as of the end of April, there was a backlog of 58,271 cases, according to HM Courts and Tribunal Service.

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Mr Raab said the strikes were "regrettable" and only 43.5% of CBA members voted for the "most disruptive option".

More than 81% of the 2,055 CBA members who cast their vote supported industrial action, and 53.4% of those also voted to refuse new cases and "return work" - stepping in and picking up court hearings for other colleagues.

The strike follows the three days of industrial action on Britain's railway network last week - the largest of its kind in 30 years.

Additional reporting by Natasha Preskey and Dulcie Lee.

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Are you a barrister on strike? If you have taken on the services of a barrister how are you affected by the strike action? Tell us by emailing: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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2022-06-27 16:25:32Z
1475594321

Ilford: Woman killed in stranger attack named as Zara Aleena, 36 - BBC

Police crime scene in IlfordAmir Ahmed

A 36-year-old woman who died from severe head injuries after what police believe was a stranger attack in east London has been named as Zara Aleena.

Ms Aleena, who was local, was the victim of an "horrific assault", police said, as she was walking on Cranbrook Road, towards Gants Hill station in Ilford, in the early hours of Sunday.

The Met Police said it believed she was a "victim of an attack by a stranger". Her family has been informed.

A 29-year-old man has been arrested.

Officers said he was detained at an address in Ilford shortly after 16:00 BST and was being held on suspicion of murder.

Kuldip Singh

Paramedics were at the scene at 02:45 BST on Sunday and took Ms Aleena to hospital, where she later died.

In a statement, Chief Supt Stuart Bell said: "Zara, who lived locally, was walking along Cranbrook Road in the direction of Gants Hill Station when she was assaulted.

"It is now believed that she was the victim of an attack by a stranger.

No evidence of weapon

"Her family are aware of this and as the investigation progresses they will continue to be updated and supported."

He added there was no evidence of any weapons being used in the attack, which left Ms Aleena with fatal head injuries.

A post-mortem examination revealed Ms Aleena had "suffered multiple serious injuries".

Earlier, Chief Supt Bell said the investigation was being led by homicide detectives.

Crime scene aerial shot
Amir Ahmed

"I understand that for women, particularly locally, this is an incredibly distressing incident, and I urge you to be alert but not alarmed."

He said officers were working "at pace" to establish what had happened.

'Don't feel safe'

Shopkeeper Kuldip Singh said he was concerned at the level of violence in the area, highlighting how this homicide was the third in five years.

"This one was quite brutal," he said. "It was a young lady but people don't really feel safe in this location as much as they used to.

"If I was an elderly person or a female, especially in the winter months, walking through this road you could be at risk."

A significant police presence is expected to remain in the area in the coming days.

Murder

Of London's 45 homicide victims this year, 15 have been women.

This time last year there had been 56 London homicide victims, 12 of whom were female, according to Met Police, British Transport Police and City of London Police statistics.

Det Ch Insp Mark Rogers, who is leading the investigation, said his team were keen to hear from anyone who was in the Cranbrook Road area between 02:00 and 03:00, particularly those with dashcam footage.

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2022-06-27 15:57:12Z
1479481723

Birmingham explosion: Woman found dead and man seriously hurt - BBC

Explosion scenePA Media

A woman has been found dead at the scene of a major gas explosion that destroyed a house in Birmingham and damaged others.

"We're very sad to confirm that a woman has been found dead at the scene," West Midlands Fire Service said.

A man also suffered life-threatening injuries in the blast in Dulwich Road, Kingstanding, which happened just after 20:30 BST on Sunday.

At least three other homes were damaged and properties were evacuated.

The man was rescued from the house by people at the scene but had suffered "very serious" injuries, the ambulance service said.

Four other men suffered more minor injuries and were discharged by paramedics.

Scene of explosion
PA Media

Footage on social media showed flames, damage and debris from a terraced red brick house.

The badly injured man was taken to the city's Queen Elizabeth Hospital for treatment in its major trauma centre.

Residents said they had clambered past flaming debris and through rubble to reach the man.

"Everyone was watching, the house was on fire, nobody was going in, so we could see a way in - so we went in the house, me and about a dozen others," a man, who did not want to be named, told the PA news agency.

He said dust from a loft insulation was burning around them.

"We got him out, he ended up coming out on a mattress," he said.

One resident told the BBC she heard a bang before the house and windows shook.

She the said the whole community had been affected. "I didn't sleep last night, it's so sad," she said.

Another said of the explosion: "I thought it was a bomb, I thought a bomb had gone off."

Emergency services at the scene in Dulwich Road, Kingstanding, where an explosion on Sunday destroyed a house and caused damage to other properties and vehicles nearby. Picture date: Monday June 27, 2022.
PA Media

West Midlands Fire Service said further investigations were taking place at the scene.

"Good progress has been made, we've scaled down the resources we have at the incident but remain in attendance," the service said.

It sent 25 firefighters to tackle the blaze after the explosion.

Following the blast and fire, which also damaged vehicles, evacuations took place and people were urged to avoid the area.

West Midlands Police said Dulwich Road and surrounding roads were closed and would be "for a very long time".

The force thanked those who had "helped shocked and injured neighbours".

Scene of explosion
WMFS

One man posted on Twitter to praise his cousin, who he said had run into the burning building to rescue someone.

Birmingham councillor Sharon Thompson said her thoughts were with everyone involved in the "horrific explosion".

Six fire crews, three ambulances, five paramedic officers and a national inter-agency liaison officer were among the resources sent to the scene.

The scene in Dulwich Road, Kingstanding, Birmingham, where a man suffered life threatening injuries after an explosion destroyed a house on Sunday and caused damage to other properties and vehicles nearby. Picture date: Monday June 27, 2022.
PA Media

Fire service area commander Steve Ball described the scene as "challenging".

"One house had been completely destroyed and three neighbouring properties had also been quite badly affected," Mr Ball said.

"There are approximately six other houses that have been evacuated and the residents are currently being looked after by the local authority."

Rick Payne, a city councillor, went to the scene to help after hearing a "massive explosion" while watching television.

He spoke to the authority's chief executive who sent emergency planning staff.

"The reason for that was to make sure that if people needed to be accommodated who had been evacuated, that could be done at the earliest opportunity," he said.

Cadent, the gas emergency service for the West Midlands, said its teams were on site as part of the multi-agency response and added its thoughts were with those affected.

Explosion scene
PA Media
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2022-06-27 08:31:26Z
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