Selasa, 03 November 2020

Coronavirus: Confusion over furlough scheme in Scotland after minister rows back on extension promise - Sky News

Nicola Sturgeon has called for clarity over whether the furlough scheme will be extended beyond 2 December in Scotland if needed.

Scotland's first minister made the call after Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick told Sky News' Kay Burley it would be a decision for the chancellor to take after the nationwide lockdown in England ends at the beginning of December.

The day before, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said if other parts of the UK needed to go into measures that required the furlough scheme it would be available to them "not just now, but, of course, in the future as well".

Live updates on coronavirus from UK and around world

But less than 24 hours later, Mr Jenrick said: "What we've said is we'll continue to say the furlough scheme is UK-wide.

"It was always UK-wide and we want it to continue to be in the future.

"So, if it's necessary to be unemployed again then that's for the chancellor to look at.

More from Covid-19

"But, everybody throughout the UK today can be assured that furlough at 80% will be available until 2 December."

When asked if the furlough scheme will be extended to Scotland beyond that, he said: "That's a decision the chancellor will have to make."

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick was pressed on government plans for second national lockdown
Image: Robert Jenrick said the chancellor would have to make a decision on whether furlough was extended beyond 2 December

Ian Blackford, leader of the SNP in the House of Commons, said it is only right that businesses and communities in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales should have the same support as England.

He told Sky News: "I asked the PM a very straightforward question yesterday whether the Scottish government would have that and his first answer was simply 'yes'.

"He backed that up with other parliamentarians but there seems to be real confusion with other parliamentarians in London.

"This is not acceptable because governments have got to take public health decisions based on scientific advice, they need to know if they do that that the financial support people need will be there.

"What we're getting from Jenrick, is it the case that businesses in England will be protected but we'll have to see whether the same can be extended to other parts of the United Kingdom.

"It really does demonstrate that this is done to suit people in London and the south of England."

Scotland currently has a five-tier system, with different areas in a tier that reflects the number of COVID-19 cases and the growth rate for that area.

No area is above level three at the moment, with the highest tier, level four being almost a full lockdown, but only if absolutely necessary.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiiAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1jb25mdXNpb24tb3Zlci1mdXJsb3VnaC1zY2hlbWUtaW4tc2NvdGxhbmQtYWZ0ZXItbWluaXN0ZXItcm93cy1iYWNrLW9uLWV4dGVuc2lvbi1wcm9taXNlLTEyMTIyNDE30gGMAWh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1jb25mdXNpb24tb3Zlci1mdXJsb3VnaC1zY2hlbWUtaW4tc2NvdGxhbmQtYWZ0ZXItbWluaXN0ZXItcm93cy1iYWNrLW9uLWV4dGVuc2lvbi1wcm9taXNlLTEyMTIyNDE3?oc=5

2020-11-03 10:03:12Z
52781162487302

Coronavirus: Confusion over furlough scheme in Scotland after minister rows back on extension promise - Sky News

Nicola Sturgeon has called for clarity over whether the furlough scheme will be extended beyond 2 December in Scotland if needed.

Scotland's first minister made the call after Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick told Sky News' Kay Burley it would be a decision for the chancellor to take after the nationwide lockdown in England ends at the beginning of December.

The day before, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said if other parts of the UK needed to go into measures that required the furlough scheme it would be available to them "not just now, but, of course, in the future as well".

Live updates on coronavirus from UK and around world

But less than 24 hours later, Mr Jenrick said: "What we've said is we'll continue to say the furlough scheme is UK-wide.

"It was always UK-wide and we want it to continue to be in the future.

"So, if it's necessary to be unemployed again then that's for the chancellor to look at.

More from Covid-19

"But, everybody throughout the UK today can be assured that furlough at 80% will be available until 2 December."

When asked if the furlough scheme will be extended to Scotland beyond that, he said: "That's a decision the chancellor will have to make."

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick was pressed on government plans for second national lockdown
Image: Robert Jenrick said the chancellor would have to make a decision on whether furlough was extended beyond 2 December

Ian Blackford, leader of the SNP in the House of Commons, said it is only right that businesses and communities in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales should have the same support as England.

He told Sky News: "I asked the PM a very straightforward question yesterday whether the Scottish government would have that and his first answer was simply 'yes'.

"He backed that up with other parliamentarians but there seems to be real confusion with other parliamentarians in London.

"This is not acceptable because governments have got to take public health decisions based on scientific advice, they need to know if they do that that the financial support people need will be there.

"What we're getting from Jenrick, is it the case that businesses in England will be protected but we'll have to see whether the same can be extended to other parts of the United Kingdom.

"It really does demonstrate that this is done to suit people in London and the south of England."

Scotland currently has a five-tier system, with different areas in a tier that reflects the number of COVID-19 cases and the growth rate for that area.

No area is above level three at the moment, with the highest tier, level four being almost a full lockdown, but only if absolutely necessary.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiiAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1jb25mdXNpb24tb3Zlci1mdXJsb3VnaC1zY2hlbWUtaW4tc2NvdGxhbmQtYWZ0ZXItbWluaXN0ZXItcm93cy1iYWNrLW9uLWV4dGVuc2lvbi1wcm9taXNlLTEyMTIyNDE30gGMAWh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1jb25mdXNpb24tb3Zlci1mdXJsb3VnaC1zY2hlbWUtaW4tc2NvdGxhbmQtYWZ0ZXItbWluaXN0ZXItcm93cy1iYWNrLW9uLWV4dGVuc2lvbi1wcm9taXNlLTEyMTIyNDE3?oc=5

2020-11-03 09:56:10Z
52781162487302

The UK’s second wave of coronavirus may not be worse than the first - Financial Times

Boris Johnson told MPs on Monday that he had “no alternative” but to order a second lockdown in England to prevent coronavirus deaths being twice as bad this winter as they were in the spring.

But MPs and experts disagree over the rationale for the new measures, with differences over the Covid-19 numbers and their interpretation inevitable when, like economic statistics, none of the data is measured perfectly and much of it is already out of date.

This means the emerging evidence for the severity of the second wave is inconclusive, but there are five reasons to suggest that this autumn’s lockdown measures are taking place earlier in the upswing of Covid-19 than in March, and are likely to cause less economic pain.

The level of Covid-19 infections is high, but likely to be lower than in March

In the week to November 2, an average of 22,739 people in the UK tested positive for Covid-19 each day. But counting the number of positive cases generally gives low results because not everyone takes a test and many are asymptomatic.

In the week ending October 23, the random testing survey undertaken by the Office for National Statistics estimated there were around 51,900 daily infections in England alone, with a plausible range spanning between 38,500 and 79,200. Half of these cases were people showing no symptoms of the disease.

The Covid symptom study run by King’s College London estimates the number of infections in the UK is running between approximately 40,000 and 45,000 a day, while the latest survey from Imperial College London suggested there were 96,000 new infections per day in England between October 16 and 25.

Chart showing that different models and methods produce very different estimates of current UK infection numbers, though all are far lower than estimated levels in March

All of these figures are significantly higher than the daily number of positive tests, but, as Tim Spector, professor of genetic epidemiology at King's College, said, recent data suggested that “cases have not spiralled out of control”.

The rate of daily infections is also much lower than estimates of the number in March around the time of the original lockdown. Then, estimates from both Cambridge university and Imperial College suggested there were between 300,000 and 400,000 per day.

Care is needed interpreting data on hospitalisations and deaths

New Covid-19 hospitalisations in England reached 1,345 in England last Thursday, a figure higher than the 1,128 total on March 23 when Mr Johnson announced the original lockdown.

But admissions were doubling in less than a week in late March, while they have been doubling at half that rate in October. In the first wave, medical staff also operated a strict triage tool, limiting care for some of the most vulnerable. There has been easier access to care so far this autumn.

Death rates also show very different trends compared with the spring. At the peak of the first wave, deaths in excess of the national average were twice the recorded number of daily Covid-19 deaths. In the second wave so far, excess deaths have been roughly the same.

Line chart of English deaths showing Unlike the first wave, excess deaths are in line with daily recorded deaths in the second wave

There is evidence the UK’s second Covid-19 wave is already slowing

The number of cases, hospitalisations and deaths is still rising, but there is evidence emerging that the growth rate of the virus is already slowing.

Government scientists estimate the reproduction number — the number of people infected by each person with coronavirus — is between 1.1 and 1.3 across the UK. This means the virus is still growing. But the R-number has declined from a peak of between 1.4 and 1.6 at the start of October just after university terms began.

Chart showing that models suggest the rate of Covid-19 transmission has been decreasing throughout October, though it still remains above 1

Positive cases have begun to decline in some of the worst-hit areas of the UK — the north-east of England, the Liverpool city region and student towns. This suggests there is significantly less additional action needed to see case numbers decline than in the spring.

Oliver Johnson, director of the Institute for Statistical Science at Bristol University, said: “It's not that things have got worse, it's that they haven't got better as much as we'd hoped current measures would achieve”.

Epidemiologists disagree about the likely spread of the second wave

The second wave has been more serious than the government’s “reasonable worst-case scenario” because the effect of restrictions in stopping the spread of coronavirus has been modest so far.

This bad news does not mean that epidemiologists agree on the likely number of cases and deaths from a second wave. In a feature well known to economists, who also deal with uncertain data and human behaviour, forecasts vary a lot.

Chart showing that projections of the autumn/winter death toll vary wildly, and actual numbers have already exceeded the government’s own “worst case scenario”

Prof Carl Heneghan of Oxford university, for example, on Monday criticised a model used by the government to justify the second lockdown that suggested deaths could peak at 4,000 a day, saying more recent data proved it was already “invalid”. However, Prof Neil Ferguson of Imperial College countered that the model was intended as a worst-case scenario and insisted that on current trends “the second wave is set to exceed the first wave in hospital demand and deaths”.

Prof Ferguson’s comment was based on the R-number remaining higher than 1. If the lockdown swiftly brings it below 1, it is highly unlikely the UK will suffer the 67,000 excess deaths that were recorded in the spring.

The economic consequences of a second lockdown appear less painful than the first

With UK gross domestic product plunging 19.8 per cent in the second quarter, and likely to perform worse in 2020 than in any year for more than a century, there are significant fears about a second lockdown.

Economists think the effects will be serious but far less damaging than in the first wave — or than if nothing was done to tame the virus. Some activity, such as public transport use, has not come back since the spring, while the government is actively seeking to keep sectors such as construction, education and manufacturing operating during the second lockdown.

Column chart of GDP forecast (%) showing The lockdown announcement has prompted some revisions to economic forecasts

With hopes that the restrictions will end in December, consumers are more likely to postpone rather than cancel spending plans. Compared with the huge drop in the second quarter, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research forecast a 3.3 per cent hit to GDP in the fourth quarter.

Hande Kucuk, NIESR deputy director, said while the situation was uncertain and the lockdown had caused the institute to cut its forecasts, the outlook “depends critically on whether we win the fight against Covid-19”.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiP2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50LzQ0NjEyNGNiLTE3ZWEtNDkxMy1hMGFkLWZjMjIzMGRjNjRlY9IBP2h0dHBzOi8vYW1wLmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50LzQ0NjEyNGNiLTE3ZWEtNDkxMy1hMGFkLWZjMjIzMGRjNjRlYw?oc=5

2020-11-03 04:01:16Z
52781155967431

Ministers suggest Nicola Sturgeon WON'T get powers to pay furlough - Daily Mail

Ministers suggest Nicola Sturgeon WON'T get powers to spend BILLIONS paying 80% furlough to Scots after lockdown in England ends – despite Boris Johnson hinting she would

  • Nicola Sturgeon demanding furlough in Scotland after England lockdown ends
  • Boris Johnson suggested last night that the support could still be available
  • Ministers insisted today the scheme is 'UK-wide' and Treasury will decide on end 

Ministers today suggested Nicola Sturgeon will not get powers to pay 80 per cent furlough to Scots after lockdown ends in England - despite Boris Johnson hinting she would yesterday.

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said it would be down to the Treasury whether the coronavirus support package continued after December 2.

The comments tee up a major row, with Ms Sturgeon complaining that she needs more financial freedom to respond to the crisis.

She tweeted this morning: 'I'm sorry to say that @scotgov has no more detail now than we did before PM statement yesterday. Woolly words don't pay people's wages.'

The Westminster government is desperately scrambling to find a way of combating a spike in support for independence north of the border, as the SNP calls for a fresh referendum as early as next year. 

As a new five-Tier local lockdown system came into force in Scotland yesterday, Ms Sturgeon said she is considering a nationwide squeeze depending on whether she can pay full furlough.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has extended the UK-wide scheme in England during the looming blanket clampdown, which is due to run from Thursday until December 2.

Boris Johnson
Nicola Sturgeon

Ministers today suggested Nicola Sturgeon (pictured right) will not get powers to pay 80 per cent furlough to Scots after lockdown ends in England - despite Boris Johnson (left) hinting she would yesterday

Scotland has already received billions from Westminster coffers for coronavirus fight

Scotland has already received more than £6.5billion from the UK Government in direct response to the coronavirus crisis, figures reveal.

That is more than half of all the Covid-cash handed out to devolved administrations to help fend off the worst of the crisis.

And it is on top of UK-wide schemes like furlough and the Job Support Scheme that was unveiled by Mr Sunak in September.

According to the most recent figures, in comparison to Scotland's £6.5billion, Wales received £4billion and Northern Ireland £2.2billion.

Additionally the devolved administrations are also receiving over £950 million in the 2020-21 financial year to maintain direct payments to farmers. 

The amount of money is determined by a system called the Barnett Formula

It is a system used by the UK Government to figure out how much funding should be given to the other home nations when it decides to spend more or less on something in England. 

It was devised by the former Labour Chief Secretary to the Treasury Joel Barnett back in 1978. 

While it has no standing in law it has now been used by the Treasury for more than 40 years to calculate funding figures. 

It is controversial because the amount of money handed out to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in the form of a block grant from Westminster is calculated based on population and what powers have been devolved Whitehall.

This should mean that in theory spending should go up and down equally.    

But the calculations are complicated and Scotland started with higher spending per head when the formula was first used which means that discrepancy is baked into the system. 

The formula was only ever supposed to be temporary and even its architect said in 2014 that it was 'unfair and should be stopped'.  

In August Tory MPs slammed the 'funding discrepancy' after official statistics showed public spending per person north of the border was almost £2,000 more than the UK average.  

They showed that total public sector expenditure for the benefit of Scotland, including both UK and Scottish government spending, has increased by just over three per cent to £81 billion.

That is equivalent to £14,829 being spent on public services per person in Scotland, some £1,633 per person greater than the UK average. 

Conservative backbenchers in Westminster said that if the SNP government in Holyrood believed in independence then it should refuse to accept English taxpayers 'subsidising their services'. 

They claimed that Nicola Sturgeon and her party 'berate everything that comes out of Westminster - apart from the money'. 

Advertisement

It pays 80 per cent of usual salary to workers whose jobs are put on hold by the measures, up to a ceiling of £2,500 a month. 

Ms Sturgeon said: 'I made clear last week, when I set out the levels that would apply initially, that we might yet have to go further and that we can't rule out – and shouldn't rule out – a move to Level 4 for all or parts of the country.

'And while that decision would never be easy, there is no doubt that the availability of a more extensive furlough scheme of the kind that the Prime Minister announced on Saturday would make it slightly less difficult because workers would have more of their wages paid.'

Describing the 'dilemma' the Scottish Government now faces, Ms Sturgeon added: 'The decision we have to weigh up in coming days is this one – should we take the opportunity of more generous financial support to step harder on the brakes now, to try to drive infection rates down faster and more firmly?

'The potential benefit of that would be suppressing Covid further and faster, at a time when financial support is available and possibly – I don't want to overstate this – but possibly opening up a bit more breathing space over the Christmas period.

'At this stage, the indication is that the more generous funding scheme is only going to be available for the next month during the period of England's lockdown.'

The First Minister said she and her counterparts from Wales and Northern Ireland pressed at a Cobra meeting yesterday for the furlough scheme to be available for the devolved administrations whenever they require.

She added she hopes to 'get absolute clarity on that point from the Treasury'.   

Mr Johnson came under fire from his own side in the Commons yesterday, when Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross called on him to extend availability of the furlough scheme. 

'The PM is right, the furlough scheme is UK-wide for next month, but the crucial answer we need is will it be available to other nations of the UK if in the future the science demands that further lockdowns are required anywhere in the country?' Mr Ross said.

'And if he can't give that commitment, will he explain why it seems an English job is more important than a Welsh, Northern Irish or Scottish one?'

In response, Mr Johnson suggested that the scheme could be available in Scotland beyond December 2.

'The furlough is a UK-wide scheme,' he said. 'If other parts of the UK decide to go into measures which require the furlough scheme then of course it's available to them, that has to be right and that applies not just now but of course in the future as well.'

Ms Sturgeon tweeted: 'If this bears out, it is v welcome. However @scotgov seeking urgent confirmation from Treasury that it will be exactly as we asked for – furlough beyond 2 December, non time-limited and on same basis as available through Nov, inc on eligibility and 80% wages paid.'

But Mr Jenrick appeared to row back the commitment in a round of interviews this morning.

He stressed furlough was a 'UK-wide scheme', adding: 'It will be available to everybody in the UK until the 2nd December.

'At that point I think the Chancellor quite rightly will have to decide what its future is.'

Scotland has already received more than £6.5billion from the UK Government in direct response to the coronavirus crisis, figures reveal.

That is more than half of all the Covid-cash handed out to devolved administrations to help fend off the worst of the crisis.

And it is on top of UK-wide schemes like furlough and the Job Support Scheme that was unveiled by Mr Sunak in September.

According to the most recent figures, in comparison to Scotland's £6.5billion, Wales received £4billion and Northern Ireland £2.2billion.

Additionally the devolved administrations are also receiving over £950million in the 2020-21 financial year to maintain direct payments to farmers. 

The amount of money is determined by a system called the Barnett Formula

It is a system used by the UK Government to figure out how much funding should be given to the other home nations when it decides to spend more or less on something in England. 

It was devised by the former Labour Chief Secretary to the Treasury Joel Barnett back in 1978. 

While it has no standing in law it has now been used by the Treasury for more than 40 years to calculate funding figures. 

It is controversial because the amount of money handed out to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in the form of a block grant from Westminster is calculated based on population and what powers have been devolved Whitehall.

This should mean that in theory spending should go up and down equally.    

But the calculations are complicated and Scotland started with higher spending per head when the formula was first used which means that discrepancy is baked into the system. 

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said it would be down to the Treasury whether the furlough package continued after December 2

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said it would be down to the Treasury whether the furlough package continued after December 2

The formula was only ever supposed to be temporary and even its architect said in 2014 that it was 'unfair and should be stopped'.  

In August Tory MPs slammed the 'funding discrepancy' after official statistics showed public spending per person north of the border was almost £2,000 more than the UK average.  

They showed that total public sector expenditure for the benefit of Scotland, including both UK and Scottish government spending, has increased by just over three per cent to £81 billion.

That is equivalent to £14,829 being spent on public services per person in Scotland, some £1,633 per person greater than the UK average. 

Conservative backbenchers in Westminster said that if the SNP government in Holyrood believed in independence then it should refuse to accept English taxpayers 'subsidising their services'. 

They claimed that Ms Sturgeon and her party 'berate everything that comes out of Westminster - apart from the money'. 

A postcode checker has been launched to help people in Scotland check where their area is in the new five-level system, which came into force at 6am.

The levels have been graded from 0 to 4, with no local authorities currently placed in the highest tier.

Levels 1, 2 and 3 are broadly comparable to the three tiers of restrictions set in England – before their national lockdown later this week – while Level 0 is similar to what was in place across Scotland in August when the virus was suppressed to very low levels.

Home visiting, with some exceptions, is banned across Scotland.

The central belt – including Edinburgh, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Stirling and Falkirk – has been joined by Dundee and Ayrshire in Level 3, where hospitality businesses are banned from selling alcohol and must close at 6pm.

Six people from two households can meet in public outdoors, which is the same rule as in Level 2, which applies to Aberdeenshire, Aberdeen, Fife, the Borders, Dumfries and Galloway, Argyll and Bute, Perth and Kinross and Angus.

In these areas indoor hospitality venues must close at 8pm and outdoor areas by 10.30pm.

Elsewhere, Highland, Moray, Western Isles, Orkney and Shetland have entered Level 1.

Hospitality businesses must close by 10.30pm, both inside and outside.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtODkwODU0My9NaW5pc3RlcnMtc3VnZ2VzdC1OaWNvbGEtU3R1cmdlb24tV09OVC1wb3dlcnMtcGF5LWZ1cmxvdWdoLmh0bWzSAXRodHRwczovL3d3dy5kYWlseW1haWwuY28udWsvbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlLTg5MDg1NDMvYW1wL01pbmlzdGVycy1zdWdnZXN0LU5pY29sYS1TdHVyZ2Vvbi1XT05ULXBvd2Vycy1wYXktZnVybG91Z2guaHRtbA?oc=5

2020-11-03 08:20:00Z
52781162487302

Coronavirus: Cyber Security Centre handled record number of incidents over past year - Sky News

The UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) handled a record number of cyber security incidents over the last year, according to its annual review, which is published today.

The agency handled 723 serious incidents between last September and the end of August - a 20% increase on the 602 it handled the year before. More than 200 of these incidents were related to the coronavirus.

Earlier this year the NCSC warned that bogus emails posing as communications from health authorities were being sent with links claiming to provide important updates, which when clicked instead lead to devices being infected with malware.

An engineer from the Israeli company "Commun.it" uses his expertise in social media commercial analysis to identify networks of fake users during at the group's office in the Israeli city of Bnei Brak near Tel Aviv on January 23, 2019. - A coalition of Israeli diplomats, programmers and hackers have joined forces to stave off threats -- including from hostile states -- by identifying networks on social media and getting them removed. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP) (Photo credit should read JACK GUEZ
Image: Russian hackers have targeted vaccine research in the UK

Other issues the agency and the government have warned of include attacks from state-sponsored hackers, including the Russian Federation, attempting to spy on the UK's vaccine research.

Three years after the WannaCry ransomware attack, and with the NHS facing exceptional amount of strain due to the pandemic, the NCSC was directed by the Department of Health and Social Care to check the security of NHS IT systems.

It examined more than a million IP addresses across the NHS IT estate, leading the agency to identify 160 high-risk and critical vulnerabilities that attackers could have exploited to disrupt clinical care.

The annual review also revealed that one of NCSC's sub-departments, the UK Key Production Authority (UKKPA) celebrated a very delayed success this year in moving an old (if very secure) paper-based system into the digital world.

More from Covid-19

UKKPA is responsible for creating and distributing the cryptographic keys used by the military and other organisations in the UK which need to communicate with an exceptional level of protection.

For a long time, these keys have been printed on spools of punched paper tape which are physically transported in protected canisters to battleships and other very sensitive locations.

Cryptographic keys are no longer stored on punched paper tape
Image: Cryptographic keys are no longer stored on punched paper tape

As reported by Computer Business Review, which revealed that the paper tape was still being used last year, it has been hard to replace because it has such a crucial function across "a sweeping range of secure infrastructure, including the cockpits of fighter jets, military radios, and submarines".

Now, according to the annual review, the UKKPA has developed a replacement method by producing these keys "in an electronic, highly secure format, meeting the advanced requirements of national and international defence partners".

LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 27: Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn presents documents related to post-Brexit UK-US Trade talks as he speaks during an election policy announcement on the NHS at church house n Westminster on November 27, 2019 in London, England. The United Kingdom will go to the polls in a general election on December 12. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Image: Jeremy Corbyn with the trade papers

NCSC also stated it "played a bigger role than ever in defending the UK's democratic processes", and issued "specific guidance on how to respond to targeted phishing attacks" to more than 200 prominent figures, including government ministers.

Despite this guidance, the report acknowledged that the government has accused Russian actors of interfering in the 2019 General Election, when they had amplified access to trade documents subsequently cited by Jeremy Corbyn during an election debate.

The NCSC declined to respond to questions about whether the agency had done enough to defend the UK's democratic processes in the light of reports that the trade papers used to interfere in the election were stolen from Liam Fox's email inbox.

The agency's new chief executive, Lindy Cameron, said the annual review outlined "the breadth of remarkable work delivered by the NCSC in the past year, largely against a backdrop of the shared global crisis of coronavirus.

"From handling hundreds of incidents to protecting our democratic institutions and keeping people safe while working remotely, our expertise has delivered across multiple frontiers.

"This has all been achieved with the fantastic support of government, businesses and citizens and I would urge them to continue contributing to our collective cyber security."

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMid2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2Nvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWN5YmVyLXNlY3VyaXR5LWNlbnRyZS1oYW5kbGVkLXJlY29yZC1udW1iZXItb2YtaW5jaWRlbnRzLW92ZXItcGFzdC15ZWFyLTEyMTIxOTg10gF7aHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL2Nvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWN5YmVyLXNlY3VyaXR5LWNlbnRyZS1oYW5kbGVkLXJlY29yZC1udW1iZXItb2YtaW5jaWRlbnRzLW92ZXItcGFzdC15ZWFyLTEyMTIxOTg1?oc=5

2020-11-03 02:37:23Z
52781164069316

Senin, 02 November 2020

Hospital frontline: NHS “could be overwhelmed” by surge in Covid cases - BBC News - BBC News

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiK2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnlvdXR1YmUuY29tL3dhdGNoP3Y9SE9QY3pwdW9vX2_SAQA?oc=5

2020-11-02 23:01:54Z
CCAiC0hPUGN6cHVvb19vmAEB

Coronavirus: Don't underestimate deep discontent among Conservatives running out of faith in Boris Johnson - Sky News

National lockdown number two. It was a policy that two weeks ago, the prime minister not only rejected on the floor of the House of Commons but lambasted Sir Keir Starmer for supporting.

So to come to the House Commons on Monday to ask parliament to back a four-week lockdown was always going to be deeply uncomfortable for Boris Johnson and the U-turn has deeply angered many of his MPs.

They are angry not just on the substance of the U-turn - many deeply opposed to further restrictions - but the way in which the prime minister and his team handled the politics.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'I make no apology for trying to avoid lockdown'

Less than two weeks ago, Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ) had asked MPs to share clips on social media showing the prime minister attacking Sir Keir, the Labour leader, for calling for a short national lockdown.

CCHQ pumped out a clip of the prime minister declaring that the idea of a "circuit breaker" lockdown was "wrong for this country", while his own "commonsensical local and regional approach" was the right thing to do.

MPs who loyally championed that message could be forgiven for feeling rather aggrieved now.

At least the prime minister appeared in the Commons on Monday to have learnt something from this politically difficult U-turn, as he refused to rule anything in or out as he addressed MPs.

More from Boris Johnson

What he was clear about was the impending national restrictions would expire on 2 December and MPs would have a vote on what comes next.

What Mr Johnson wouldn't promise was an end to those restrictions.

He "intends" to return to a tiered system - but it will depend on the "latest data and trends".

And, as the pattern of the virus changes, the prime minister is moving the goalposts too - his game plan changing amid concerns around public compliance, a faltering Test and Trace system and worsening COVID-19 data.

While a few weeks ago Mr Johnson promised us the hope of a normal Christmas, on Monday he spoke only of beating the virus by the spring.

For a prime minister that trades in optimism, sticking to gritty realism is not his comfortable spot.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'PM's shown catastrophic failure of leadership'

But for MPs like Douglas Ross, the leader of the Scottish Conservatives, it's a better position to be in than the knots the party has tied itself in in recent weeks.

He told Sky News: "The prime minister is giving people hope that this circuit breaker lockdown is only going to last four weeks.

"But we also can't guarantee that we'll be in the right place in a month's time, so again - like ruling out a national lockdown - I don't think we can rule anything out and we'll have to keep all options open."

As for the Commons vote on Wednesday for MPs to authorise the new national restrictions, it will pass after Labour confirmed that it will back the lockdown.

That, in turn, has rather taken in the wind out of the Tory rebellions which once might have had teeth but will now be symbolic.

Sir Charles Walker, vice-chair of the 1922 Committee of Conservative backbenchers, told Sky News he thinks in the end that the rebellion might not pass 20 people.

But do not underestimate the deep discontent in the party that is fast running out of faith in their prime minister and his Number 10 operation.

Mr Johnson's glimmer of hope on Monday was the prospect of millions of rapid tests to lift the country out of lockdowns, as he dangled the possibility of city-wide testing as part of efforts to catch cases and break chains of transmission.

Such a breakthrough would be a game-changer for the country and for Mr Johnson's premiership too.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMijAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1kb250LXVuZGVyZXN0aW1hdGUtZGVlcC1kaXNjb250ZW50LWFtb25nLWNvbnNlcnZhdGl2ZXMtcnVubmluZy1vdXQtb2YtZmFpdGgtaW4tYm9yaXMtam9obnNvbi0xMjEyMjIwONIBkAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvY29yb25hdmlydXMtZG9udC11bmRlcmVzdGltYXRlLWRlZXAtZGlzY29udGVudC1hbW9uZy1jb25zZXJ2YXRpdmVzLXJ1bm5pbmctb3V0LW9mLWZhaXRoLWluLWJvcmlzLWpvaG5zb24tMTIxMjIyMDg?oc=5

2020-11-02 21:27:37Z
52781155967431