Kamis, 06 Agustus 2020

Coronavirus map LIVE: Official death figure for England to be changed after urgent review - Express

In Public Health England numbers, anyone who tests positive for the virus and later dies is counted as a death. However, scientists have claimed this does not present a true picture as someone could die from a non-related illness but still be counted within the coronavirus death total. Health Secretary, Matt Hancock will now move to bring the recording of deaths in line with Northern Ireland and Scotland. Both count a coronavirus death if it occurs 28 days after testing positive. Due to this, the England's death total could be reduced by thousands. The new measure is expected to be announced by the end of the week. 

Professor Carl Heneghan, from the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at Oxford University, told The Sun: "It is a sensible decision. There is no point attributing deaths to Covid 28 days after infection.

“All it does is muddy the water. While deaths are falling in Scotland, PHE data suggests matters are worse in England.

“But if it’s someone who picked up the virus in a care home in March and recovered, and last week died of a heart attack, what does that actually tell us?"

UK ministers wasted up to £180million on buying 50million face masks for the NHS which have now been deemed as faulty and not adequate for use.

The masks were bought from a family investment company in April but will not be able to be used as they have the wrong kind of strap.

The deal struck by a Government adviser, included 50 million high-strength FFP2 medical masks costing between £150 million to £180million.

Of the £252 million contract, officials have now admitted the 43.5 million Chinese-made FFP2 masks delivered so far, do not meet standards as the masks have ear-loop fastenings as opposed to head loops. 

Due to those straps, the masks cannot be fixed securely when worn. 

According to documents seen by the Good Law Project, the masks were bought from Ayanda Capital. 

Ayanda Capital said: "The masks supplied went through a rigorous technical assurance programme and meet all the requirements of the technical specifications which were made available online through the government's portal.

"There are provisions in our contract for product to be rejected if it did not meet the required specification as per the contract. These provisions have not been activated."

A Government statement also said: "Throughout this global pandemic, we have been working tirelessly to deliver PPE to protect people on the frontline.

"Over 2.4 billion items have been delivered, and more than 30 billion have been ordered from UK-based manufacturers and international partners to provide a continuous supply, which meets the needs of health and social care staff both now and in the future.

"There is a robust process in place to ensure orders are of high quality and meet strict safety standards, with the necessary due diligence undertaken on all government contracts."

SEE BELOW FOR LIVE UPDATES: 

Coronavirus Map Live: UK numbers could drop

Coronavirus Map Live: UK numbers could drop (Image: Flickr/PA)

11.06am update: NHS workers protest

Thousand sof NHS workers are expected to take part in protest this weekend to demand a pay rise.

The Unite union, which has 100,000 members in the health service has said it will support any who wish to attended socially distanced protests. 

This will be to show frustration among NHS staff according. 

Coronavirus Live: Statistics as of August 5

Coronavirus Live: Statistics as of August 5 (Image: Express)

10.26am update: Labour now comments

Shadow Cabinet Office minister, Rachel Reeves has said: "Many health and care workers experienced inadequate protection, relied on community donations and even bought their own PPE from DIY shops.

"Ministers repeatedly assured the country that things were fine, yet lives of health workers were lost, the infection was spread in health settings while all that time masks bought by the government could not be used for their intended purpose.

"The case for the National Audit Office to investigate the Conservative government’s mishandling of PPE is overwhelming and as well as apologise, ministers must urgently learn lessons to save lives in the future."

9.56am update: Lib Dem leadership contender on PPE controversy 

Responding to the story over the Government's £252million deal for medical supplies, MP for Oxford West and Abingdon, Layla Moran has demanded a review be launched on the contracts given for medical supplies.   

She said: "The government has serious questions to answer over this shocking waste of taxpayers’ money.

"We urgently need a clear strategy for procuring PPE so that NHS and care staff on the frontline are not left without. That should include a review of the process for handing out contracts to prevent these colossal errors from happening again.

"It’s vital that ministers act on the recommendations of the cross-party inquiry I’m chairing so that lessons are learned ahead of a potential second spike later this year."

Coronavirus Live: Stats as of August 5

Coronavirus Live: Stats as of August 5 (Image: Express)

9.14am update: JD Wetherspoon to cut head office jobs

The pub chain has written to head office staff informing them up to a third could lose their jobs. 

Chief executive John Hutson said that all head office staff, including those who are regionally based, will be affected

He added: "The decision is mainly a result of a downturn in trade in the pub and restaurant industry generally, a reduction in the company's rate of expansion and a reduction in the number of pubs operated from 955 in 2015 to 873 today."

8.42am update: Preston could be next to face lockdown measures

Preston could be the next area to face localised lockdown restrictions after a rise in cases. 

City council’s chief executive, Adrian Phillips said: "We are not waiting for some government announcement.

"We know our rates are increasing and they have increased over the last week to a level now where we are concerned that we could face government intervention.

"We’ve been working with our communities to make sure we get those key messages out."

8.26am update: UK death total to be adjusted

The Government is set to announce a new way for recording the UK's death total. 

Previously, any death was counted if someone had at one time, tested positive for the virus. 

According to The Sun, deaths will now be recorded if someone dies within 28 days of the infection. 

8.07am update: Robert Jenrick defends Government planning reforms 

Housing Secretary, Robert Jenrick has defended the Government's planning reforms which include allowing developers to be given automatic planning permission to build homes and schools. 

Mr Jenrick told Sky News: "Today it takes seven years to produce a local plan, we want to reduce that to around two and a half years.

"And it can take five years to get spades in the ground on a housing estate.

"We believe that can be cut very significantly and everybody will benefit from that – the people who work in the industry and those people who want to get on the housing ladder as well.”

Coronavirus Live: UK cases as of August 5

Coronavirus Live: UK cases as of August 5 (Image: Express)

7.52am update: Economic downturn less severe than feared 

The Bank of England has lowered its prediction for the UK economy this year. 

It was initially estimated that the UK economy would shrink by 14 percent this year.

This has now be scaled back to 9.5 although this would still present the biggest economic decline in 100 years. 

Interest rates will remain at 0.1 percent while unemployment is expected to jump to 7.5 percent.

7.25am update: 150 million masks not to be used 

At least 150 million protective masks will not be used after officials have expressed concern over their safety standards. 

The masks were part of a £252million contract struck in April but according to the Good Law Project, they will not be used due to the type of strapping. 

Of the overall number of masks, 43.5 million FFP2 masks which have been delivered so far, are now adequate for use. 

The firm involved, Ayanda Capital, has insisted the masks stand up to the standards needed at the time of purchase. 

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2020-08-06 06:41:00Z
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Coronavirus: Safety concerns over masks and UK recession less severe than feared - BBC News

Here are five things you need to know about the coronavirus outbreak this Thursday morning. We'll have another update for you at 18:00 BST.

1. Safety concerns over 50 million PPE masks

Legal papers seen by the BBC show 50 million masks ordered by the government to protect health workers will not be used by the NHS because of safety concerns. The FFP2 respirator masks were bought as part of a £252m contract signed in April with Ayanda Capital Limited. But their use in the health service has been halted because they have loops which hook over the user's ears and there are concerns this may not provide a tight-enough fit to prevent virus particles from being inhaled. Ayanda Capital says its product meets the specification the government set out.

2. UK downturn 'less severe than feared'

The Bank of England has published its first official forecast since the pandemic hit, in which it warns it expects the UK economy to shrink by 9.5% in 2020. This would be its worst performance in 100 years - but better than the 14% contraction that was initially estimated. The Bank says economic recovery has been "earlier and more rapid" than it had assumed when it made that prediction back in May. However, economic recovery from the pandemic is forecast to take longer than first expected - not returning to pre-Covid levels until the end of next year.

3. Trump campaign targeted over virus claims

Facebook and Twitter have taken action against Donald Trump's re-election campaign after it posted a clip from an interview with the president in which he claimed children had immunity to coronavirus. This runs counter to official US public health advice. Facebook said it removed the video because it was in violation of its policies on coronavirus misinformation. Twitter said the Trump campaign account would be suspended until the tweet was deleted. Experts say children can catch and spread the virus but they're less likely to become seriously ill.

4. City dwellers seek life in the country

The coronavirus seems to have made some people question why they continue to live in cities, according to property website Rightmove and estate agents Knight Frank. A desire for countryside and outdoor space has led to more city residents looking to move, while increased remote working means some people can now consider living further away from their offices. Rightmove says searches for properties in villages jumped 126% in June and July.

5. Bugler to play until there are no more deaths

Army veteran Paul Goose, who has played the Last Post every night since lockdown began, says he will continue until there are no more coronavirus deaths in England. Mr Goose, from South Yorkshire, began his nightly routine on 29 March and has so far kept it going for 130 days. Each performance is live-streamed and dedicated to NHS staff, key workers and victims of the pandemic.


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And don't forget...

...loss of taste and smell are among the symptoms of coronavirus. Find out more about how it affects our bodies.

You can find more information, advice and guides on our coronavirus page and get all the latest from our live page.


Postcode search: See case numbers in your area.

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Use this form to ask your question:

If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or send them via email to YourQuestions@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any question you send in.

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2020-08-06 06:10:19Z
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Rabu, 05 Agustus 2020

How long does it take to get planning permission? - BBC News

The claim: A standard housing development takes an average of five years to go through the planning system.

Verdict: Developments of more than 1,000 dwellings may take that long, but those are very large. The vast majority of developments are much smaller and do not take that long.

Robert Jenrick, secretary of state for housing, communities and local government, wrote an article in the Sunday Telegraph talking about how he wants to change the planning system in England.

In the article, he wrote: "Under the current system, it takes an average of five years for a standard housing development to go through the planning system - before a spade is even in the ground."

The Reality Check team asked his department where this figure came from and was pointed towards a chart in the Letwin Review from 2018, which looked at why it takes so long to complete large housing projects.

The chart features 15 housing developments together with how long they took to get planning permission.

When you add up how long they each took and divide by the number of developments, you do indeed get about five, even though only five of them took five years or longer.

The 8,861 unit Barking Riverside development takes up the average considerably - its planning process took 12.5 years.

The development of the site of the Barking power station was originally supposed to be supported by an extension of the Docklands Light Railway but will now be served by a London Overground Station.

It needed other transport links including roads, as well as schools, utilities and community facilities.

Mr Jenrick did not give a definition of a standard housing development, but according to research from the estate agents Savills. around 65% of homes given consent are on sites of fewer than 100 units.

There is also no legal definition of a standard development, although any development with more than 10 dwellings is counted as a major residential development.

The smallest one in the selection of 15 used to reach the five-year average is the 1,187 unit Trumpington Meadows development in Cambridge. The largest is the 15,737 unit development in North Greenwich. So they do seem to be very large developments rather than what might be deemed standard.

"It is an easy throwaway comment and will be true in some cases," said Tony Mulhall, planning expert at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.

"Most of the applications being referred to will have gone to appeal or perhaps judicial review."

The property consultancy Lichfields did some similar research into how long the planning process took for different-sized developments.

How many years does it take to get planning permission for different-sized developments?

It found that the process takes longer the bigger the development, which is no great surprise.

The bigger the development, the more factors need to be dealt with such as water, electricity, roads and services such as GP surgeries and schools.

The average length of time for planning doesn't get close to five years until you start looking at developments of more than 1,000 units.

The government has already had a review of planning appeals, led by Bridget Rosewell. She said: "At present, the inquiry process takes nearly a year to complete from lodging the appeal to a decision for inspector decided cases."

"This is just too long." She suggested that this part of the process could be reduced to six months reasonably easily.

The government publishes statistics on how long planning decisions by district level planning authorities in England have been taking. (The vast majority of residential planning decisions are taken at this level, although the secretary of state and Mayor of London might also get involved.)

The latest figures show that 89% of major applications were decided within 13 weeks.

So while the biggest developments may indeed average five years for planning, that isn't the case for most projects.

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2020-08-06 02:29:51Z
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England's first wild beavers in 400 years allowed to stay in river - Sky News

England's first wild population of beavers for 400 years has won the right to stay in a Devon river.

The government said the breeding beavers - comprising up to 15 family groups - can remain in the River Otter, where they were discovered in 2013.

The beavers had been threatened with removal but a five-year trial found their dam-building brought benefits.

It helped reduce flooding for some at-risk homes, created wetlands for other animals, improved water quality and even boosted local tourism.

There were some localised problems for landowners, as beavers can damage trees and flood parts of fields, but these were managed with the help of Devon Wildlife Trust.

Beavers were hunted to extinction four centuries ago in Britain but a family were found in the river seven years ago.

The beavers can continue to breed and expand their range on the river
Image: The beavers can continue to breed and expand their range

The government decision means the future is secure for the first reintroduction of an extinct native mammal to England, said Devon Wildlife Trust.

More from UK

"This is the most groundbreaking government decision for England's wildlife for a generation," said the organisation's Peter Burgess.

"Beavers are nature's engineers and have the unrivalled ability to breathe new life into our rivers and wetlands. Their benefits will be felt throughout our countryside, by wildlife and people."

There are believed to be other beavers living on English rivers after having escaped or being released, and there are calls to help these populations too.

Mark Elliott, also from Devon Wildlife Trust, said: "It's now vital that decisions are made on the national status of beavers that allows them to be reintroduced into other river systems in England.

"There also needs to be funding to support landowners who wish to allow beavers to restore wetlands on their land, and to assist landowners who do not wish beavers to affect their farming practices.

"This is vital if we are to see beavers welcomed back into the English landscape after such a long absence."

A consultation on a national approach will open later this year, said environment minister Rebecca Pow.

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2020-08-06 03:57:16Z
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Mother of Keeley Bunker shares heartbreaking tribute to the murdered barmaid - Daily Mail

'I have been robbed of my daughter': Mother of Keeley Bunker shares heartbreaking tribute to the murdered barmaid after court shows haunting video of her dancing with a 'friend' - hours before he raped and murdered her and hid her body in stream

  • Wesley Streete attacked his victim then returned repeatedly to cover her body where he left it in stream 
  • He lied about what had happened, changing his account four times before trial - but CCTV exposed his lies
  • The jury took just over eight hours to convict the former warehouse packer who was Keeley's childhood friend
  • Keeley's mother Deborah Watkins shared touching tribute to her daughter after Wesley Streete was convicted
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The heartbroken mother of barmaid Keeley Bunker has paid tribute to her daughter after her 'childhood friend' Wesley Streete was found guilty of her murder. 

Speaking after the conviction, Deborah Watkins said: 'As a mum, I could give you a thousand pictures and say a million words but nothing could ever describe the beautiful daughter I had.

'She was the most caring and innocent young lady. On the day she was taken the lives of our family changed forever. They will never be the same again.

'Such is the hurt we feel we are incapable of showing forgiveness and we will never forget our Keeley.

'I have been robbed of my daughter and holding her hand through life's experiences. It will stay with me for the rest of my life.

'I can only hope she can rest easy now. Our precious and beautiful daughter Keeley will forever be in our heart and memories.'

It comes after a video of Keeley dancing with her 'trusted' friend in a nightclub emerged, just hours before he would rape and kill her before dumping her half-naked body in a stream.

On Wednesday, Wesley Streete was convicted of the 20-year-old's murder in Tamworth, Staffordshire on September 19, last year, not long after the victim had texted a friend to say: 'Wes will walk me home, it'll be fine'.

Streete, who towered over his slightly-built childhood friend, attacked and killed her before dumping her body face-down in a stream in Wiggington Park, then repeatedly returned to the scene to cover her with vegetation.  

He lied about what had happened to the 20-year-old woman, after returning with a friend from a night-out to Birmingham to celebrate Ms Bunker's birthday, changing his account four times before trial.

Footage released by Staffordshire Police today after the verdict shows Keeley and Streete laughing and dancing in Snobs nightclub in the second city, just hours before the murder took place. He will be sentenced on Friday.

Debbie Watkins (centre), the mother of Keeley Bunker reacting after Wesley Streete was convicted of her daughter's murder

Debbie Watkins (centre), the mother of Keeley Bunker reacting after Wesley Streete was convicted of her daughter's murder

Keeley's mother Deborah Watkins said today: 'As a mum, I could give you a thousand pictures and say a million words but nothing could ever describe the beautiful daughter I had'

Keeley's mother Deborah Watkins said today: 'As a mum, I could give you a thousand pictures and say a million words but nothing could ever describe the beautiful daughter I had'

Keeley Bunker in Snobs nightclub, in Birmingham, where she had been celebrating her birthday with childhood friend Wesley Streete

Keeley Bunker, pictured  in Snobs nightclub, in Birmingham, where she had been celebrating her birthday with childhood friend Wesley Streete

Wesley Streete in Snobs nightclub, in Birmingham, where he had been on a night out with his victim Keeley Bunker and her best friend

Wesley Streete was a 'trusted' childhood friend of barmaid Keeley Bunker who he strangled to death as they walked home from partying at a Birmingham nightclub. Today he was convicted of her horrific rape and murder and faces a lengthy jail term

Wesley Streete arrives at New Street Station, Birmingham, prior to his arrest for the rape and murder of childhood friend Keeley Bunker

Wesley Streete arrives at New Street Station, Birmingham, prior to his arrest for the rape and murder of childhood friend Keeley Bunker

Keeley Bunker arrives at Snobs nightclub, Birmingham just hours before she was raped and killed

Keeley Bunker arrives at Snobs nightclub, Birmingham just hours before she was raped and killed

Body-worn video footage issued by Staffordshire Police shows Wesley Streete in the back of the police car, handing over his mobile phone, having moaned 'I feel like you're blaming me'

Body-worn video footage issued by Staffordshire Police shows Wesley Streete in the back of the police car, handing over his mobile phone, having moaned 'I feel like you're blaming me'

'I feel like you're blaming me,' killer moaned during search 

Streete moaned 'I feel like you're blaming me' to police after they took his phone during their investigation.

The killer seemed more concerned about officers looking through his Google searches, than helping police find his missing friend.

Streete said: 'I just don't want them (the police) to laugh if they go through my Google.'

Detectives investigating the disappearance of Ms Bunker, who was 4ft 11 inches tall and weighed just six-and-a-half stone, had turned their attentions to the man who was last with her, 'trusted' friend Streete.

Streete, who towered over Ms Bunker, had been among a group of pals on a night out to Birmingham earlier the previous evening.

But arriving back in Tamworth, Staffordshire, in the early hours of September 19, 2019, they parted ways with another friend and then walked together towards Ms Bunker's home, across town.

Ms Bunker was not seen alive again, and by the following evening, desperate searches were under way involving her family, close friends and police.

Streete, also 20, was taken by police on a ride-along in a marked patrol car to retrace their movements, claiming all the while that when he and Ms Bunker had parted, she was still alive.

But as detectives' suspicions grew, they told uniformed officers in the car to get Streete's phone.

In the exchange, caught on a body-worn camera, Streete, who was sitting in the back of the police car alongside his mother and father, said: 'I just feel like I'm getting the blame.

'You said when I was at the house that all I needed to do was speak to the officer and then I could go and look for Keeley.

'And then you take my phone off me.'

Officers, reassuring Streete, said: 'There's a lot of people involved in what is happening.

'There's people a lot higher up than us that are making decisions.'

Streete, pointing at his chest, replied: 'When you're going to take my phone, now I feel like you're blaming me.'

Asked for the phone's pass-code, he gave them a wrong number, although the police switched off the handset immediately after getting the correct digits, to preserve the battery.

The conversation happened just as Jason Brown found the body of his niece in nearby Wigginton Park, face-down, partially submerged in a brook and concealed by tree branches.

An hour later, officers captured on their body-worn video the moment Streete, of no fixed address but previously of St Austell Close, Tamworth, was formally arrested for the murder.

Asked if he had any questions as he was being driven to the custody block at Cannock, he replied: 'Not really.'

Jurors were told how later on in the journey Streete spoke of being hungry, and 'asked if there was food to eat when he got there'.

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Streete, also 20, previously of St Austell Close, Tamworth, initially claimed to have left Ms Bunker to walk home alone before later alleging he 'accidentally killed her' during consensual sex in the park.

The victim's uncle later discovered Ms Bunker's partially-submerged body later that same day during a massive search effort involving family, friends and police.

The jury took just over eight hours to convict the former warehouse packer. 

After being arrested, Streete told a web of lies which were undone by police who painstakingly pieced together CCTV and GPS data lifted from Streete's own mobile phone.

It proved Streete had been with Ms Bunker in Wigginton Park in the early hours of September 19 and how he had repeatedly returned to the scene where he had dumped her body.

'I kept on lying to everyone,' he said from the witness box while giving evidence, before claiming: 'Now I'm telling the truth.' 

Friends and relatives had launched a search for missing Keeley after she failed to return home from watching rapper Aitch perform at the 02 Academy in Birmingham.

Promising footballer Streete, who was a 'trusted friend' of Keeley, said he accidentally strangled her during sex and dumped her body as he was 'scared' and 'embarrassed'.

But a jury rejected his claims and found him unanimously guilty of rape and murder following a three week trial at Stafford Crown Court today.

He was also found guilty of a further two counts of rape and three sexual assaults in relation to three other victims. He will be sentenced on Friday. 

The court heard Keeley, who was just 4ft 11ins and weighed six-and-a-half stone, was killed after she turned down a bed at a friend's house following a night clubbing.

The pair were seen laughing and dancing in Snobs nightclub, but Keeley later declined to sleep over at Monique Riggon's home because she wanted to get home and told her pal: 'I've got Wes, Wes will walk me back, it'll be fine.'

She had celebrated her birthday just days earlier and was due to attend a job interview at a local infant school later that day - but never arrived.

Jurors heard Streete pounced as the pair walked through the park and Keeley had the life choked out of her as a result of 'sustained pressure' around the neck.

He then hoisted Keeley's body on to his shoulder and spent around an hour concealing her body in the undergrowth.

Bodycam footage shows Streete lying to police about Keeley's whereabouts after she went missing and saying: 'I just feel like I'm getting the blame'.

During his custody interview Streete can also be heard complaining his 'embarrassment' at being accused and says: 'Its scary, but not scary in a way.'

Wearing a black Nike t-shirt, he later tells a custody officer who asked him how he was feeling: 'A bit sad... I wouldn't even say a bit sad, just say sad'.

Keeley, who also worked at Drayton Manor Theme Park, was found by uncle Jason Brown at around 9pm the day after she disappeared.

Dean Reynolds, an off-duty police officer, said in a statement that Mr Brown's agonising shouts were 'the most horrendous screaming I have heard in my life.'

Prosecutor Jacob Hallam QC said: 'He began to scream 'No!' because he knew that he was he was looking at was the body of his niece. He had found Keeley. 

'It was lying face down in a pool, fringed by small trees and bushes, near the edge of an area of parkland in Tamworth.

'It had been hidden under a latticework of branches taken from the surrounding vegetation.

'Her clothing was in disarray, her tight black leggings and her underwear had been pulled down and were twisted over and around her trainers.

'It was obvious from the state of her body and the way it had been hidden that she had been unlawfully killed.

'It was obvious from the state of her clothing that she had been sexually assaulted.

'He [Streete] had taken Keeley's life and had sexually assaulted her, she a young woman who trusted him.'

A forensic pathologist said there were 100 marks to Keeley's body including bruises to her face and scratches to her forehead.

There was also deep bruising beneath the skin of her face, her lower lip had been lacerated and there were also haemorrhages to the lining of the mouth.

During the trial Keeley's dad Christopher Bunker, 51, told how Streete had even visited his house while his daughter was missing and lied about her whereabouts.

Body-worn video footage shows the killer shortly after he was arrested for Keeley's murder

Body-worn video footage shows the killer shortly after he was arrested for Keeley's murder

Streete complained to police after his arrest, telling officers: 'I feel like I'm getting the blame'

Streete complained to police after his arrest, telling officers: 'I feel like I'm getting the blame'

During his custody interview Streete can also be heard complaining his 'embarrassment' at being accused and says: 'Its scary, but not scary in a way.'

During his custody interview Streete can also be heard complaining his 'embarrassment' at being accused and says: 'Its scary, but not scary in a way.' 

Wearing a black Nike t-shirt, he later tells a custody officer who asked him how he was feeling: 'A bit sad... I wouldn't even say a bit sad, just say sad'

Wearing a black Nike t-shirt, he later tells a custody officer who asked him how he was feeling: 'A bit sad... I wouldn't even say a bit sad, just say sad'

Keeley Bunker, had 'trusted' her childhood friend to walk her home safe, in Tamworth, Staffordshire

Keeley Bunker, had 'trusted' her childhood friend to walk her home safe, in Tamworth, Staffordshire

Wesley Streete being led away from North Staffordshire Justice Centre, Newcastle-under-Lyme

Wesley Streete being led away from North Staffordshire Justice Centre, Newcastle-under-Lyme

The locator map above shows where Keeley was found near Wigginton Park, in relation to where she went missing

The locator map above shows where Keeley was found near Wigginton Park, in relation to where she went missing 

Detective blasts 'audacity' of killer who 'played the martyr'

Senior detective says there was 'audacity in his arrogance' as Wesley Streete was convicted of murdering childhood friend Keeley Bunker.

DI Cheryl Hannan of Staffordshire Police said Streete's lies meant the force knew he had something to do with 20-year-old's disappearance.

Ms Hannan said Streete was 'playing the martyr' by criticising the police for blaming him.

Ms Hannan said: 'Her friend, as Keeley did, trusted him to walk her home that night and there's only Wesley to blame that she didn't make it home.

'The lies that he told from the outset meant it was clear that he had something to do with her disappearance.

'When her body was located he was arrested and soon after that CCTV evidence would completely disprove his first account along with phone evidence.'

Addressing his interaction with police after joining them for a ride-along in the back of a marked car, Ms Hannan said: 'I think there's some audacity in his arrogance there in playing the martyr - saying 'why are people blaming me when I left her at that phone-box?' knowing full well where she was and what he'd done and the efforts he'd gone to to conceal her, to delay people finding her, if ever.

'It was apparent from the outset that Wesley was the last person to be with Keeley and he put himself forward as that person.

'But it soon became apparent that he was telling contradictory things to friends and family members.

'Then ultimately, we got evidence that completely disproved his account which led him to be the suspect in the investigation.

'Forensic evidence disproved subsequent accounts and ultimately pathology still disproves his final account as to the way Keeley died.'

Commenting on the lies he told to Ms Bunker's uncle, Ms Hannan said: 'He did the same to Keeley's father and even attended Keeley's house when she was missing and lied to them directly - which shows someone's character.'

Asked if she believed Streete was a sexual predator after also being found guilty of a series of sexual assaults on other women, the senior officer added: 'I think he's used his popularity to manipulate young women into situations where he thinks he can take advantage of them.'

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He told the court: 'I said 'do you know where Keeley is?', he said 'no' and that he walked her to the phone box and went home.

'I asked if she was drunk and he said 'no', he said he was more drunk than her.'

But Streete was caught on CCTV cameras walking through the park with Keeley, his DNA was also found on her body and her make up on his shirt.

The court was told he told 'lie after lie' claiming she was still alive when they parted ways but GPS date from his phone also showed he was in vicinity of the brook.

He also said he jumped on her back for a piggy back causing her to fall and fatally hit her head on a gatepost before saying he killed her by mistake during consensual sex.

Streete told the jury: 'I was scared. I've never been in that position. I've just killed my mate. I put trees over her so you couldn't see her naked.'

The court was told how the killer had moaned 'I feel like you're blaming me' to police after they took his phone during their investigation.

Streete seemed more concerned about officers looking through his Google searches, than helping police find his missing friend.

He said: 'I just don't want them (the police) to laugh if they go through my Google.'

Detectives investigating the disappearance of Ms Bunker, who was 4ft 11 inches tall and weighed just six-and-a-half stone, had turned their attentions to the man who was last with her, 'trusted' friend Streete.

Streete, who towered over Ms Bunker, had been among a group of pals on a night out to Birmingham earlier the previous evening.

But arriving back in Tamworth, Staffordshire, in the early hours of September 19, 2019, they parted ways with another friend and then walked together towards Ms Bunker's home, across town.

Ms Bunker was not seen alive again, and by the following evening, desperate searches were under way involving her family, close friends and police. 

Streete was taken by police on a ride-along in a marked patrol car to retrace their movements, claiming all the while that when he and Ms Bunker had parted, she was still alive.

But as detectives' suspicions grew, they told uniformed officers in the car to get Streete's phone.

In the exchange, caught on a body-worn camera, Streete, who was sitting in the back of the police car alongside his mother and father, said: 'I just feel like I'm getting the blame.

'You said when I was at the house that all I needed to do was speak to the officer and then I could go and look for Keeley.

'And then you take my phone off me.'

Officers, reassuring Streete, said: 'There's a lot of people involved in what is happening.

'There's people a lot higher up than us that are making decisions.'

Streete, pointing at his chest, replied: 'When you're going to take my phone, now I feel like you're blaming me.'

Asked for the phone's pass-code, he gave them a wrong number, although the police switched off the handset immediately after getting the correct digits, to preserve the battery.

The conversation happened just as Jason Brown found the body of his niece in nearby Wigginton Park, face-down, partially submerged in a brook and concealed by tree branches.

An hour later, officers captured on their body-worn video the moment Streete, of no fixed address but previously of St Austell Close, Tamworth, was formally arrested for the murder.

Asked if he had any questions as he was being driven to the custody block at Cannock, he replied: 'Not really.'

Jurors were told how later on in the journey Streete spoke of being hungry, and 'asked if there was food to eat when he got there'.

Police at the scene where Ms Bunker's body was discovered in a pond in Wiggington Park, Tamworth, Staffordshire at around 9pm on September 19 last year

Police at the scene where Ms Bunker's body was discovered in a pond in Wiggington Park, Tamworth, Staffordshire at around 9pm on September 19 last year

Father says he will 'never be at peace' until he is laid to rest with her'

Murdered Keeley Bunker's father said he will 'never be at peace' until he is laid to rest with her following the guilty verdicts.

Heartbreaking victim impact statements from her family were read out this afternoon by prosecutor Jacob Hallam.

Dad Christopher Bunker, 51, said: 'The day that Keeley was cruelly taken from us our lives changed forever. What was once a family home is now filled with sadness.

'Keeley's absence in the house has left us all struggling. Keeley loved children, she was due to attend an interview at her old school the day after the concert.

'She always said she wanted three or four children herself but she will sadly never bear my grandchildren.

'I will never walk her down the aisle and I am left with sadness and heartbreak. I don't think I will ever be at peace until I am laid to rest with Keeley.

'She was the glue that held us all together. I look into her sibling's eyes daily and see sadness. We all feel the anxiety of going out in public.

'We are treated with love, support and pity. There is no sentence long enough to cope with a life sentence of grief for her family left behind.'

Mother Deborah Watkins added: 'As a mum, I could give you a thousand pictures and say a million words but nothing could ever describe the beautiful daughter I had.

'She was the most caring and innocent young lady. On the day she was taken the lives of our family changed forever. They will never be the same again.

'Such is the hurt we feel we are incapable of showing forgiveness and we will never forget our Keeley.

'I have been robbed of my daughter and holding her hand through life's experiences. It will stay with me for the rest of my life.

'I can only hope she can rest easy now. Our precious and beautiful daughter Keeley will forever be in our heart and memories.'

Aunt Cheryl Watkins said in her statement: 'It was the worst day of our lives knowing that she was never coming home.

'She would have been scared, alone and she knew her attacker. Her family couldn't help. She was truly perfect inside and out but she didn't know it.

'Her family will remain broken and whatever sentence is passed it will never be enough. Streete will be able to see his family which Keeley will never be able to do. We hope people will remember Keeley for being the amazing girl she was.'  

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Streete was also convicted of forcing a girl to perform oral sex on her 16th birthday, raping a 19-year-old and and sexually assaulting a 15-year-old schoolgirl.

A further count of sexual activity with a child was discounted.

Detective Inspector Cheryl Hannan, of the force's Major Investigations Department, said: 'I welcome today's verdict and hope that it will bring some comfort to Keeley's family and friends.

'Throughout the police investigation and this trial, the three women who were raped and sexually assaulted by Streete have shown bravery.

'Keeley's death shocked everyone in the town and beyond and I would like to thank the local community of Tamworth who helped Keeley's family and the police investigation.'

In their impact statements, Streete's three other victims, who cannot be named for legal reasons, spoke of the horror they suffered at the hands of the sexual predator.

One woman said: 'After what he did to me, I thought it was going to destroy me but I haven't let it.

'I'm glad the truth has come to the light and that I, the other victims and Keeley's friends and family are getting the justice that's deserved.'

Another victim added: 'After Wesley attacked me, I was scared to tell anyone. However, looking back, if something made you physically sick in your stomach, it is definitely not ok.

'When I decided to speak out about my experience, I had to fight a lot of demons.

'A lot of the insecurities I masked over the year's came back. I have been left with a lot of psychological trauma.'

Another woman added: 'I believed that it was my fault [that I was raped] as I went back to his house when he invited me and then kissed him.

'It wasn't until I heard the sad news concerning Keeley that I found the courage to tell someone.

'It was at that point that I felt the full force of what happened to me, but by that time I had already dealt with my grief in what I feel was a bad way.'

The family and friends of Keeley Bunker remained dignified as the word 'guilty' was read out seven times at Stafford Crown Court earlier today. 

They sat in an overspill court room, due to the social distancing guidelines, watching a feed into the main court room where the jury delivered the verdicts in front of Streete.

There were audible signs of relief while some simply bowed their heads in silence. Moments later an officer from Staffordshire Police read out a statement on there behalf on the steps of the court as the family stood behind.

Many of them were wearing pink ties or flowers in memory of 20-year-old Keeley, who had been due for an interview for her 'dream' job working with children in a local school on the day she was murdered.

The family statement said: 'Keeley Bunker, our Keeley Bunks, was the kindest, most beautiful young lady you could ever wish to meet. Keeley was compassionate, loving, caring and would put others before herself always. 

'Keeley loved everyone unconditionally and nothing was ever too much trouble. She had many friends, she didn't realise just how many she had. We know that she was loved by all.

'We could never have wished for anymore from Keeley, she was perfect in every way. Her life was taken away so cruelly and far too soon. 

'Keeley had many dreams that have now all been stolen from both her and from us, her family and friends. We will not see Keeley marry, go on to have children, enjoy any holidays. The world was hers and Keeley was just beginning to live a happy life.

'As Keeley's family the outcome of this trial will never be enough in terms of justice. It will never bring our Keeley back to us. We miss her so much and words can never express the heartache we feel. 

'Never, ever will we forget the precious moments we had with our Keeley, together with all of the memories we will always hold dear. We love you Keeley. We would ask that our privacy is respected at this difficult time.'

In a victim impact statement read to court after Streete's conviction, Marc Ensor, partner of Ms Bunker's mother Debbie Watkins, said she had been 'a beautiful, kind, caring young lady' whose 'journey in life was only just starting'.

A jury today took just over eight hours to convict the former warehouse packer, pictured

A jury today took just over eight hours to convict the former warehouse packer, pictured

He said the family had been 'destroyed' by her death and thoughts of 'trying to visualise and understand just how such a dreadful thing could have happened to such a beautiful person like Keeley'.

Mr Ensor said Ms Bunker would 'do anything for anybody' and looked after her cousin, who had disabilities, or her auntie's children 'to take some pressure off'.

'Keeley loved doing it,' he said.

'She didn't have a bad bone in her body.

'She had so much love to give and had a bright future.

'Keeley's journey in life was only just starting at 20 years of age.

'A week before she had had her first weekend away to celebrate her birthday and she had so much in life still to sample.

'Instead, Keeley trusted an old school friend to walk her home and she never made it back.

'She was led into the darkness and never returned home to her family who loved her dearly.'

He added the family had been given 'a life sentence' and hoped justice would be served on Streete, who is due to be sentenced on Friday. 

Christopher Bunker, Ms Bunker's father, said a once-happy family home was now 'filled with sadness and emptiness' since his daughter was 'cruelly taken'.

He said Ms Bunker's sister and brother were now 'a shadow of how they used to be'.

Mr Bunker added: 'Keeley loved children and on the day that she was discovered, she was due to attend an interview at the infant school she once attended.

'She often talked about how she'd like three or more children herself.

'Sadly she will not fulfil that wish.'

He said: 'I will never be a proud father who walks her down the aisle - all of this has been taken away from me.'

Debbie Watkins, Ms Bunker's mother, said she had been 'robbed' of her 'precious and beautiful' daughter.

She added: 'As a mother I could give you a thousand images and say a million words, but nothing could ever describe the beautiful daughter cruelly taken away from her parents, her family and her friends.

'Keeley was the kindest, most caring, innocent young lady you could ever meet and was only just starting out in her life.'

She added: 'All of our lives have been massively broken and they will never be the same again.

'Such is the hell we feel we are incapable of showing any forgiveness and throughout our lives we will never forget our Keeley.'

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2020-08-06 00:44:24Z
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Coronavirus: Empty streets as Aberdeen lockdown takes effect - BBC News

The streets of Aberdeen were "eerily quiet" during the first night of Scotland's first local lockdown.

Nicola Sturgeon announced the tightening of restrictions on Wednesday after cases from a coronavirus cluster rose sharply.

Bars, cafes and restaurants will remain shut for at least seven days.

Extra police have been sent to the city to help increase patrols but the first minister said she hoped compliance would be voluntary.

More than 228,000 people living in the city were told they should not enter each other's homes or travel more than five miles as restrictions were re-imposed.

Officials later announced that visits to hospital and care homes from a named family member or friend would also be stopped, with only essential visits allowed.

The number of cases linked to bars in the city centre rose to 54 by Wednesday and the first minister said community transmission could not be ruled out.

By 21:30, BBC reporter Ben Philip described the streets as "eerily quiet".

The restrictions will be reviewed next Wednesday and may be extended further if required.

Police Scotland posted video of extra police officers from its Flexible Response Unit making their way to the city to support local police.

Deputy Chief Constable Will Kerr said: "We are putting somewhere between 10-15 extra patrols in the city from 17:00 on Thursday and over the next few days and the weekend, to reassure the vast majority of the public who will continue to comply with instructions and guidance because they know how important it is.

"But it is also to deal with a small minority who decide that they don't want to do something and put others' health at risk.

"We will clearly and undeniably enforce the law when it comes to those people."

Other organisations were also beginning to react to the re-imposed lockdown.

NHS Grampian suspended visiting at all Aberdeen hospitals with immediate effect, including Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Woodend Hospital, Cornhill Hospital, Royal Aberdeen Children's Hospital, Roxburghe House and the maternity hospital.

At her daily briefing, Ms Sturgeon said the situation in Aberdeen should be "the biggest wake-up call" since the early days of the pandemic.

Details of the cluster, which was initially linked to people who had visited the Hawthorn Bar on 26 July, first emerged on Sunday.

Ms Sturgeon said 54 cases had now been associated with the cluster and 191 close contacts had been traced through the Test and Protect system.

NHS Grampian has published a list of venues which have been visited by people linked to the cluster, including 28 bars and cafes.

They are:

  • Bieldside Inn, Bobbin, Brewdog (Castlegate), Buckie Farm Carvery, Café Andaluz, Café Dag, Café Drummond, The Cock & Bull, College Bar, The Dutch Mill, Dyce Carvery, East End Social Club, Ferryhill House Hotel, Hawthorn/Adam Lounge, The Howff, The Justice Mill, The Marine Hotel, McGinty's, McNasty's, Malmaison, Moonfish Café, No.10 Bar, O'Donoghues, Old Bank Bar, Prohibition, Soul, Spider's Web, The Draft Project.
  • The list also includes Aboyne, Deeside and Hazelhead golf clubs, and the Banks O'Dee Football Club.

People who have visited any of these premises recently are being urged to be "extra vigilant" about symptoms.

But some of these venues told BBC Scotland they had not been contacted by Test and Protect. Brewdog bar tweeted that it had not heard from the NHS service.

Stuart McPhee from Siberia bar in Belmont Street told the BBC: "We closed after a customer got in touch to say they had tested positive. We saw a list released by NHS Grampian and some venues don't even know they have been named.

"We need clear, concise protocols and messages that allow confidence to be built in the long term."

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2020-08-05 23:50:31Z
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Planning law overhaul for England takes next step - BBC News

Sweeping changes to England's planning system will "cut red tape, but not standards," Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick has said.

Under draft new laws, first revealed on Sunday, developers will be granted "automatic" permission to build homes and schools on sites for "growth".

It follows Boris Johnson's pledge to "build back better" after coronavirus.

But critics warn it could lead to "bad-quality housing" and loss of local control over development.

Mr Johnson promised to speed up investment into homes and infrastructure in June to help the UK recover from the economic impact of coronavirus.

But Labour's shadow housing and planning minister, Mike Amesbury, said the new plan was a "developer's charter that will see communities side-lined in decisions and denied vital funding for building schools, clinics and community infrastructure".

The government's planning white paper, which goes out to consultation on Thursday, contains wide-ranging measures aimed at speeding up house building.

The changes are expected to only impact England, as planning policy is devolved to the administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Mr Jenrick said: "Our complex planning system has been a barrier to building the homes people need.

"These once in a generation reforms will lay the foundations for a brighter future, providing more homes for young people and creating better quality neighbourhoods and homes across the country.

"Planning decisions will be simple and transparent, with local democracy at the heart of the process."

But the chairman of the Local Government Association, James Jamieson, said the idea that planning was a barrier to house building was "a myth".

From planning to building

Mr Jamieson claimed that nine in 10 planning applications were approved by councils, and more than a million homes given permission in the last decade had yet to be built.

Homeless charity Shelter said 280,000 homes received permission in England between 2011 and 2016 but were never built.

BBC Reality Check said there had been criticism in recent years of the amount of time it takes to get planning permission - but it also noted many developers secure planning permission and then do not immediately build.

Planning rows raise high passions.

For Jacky Nabb, a proposal to build 3,000 houses near her home in the Oxfordshire countryside felt to her like "somebody just twisted my stomach".

She added: "It sounds really dramatic, but it broke my heart".

The has been a four-year battle over the prospective new town at Chalgrove - and a broader plan for local homes - with bitter political skirmishing and the personal intervention of the housing secretary.

But still, not a single brick has been laid here.

It is exactly this sort of delay ministers want to sweep away.

Under their policy, once a local plan is agreed, developers in some places could press on with confidence.

But local Conservatives have opposed the Chalgrove plan too, just as they have many other developments.

Will the government hold firm should campaigning Tories - under fire from home-owning voters - turn on this policy?

Making yet another announcement about homes is easy. Turning it into real change will require political courage.

A number of new planning measures were announced by the government in June.

From September, home owners will be allowed to build above their properties without going through the normal planning process and developers will be able build above - or demolish and rebuild - vacant premises, or change the use of a town centre shops, without planning permission.

Builders will also be allowed to convert a wider range of commercial properties into homes - despite criticism in a government-commissioned report that the existing policy has led to poor quality, cramped flats with low quality of life for their residents.

New proposals, revealed by Mr Jenrick on Sunday, are now being put forward by the government in a white paper, including:

  • Designating land into three categories - "growth", "renewal" or "protected" - affecting the level of planning permission needed
  • A fast-track planning system for "beautiful buildings"
  • New online planning proposals so that local communities "will be consulted from the very beginning of the planning process"
  • All new streets will have to be tree-lined
  • Making all councils have a local plan for housing

The plans also include the "first homes scheme", to provide newly-built homes at a 30% per cent discount for local people, key workers and first-time buyers.

And the government will introduce a new national charge for developers - replacing the existing Section 106 agreements and the Community Infrastructure Levy - to fund projects such as schools, roads and GP surgeries.

But the chief executive of the National Housing Federation, Kate Henderson, said Section 106 agreements are "the single biggest contribution to building new affordable homes in the country", as they require private developers to build a certain amount of social homes in every new development.

She said: "Any alternative to Section 106 must ensure we can deliver more high quality affordable homes to meet the huge demand across the country."

A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said the new levy would "aim to at least maintain revenue levels nationally when compared to the current system, and to ensure that delivery of affordable housing on-site is maintained, to create mixed and balanced communities".

'Make a bad situation much worse'

The government will also pledge in the white paper to make all new homes carbon neutral by 2050, stopping all new buildings from needing retrofitting.

The Wildlife Trusts said, while there were "fundamental flaws" in current planning rules, the new laws around "growth", "renewal" and "protected" areas would "make a bad situation much worse".

The charity group's director of campaigning and policy, Nikki Williams, said: "The government may find it inconvenient that wildlife won't stick to its three categories and survives outside protected areas, as well as thriving on some brownfield sites that it would like to see developed.

"Local authorities will have to be far better resourced with access to high-quality ecological data."

It's hard to be sure about these proposals from the environmental perspective because key details are missing.

One policy unifies green critics - the plan to make all homes carbon neutral by 2050.

Labour promised to achieve that by 2016, and environmentalists condemned the later date as "pitiful".

They also fear the zoning system will do little to help the wildlife that lives outside protected areas.

The current system governed by councillors is very flexible. The zoning system would be more rigid.

Apart from that, confusion abounds.

What happens, for instance, if citizens devising their local plan decide their whole area should fall into the "protection" category? Can they reject all new homes on their patch?

If so, what's the role of the government's housing targets?

Perhaps answers will emerge.

But I'm told some officials in the department think these plans have been rushed and are rather a "dog's dinner".

The UK's planning system was effectively established in 1947, two years after the end of the war, with the Town and Country Planning Act.

The Conservative Party has repeatedly pledged to "build and fund" 40 new or rebuilt NHS hospitals before 2029, while the PM has promised the "most radical reforms" of the planning system since World War Two.

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2020-08-05 21:30:09Z
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