Kamis, 28 November 2019

'They don't know we're here': In Britain's most pro-Brexit town, voters are still angry and disillusioned - CNBC

Shoppers walk past an empty commercial unit in the central market square of Boston, England, Nov. 8, 2019.

Elliot Smith | CNBC

BOSTON, England — With Britain facing its second general election since the historic vote to leave the European Union in June 2016, voters in the nation's most pro-Brexit town are even more angry and disillusioned than they were three years ago.

More than three quarters of the people of Boston, in the county of Lincolnshire in the East Midlands of England, voted to leave the EU.

According to the most recent U.K. census in 2011, Boston also has the highest proportion of eastern European immigrants of anywhere in the U.K., after an influx of EU workers to the area's agricultural sector, earning it the label of Britain's "most divided town."

Between 2004 and 2014, the town's migrant population grew by 460%, and the proportion of residents of the Borough of Boston born in EU accession countries such as Lithuania, Poland and Latvia, stands at around 12%.

The center of the quaint English farming town is a melting pot of local and eastern European chatter as residents work, shop, visit the bank, the drug store, the pub, and co-exist seemingly without incident.

Yet the first word out of the mouth of every local when asked about the difficulties facing the town is "immigration."

St. Botolph's Church, known in typically blunt local parlance as the "Boston Stump," formerly served as a landmark to sailors arriving at the town's docks. In its neighboring Stump & Candle pub, cries of "sh-t", "fed up" and "p----d off" ring out when the current state of British politics is mentioned.

Brexit, immigration and the death of hope

Slogans like "will of the people" and "leave means leave" still dominate the local lexicon, and almost to a man, the regulars will be voting for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative Party next month in the hope of getting Brexit over the line before the extended deadline of January 31. The simmering frustration with opposition lawmakers for their successful attempts to block a "no-deal" Brexit in Parliament is palpable.

The constituency of Boston and Skegness has been a safe Conservative seat since its inception in 1997, and the party is almost certain to retain it in December after Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage announced that he would not stand candidates in seats carried by the Conservatives in 2017.

The River Witham and St. Botolph's Church, known locally as the 'Boston Stump', in Boston, England, Nov. 8, 2019.

Elliot Smith | CNBC

This notwithstanding, nobody in Boston seems to believe that the upcoming general election will resolve the country's political divisions, and the tone is one of exasperation.

"I'm not bothered if there's a deal or no deal," one regular says indignantly. "Everybody's frightened to death about what might happen, but nobody knows what will happen. We should just go with the deal, but the opposition are always going to block it."

Some of the patrons accuse migrants of "coming over here to claim benefits" while others simultaneously allege that they have taken jobs and opportunity away from low-skilled workers in the area.

Migrants from the eastern European countries which joined the EU after 2004 are more likely to be in work than British born working-age adults, according to the Migration Advisory Committee.

Boston's employment rate is comfortably higher than the U.K. average and its percentage of out-of-work benefits claimants sits at 2.7% compared to a national average of 2.9%, according to the latest figures from the Office of National Statistics.

Boston's total population did grow by nearly 16% between 2001 and 2011, double the national average, but around 42% of the town's workforce is employed in the categories of "process plant and machine operatives" or "elementary occupations," versus a national average of just below 17%.

Its proportion of workers employed in managerial, professional or technical occupations is 18.4% versus 47.1% across Great Britain. Median wages are well below the national average.

The bottom 10% of earners are more detrimentally affected by EU migration, but the change is comparatively small compared to overall wage growth for U.K.-born workers. So while low income U.K.-born workers experience more of the negative impact of increased unskilled migration compared to higher earners, this is outstripped by the average increase to their wages over that same period.

An Oxford Economics study in 2018 estimated that EU migrants' annual net tax contributions are approximately £2,300 ($2,960) more than the average U.K. adult.

A Union Jack flies from an apartment block against the backdrop of the 'Boston Stump' in Boston, England, Nov. 8, 2019.

Elliot Smith | CNBC

One man in his sixties who spoke to CNBC in the Stump & Candle attributed the disgruntlement not to the migrants themselves, but to a lack of U.K. government spending to enable public services to deal with the surging population.

"Did they give us more police, more doctors, more hospitals, more schools, better roads? Did they give us anything to cope with it? No. We got dumped on," he says, adding that Boston used to be a "beautiful little town and still could be," but has been reduced to an "empty shell."

'We've been robbed blind'

Contrary to his peers, he welcomes the presence of migrant workers as a positive for the area, but claims the presence of large supermarkets at the expense of local businesses has "drawn the lifeblood" out of Boston.

"In the old days, that money used to circulate in Boston, we all got a bit of it. It would go round and round and round — now the money flies, it's gone, we never see anything," he says.

The group paints a dystopian picture of Boston's decline, describing a wasteland of boarded up windows, businesses closing down to be replaced by charity stores.

There are indeed an increasing number of empty commercial units dotted throughout the central shopping district, but as locals greet one another gleefully on the sidewalk on a wintry Friday morning, it evokes greater likeness to the archetypal sleepy, post-industrial East Midlands town than the nightmare they are depicting.

A vacant furnishing store in Boston, England, Nov. 8, 2019.

Elliot Smith | CNBC

Much of the anger which fueled the Brexit vote seems to stem from a sense of neglect by consecutive British governments, rather than any long-running gripe with the EU itself.

"When you come up from London and you see the roads in London, and then you see from Peterborough to here, they don't spend any money on any of it," the man points out indignantly.

"We're stuck out here in the Wash, nearly in the North Sea, and they don't even know we're here. That's what it's all about."

Responses vary with regards to what Brexit will achieve, however.

"We don't want to be dictated to!" one elderly gentlemen yells from across the room, which by now has escalated from a quiet midday hum to a bellowing cacophony. "I'm not bothered, as long as we're out!" a gaunt, wild-eyed man shouts, adding that "it'll get rid of the foreigners."

"It's not going to solve anything," the first man sighs, "because we've got no pull on government, we've got no voice, we've got nothing to help us."

He points out to his friend that Boston will still need EU migrant labor on the farms and in the packhouses, but says the money which once circulated within the local economy will still "fly away" and the town will continue to be "robbed blind."

Strained public services

Financial pressures on the U.K.'s national health service (NHS) are, aside from Brexit, one of the pre-eminent battlegrounds in British politics.

A burly man in his late fifties says the local NHS is "overwhelmed" and "you can't get a doctor's appointment," while the gaunt man angrily claims that he has been waiting over a year for a pacemaker.

Out in the central market square, Pat, a 74-year-old former secretary at Boston's flagship Pilgrim Hospital, claims it is no longer "fit for purpose."

"We can't blame the foreigners for everything but our services are stretched to the limit and have been for a good few years due to the influx of people coming here," she says, adding that the "schools are packed to capacity" and "English children are having to be held back" due to the growing proportion of non-English speaking pupils.

NHS trusts across the country are spending more than they are bringing in, and the NHS was asked several years ago to find £22 billion in savings by 2020, prompting further cuts.

A commercial unit sits empty beside a pawn shop in Boston, England, Nov. 8, 2019.

Elliot Smith | CNBC

United Lincolnshire Hospitals Trust, which runs the Pilgrim, has racked up almost £4 million in fines for missing key waiting time targets over the last four years.

Meanwhile, EU immigrants make up about 5% of English NHS staff and about 5% of the English population, according to the best available data. Across the U.K., EU immigrants make up 10% of registered doctors and 4% of registered nurses.

Pat does not think the election will help to heal the nation's divisions, and suggests lawmakers on both sides of the aisle need to "get round the table and work together."

She empathizes with ousted former Prime Minister Theresa May and complains that under Johnson, the country is "two steps back from where we were" on Brexit. "We've become the laughing stock of the world," she says, adding that she is unsure which way she'll vote in December.

A young woman nearby confirms that she will vote Conservative, but is not sure how it will help, or whether anything will change in Boston, regardless of the result.

'Everyone is going home'

Contrary to the bleak representation of the town given in the Stump & Candle, the Bulgarian grocery store neighboring it is bustling with activity, and the two female clerks chat jovially in native dialect to customers and a group of men congregated by the store room.

Beside them are a string of Western Union posters headlined "Know Your Rights" and containing a string of advice for migrants on how to avoid exploitation and discrimination.

"It is your right to be treated honestly and fairly," the top bullet point reads.

Graffiti on the wall of a private car park in Boston, England. Nov. 8, 2019

Elliot Smith | CNBC

Interaction between Bostonian and Eastern European residents seems minimal at best. One 28-year-old employee at a Romanian butchers has lived here for six years and says that while she has found the locals to be generally friendly, her community very much keeps to itself.

Over on the less postcard-worthy side of the River Witham, West Street, a long, straight road toward the railway station, is lined on both sides with Eastern European stores, in an area which once hosted more empty units than occupied ones.

Romas Latvenas, a grocery and protein supplement store owner who moved to Boston from Lithuania in 2004, says despite the relative prosperity they have enjoyed in Boston, Brexit is forcing EU migrants to consider relocating, while already driving up food prices for businesses.

Eastern European shops on West Street, Boston, England, Nov. 8, 2019.

Elliot Smith

"Our businesses are already being affected, and it is not just European shops, but everything. People who are working in the factories, the Lithuanians, Polish, Latvians, everyone is going home, or they are going to Germany, Holland or Belgium," he says.

"The currency going down means that people can just move to mainland Europe and it is the same, and now look around — the shop is empty, the streets are empty."

Romas also says his own family is considering moving, despite having lived in Boston for over a decade.

"With fewer people, fewer workers, the local economy is going off a cliff. Fifteen years ago, these shops were empty — there was maybe one European shop and that was it, the windows and houses and estate agents were boarded up," he says.

"We all come here to work, we pay our taxes, and I don't know what the English people think will happen. The big people in London do not care about this place, they do not care about us — it is very bad for us now."

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2019-11-28 08:27:00Z
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Rabu, 27 November 2019

UK would be 'outgunned' in Russia conflict - think-tank - BBC News

British ground forces would be "comprehensively outgunned" in a conflict with Russia in Eastern Europe, according to a defence think-tank.

Research by the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi) found that the Army, as well as Nato allies, has a "critical shortage" of artillery and ammunition.

It concluded that it could not maintain a credible defence position.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) said the UK works closely with Nato and is "well equipped to take on a leading role".

The research comes ahead of a meeting of Nato leaders in London next week to mark the 70th anniversary of the alliance.

The UK, along with other Nato members, has positioned military forces in Eastern Europe to deter any potential Russian aggression in the wake of Moscow's annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Around 800 British troops are currently stationed in Estonia. The first were sent in 2017.

But the study by Rusi found that the UK armed forces lack critical firepower compared to Russia's military.

It analysed military capabilities in the "unlikely" context of "a high-intensity conflict between Nato and Russia, in which the UK has promised to deliver a warfighting division".

"At present, there is a risk that the UK - unable to credibly fight - can be dominated lower down the escalation ladder by powers threatening escalation," the report said.

It said Britain is "comprehensively outgunned and outranged", leaving enemy artillery free to defeat UK units.

Russian artillery and rocket batteries have already proved to be potent, destroying two Ukrainian battalions in 2014 within minutes.

UK and other Nato forces not only have a limited number of artillery pieces, but also a shortage of munitions stockpiles and transportation.

The report said the "rejuvenation and modernisation" of Britain's ground-based artillery is an "urgent and critical priority".

In response, the MoD said: "The UK does not stand alone but alongside its Nato Allies, who work closely together across air, sea, land, nuclear and cyber to deter threats and respond to crises."

It added: "As the largest Nato defence spender in Europe, the UK's armed forces are well equipped to take a leading role in countering threats and ensuring the safety and security of British people at home and abroad."

The statement comes less than three weeks after French President Emmanuel Macron described Nato as "brain dead" - stressing what he sees as waning commitment to the transatlantic alliance by its main guarantor, the US.

MoD figures released in August found that the size of Britain's armed forces had fallen for a ninth consecutive year.

The finding came just six months after the Commons spending watchdog, the Public Accounts Committee, claimed the MoD had a funding black hole of at least £7bn in its 10-year plan to equip the UK's armed forces.

Number of full-time trained personnel

A delegation of Russian military personnel visited Scotland last year to observe one of Europe's largest Nato exercises.

The visit was in line with the UK's obligations to the Vienna Document which aims to promote mutual trust and transparency among states signed to it.

It came as UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres claimed the Cold War was "back with a vengeance" as he warned abut the dangers of escalating tensions over Syria.

On Sunday, Boris Johnson promised he would not cut the armed forces "in any form" after it was pointed out the Conservative Party's manifesto for next month's election did not commit to maintaining troop levels.

The Conservatives, Labour, and the Lib Dems have all committed to meeting Nato's target of spending 2% of GDP on defence. The SNP said it would "press for investment in conventional defence".

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2019-11-27 12:23:31Z
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Sixteen of the 39 migrants found dead in UK truck repatriated to Vietnam amid human trafficking investigation - Fox News

The bodies of sixteen of the 39 migrants found dead in the back of a refrigerated truck in the United Kingdom last month were repatriated to Vietnam early Wednesday and returned to next of kin, according to reports.

This comes as officials in the UK and Vietnam continue to investigate an international human trafficking ring after eight women and 31 males, including two boys both aged 15, were found dead in the back of a truck in Essex on Oct. 23. All 39 were later identified as Vietnam nationals.

The remains of sixteen of the migrants arrived in Hanoi's Noi Bai Airport early Wednesday and were transported by ambulances to their family’s homes in the Nghe An, Ha Tinh and Quang Binh provinces, according to Sky News.

“After waiting for so many days, my son has finally arrived,” Nguyen Dinh Gia, father of victim Nguyen Dinh Luong, told Reuters in a phone interview from his home in Can Loc, Ha Tinh province. “We are deeply saddened, but we have to hold back the emotion to organize the funeral for my son.”

TRUCK DRIVER PLEADS GUILTY TO IMMIGRATION CHARGE IN CASE OF UK SMUGGLING DEATHS

UK and Vietnamese officially are working to repatriate the remaining victims in the near future.

"This is a very difficult time," British ambassador to Vietnam, Gareth Ward, said in a video statement released on Wednesday. "I promise the families and the Vietnamese people as a whole that we will continue to boost the cooperation between the UK and Vietnam to prevent human trafficking and protect vulnerable people here."

Each body will cost about $2,856 to repatriate, according to the vice minister of foreign affairs. The Vietnamese government will advance the payment and the victims’ families will be required to pay back the cost of to fly the bodies in from the UK at a later date. A crowdsourcing campaign has raised more than $110,000 for the relatives of the deceased migrants, BBC reported.

The minister added in a statement that families were encouraged to have the bodies cremated “to ensure speed, low cost and sanitation safety.” Many relative instead agreed to pay to have the bodies shipped back to Vietnam for traditional burials given cremation is rare in the country’s rural areas, The Guardian reported.

On Monday, Maurice “Mo” Robinson, 25, of Craigavon in Northern Ireland, pleaded guilty to conspiring with others to assist illegal immigration. He admitted to driving the truck where the bodies were found. Robinson told the court he conspired with others from May 1, 2018, to Oct. 24, 2019 to assist unlawful immigration and acquired cash that he knew or suspected came from criminal conduct, Reuters reported.

CLICK HERE FOR THE ALL-NEW FOXBUSINESS.COM

On Sunday, the Essex police said Christopher Kennedy, 23, also of Northern Ireland, had been arrested in connection with the investigation. He was charged with conspiracy to arrange people trafficking and conspiracy to break U.K. immigration law. A third suspect was being held in Ireland. Two other suspects from Northern Ireland, brothers Ronan and Christopher Hughes, were being sought, the New York Times reported.

Police in Vietnam has arrested 10 people in connection with the deaths.

Fox News Robert Gearty contributed to this report.

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2019-11-27 11:35:58Z
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Selasa, 26 November 2019

UK banknote printer De La Rue fears for its future - BBC News

De La Rue, the company that prints the UK's banknotes, has said there is a risk that the firm will collapse if its turnaround plan fails to work.

The announcement came as it suspended its dividend and reported a loss in the first half of its financial year.

De La Rue said its warning was based on a worst-case scenario.

However, it concluded that there was "a material uncertainty that casts significant doubt on the group's ability to operate as a going concern".

UK-based De La Rue prints cash for about 140 central banks and employs more than 2,500 people globally.

All current Bank of England banknotes are printed by the firm at a site in Debden, Essex.

It is unclear what would happen if the firm got into difficulties, but it is likely that a rival would take over its Bank of England contract. Its main competitors are all based outside the UK.

The BBC understands that preparations have already been made for the launch of the new £20 note featuring artist JMW Turner, printed by De La Rue, which enters circulation on 20 February next year.

Shares in De la Rue fell 20% on Tuesday morning.

De La Rue has faced some big setbacks in the past two years, including the loss of the post-Brexit UK passport printing contract to a Franco-Dutch firm last year.

In May last year, it had to write off £18m after Venezuela's central bank failed to pay its bills.

The company is also under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office in connection with "suspected corruption" in South Sudan.

It appointed a new chief executive, Clive Vacher, in October as part of a management shake-up.

What is De la Rue?

Around 11% of the 171 billion banknotes issued globally in 2017 were printed by a handful of commercial printers. De La Rue is now the largest of these firms.

It began producing banknotes in 1860, first for Mauritius and then elsewhere. Today it produces enough notes each week that if stacked up would reach the peak of Everest twice.

Its main competitor, German company Giesecke & Devrient, produces notes for roughly 100 central banks, while the Canadian Banknote Company and US-founded Crane Currency are also major players.

'Teetering on the brink'

De La Rue reported a £12.1m pre-tax loss for the six months to 28 September, compared with a £7.1m profit in the same period last year.

In its results statement, the company said it was accelerating its restructuring plan, including a reduction in overhead costs.

It is also planning new banknote security feature products to bolster its position in the "increasingly competitive" banknote market.

"De La Rue is teetering on the brink," said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst for Markets.com.

"Bad management and decisions seems to be the main reason for the malaise."

Investors sometimes wonder whether a company's board of directors can, in the short term, have much sway over a company's trading.

The scepticism is warranted: boards normally comprise a small number of executives and a larger number of non-executive directors, who have no involvement with day-to-day operations, and there are plenty of examples of companies going off the rails without the board suspecting anything was wrong.

Today's results from De La Rue show, however, that boards are vital. The banknote and secure-printing company turned in a disastrous set of numbers - a £10m operating loss, a string of one-off charges and mounting debt - which it blamed on falling demand and too many companies chasing too few contracts.

But it also admits that a period of unprecedented turmoil at the top has not helped, with the chairman, chief executive, finance director and most of the other directors changing in short order.

"The board believes that significant changes in the board and executive teams, along with a restructuring of the business, has contributed to the poor performance of the business in the period," the results statement says.

"This has contributed to a larger variance between forecasts and performance than has been experienced historically."

Management matters, and will matter even more in the next few months. The directors warn that if the revival plan put in place by (newish) chief executive Clive Vacher does not yield results, there is a threat to the company being able to continue as a going concern.

In plain English, that means it will have to find more money, either by renegotiating the terms of its bank loans or by asking shareholders to stump up more cash.

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2019-11-26 09:05:09Z
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Senin, 25 November 2019

Kidnapped UK man and wife rescued after Philippines gun battle - BBC News

A British businessman and his Filipino wife have been rescued from their abductors in the southern Philippines, the country's army has said.

Allan and Wilma Hyrons were taken from a beach resort on Mindanao island by four armed men on 4 October.

Their kidnappers - thought to belong to the IS-loyal militant group Abu Sayaff - fled after a gun battle in the nearby Sulu region on Sunday.

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the couple were "safe and well".

Mr Hyrons, 70, who is a dual national, has lived in Mindanao's Zamboanga del Sur region with his wife since 2013.

On the day they were captured, the couple had reportedly been celebrating Teachers' Day at a nearby college.

Witnesses reported seeing them being taken from a hut and dragged to a motorboat.

They were given medical checks after their ordeal ended with the operation by Philippine forces at approximately 17:00 GMT on Sunday.

BBC News has been told that the UK military was involved in the rescue operation.

A small team of British special forces personnel provided advice and planning support to help the search, a military source told BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Beale. The MoD has not commented.

Mr Raab thanked the Philippine authorities' "tremendous efforts".

"We are in particular grateful to their armed forces for their courage throughout a difficult operation which resulted in Alan and Wilma's release," he said.

"Foreign Office officials have been in close contact with Alan and Wilma's family throughout this ordeal. We request their privacy during this emotional time."

British Ambassador to the Philippines Daniel Pruce has spoken to the couple by telephone since their release, the Foreign Office said.

He tweeted: "Fantastic news! My sincerest thanks to all involved."

Who are the Abu Sayyaf group?

Abu Sayyaf is one of the smallest and most violent jihadist groups in the southern Philippines. Its name means "bearer of the sword" and it is notorious for kidnapping for ransom, and for attacks on civilians and the army.

The group is believed to have an estimated 400 members and, since 2014, several of its factions have declared their allegiance to the so-called Islamic State (IS).

In 2016, Isnilon Tontoni Hapilon, one of Abu Sayyaf's most prominent leaders, was recognised as the leader of all IS-aligned groups in the Philippines.

Read the full story

The UK government advises Britons against all travel to the area where Mr Hyrons was taken.

BBC Philippines correspondent Howard Johnson says the island has "several militant groups" operating on it.

In May, a 59-year-old Dutch hostage was reportedly killed by his captors on the nearby island of Jolo in May.

The Philippine army said Ewold Horn, who had been kidnapped in 2012, was shot as his captors fled a confrontation with troops.

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2019-11-25 14:17:02Z
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Minggu, 24 November 2019

General election 2019: Boris Johnson vows to 'forge a new Britain' - BBC News

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The Conservatives will "get Brexit done" and "forge a new Britain", Boris Johnson has said as he launched the party's election manifesto.

He vowed to train 50,000 new nurses and create 50 million more GP appointments.

Other "guarantees" include tighter immigration controls, more money to fix potholes, zero-net carbon emissions by 2050 and no increases in income tax and VAT rates.

The 59-page manifesto comes 18 days before the general election.

Speaking at its launch in Telford, Shropshire, the prime minister said the choice facing the country in this "closely fought" contest had "never been starker".

"Get Brexit done and we can focus our hearts and minds on the priorities of the British people," he added.

The manifesto, which the PM described as a "partial blueprint" for the future of the country, promises 20,000 more police officers and to "level up" schools funding.

The major new announcement is a plan to recruit and train 50,000 more nurses, through a mixture of new university places, apprenticeships and hiring from overseas.

Student nursing bursaries scrapped in 2016 will be restored, at an estimated cost of £760m in 2020-21, rising to £880m in 2023-4.

Other policies include:

  • Building "Northern Powerhouse Rail" between Leeds and Manchester and investing £28.8bn in strategic and local roads
  • A "triple tax lock", ruling out increases in the headline rate of income tax and National Insurance, as well as VAT, for five years
  • Raising the National Insurance threshold to £9,500 in 2020, with an ambition to raise it further to £12,500
  • Childcare: £250m a year, for at least three years, plus a £250m capital spending boost, for "wraparound" childcare - meaning after school or during holidays
  • Environment: £6.3bn for upgrades to homes, such as grants for improving boilers and insulation
  • £500m a year for four years for filling potholes - almost 10 times the amount promised by the party in an announcement in March
  • A new National Skills Fund of £600m a year for five years. Labour and the Liberal Democrats have announced similar plans

BBC assistant political editor Norman Smith said it was a pared-back, "take-no-chances" manifesto.

It rules out any changes to the Hunting Act, which bans the hunting of foxes and others wild mammals with dogs in England and Wales.

A plan to lift income tax thresholds for middle-earners to £80,000, announced during the Tory leadership campaign, has been dropped, with Mr Johnson saying this "was not the time" for such a move.

Brexit

The prime minister promised to bring back the Withdrawal Agreement Bill to Parliament before 25 December.

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The Conservatives want MPs to ratify the prime minister's Brexit deal before the UK is due to leave the EU on 31 January. After this there would be a "transition period" - during which the UK would continue to follow EU rules while the two sides try to work out a permanent trade deal.

The manifesto rules out extending the transition period beyond the 31 December 2020 deadline.

The House of Commons approved the Withdrawal Agreement Bill in principle in October. But it has to be reintroduced because Parliament was dissolved ahead of the election on 12 December.

Parking

The manifesto promises free hospital parking in England for people with disabilities, frequent patients, the gravely ill, families of long-stay patients, carers and NHS staff working night shifts.

The Conservative Party says £78m per year will be provided, which it claims is new funding for extra parking capacity, or compensation for lost fees.

Labour wants to make hospital parking free for everyone in England, in line with Wales and Scotland.

'Care consensus'

The manifesto promises £1bn per year in extra funding for care for the elderly over the next five years.

The PM said he was willing to talk to other parties to come up with a long-term solution for funding the system.

Pensions

The Conservative Party is promising to maintain the so-called "triple lock" on the UK state pension - meaning it will rise the by the rate of average earnings, inflation or 2.5%, whichever is higher - and continuing the older person's free bus pass.

Chancellor Sajid Javid told the Sophy Ridge on Sunday show on Sky News the manifesto had the "most detailed and most transparent costings ever published in British electoral history".

But Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank, said the Conservatives' position on taxes could "come back to bite" the party, as it could limit the ability to deal with costs to the NHS from an ageing society.

What are the parties promising you?

Here's a concise guide to where the parties stand on key issues like Brexit, education and the NHS.


What are other parties pledging on Brexit, taxes and childcare?

Brexit: Labour is promising to negotiate a new Brexit deal within three months, based on close alignment with the EU. This would then be put to the public in a legally binding referendum, alongside the option of staying in the EU.

The Liberal Democrats have vowed to cancel Brexit if elected as a majority government, or otherwise campaign for a referendum with the option of staying in the EU.

The SNP wants Scotland to stay in the EU and the Brexit Party says the UK should leave immediately without an exit deal, but negotiate a free trade agreement with the EU.

Taxes: Labour has set out plans to raise income tax for the top 5% of earners and reverse cuts to corporation tax in order to increase public spending.

The Liberal Democrats would bring in a 1p rise in income tax to spend on health and social care.

The Brexit Party wants to scrap corporation tax for companies earning less than £10,000 a year, ditch VAT for fuel bills and abolish inheritance tax.

Childcare: Labour has pledged that within five years two, three and four-year-olds will be entitled to 30 hours of free pre-school education per week.

The Lib Dems are offering to fund 35 hours of childcare, 48 weeks a year for children aged two to four.


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2019-11-24 15:21:33Z
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UK police charge man with human trafficking offenses in Vietnamese truck deaths inquiry - Reuters

Police move the lorry container where bodies were discovered, in Grays, Essex, Britain October 23, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

LONDON (Reuters) - British police have charged a 23-year-old man from Northern Ireland with human trafficking offenses as part of their inquiry into the deaths of 39 Vietnamese people found in the back of a truck near London last month.

The police said in a statement that Christopher Kennedy was arrested on Friday, Nov. 22, and that he is due to appear at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court in England on Monday.

The Crown Prosecution Service has authorized charges of conspiracy to arrange or facilitate the travel of people with a view to exploitation and conspiracy to facilitate the commission of a breach of UK immigration law, it said.

The victims, 31 males and eight women, were found in a truck container on an industrial estate in Grays, Essex, not far from docks on the River Thames, on Oct. 23.

The truck driver, who is also from Northern Ireland, has been charged with 39 counts of manslaughter, conspiracy to traffic people, and money laundering.

Reporting by Elizabeth Piper; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise

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2019-11-24 11:22:00Z
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