Selasa, 25 Mei 2021

Tory Islamophobia inquiry: Anti-Muslim sentiment 'remains a problem' within Conservative Party, report finds - Sky News

Anti-Muslim sentiment "remains a problem" within the Conservative Party, an independent report has found.

Professor Swaran Singh, a former equality and human rights commissioner, analysed 1,418 complaints relating to 727 separate incidents as recorded in the Tories' complaints database between 2015 and 2020.

In a 44,000-word report on his findings, he said: "Judging by the extent of complaints and findings of misconduct by the party itself that relate to anti-Muslim words and conduct, anti-Muslim sentiment remains a problem within the party.

"This is damaging to the party, and alienates a significant section of society."

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June 2019 - Tory leadership rivals sign up to Islamophobia inquiry

Prof Singh's review was published almost two years after all five candidates in the 2019 Conservative leadership contest - including eventual winner Boris Johnson - committed to an independent inquiry into allegations of Islamophobia within the party.

He also found:

• Two-thirds of all incidents reported to the complaints team at the Tories' headquarters related to allegations of anti-Muslim discrimination
• Three-quarters of all incidents recorded in the Tories' complaints database involved social media
• High-profile incidents, such as remarks made during Lord Goldsmith's London mayoral campaign and Mr Johnson's comments on Muslim women in burqas, "give the impression to many that the party and its leadership are insensitive to Muslim communities"
• The Conservatives' complaints system is "in need of overhaul" due to its "under-resourced and inadequately trained" complaints team, a "weak" data collection system, and "poor" communication between officials, complainants and respondents
• There has also been a "lack of transparency" in the complaints process, while there are no clear guidelines as to which behaviours should attract which sanctions
• But there is "no evidence" that complaints related to Islam are treated differently from those related to other forms of discrimination
• And allegations of "institutional racism" against the party - such as those made by former Tory chair Baroness Warsi - were not borne out by the evidence available

More on Boris Johnson

Prof Singh said parts of his report would "make for very uncomfortable reading among the leadership and the rank and file".

"Change will be a difficult process that will require a completely new mindset in some quarters, and one that some party members may not like," he added.

In August 2018, while a backbench MP, Mr Johnson was heavily criticised for comparing Muslim women wearing a burka to "letter boxes" and "bank robbers" in a column for the Daily Telegraph.

Boris Johnson brings tea for the press to drink outside his house
Image: Boris Johnson prompted a row with his comments in a 2018 newspaper column

In evidence to Prof Singh's investigation, in which he was asked about his previous comments on Islam and references to black people as having "watermelon smiles", Mr Johnson said he was "obviously sorry for any offence taken" from his past remarks.

"Would I use some of the offending language from my past writings today? Now that I am prime minister, I would not," he added.

Lord Goldsmith, who was handed a place in the House of Lords by Mr Johnson after losing his seat as an MP in 2019, was accused of running a "racist" and "Islamophobic" campaign against Sadiq Khan during the 2016 London mayoral election.

In his evidence to Prof Singh's review, the Conservative peer acknowledged that "a large number of Muslim Londoners felt personally insulted by what they had been told was my campaign message", adding: "That is of course a source of major regret and sadness on my part."

In his report's conclusions, Prof Singh called for the Tory leadership to publish an action plan within the next six weeks to set out how it will tackle the failings he found.

And, within the next six months, Prof Singh recommended the Conservatives produce and implement a new code of conduct for party members.

In the next year, Prof Singh said each party association should have given equality training to at least one named member.

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Tory former cabinet minister Baroness Warsi - who has long campaigned on the issue of alleged Islamophobia in the Conservative Party and previously questioned Prof Singh's suitability to oversee the review - said the "crucial" detail of the report "tells a story that headlines do not".

"Each section reveals a deep and embedded issue of a party at best unable and at worst unwilling to deal with the issue of racism," she said.

Ex-chancellor Sajid Javid, who was one of the 2019 Tory leadership candidates to commit to an Islamophobia inquiry, called on the Conservative Party to adopt Prof Singh's recommendations "unconditionally and in full".

"Although the investigation didn't find any evidence of institutional or systemic anti-Muslim prejudice, it did find distressing examples of anti-Muslim sentiment at local association and invidual levels, as well as serious shortcomings in the party's complaints processes," he said.

Conservative co-chairman Amanda Milling said the party would be responding to the report's recommendations later on Tuesday.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission had backed off launching its own investigation into allegations of Islamophobia in the Conservative Party while Prof Singh's review took place.

A spokesperson said: "We are pleased to see that the independent investigation has now published its report.

"We have been kept informed of the progress of the investigation by Professor Singh and will evaluate his team's findings carefully.

"We will assess the report alongside the investigation's terms of reference and await the Conservative Party's response on the actions they will take."

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2021-05-25 11:37:30Z
52781621306584

Tory Islamophobia: Anti-Muslim sentiment 'remains a problem' within Conservative Party, report finds - Sky News

Anti-Muslim sentiment "remains a problem" within the Conservative Party, an independent report has found.

Professor Swaran Singh, a former equality and human rights commissioner, analysed 1,418 complaints relating to 727 separate incidents as recorded in the Tories' complaints database between 2015 and 2020.

In a 44,000-word report on his findings, he said: "Judging by the extent of complaints and findings of misconduct by the party itself that relate to anti-Muslim words and conduct, anti-Muslim sentiment remains a problem within the party.

"This is damaging to the party, and alienates a significant section of society."

Prof Singh's review was published almost two years after all five candidates in the 2019 Conservative leadership contest - including eventual winner Boris Johnson - committed to an independent inquiry into allegations of Islamophobia within the party.

He also found:

• Two-thirds of all incidents reported to the complaints team at the Tories' headquarters related to allegations of anti-Muslim discrimination
• Three-quarters of all incidents recorded in the Tories' complaints database involved social media
• High-profile incidents, such as remarks made during Lord Goldsmith's London mayoral campaign and Mr Johnson's comments on Muslim women in burqas, "give the impression to many that the party and its leadership are insensitive to Muslim communities"
• The Conservatives' complaints system is "in need of overhaul" due to its "under-resourced and inadequately trained" complaints team, a "weak" data collection system, and "poor" communication between officials, complainants and respondents
• There has also been a "lack of transprency" in the complaints process, while there are no clear guidelines as to which behaviours should attract which sanctions
• But there is "no evidence" that complaints related to Islam are treated differently from those related to other forms of discrimination
• And allegations of "institutional racism" against the party - such as those made by former Tory chair Baroness Warsi - were not borne out by the evidence available

More on Boris Johnson

Prof Singh said parts of his report would "make for very uncomfortable reading among the leadership and the rank and file".

"Change will be a difficult process that will require a completely new mindset in some quarters, and one that some party members may not like," he added.

In August 2018, while a backbench MP, Mr Johnson was heavily criticised for comparing Muslim women wearing a burka to "letter boxes" and "bank robbers" in a column for the Daily Telegraph.

Boris Johnson brings tea for the press to drink outside his house
Image: Boris Johnson prompted a row with his comments in a 2018 newspaper column

In evidence to Prof Singh's investigation, in which he was also asked his previous comments on Islam and references to black people as having "watermelon smiles", Mr Johnson said he was "obviously sorry for any offence taken" from his past remarks.

"Would I use some of the offending language from my past writings today? Now that I am prime minister, I would not," he added.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

June 2019 - Tory leadership rivals sign up to Islamophobia inquiry

In his report's conclusions, Prof Singh called for the Tory leadership to publish an action plan within the next six weeks to set out how it will tackle the failings he found.

And, within the next six months, Prof Singh recommended the Conservatives produce and implement a new code of conduct for party members.

In the next year, Prof Singh said each party association should have given equality traning to at least one named member.

Subscribe to the All Out Politics podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

Conservative co-chairman Amanda Milling said the party would be responding to the report's recommendations later on Tuesday.

A spokesperson from the Equality and Human Rights Commission said: "We are pleased to see that the independent investigation has now published its report.

"We have been kept informed of the progress of the investigation by Professor Singh and will evaluate his team's findings carefully.

"We will assess the report alongside the investigation's terms of reference and await the Conservative Party's response on the actions they will take."

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2021-05-25 10:07:30Z
52781621306584

Senin, 24 Mei 2021

Heysham explosion: Cut gas pipe caused fatal blast, say police - BBC News

George Arthur Hinds
Family handout

An explosion that killed a child was caused by a gas pipe being cut inside a neighbouring house, police said.

Two-year-old George Hinds died in the blast in Mallowdale Avenue in Heysham, Lancashire, on 16 May.

Four other people were also hurt in the explosion which destroyed two homes and seriously damaged a third.

Lancashire Police said it was investigating how and why the pipe became severed and treating it as a criminal investigation.

Two houses collapsed and many others were damaged

Detectives said they had identified, along with gas experts, the cause of the explosion as a cut gas pipe inside a property on Mallowdale Avenue.

George's parents, Vicky Studholme and Stephen Hinds, who were also injured in the explosion, have been discharged from hospital, police said.

Two others, a man, 44, and a 50-year-old woman, remain in hospital with critical injuries.

Cadent North West had said earlier the gas mains and service pipes were "sound and did not contribute to or cause the explosion at Heysham".

Det Ch Insp Jane Webb, of Lancashire Police, said "an incredible amount of work" had been done at the scene "in a relatively short space of time" and officers had been able to identify the source.

"We have also managed to recover some items of George's, which I know means a lot to his parents," she said.

She said the focus was now on establishing how and why the pipe came to be cut and that investigation would be "complex and lengthy".

Forensic examination of the scene had been completed, the force said, and it had been handed over to the local authority.

The blast caused debris to cover nearby streets and fields and residents described it as sounding "like a bomb going off".

George was described as a "beautiful little angel" by his parents who said they were devastated by his death.

"He was so precious to us," they added.

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2021-05-24 18:05:09Z
52781618669460

Boris Johnson delays decision on social distancing amid Indian variant worries - The Times

Boris Johnson has delayed announcing the end of social distancing as his scientific advisers urge him to hold off until the risk from the Indian variant is clearer.

Some senior advisers remain nervous that the variant could be so much more infectious that social distancing is needed beyond next month, with one today urging the prime minister to “reconsider the pathway to full opening”. Another braced the country to quickly change course if the data grows more concerning.

Others are more reassured by the lack of a nationwide surge in infections, bolstering Johnson’s confidence that all restrictions can end as planned next month. One expert said that the coronavirus pandemic may be over if vaccines are as good as hoped at keeping people

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2021-05-24 16:00:00Z
52781614482867

BLM activist Sasha Johnson 'not intended target' of drive-by shooting - ITV News

A Black Lives Matter (BLM) activist who's "fighting for her life" after sustaining a gunshot wound to her head was "not the intended target", her friend has said.

Sasha Johnson, both a BLM activist and senior member of the political party, Taking the Initiative Party (TTIP), was injured in the early hours of Sunday in South London.

The political group TTIP said the mother of two had received "numerous" death threats because of her activism.

However, a friend of the activist has said she believed the incident was "more related to rival gangs".

Imarn Ayton, who met Sasha Johnson during the Black Lives Matter protests last year, told ITV News Ms Johnson had been at a party when she was injured but she "does not believe she was the intended victim".

"I do believe that it was a party and there was some type of dispute between two individuals or two gangs, and it was wrong place, wrong time."


"I do not believe that she was the target," Imarn Ayton tells ITV News

Ms Ayton said: "And the third-party information that I have received also alludes to the fact that she wasn't the target."

She added: "I was just so shocked, I'm still shocked to be honest with you, it's very surreal and honestly I'm just so heartbroken for her family."

Ms Ayton said: "I can’t speculate, I wasn’t there. Again, just based off of the information that I’ve been given from closer friends and family, as far as we are aware, she was at a party or some sort of gathering and this incident is more related to rival gangs as opposed to her activism, let’s just say that."


'Sasha's political party believe she was brutally attacked', ITV News Correspondent Sejal Karia reports

Ms Ayton continued: "I think it’s more to do with gangs or gang violence or rivalry or some type of dispute between two different groups, and the incident was not intended for Sasha as far as we are aware, as I am being told by closer friends and family."

She added: "There was a rival gang that may have heard about someone being in that party that they didn’t feel quite comfortable with or trusted and so they resorted to driving past and shooting into the garden, and one of those shots obviously hit Sasha Johnson.

Her comments come a day after the TTIP said on Instagram: "It is with great sadness that we inform you that our own Sasha Johnson has been brutally attacked and sustained a gunshot wound to her head.

"She is currently in intensive care and in a critical condition. The attack happened in the early hours of this morning, following numerous death threats as a result of her activism.

"Sasha has always been actively fighting for black people and the injustices that surround the black community, as well as being both a member of BLM and a member of Taking the Initiative Party’s Executive Leadership Committee.

"Sasha is also a mother-of-two and a strong, powerful voice for our people and our community."

Ms Johnson is an Oxford Brookes university graduate. She was involved in the protests that followed the murder of George Floyd last summer, such as the Rhodes Must Fall demonstration in Oxford.

The Met Police said the woman was found after officers were called to reports of gunshots in Consort Road, Peckham, south-east London, shortly before 3am.

It is believed the shooting occurred in the vicinity of a house where a party was taking place and a number of people may have been in the area.

Activist Sasha Johnson participating in a Black Lives Matter protest rally in Hyde Park, London. Credit: PA

A spokesman said that while the investigation is at an early stage, there was nothing to suggest it was a targeted attack or that the woman had received any credible threats against her before this incident.

Detectives from the Met’s specialist crime command (Trident) are leading the investigation.Detective Chief Inspector Jimi Tele said: “This was a shocking incident that has left a young woman with very serious injuries. Our thoughts are with her family who are being provided with support at this terribly difficult time.”

He said detectives are making “good progress” in hunting the attackers but they need help from the public.

It is “crucial” that anyone who saw anything suspicious in the Consort Road area in the early hours of Sunday or who has heard information since then get in touch.


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2021-05-24 13:04:04Z
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BLM activist Sasha Johnson 'not intended target' of drive-by shooting - ITV News

A Black Lives Matter (BLM) activist who's "fighting for her life" after sustaining a gunshot wound to her head was "not the intended target", her friend has said.

Sasha Johnson, both a BLM activist and senior member of the political party, Taking the Initiative Party (TTIP), was injured in the early hours of Sunday in South London.

The political group TTIP said the mother of two had received "numerous" death threats because of her activism.

However, a friend of the activist has said she believed the incident was "more related to rival gangs".

Imarn Ayton, who met Sasha Johnson during the Black Lives Matter protests last year, told ITV News Ms Johnson had been at a party when she was injured but she "does not believe she was the intended victim".

"I do believe that it was a party and there was some type of dispute between two individuals or two gangs, and it was wrong place, wrong time."


"I do not believe that she was the target," Imarn Ayton tells ITV News

Ms Ayton said: "And the third-party information that I have received also alludes to the fact that she wasn't the target."

She added: "I was just so shocked, I'm still shocked to be honest with you, it's very surreal and honestly I'm just so heartbroken for her family."

Ms Ayton said: "I can’t speculate, I wasn’t there. Again, just based off of the information that I’ve been given from closer friends and family, as far as we are aware, she was at a party or some sort of gathering and this incident is more related to rival gangs as opposed to her activism, let’s just say that."


'Sasha's political party believe she was brutally attacked', ITV News Correspondent Sejal Karia reports

Ms Ayton continued: "I think it’s more to do with gangs or gang violence or rivalry or some type of dispute between two different groups, and the incident was not intended for Sasha as far as we are aware, as I am being told by closer friends and family."

She added: "There was a rival gang that may have heard about someone being in that party that they didn’t feel quite comfortable with or trusted and so they resorted to driving past and shooting into the garden, and one of those shots obviously hit Sasha Johnson.

Her comments come a day after the TTIP said on Instagram: "It is with great sadness that we inform you that our own Sasha Johnson has been brutally attacked and sustained a gunshot wound to her head.

"She is currently in intensive care and in a critical condition. The attack happened in the early hours of this morning, following numerous death threats as a result of her activism.

"Sasha has always been actively fighting for black people and the injustices that surround the black community, as well as being both a member of BLM and a member of Taking the Initiative Party’s Executive Leadership Committee.

"Sasha is also a mother-of-two and a strong, powerful voice for our people and our community."

Ms Johnson is an Oxford Brookes university graduate. She was involved in the protests that followed the murder of George Floyd last summer, such as the Rhodes Must Fall demonstration in Oxford.

The Met Police said the woman was found after officers were called to reports of gunshots in Consort Road, Peckham, south-east London, shortly before 3am.

It is believed the shooting occurred in the vicinity of a house where a party was taking place and a number of people may have been in the area.

Activist Sasha Johnson participating in a Black Lives Matter protest rally in Hyde Park, London. Credit: PA

A spokesman said that while the investigation is at an early stage, there was nothing to suggest it was a targeted attack or that the woman had received any credible threats against her before this incident.

Detectives from the Met’s specialist crime command (Trident) are leading the investigation.Detective Chief Inspector Jimi Tele said: “This was a shocking incident that has left a young woman with very serious injuries. Our thoughts are with her family who are being provided with support at this terribly difficult time.”

He said detectives are making “good progress” in hunting the attackers but they need help from the public.

It is “crucial” that anyone who saw anything suspicious in the Consort Road area in the early hours of Sunday or who has heard information since then get in touch.


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2021-05-24 12:30:30Z
52781617143668

Scots urged not to travel to Spain for non-urgent reasons such as holidays - Daily Record

Scots holidaymakers are being urged not to jet off to amber list countries, including Spain.

UK business minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan said scientists still think there is " too great a risk " in travelling to amber list countries for non-urgent reasons such as holidays.

Spain officially lifted restrictions from travellers from the UK today which means those entering will no longer need to take a Covid-19 test.

People returning from Scotland 's favourite holiday hotspot will still have to quarantine on returning under UK rules.

Speaking on Times Radio, Trevelyan said: "The reality is, at the moment, amber countries are still not meeting the criteria for our scientists to say that they should be green.

"So the recommendation remains don't go unless you have to, and remember that, if you do go, you will have to quarantine for 10 days and that will be monitored.

"The reason we ask people still not to go is because there is still too great a risk as far as our scientists are concerned."

Trevelyan said Boris Johnson "has been clear" that people should not travel to amber countries unless there is a pressing reason, such as an urgent family need.

She added that it is hoped "the amber numbers will become more green in due course" but "at the moment, today, that means amber countries really aren't safe to go to".

It came as Deputy First Minister John Swinney refused to rule out cancelling international travel if a new strain of the virus hit Scotland over the next month.

From today people in Scotland, apart from those living in Glasgow, can fly to green countries including Portugal and not have to quarantine on return.

Scottish politics

Asked if a new variant emerged in the next month would mean the closure of international travel, Swinney responded: "It depends on the research and the clinical advice that we receive.

"What we are looking at very carefully in relation to the variants of concern is the effect they have, the degree of transmissibility within our society, the degree to with they essentially recirculate the virus.

"We have seen higher transmissibility in the more recent variants of concern, in the Kent variant and in the B1617.2, the so-called Indian variant, so we have to monitor that carefully.

"The encouraging news from the Public Health England study is that the vaccination that we have are very robust or just about as robust as they are in relation to previous variants in providing the necessary protection for members of the public."

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2021-05-24 09:23:56Z
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