Minggu, 19 Februari 2023

Nicola Bulley: Body found in search for missing dog walker - The Telegraph

A body has been found in the search for Nicola Bulley, the mother-of-two who has been missing for 23 days.

The body has not yet been formally identified.

A spokesperson for Lancashire police said: "This morning, Sunday, 19 February, you may be aware of police activity around the river near to St Michaels. We want to provide you with an update on that activity.

"We were called today at 11:36am to reports of a body in the River Wyre, close to Rawcliffe Road.

"An underwater search team and specialist officers have subsequently attended the scene, entered the water and have sadly recovered a body.

"No formal identification has yet been carried out, so we are unable to say whether this is Nicola Bulley at this time.

"Procedures to identify the body are on-going.

"We are currently treating the death as unexplained.

"Nicola’s family have been informed of developments and our thoughts are with them at this most difficult of times. We ask that their privacy is respected."

Ms Bulley, 45, vanished while walking her dog Willow on a footpath overlooking the River Wyre in Lancashire on Jan 27.

Her phone was found on a bench by the river, with the family's pet, Willow, running loose nearby and its harness on the ground.

Her disappearance sparked a major search of the river and surrounding areas and a controversial police investigation.

The discovery of a body came after police hurriedly sealed off a road and launched a diving operation on Sunday afternoon in the River Wyre, following a tip-off from two walkers.

The river had already been searched multiple times previously by police and private divers.

A helicopter, drone and police officers were combing a section of the River Wyre less than a mile from the bench where Ms Bulley's phone was found.

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2023-02-19 14:26:15Z
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Boris Johnson NI intervention not entirely unhelpful, says Mordaunt - BBC

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An intervention by former Prime Minister Boris Johnson on post-Brexit trading arrangements for Northern Ireland is not "entirely unhelpful", Commons leader Penny Mordaunt has said.

He has urged Rishi Sunak not to abandon legislation that would give the government powers to scrap parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol.

Ms Mordaunt told the BBC the bill had helped persuade the EU to negotiate.

She also said any deal must work for all communities in Northern Ireland.

The protocol came into effect in 2021 and aims to ensure free movement of goods across the Irish land border by conducting checks between Northern Ireland and Great Britain instead.

However, unionist parties, who support Northern Ireland being part of the UK, oppose the protocol and argue that placing an effective border across the Irish Sea undermines Northern Ireland's place within the UK.

Negotiations between the UK and the European Union to try to resolve issues with the protocol have been going on for more than a year but sources suggest a deal could be sealed early next week.

On Saturday, a source close to Mr Johnson said he believed it would be "a great mistake" to drop the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, which many Conservatives see as an important bargaining chip for the UK to gain concessions from the EU.

Ms Mordaunt also suggested the bill had aided negotiations with the bloc.

There has been trepidation and a sense of inevitability about the former PM and Brexit cheerleader getting involved in the arguments around new arrangements for Northern Ireland - and Mr Sunak's team may not see his intervention in the same light as Ms Mordaunt.

Ms Mordaunt, who also campaigned to leave the EU during the 2016 referendum, told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme: "I think the prime minister would give credit to his predecessors for enabling us to get this far.

"We have the bill... and in part it is because of that that we are now able to have these negotiations and the EU is talking about things that previously it said it wouldn't talk about."

She added: "It's a reminder to the EU the bar that they have to get over. But ultimately it's not really about what Boris Johnson or any members of the House of Commons think about a deal. It's what the people of Northern Ireland think about a deal."

The bill, which was first introduced by Boris Johnson, is currently paused in Parliament while the UK and EU try to hammer out a new agreement.

The BBC understands the EU will not move ahead with a deal unless there is a commitment by the UK to drop the Protocol Bill.

A senior government official has said if issues with the protocol arrangements can be resolved then there will be no need for the bill to go further in Parliament.

Anti-Northern Ireland protocol poster at the entrance to Larne harbour
Getty Images

Former Northern Ireland Secretary Lord Mandelson accused Mr Johnson trying to "wreck" the protocol, which he agreed as part of the 2019 Brexit withdrawal agreement, to undermine the prime minister.

The Labour peer told Sky News Mr Johnson should "remove himself entirely" from the issue.

Meanwhile, Ms Mordaunt said any deal on the protocol had to work for all communities in Northern Ireland and pass the seven tests set out by the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP).

The DUP is preventing a government from being formed in Northern Ireland in protest over the protocol and says its tests must be met for it to end its boycott of Stormont.

There had been some whispers that there was a possibility of doing a deal, even without the support of the DUP, but Ms Mordaunt closed down that idea, saying: "If this deal does not pass those tests, it won't work, it's as simple as that."

She added: "What my colleagues might say and what they might do in a hypothetical vote, that is irrelevant unless it works for the whole of Northern Ireland."

Some government insiders expect a debate and vote on a protocol deal in the House of Commons soon, with Tuesday seen as the most likely day - although the plans are said to remain "fluid".

Following the latest round of talks on Saturday, Mr Sunak warned an agreement was "by no means done" and said there were still "challenges to work through".

Labour has said it would support the government in a vote on a protocol deal.

However, the prime minister could still face a rebellion by Eurosceptic Tory backbenchers.

A map of the the UK showing how goods travelling from GB into NI and onward to the Republic of Ireland.

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2023-02-19 11:49:31Z
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TikTok detectives dig up woodland near where Nicola Bulley vanished - The Independent

Villagers living near where Nicola Bulley disappeared have condemned TikTok detectives who have been digging up woodland near where the mother-of-two went missing last month.

Conspiracy theories have been rife on social media after Ms Bulley vanished, with vigilantes descending on St Michael’s on Wyre.

Lancashire Police has been forced to urge members of the public not to interfere with the case and senior investigators said social media sleuths have “distracted” the search for the mother-of-two.

Locals have complained of people peering in through windows and some have resorted to hiring private security.

In a video circulating on social media, two men appear to be searching a patch of woodland near the River Wyre, where Ms Bulley disappeared. One proceeds to dig up a patch of ground while the other films.

A local dog walker who gave his name as Jon told MailOnline: “This TikTok stuff is ridiculous. It’s a lot of people playing armchair detectives and speculating about things they don’t know anything about.

“It’s not helping the police at all. These videos just attract more people who haven’t got anything to contribute but just want to be part of it.

“It’s really disrespectful to Nicola’s family to have people who don’t know anything about it making comments and sticking their noses in. There’s even people filming themselves digging in some of the woods nearby. It’s shocking.”

Nicola Bulley has been missing since 27 January

A police spokesman told The Independent: “We’re aware of this incident, we’re looking into it and any criminal acts will be investigated.

“We have made it very clear that online amateur sleuths should not be coming to St Michael’s interfering with the investigation and causing concern to the local community. They are a continuing distraction to the case and our efforts to trace Nicola.”

It comes after a social media influencer was fined after joining the search for Ms Bulley.

Dan Duffy posted a video of himself being arrested by Lancashire Police officers on his YouTube channel, called Exploring with Danny.

Conspiracy theories have been rife over the disappearance of Nicola Bulley

The force said the 36-year-old was handed a fixed penalty notice under section 4 of the Public Order Act – fear or provocation of violence.

Since Ms Bulley went missing, Duffy has posted a number of videos on TikTok, as well as three others on his YouTube channel.

In the arrest video, he said: “Hi guys, I’m being arrested on a public order offence. They’ve had an allegation. As you all know I was in search to find the missing woman Nicola but this is what this country’s turning into. No freedom of speech.”

The clip later displays the message: “20 hours in the police station arrested on a public order offence for searching for missing woman Nicola Bulley.”

Ms Bulley vanished after dropping off her daughters, aged six and nine, at school on January 27 in St Michael’s on Wyre, Lancashire.

Her phone, connected to a work Teams call, and her dog lead was found on a nearby bench. Searches of the river and surrounding areas have so far yielded no sign of her.

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2023-02-19 08:32:11Z
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Iran International editor says Tehran threats 'getting out of hand' after TV channel forced to leave UK - Sky News

A UK-based Iranian broadcaster forced to move over threats from Tehran has been guarded by armed police and the situation is "getting out of hand", a senior editor has said.

Iran International TV has been forced to relocate its headquarters from west London to Washington DC in the US after police warned of "imminent and credible threats to the lives of their journalists", the station said.

The channel said that it had "reluctantly" closed its west London studios in Chiswick but its staff "refuse to be silenced by these cowardly threats".

Following the decision, editor Niusha Boghrati told Sky News: "The threats have turned into a reality of terrorism.

"That is what the Met Police have been telling us. Threats were so real this time that they had to ask us to move the operation out of the country.

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'Threats from Tehran turned into terrorism'

"It was hard to believe.

"The Met Police have been heavily guarding the location of the office in London with armed police, but it seems right now that it is getting out of hand. It was very significant.

"When you enter this arena as a journalist covering the Islamic government you know it is going to have consequences. We have been living with these consequences for several years.

"The threats, the pressure on the journalists is not something new, but the threats of assassination and kidnapping is an extreme that so far we had not experienced."

Scotland Yard revealed that police and MI5 had foiled 15 plots since the start of 2022 to either kidnap or assassinate UK-based individuals perceived as enemies of the Iranian regime.

Iran International TV west London studio. Pic: Iran International TV
Image: The TV studio in west London

On Monday, a man was arrested in the area around the TV studio and charged with terrorism offences related to the surveillance of the company's headquarters, police said.

Mr Boghrati said the station's coverage of protests and the "bigger goal" to seek the truth for people in Iran will not stop.

He added: "It has been a challenging time but we have managed to keep the operation going 24/7.

"The bigger goal will keep us all going."

Read more:
Iranian missile haul intercepted by Royal Navy
Wanted protest leader says 'people have become more daring'

A Home Office spokesperson said: "Media freedom is a vital part of our society and journalists must be able to investigate and report independently without fear.

"We will not tolerate any threat to media organisations or journalists. We know the Iranian regime has established a pattern of this type of behaviour which is completely unacceptable, yet sadly typical of the regime and its lack of respect for basic rights.

"The police are continuing to work in response to this threat. We will continue to use all tools at our disposal to protect individuals in the UK against any threats from the Iranian state."

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2023-02-19 03:53:34Z
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NI Protocol: Boris Johnson warns Rishi Sunak not to drop power to override Brexit deal - BBC

Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and current PM Rishi SunakReuters

Boris Johnson has urged Rishi Sunak not to abandon legislation he introduced on how Northern Ireland's post-Brexit trade will work in the long-term.

The Northern Ireland Protocol Bill was set in motion when Mr Johnson was PM, but Mr Sunak has been meeting EU leaders to agree a new deal.

Since 2021, certain trade checks cover some goods crossing the Irish Sea.

A source close to Mr Johnson said the former PM thought it would be a "great mistake" to move away from his plan.

If it concludes its passage through Parliament, it would give the Westminster government the power to unilaterally decide to move away from those current arrangements for Northern Ireland.

Many Conservative MPs on the backbenches see the move towards that ultimate position as an important bargaining chip whenever the UK is trying to wring concessions from the EU.

The protocol bill is currently paused in parliament while the UK and EU try and hammer out a new deal - one which again aims to resolve longstanding issues like trade across the Irish Sea and the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice in Northern Ireland.

Following the latest round of talks on Saturday, Mr Sunak warned an agreement was "by no means done" and said there were still "challenges to work through".

The comments from the source close to the ex-PM were initially reported by Mr Johnson's former employers, the Sunday Telegraph.

But on Mr Sunak's plans for a new deal, the source said Mr Johnson believes no one can make a judgement until people have seen the text - which the government hopes to release early next week.

Some government insiders expect a debate and vote about a deal in the House of Commons soon, with Tuesday seen as the most likely day - although the plans are said to remain "fluid".

Mr Johnson's proposed legislation allowing the UK to unilaterally abandon parts of the current arrangements that had been negotiated and agreed by the EU had inflamed tensions between Westminster and Brussels, which Mr Sunak is straining to smooth.

A senior government official said if issues with the ongoing protocol arrangements could be resolved then there would be no need for the bill to go further in Parliament.

Describing the ongoing negotiations for a new deal, the cabinet source also told BBC News: "There are hard yards ahead. We're working hard. But it is by no means done. The toughest issues are always the ones that you get to towards the end."

As well as finding a compromise that is acceptable to the EU, Mr Sunak wants the backing of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) in Belfast and Tory MPs at Westminster.

Both would welcome a deal that reduces trade barriers across the Irish Sea - one of the key objections to the Northern Ireland protocol from unionists and Eurosceptics alike.

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The controversy over the Protocol has led to a political vacuum in Stormont in recent months, with the DUP blocking the functioning of devolved government in Northern Ireland in protest against the trade rules.

Securing the party's support for any deal will be crucial for the future of the political institutions at Stormont - the Northern Irish parliament.

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph the former Tory Leader Iain Duncan Smith said any deal that kept Northern Ireland subject to EU law and regulations would prevent the DUP from returning to power-sharing at Stormont and threaten the Good Friday Agreement.

The prime minister held talks on Saturday with European Commission President Ursula von de Leyen in Munich in an effort to secure the needed agreement to resolve the tensions - following more than a year's worth of work by UK and EU negotiators attempting to strike a deal on changes to the controversial trade arrangement.

Afterwards Downing Street said it was a "positive discussion" and there had been "very good progress to find solutions".

The protocol was originally agreed by Mr Johnson in 2019 as part of the withdrawal agreement.

At the time, he described the agreement as "a great deal for our country", saying it meant "we in the UK can come out of the EU as one United Kingdom".

However, the deal meant there would be a new trade border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.

During the 2019 general election campaign Mr Johnson repeatedly said there would not be checks.

But by the time he was introducing the Protocol Bill he conceded it had upset the "delicate balance" of Northern Ireland's political settlement.

2px presentational grey line

What is the Northern Ireland Protocol?

It is the trade deal that was agreed to ensure the free movement of goods across the Irish land border after Brexit.

It came into effect in 2021 and has resulted in checks on goods travelling from Great Britain to Northern Ireland.

Unionist parties argue that placing an effective trade border across the Irish Sea undermines Northern Ireland's place within the UK.

The largest of those parties is the DUP, which is refusing to take part in Northern Ireland's power-sharing government until its concerns are resolved.

But a majority of members of the Stormont assembly are in favour of the protocol in some form remaining in place.

Sinn Féin, the Alliance Party and the SDLP have said improvements to the protocol are needed to ease its implementation.

A map of the the UK showing how goods travelling from GB into NI and onward to the Republic of Ireland.

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2023-02-19 09:02:58Z
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Sabtu, 18 Februari 2023

Rishi Sunak: 'We are by no means done' on Brexit deal - The Telegraph

Rishi Sunak has said “we are by no means done” over his Brexit deal which aims to break the deadlock engulfing the Northern Ireland protocol.

Speaking at the Munich Security Conference the Prime Minister appeared exasperated as he told those gathered: "There isn’t a deal that has been done. There is an understanding of what needs to be done. We are by no means done."

He said: "When it comes to issue of Northern Ireland Protocol there are real issues that need resolving. The way that the protocol has been implemented Its causing very real challenges for families, people, businesses on the ground. 

"Also an Issue of democratic deficit that sits at heart of protocol as is currently constructed. Those are things we need to resolve. I’m working very hard together with my ministerial colleagues … we are working very closely together, we are engaging in those conversations with the European union, all the time.

Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (L) speaks with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz during their bilateral meeting at the 59th Munich Security Conference on Feb 18, 2023 Credit: Pool

"There is still work to do. There are still challenges to work through. We have not resolved all these issues. No, There isn't a deal that has been done. There is an understanding of what needs to be done, it’s the issues that I outlined.

"We are working through those, we are working through them hard and we will work through them intensely with the EU but we are by no means done."

It comes after Mr Sunak was warned that his Brexit deal “falls short”, as he rushed to get an agreement over the line to present to Parliament on Tuesday.

Rishi Sunak arriving for the Munich Security Conference on Saturday Credit: BEN STANSALL

Mr Sunak added: “When it comes to the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol there are real issues that need resolving. It’s causing very real challenges.”

He cited the issue of the “democratic deficit that sits at the heart of protocol as currently constructed” as one of the major “things we need to resolve”. 

It follows a trip to Northern Ireland on Friday where he hoped to win the support of political leaders. But Mr Sunak faced a setback as Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, the leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), told him that the pact as it stands would not win his party’s support. Sir Jeffrey said the deal as described to him “currently falls short of what would be acceptable”.

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2023-02-18 14:30:00Z
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Storm Otto: thousands of UK homes face blackouts as wind gusts reach 80mph - The Guardian

Thousands of homes could be without power over the weekend as food vans were dispatched to the worst-hit areas in the wake of Storm Otto.

A yellow warning for snow and ice was in place for central parts of Scotland until 9am on Saturday, while the Met Office expected the heaviest rainfall by 7am to be around Neath Port Talbot and Bridgend County Borough in south Wales – between 4-8mm.

Gusts of 75-80mph were recorded across parts of northern Scotland on Friday while trains and flights were cancelled and roads blocked by overturned lorries in northern England.

More than 40,000 properties were left without power in Scotland, with around 7,600 still cut off as of 9pm on Friday.

Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN) Distribution said it expected its teams to continue to make significant progress in restoring power to customers into Friday evening, but warned some customers in rural areas may be off supply for more than 48 hours.

SSEN said it had sent food vans to the main areas still cut off from supply, and they would serve food and drink from 8am on Saturday.

In England, Northern Powergrid said around 21,000 customers lost power, with 92 still affected as of 9.15pm on Friday.

The Met Office has said Scotland will see heavier rain heading north-east overnight and into Saturday morning, with snow on the hills north of the central belt.

A damaged school roof in Carnoustie, Angus, Scotland, from Storm Otto

However, the weather will be mild across southern and central areas of the UK.

Heading into Saturday, the rain and snow in Scotland is expected to ease, with sunny spells further south in the afternoon.

On Friday morning, a man was taken to hospital in a serious condition after a tree fell on a street in Sheffield.

South Yorkshire Police officers were called to Endcliffe Vale Road at 8.50am.

A spokesperson said: “A man in his 50s was injured and was taken to hospital in serious condition. A property nearby was also damaged and structural engineers are at the scene.”

A tree toppled on to a Porsche on Granby Road in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, causing anxiety for drivers in the area.

Charlie Lowe, a 29-year-old cake business owner, photographed the crushed Porsche on her way to work, telling the PA news agency: “I felt shocked and I think it’s nerve-wracking.

“I felt a bit nervous driving around Harrogate as a result.”

The storm, the first to be named this winter, was labelled Otto by the Danish Meteorological Institute.

It is the first named storm to directly affect the UK this storm-naming season, which began in September.

The first storm to be named by the Met Office, or the Irish and Dutch weather services, this season will still be Storm Antoni, in accordance with the 2022-23 storm name list.

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2023-02-18 07:20:00Z
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