Kamis, 03 Juni 2021

Five councils in England BAN smoking outside pubs, cafés and restaurants - Daily Mail

Stubbed out! Five councils in England BAN smoking outside pubs, cafés and restaurants with two more to follow - in push to make UK smoke-free by 2025

  • Councils including Newcastle and Manchester ban smoking on pavements outside hospitality venues
  • Durham, Northumberland and North Tyneside county councils are also part of group banning smoking
  • Oxfordshire County Council is set to follow suit under plans for England's first smoke-free county
  • All licences granted by Gateshead Council state that pavement cafes must be smoke-free

Five councils in England have banned smoking outside pubs, cafes and restaurants with others now considering joining them as the Government tries to make the country smoke free within the next decade.

Newcastle City Council, Manchester City Council, Durham County Council, Northumberland County Council and North Tyneside Council have all banned smoking on the pavements where outdoor hospitality venues have tables.

And Oxfordshire County Council is set to follow suit under plans for the first smoke-free county, with employers expected to asked to enforce smoke-free spaces outside shops, offices and factories to help staff kick their habit.

A seventh local authority, Gateshead Council, does not have an official policy on smoking outdoors, but all the licences it grants to venues state that pavement cafes must be smoke-free, reported the Guardian.

In Oxfordshire, officials will work with the NHS and other local organisations to end smoking near hospitals, play parks and school gates. People will also be discouraged from smoking at home and in their car.

It is part of the push to make the county smoke-free by 2025 - five years ahead of the national target - in proposals in the Oxfordshire Tobacco Control Strategy discussed by the county's health improvement board last week.

But a smokers' lobby group said it was 'no business of local councils if adults choose to smoke' - and it follows a failed attempt last summer to push through an amendment in the House of Lords to make pavements smoke-free.

Another organisation which campaigns for vaping said it 'seems fashionable again to attack smokers instead of helping them' and the five councils 'don't care about the individual smoker's health, they care about looking good'.

The pubs industry has suffered a torrid period since the indoor smoking ban in England became active in July 2007, with 11,400 fewer venues open one decade later amid claims that the two were closely linked. 

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said: 'The pandemic has been the worst period our pubs have ever had to endure. Months of closure followed by periods of severely reduced trading.'

Speaking to MailOnline, she added: 'We would encourage all local authorities to work with the sector in helping us get back on our feet, not burdening us with more red tape at the worst possible time.'

Pubs are said to have suffered financially from the ban because smokers are known to drink more, with previous US studies estimating that 85 to 90 per cent of adults who are alcohol-dependent are also nicotine-dependent. 

Many venues have improved their food offering and family friendly appeal since the ban in an attempt to survive, with the number of jobs at pubs and bars actually rising 6 per cent between 2008 and 2018. The Office for National Statistics said this may be because the greater focus on food requires more waiting and kitchen staff. 

People eat and drink at outside tables in London's Soho in April following the easing of lockdown restrictions in England

People eat and drink at outside tables in London's Soho in April following the easing of lockdown restrictions in England

Smoking poster in Newcastle
Smoking poster in Manchester

Newcastle City Council and Manchester City Council have banned smoking on the pavements where outdoor hospitality venues such as pubs, restaurants and cafes have tables

In Oxfordshire, the policy document says 'reducing the visibility of smoking' will make it seem more abnormal, so children are less likely to start. 

And it adds: 'By compelling smokers to remove themselves from defined areas to smoke, there is increased chance that they will consider stopping.' 

Ansaf Azhar, Oxfordshire's public health director, told the meeting: 'It is not about telling people not to smoke - it is about moving and creating an environment in which not smoking is encouraged and they are empowered to do so.' 

Some 12 per cent of Oxfordshire's population currently smoke but rates are higher among those on lower incomes or with mental illnesses, the homeless and travellers.

Bosses will make it easier for people to access quit-smoking drugs and therapies to bring this figure down, the board papers reveal. 

They say: 'To be smoke free by 2025, smokers need supportive environments to quit and young people need environments where being smoke free is the easy option.

A man smokes a cigarette with his meal at the Craven Arms pub in Birmingham in 2004, three years before the indoor ban

A man smokes a cigarette with his meal at the Craven Arms pub in Birmingham in 2004, three years before the indoor ban

'We will be working closely with workplaces, communities, and our smoke free partner organisations to support the implementation of smoke-free indoor and outdoor places, and to improve access to nicotine replacement and pharmacotherapy for those who need it most.'

How will the proposal work in Oxfordshire? 

When will the ban come into force?

  • Oxfordshire County Council has said there are no timeframes for plans and it has not yet been agreed. 
  • The decision to make outdoor seating 100 per cent smoke-free remains the responsibility of individual district councils - as part of the 2020 Business and Planning Act. 
  • There are no timeframes or plans regarding enforcement or signage. 
  • District councils have yet to agree on a timeframe that would be consistent with the county-wide ambition of smoke-free by 2025.

The proposal

  • Under the proposal by the Oxfordshire Tobacco Control Alliance, the council aims to have reduced the prevalence of smoking in the adult population to below five per cent by 2025.
  • This would include encouraging employers to stop the habit outside offices and factories, or by creating smoke-free areas in newly created pavement dining areas.
  • The authorities have said they will follow the four pillars of prevention, local regulation and enforcement, smoke-free environments and provide support for smokers to quit in order to see through their vision

What the council hopes to achieve by 2025?

  • Reduce the prevalence of smoking in the adult population to below 5 per cent by 2025.
  •  Reduce the prevalence of smoking in routine and manual workers to below 10 per cent. 
  • Reduce the prevalence of smoking in those with a serious mental illness to below 20 per cent.
  • Reduce the prevalence of women who smoke at the time of delivery to below 4 per cent.
  • Reduce the prevalence of smoking at age 15 below 3 per cent.

Local Regulation and Enforcement  

  • The council said it will also support regional programmes to reduce illegal tobacco. 
  • Ensure effective prosecutions continue to be pursued in appropriate cases based on intelligence received.
  • Take actions to reduce the sale of tobacco related products and electronic cigarettes to people underage.  

'Smoke-free' areas

  • Encourage workplaces to promote smoke-free environments and support staff to quit smoking
  • Ensure that local NHS Trusts are smoke-free, including encouraging smokers working in the NHS to quit.
  •  Explore opportunities to protect both adults and children from the harm of secondhand smoke
  •  Support organisations working across the community to promote smoke-free environments, including homes, cars, play parks and school gates. 
  • Train and support staff working with families to promote smoke-free homes and cars.  

Supporting Smokers to Quit

  • The council will reduce health inequalities by targeting those populations where smoking rates remain high, including routine and manual workers, unemployed and those living in the most deprived communities.  
  • Community-based client friendly Local Stop Smoking Services will target vulnerable groups.
  • Frontline healthcare workers will be trained to raise the issue of smoking.           

The Government wants England to be smoke-free - meaning only 5 per cent of the population smokes - by 2030.

But the Oxfordshire Tobacco Control Strategy aims to achieve this goal by 2025.

The local authority will tackle sellers of illicit tobacco and take action to reduce the sale of tobacco-related products and electronic cigarettes to people who are underage.

Dr Adam Briggs, the public health official leading the strategy, said smoking is the leading cause of preventable deaths in Oxfordshire, costing the public purse £120million a year.

He told the meeting: 'We have got a condition that is entirely a commercially driven cause of death and disease. It is impossible to be on the wrong side of history with tobacco consumption.'

Last year, data from the charity Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), found 2,132 people died from smoking-related causes in Oxfordshire between 2012 and 2017.

ASH also said 23 tonnes of waste, or enough to fill 421 wheelie bins, is gathered in the form of cigarette butts in Oxfordshire each year.

It was also estimated that smoking-related house fires cost the Oxfordshire economy £2.7million.

Oxfordshire County Council said on Tuesday: 'Oxfordshire has set itself an ambitious aim to be smoke-free by 2025.

'Creating healthy, smoke-free environments - including considering proposals for hospitality outdoor seating to be 100 per cent smoke-free - is just one small part of a wider range of county-wide plans.

'At present there are no timeframes for smoke-free pavement licensing proposals and nothing has yet been agreed.

'Any decision on this would be ultimately the responsibility of our individual district councils in Oxfordshire.

'Our tobacco control strategy further outlines our smoke-free 2025 plans, which includes creating healthy and family-friendly smoke-free spaces, helping people stop smoking in the first place, and supporting those who wish to quit.'

Simon Clark, director of the smokers' lobby group Forest (Freedom Organisation for the Right to Enjoy Smoking), criticised the plans.

He said: 'It's no business of local councils if adults choose to smoke, and if they smoke outside during working hours that's a matter for them and their employer not the council.

'Nor should it be the role of councillors to force smokers to quit by extending the indoor smoking ban to any outdoor area where there is no risk to non-smokers.'

He added: 'The public will want local authorities to help local businesses bounce back from the impact of the pandemic. They will also be expected to focus on issues like employment and housing.

'Reducing smoking rates to meet some idealistic target is not a priority for most people and council policy should reflect that.'

And Mark Oates, director of campaign group We Vape, said: 'It now seems fashionable again to attack smokers instead of helping them, which is all these five councils are doing.

'They don't care about the individual smoker's health, they care about looking good. Smokers need to be educated in the alternatives, not treated like exiles.

'Public Health England and Cancer research UK have publicly stated between them vaping is 95 per cent safer than smoking, doesn't hurt people nearby and we know it is far more effective at quitting tobacco than any other nicotine replacement method. It is a fact.

'So by ignoring this and not advising on far healthier alternatives and instead forcing smokers down the road or wherever they can push them, they are blindly rejecting science for some PR stunt.'

Professor Chris Whitty, England's chief medical officer, told a recent conference more than 90,000 people died from tobacco related diseases in 2020, compared with 75,000 from Covid.

He added: 'One in five people who die from cancer will die from [lung cancer]. The reason that people like me get very concerned and very upset about it is that this cancer is almost entirely caused for profit.'

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2021-06-03 07:03:30Z
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Covid in Scotland LIVE as Nicola Sturgeon and Boris Johnson to meet at summit - Scottish Daily Record

Finance secretary puts up £50M cash fund for project to transform Scotland from pandemic

The Scottish Government will provide up to £50 million of cash for a new competition as part of efforts to transform the country in the wake of the Covid pandemic.

Kate Forbes announced details of the national challenge competition as she promised more support for some of those businesses that have been hardest hit by the pandemic.

She pledged £12 million to help businesses in the 13 local authority areas that are being held under Level 2 restrictions.

The Finance and Economy Secretary said: "Businesses who were expecting to open or see reduced restrictions as a result of moving to Level 1, but who will now remain in Level 2, will receive weekly support."

She pledged more money for taxi drivers, with an additional funding of up to £62 million being made available, taking support for this sector to more than £90 million.

In addition to this, there will be a further £40 million for the cultural sector, Ms Forbes said.

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2021-06-03 09:11:15Z
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Nicola Sturgeon spent outrageous sum of taxpayers' money for failed Brexit case - Express

Scotland's deficit has ballooned to £40billion, more than eight times the limit set for EU membership, the UK's leading economic think tank has found. The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said that the gap between Scotland’s spending and tax revenue was up to a quarter of the economy last year. The IFS estimated Scotland’s deficit had risen from 8.6 percent of GDP in the financial year before COVID-19 to between 22 and 25 percent of GDP in 2020-21.

The main difference was a massive injection of UK Treasury funding to help cope with the pandemic that allowed more spending in Scotland without an equivalent increase in Scottish tax revenue.

The UK deficit for 2020-21 is put at around 14.5 percent.

Despite the country’s weak economic performance, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is not only ramping up her calls for a second independence referendum but it also appears that her party spent an “outrageous” sum of taxpayers’ money for a failed Brexit court case.

In 2018, the SNP argued that the UK Withdrawal Bill put forward by former Prime Minister Theresa May undermined the founding principles of devolution and diluted the powers of the Scottish Parliament.

Ms Sturgeon’s ministers claimed that some EU powers – like support for farmers, control of our seas or food standards – fell within areas that are Holyrood's responsibility.

Amid failing negotiations between the Scottish government and the UK government, the SNP introduced the EU Continuity Bill.

However, it was later referred to the Supreme Court by UK ministers, who claimed Holyrood acted outside its remit by passing the Bill.

It was the first time in the history of devolution that Westminster challenged legislation passed by Holyrood in the country's highest court.

According to a 2019 report by the Scottish Sun, SNP Ministers spent £132,000 for the court case, which in January last year, ruled against them.

JUST IN: EU's Brexit punishment plan torn to shreds

“There was never any need for this bill but the SNP will take any opportunity to pursue separation, regardless of the cost to the people of Scotland.”

The Scottish Government said in a statement the legal bill included lawyers’ fees of £131,316.60, £160 court costs and £423 on admin.

However, the figure did not include the Lord Advocate’s expenses or internal legal advice from government briefs.

Last week, Ms Sturgeon opened formal talks with the Scottish Greens on a cooperation deal in government, in a move designed to cement a pro-independence majority at Holyrood and bolster its pro-climate credentials.

In a move mooted before the May elections, the First Minister said the SNP and Scottish Greens could jointly write policies on the climate crisis and the shift to net zero, in return for Green votes to back her spending plans and legislation.

The deal, which is likely to stop short of a full coalition agreement, could see the Greens win ministerial seats in future, Ms Sturgeon told MSPs.

A deal would be used by Ms Sturgeon to strengthen her hand in the battle with Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Government for the legal authority to hold a second independence referendum and to ensure any referendum legislation carries a clear parliamentary mandate.

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2021-06-03 07:01:00Z
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Rabu, 02 Juni 2021

Billionaire Lord Ashcroft paid for police gym & jail on island where Jasmine Hartin is charged over... - The Sun

BRITISH billionaire Lord Ashcroft paid for a police gym and jail on the island where his son's partner is charged with shooting a cop dead.

Jasmine Hartin, 32, is facing manslaughter by negligence charges after the body of Superintendent Henry Jemmott was found floating in the sea near San Pedro in Belize on Friday.

Jasmine Hartin, 32, is facing manslaughter by negligence charges
Jasmine Hartin, 32, is facing manslaughter by negligence chargesCredit: Jasmine Hartin/Linked In
Lord Ashcroft paid for a police gym and jail on the island where his son's partner is charged
Lord Ashcroft paid for a police gym and jail on the island where his son's partner is chargedCredit: AFP
Lord Ashcroft at the Belize police gym he funded
Lord Ashcroft at the Belize police gym he fundedCredit: Facebook / Belize Police Department, Police Public Relations

The peer, who lives in Belize but remains active in British politics, has been a major investor in the Caribbean country for decades - including to its police force, MailOnline reports.

In February, he officially opened a new $135,600 gym he funded at the main Belizean police station.

He also donated $60,000 worth of Covid protective equipment to police after being awarded an 'outstanding citizen award' for his generosity in July last year.

Even Belize's infamous Central Prison - which featured on the Netflix doc Inside the World's Toughest Prisons and is where daughter-in-law Hartin was moved on Tuesday - has benefited directly from Lord Ashcroft.

Known as the "Hattieville Ramada", the facility currently houses 1,041 prisoners in small concrete cell blocks where they are held for months and sometimes even years as they await trial.

The Kolbe Foundation, which runs the prison, is listed as one of Lord Ashcroft's Foundation's key charitable projects on his website.

In his 2005 biography, Lord Ashcroft - who served as the Belizean Ambassador to the United Nations from 1998 to 2000 - admitted his interests there have been "exempt from certain taxes for 30 years".

Belize's infamous Central Prison has benefited directly from Lord Ashcroft
Belize's infamous Central Prison has benefited directly from Lord AshcroftCredit: Google
A sign for the Ashcroft-funded facility, which opened in February
A sign for the Ashcroft-funded facility, which opened in FebruaryCredit: Facebook / Belize Police Department, Police Public Relations
The body of Henry Jemmott was found floating in the sea near San Pedro on Friday
The body of Henry Jemmott was found floating in the sea near San Pedro on FridayCredit: pixel8000
Hartin, pictured with a rifle, said she shot the cop by accident
Hartin, pictured with a rifle, said she shot the cop by accidentCredit: Facebook

Four years later, the country's then prime minister Dean Barrow, told his parliament: "Ashcroft is an extremely powerful man.

"His net worth may well be equal to Belize’s entire GDP. He is nobody to cross."

He was caught up in controversy in 2007 when his Belize Bank faced 80 separate charges of failing to comply with anti-money-laundering laws, but the case was withdrawn over fears any financial damage to the bank would trigger the collapse of the Belizean economy.

There was no suggestion of wrongdoing by Lord Ashcroft, whose son Andrew is in a long-term relationship with Hartin.

The mother-of-two is charged with fatally shooting Supt Jemmott on May 28, but she has insisted it was an accident.

She said she had been giving him a massage on a pier after a boozy night out when she attempted to hand his service pistol back to him and it suddenly fired.

Family members of the slain cop have slammed law enforcement's decision to charge the Canadian-born socialite with manslaughter rather than murder, insisting "this is not justice".

Cherry Jemmott and her brother Henry Jemmott
Cherry Jemmott and her brother Henry JemmottCredit: Facebook
Hartin was transferred to one of Central America's toughest prisons
Hartin was transferred to one of Central America's toughest prisonsCredit: The San Pedro Sun
Lord Ashcroft (right) with Lord Kareem Musa, Minister of Home Affairs, and Commissioner of Police Chester Williams cutting the ribbon to a new gym at Belize's main police station
Lord Ashcroft (right) with Lord Kareem Musa, Minister of Home Affairs, and Commissioner of Police Chester Williams cutting the ribbon to a new gym at Belize's main police stationCredit: Facebook / Belize Police Department, Police Public Relations

One of the cop's sisters, Marie Jemmott Tzul, who is currently looking after her brother's five kids, told 7 News Belize: "I would just say I am disappointed in the police department and that's not only my opinion but it's a consensus of my family, his friends and the general Belizean people.

"I had faith in all the police department. It's one of their own and I think in my honest opinion with due respect to them, I think they should have took that to court as murder and let the court decide.

"That's my humble and honest opinion. It's a big disrespect to my brother who have served for 23 years plus and if it was anybody in his shoes, if the tables were turned, they would have done the correct thing."

FLIGHT RISK

Hartin, after being deemed a flight risk, was denied bail on Monday and was transferred to one of Central America's toughest prisons after four days cramped in a tiny concrete cell inside the magistrate's court complex in San Pedro.

Wearing a pink hoodie and a face mask, Hartin was escorted by a policewoman out of the station and put onto the back of a golf cart.

Her partner Andrew is the youngest of Lord Ashcroft's three children from his first marriage and is a citizen of Belize. They run swanky local hotel Alaia together.

Lord Ashcroft has not yet commented on the incident.

Senior cop Henry Jemmott was shot dead in the early hours of Friday morning
Senior cop Henry Jemmott was shot dead in the early hours of Friday morningCredit: Facebook / Henry Jemmott
Hartin was initially uncooperative with investigators after her arrest
Hartin was initially uncooperative with investigators after her arrest

As Hartin was charged with manslaughter by negligence, rather than fully-fledged manslaughter or murder, she faces a maximum sentence of five years behind bars.

But she could also escape with just a fine of around US$10,000, local reports say.

Her lawyer, Godfrey Smith, is a former Attorney General and Foreign Affairs minister of Belize and a member of the ruling People’s United Party, according to MailOnline.

Another sister of the slain cop, Cherry Jemmott, who is also an assistant superintendent in the Belize Police, voiced outrage over the socialite's charges.

"It's not right. It's not right. The family will feel really bad. This is not justice," she told the Daily Mail.

"My brother will have a state funeral on June 12. He gave 24 years to the police. And this is the value they put on his life?"

Cherry also said she believes Hartin should have been charged with murder and then taken to trial, where a jury could decide whether or not the killing was manslaughter.

"Within seven working days she will get bail, I predict it. She can afford it," she said.

Hartin was reportedly 'hysterical' when she was found at the scene of the shooting
Hartin was reportedly 'hysterical' when she was found at the scene of the shooting
Henry Jemmott's body was later discovered by someone on a passing boat
Henry Jemmott's body was later discovered by someone on a passing boatCredit: Facebook / Henry Jemmott
Family of the victim have insisted there was no romantic relationship between Hartin and Jemmott
Family of the victim have insisted there was no romantic relationship between Hartin and JemmottCredit: Facebook / Henry Jemmott

And a former colleague of Supt Jemmot, Darrell Tutsi Usher, said he "can’t get his head round" Hartin's story and said a "disciplined" officer would never have turned his back on a loaded weapon.

"To the all accounts that I heard from it, it's not adding up, especially to the last account when they say they were playing with the gun and the gun gone off and shot him in his head back," he told 7 News Belize.

Hartin told police she had been giving Supt Jemmott a massage on a pier near the shuttered Mata Rocks hotel, with the cop placing his gun on the ground.

'STATE OF PANIC'

She claims he asked her to hand his gun back to him when suddenly it went off in her hand, with a single bullet striking him in the head.

Cops said Supt Jemmott then fell on top of her and, in a state of panic, Hartin tried to push him off of her causing his body to fall into the water.

His corpse was later discovered by someone on a passing boat and Hartin was reportedly "hysterical" when she was found at the scene.

Police in Belize said that a single gunshot was heard - and officers then found the woman on the pier with "blood on her arms and her clothing".

Friends and family of the victim have insisted there was no romantic relationship between Hartin and Jemmott.

But Jemmott's family has raised doubt over Hartin's version of events, with one of his sisters saying he "had a gunshot behind his ear like an assassination".

Sources have claimed to 7 News Belize that Jemmott's gun had a trigger safety mechanism which made it "impossible" for it to be fired accidentally.

Billionaire Lord Ashcroft’s daughter-in-law Jasmine Hartin CHARGED with manslaughter of Belize cop ‘she shot dead’

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2021-06-02 23:15:00Z
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Boy, 14, 'racially abused' before being stabbed to death - Metro.co.uk

Dea-John Reid, 14, was stabbed to death after being 'racially abused' in Kingstanding, Birmingham, on Monday.
The victim was named as Dea-John Reid with his family paying tribute to him as an ‘incredibly talented young boy’ (Picture: West Midlands Police)

A 14-year-old boy was racially abused before he was stabbed to death, said police as they named the victim as Dea-John Reid.

The schoolboy and his friends were reportedly chased and subjected to racist language before Dea-John was killed in Kingstanding, Birmingham, on Monday evening.

Six people were arrested on suspicion of murder on Tuesday, including two teenagers, aged 13 and 14, and four men in their 30s.

They continue to be questioned in custody.

Dea-John’s family tonight paid tribute to the ‘incredibly talented young boy’ and called for an end to knife crime, asking: ‘How many more mothers will have to mourn for their sons for this to stop?’

West Midlands Police previously said said there was ‘nothing to suggest’ the stabbing was racially-motivated.

However, Detective Chief Inspector Stu Mobberley said tonight: ‘As the investigation has progressed we now believe there was an incident involving Dea-John and his friends shortly before the murder.

‘That quickly escalated, resulting in Dea-John’s tragic death.

A forensics officer at the scene on College Road, Kingstanding, north of Birmingham, where a 14-year-old boy died after being stabbed on Monday evening. Police have launched a murder investigation and are hunting up to seven people in connection with the attack.
Police believe the victim was subjected to racist abuse before the killing (Picture: PA)
Undated handout photo issued by West Midlands Police of Dea-John Reid who has been named as the 14-year-old who was fatally stabbed in Kingstanding, Birmingham on Monday. Issue date: Wednesday June 2, 2021. PA Photo. See PA story POLICE Kingstanding. Photo credit should read: West Midlands Police/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Dea-John’s family called for an end to knife crime (Picture: PA)
Dea-John Reid, 14, was stabbed to death after being 'racially abused' in Kingstanding, Birmingham, on Monday.
Six people have been arrested in connection with the killing (Picture: Snapper SK)

‘During this precursor incident racist language was directed at Dea-John and his friends – that’s now being investigated.

‘We’re still appealing for witnesses, anyone who saw or heard anything that could help our investigation, to get in touch so we can build up a clear picture of what happened.’

West Midlands Police have voluntarily referred their investigation to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) after ‘looking at previous incidents involving’ Dea-John.

The family paid tribute to their Dea-John in a statement, saying: ‘We’d like to thank the emergency services for their diligence and support… and the public for their outpouring of love and support throughout this tragic and challenging time.

Dea-John Reid.
Dea-John died at the scene in Kingstanding, Birmingham, on Monday night

‘This loss not only affects us but everyone Dea-John knew, we have lost a son, his siblings have lost a brother and others have lost a friend.

‘The passing of this incredibly talented young boy will be felt by us all.’

The teenager was attacked at about 7.30pm on College Road at the junction with Wardour Grove. He died at the scene.

A post-mortem examination confirmed he died from a stab wound to the chest.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2021-06-02 21:55:00Z
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UK records hottest day of the year for third day in row - BBC News

Children enjoy the weather during a hot day near the Seven Sisters Cliffs, at Birling Gap, in East Sussex
Reuters

It has been the hottest day of the year in the UK for the third day in a row.

Temperatures reached 28.3C (83F) in Northolt, west London, on Wednesday afternoon. It beat the previous day's high of 26.1C in Cardiff on the first day of meteorological summer.

But there have been showers and even thunderstorms in some areas, with these spreading north as the day progressed.

More warm weather is expecting for many parts of the UK this week but it will then start to cool, forecasters say.

The golden laburnum arch at the National Trust's Bodnant Garden, near Tal-y-Cafn, Conwy, which has reopened to visitors following the easing of lockdown restrictions
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Hannah Vitos observes The Blenheim Art Foundation interactive sculpture by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei which will go on long-term view in the grounds of Blenheim Palace in Woodstock, Oxfordshire
PA Media
People enjoy boats on the River Thames in Windsor, Berkshire
PA Media

BBC Weather forecaster Billy Payne said it was also the warmest day of the year for Scotland, with Achnagart hitting 25.4C, as well as Wales, where temperatures reached 26.5C in Hawarden.

Parts of south-west England saw cooler temperatures however, with showers and thunder in some areas.

The forecaster said Thursday would be very warm again, especially in south-east England, with temperatures around 27C.

The weather will then be slightly more unsettled but will not be a return to the cold wet weather of last month.

The average for June is usually 21C, with the earlier days of the month around 20C.

People picnic in the sun in Greenwich Park, London
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People picnic in the sun in Greenwich Park, London
PA Media
A couple shelter beneath an umbrella at Bournemouth beach in Dorset. The UK has recorded its third successive warmest day of the year
PA Media

After a rainy May, the good weather of recent days has come as a relief to many.

The UK has seen its fourth highest amount of rainfall on record for the month, with an average of 120mm (4.7in).

And Wales had the wettest May since records began in 1862, with 245mm (9.6in) of rainfall, topping the previous record of 184mm (7.2in) set in 1967, according to the Met Office.

A man takes a selfie with the skyline of Canary Wharf, from the Royal Observatory in Greenwich Park, London
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MCC members queue outside the ground ahead of day one of the first Test match at Lord's, London
PA Media

Picture research by Phil Coomes

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2021-06-02 16:44:24Z
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Boris Johnson upbeat but cautious over June 21 reopening in England - Financial Times

Boris Johnson said on Wednesday he remained upbeat about easing remaining coronavirus lockdown measures in England on June 21, but ministers are discussing a fallback plan of delaying the easing by two weeks if data show a surge in hospitalisations and deaths.

Senior members of Johnson’s government said they expected the prime minister to hold to the June 21 date unless the data present a compelling case for a delay. “He’ll move heaven and earth for June 21,” said one senior minister.

Johnson’s hopes of easing all restrictions this month have been derailed by the rapid spread of the Delta variant of Sars-Cov-2 first identified in India. The government has accelerated its vaccine programme and introduced surge testing to parts of England where the variant has been reported to try and suppress its spread.

On Wednesday the government said three quarters of all UK adults have now received one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine while half have received two jabs. One individual close to the programme said the internal aim was now to deliver two jabs to all adults over 50 ahead of the final easing.

Johnson said it was too soon to commit to easing restrictions, but nothing had currently changed in the data to delay his plans. “I can see nothing in the data at the moment that means we can’t go ahead with step four, or the opening up on June 21, but we’ve got to be so cautious.”

He added: “What we need to work out is to what extent the vaccination programme has protected enough of us, particularly the elderly and vulnerable against a new surge, and there I’m afraid the data is still ambiguous.”

Johnson acknowledged that “people want a clear answer” about the final stage of easing but said “we’ve just got to wait a little bit longer”. The prime minister will make a final decision on June 14 about whether lockdown restrictions in England will be fully lifted.

Matt Hancock, health secretary, was similarly equivocal about whether the June 21 reopening would go ahead. “There is nothing in the data to suggest we are definitively off track but it is too early to make the decision about June 21,” he said.

One individual close to the vaccination programme said they were hopeful that the easing could still go ahead. “We are in a different place than in January on deaths, thanks to vaccines. The next two weeks will be crucial.”

But if the data suggest that a delay is required, ministers said that one option being considered would be to delay the reopening date by a maximum of two weeks to July 5 to allow a further push on vaccinations.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has indicated to colleagues he would be relaxed over such a delay if it was justified by the data and to ensure that hospitals were not put under undue pressure.

One ministerial aide said: “No one wants this to go on longer than necessary. But there’s a sense that everyone could live with an extra two weeks if it keeps the new strain under control.”

Ministers expect that all adults in the most vulnerable groups will have been offered two jabs before June 21. That would then allow health officials to undertake a major effort to vaccinate people in their 40s and 30s, who might still require hospital treatment despite not becoming critically ill.

Meanwhile, government insiders said plans for vaccine passports for domestic activities such as going to sports events or pubs have been dropped, although they are still likely to be introduced this summer to facilitate international travel.

One senior Whitehall official said: “It’s looking pretty much dead in the water as it will be a lot of hassle for a short period of time” for domestic activities.

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2021-06-02 16:48:35Z
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