Selasa, 14 September 2021

Three dead after car crashes into residential block in Notting Hill, west London - Sky News

Three people have died after a car crashed into a residential block in Notting Hill, west London.

The incident happened in Great Western Road in the early hours of this morning, the Metropolitan Police said.

Emergency services were called to the site of the crash around 4.50am and found the vehicle on fire.

The flames were extinguished but three people were pronounced dead at the scene.

Police officers are working to identify the deceased and inform their families.

Detectives from the Serious Collision Unit have asked for any witnesses or those with dashcam footage to come forward.

It is thought that no other cars were involved in the crash and several residents were evacuated from the building as a precaution.

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A London Fire Brigade spokesperson said: "Firefighters were called to reports a car had collided with a sheltered accommodation block. The vehicle was alight when crews arrived.

"Crews tackled the fire and led nine people to safety from the block via an internal staircase.

"Three people in the vehicle were sadly pronounced dead at the scene."

Police officers have set up a cordon blocking off either side of Great Western Road.

Six officers are on the scene to redirect pedestrians and traffic. The cordon at the junction of Harrow Road and Great Western Road is expected to be in place for several hours.

Anyone with information can call police on 101 quoting the reference CAD 917/14 Sept.

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2021-09-14 08:23:36Z
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Senin, 13 September 2021

Prince Andrew's lawyer fights to have US sexual assault case dismissed - Daily Record

Prince Andrew’s lawyers say a woman accusing him of sexually assaulting her when she was a teenager has a prior agreement "releasing the duke and other from any and all potential liability".

The Duke of York’s lawyers will challenge the US court jurisdiction over a civil lawsuit by a woman who has accused him of sexually assaulting and battering her 20 years ago.

Virginia Giuffre claims she was trafficked by Andrew's former friend, and convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, to have sex with the duke, when she was aged 17 and a minor under US law.

At a pre-trial hearing, Andrew B Brettler, for the duke, said Ms Giuffre has previously entered into a "settlement agreement" that would nullify her current lawsuit.

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Mr Brettler said Ms Giuffre appeared to have signed away her right to sue the Queen's second son in resolving a separate lawsuit in 2009.

Mr Brettler told the US district court for the southern district of New York: "We believe this is a baseless, unviable and potentially unlawful lawsuit that the plaintiff has filed against the Duke.

"There has been a settlement agreement that the plaintiff has entered into in a prior action that release the duke and others from any an all potential liability."

The hearing, which was conducted by telephone, mostly focused on whether or not had been properly served notice of the case against him, and what action the court needs to take to ensure the legal papers reach Andrew.

Top news stories today

David Boies, representing Ms Giuffre, said the complaint had been "delivered to the last known address of the defendant". He added that the documents had also been sent "by Royal Mail".

Mr Boies said: "We believe we have complied with the service requirement and we filed proof of service last Friday."

He said he expected Andrew to challenge the claim that notice of the case has been properly served on him.

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2021-09-13 21:29:56Z
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Boris Johnson's mother, Charlotte Johnson Wahl, dies aged 79 - BBC News

Charlotte Johnson Wahl with son Boris Johnson and daughter Rachel Johnson
Getty Images

The prime minister's mother, Charlotte Johnson Wahl, has died aged 79.

A notice published in the Times newspaper said she died "suddenly and peacefully" at St Mary's Hospital in west London.

Boris Johnson once described his mother, who was a painter, as the "supreme authority" in the family.

Senior figures from across the political spectrum, including Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, have sent their condolences to Mr Johnson.

Sir Keir tweeted: "I'm very sorry to learn of the prime minister's loss. My condolences to him and his family."

Conservative party chairwoman, Amanda Milling, said she was "thinking of Boris Johnson and his family this evening", adding, "Our thoughts and prayers are with you."

Tory MP, Conor Burns, who is a friend of the prime minister, tweeted: "So sad to hear of the death of Boris Johnson's mum. Thoughts and prayers are with him and the whole of the Johnson clan."

Mrs Johnson Wahl, whose father was president of the European Commission for Human Rights in the 1970s, married Stanley Johnson in 1963 before completing her degree at Oxford University as the first married female undergraduate at her college.

The couple had four children - Boris, journalist Rachel, former minister Jo and environmentalist Leo. They divorced in 1979.

As an artist, Mrs Johnson Wahl made her name as a portrait painter, with actress Joanna Lumley and author Jilly Cooper among her subjects.

In 1988, she married American professor Nicholas Wahl and moved to New York - where she began painting cityscapes. She returned to London in 1996 following his death.

At the age of 40, she was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease but continued painting, steadying herself with a walking frame as she worked.

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2021-09-13 23:57:15Z
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Prince Andrew to challenge US court jurisdiction in sexual assault lawsuit - Sky News

Prince Andrew plans to challenge a US court's jurisdiction over a civil lawsuit by a woman who accused him of sexual assault, according to a court filing.

In the filing with the US District Court in Manhattan, a lawyer for the Duke of York said the prince also plans to contest that he was properly served with the lawsuit by accuser Virginia Giuffre.

Prince Andrew, the Earl of Inverness as he is known in Scotland, during a garden party at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh.
Image: Prince Andrew has always denied the allegations

Prince Andrew has always categorically denied any sexual contact or relationship with Ms Giuffre.

A US court will hold a pre-trial conference later in the civil lawsuit.

The hearing, which will take place in New York City, will look at whether Ms Giuffre's legal team has done enough to deliver papers regarding the civil lawsuit to the duke.

Ms Giuffre's lawyers have said the documents were handed to a Metropolitan Police officer on duty at the main gates of Andrew's home in Windsor Great Park on 27 August.

But Blackfords, a law firm that represents the prince "in certain UK matters", has questioned whether the papers were properly served.

More on Prince Andrew

Judge Lewis Kaplan of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York will decide whether the efforts to present the prince with the papers were enough or whether more is required.

Ms Giuffre claims she was trafficked by Andrew's former friend and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to have sex with the duke, when she was 17 and a minor under US law.

She has repeatedly made her allegations against Epstein, the American's ex-girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, and the prince, but the suit is the first time she has directly confronted Andrew in such a formal setting.

Ms Giuffre earlier said in a statement that the lawsuit was brought under the Child Victims Act to allege she was trafficked to him and sexually abused by him.

"I am holding Prince Andrew accountable for what he did to me," she said.

In a BBC Newsnight interview in 2019, Prince Andrew said he had never had sex with Ms Giuffre, saying: "I can absolutely categorically tell you it never happened."

The duke said he had "no recollection" of ever meeting her and that there were "a number of things that are wrong" about her account.

He has also suggested a photo showing him with his arm around Ms Giuffre may have been doctored.

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2021-09-13 17:14:16Z
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Covid UK: Daily cases fall by a quarter in a week with 30,825 positive tests - Daily Mail

UK's daily Covid cases fall by a quarter in a week with 30,825 positive tests as deaths jump by 36% to 61 but hospitalisations in England fall by 14%

  • Department of Health statistics showed cases have fallen by a quarter in a week but deaths rose
  • UK has been hit by a heatwave with temperatures soaring to 30C last week, and more warm weather forecast
  • Schools in England, Wales and Northern Ireland have been back for less than a fortnight 

Britain's daily Covid cases today were down by a quarter on last week but deaths jumped by a third, official data showed.

Department of Health bosses posted 30,825 positive tests within the last 24 hours, roughly 10,000 fewer than on last Monday.  

England is yet to suffer a Scotland-style spike in infections, which experts feared would be sparked once children returned to classrooms after the summer holidays.

But schools in England have been back for less than a fortnight and the country was hit by a heatwave which saw temperatures reach as high as 30C earlier this week, meaning people spent more time outdoors where the virus finds it harder to spread. 

Another 61 Covid deaths were also recorded, which was up 35.6 per cent from the same time last week when 45 were recorded. Fatality figures lag behind cases by three weeks because of how long it can take for the infected to become severely ill.

Latest hospitalisations figures for England show admissions have fallen by 14 per cent in a week, after 647 people were admitted to wards suffering from the virus on September 11. No UK-wide data was available. 

It came as Professor Chris Whitty and the chief medical officers from the other devolved nations today announced all children over the age of 12 should be offered one dose of a Covid vaccine. Around 3million under-16s are due to start getting their jabs from next week, with health chiefs claiming it would help prevent outbreaks in classrooms and further disruptions to education this winter.

Parents, experts and teaching unions warned of tension in schools after the UK signed off on the plans, which will see children get the final say on whether they are inoculated.

Meanwhile, latest vaccination figures show 14,955 first doses were dished out yesterday, the lowest number since the roll out began, and 52,615 second doses were administered. As many as 48.4million Britons — or 89.1 per cent of over-16s — have already received one dose, and 44million — or 81 per cent — have received two doses.

ENGLAND: The above graph shows Covid cases spotted in England by date reported. It shows that infections in the country are falling amid a September heatwave allowing people to spend more time outdoors

ENGLAND: The above graph shows Covid cases spotted in England by date reported. It shows that infections in the country are falling amid a September heatwave allowing people to spend more time outdoors

SCOTLAND: The above graph shows Covid cases in Scotland by date reported. It reveals cases in the country are now also falling after spiralling to their highest levels since the pandemic began

SCOTLAND: The above graph shows Covid cases in Scotland by date reported. It reveals cases in the country are now also falling after spiralling to their highest levels since the pandemic began

WALES: The above graph shows Covid cases in Wales by date reported. It shows that infections in the country are staying flat less than a fortnight after schools returned

WALES: The above graph shows Covid cases in Wales by date reported. It shows that infections in the country are staying flat less than a fortnight after schools returned

NORTHERN IRELAND: The above graph shows Covid cases in Northern Ireland by date reported. It revealed cases may be beginning to drop in the country less than a fortnight after schools returned

NORTHERN IRELAND: The above graph shows Covid cases in Northern Ireland by date reported. It revealed cases may be beginning to drop in the country less than a fortnight after schools returned

Professor David Livermore, a microbiologist at the University of East Anglia, said that since late July cases have hovered between 25,000 and 40,000 'without a convincing trend'.

'There was evidence of a spike in Scotland, perhaps associated with children returning to school,' he told MailOnline, 'but there is no evidence yet of this being recapitualted in England'.

'What is clear is that England's "Freedom Day" didn't drive a large resurgence and that stronger residual restrictions in Scotland, notably masks, don't seem to have done any good.' 

Around 3million children are due to start getting their jabs from next week after Chris Whitty endorsed the move to routinely vaccinate over-12s.

Doses will be largely administered through the existing school vaccination programme, and parental consent will be sought - but children will be able to override their parents in the case of a conflict.

Angry parents fumed against the move to leave the decision with young children who 'can't even decide what they want for tea, never mind' a vaccine, which carry small risks of side effects.

Just one in 200 Covid deaths during the first half of 2021 occurred among the fully-jabbed 

Fully-vaccinated people made up just one in 200 Covid deaths in England in the first half of this year, official data revealed today.  

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) identified 256 'breakthrough deaths' among the 51,281 Covid fatalities that occurred between January 2 and July 2.

More than 76 per cent of these patients were clinically extremely vulnerable to the virus, and had underlying conditions or weak immune systems.

The average age of a 'breakthrough death' — when a person caught and succumbed to Covid despite having maximum immunity from two jabs — was 84.

Today's ONS report is the latest to highlight the immense impact the vaccines have already had on reducing coronavirus deaths.

The Office for National Statistics looked at 51,281 Covid fatalities that occurred between January 2 and July 2 in England. These were broken down by vaccination status, which revealed 458  cases died 21 days after their second dose. Further analysis determined that only 256 of these had tested positive at least 14 days after their second dose

The Office for National Statistics looked at 51,281 Covid fatalities that occurred between January 2 and July 2 in England. These were broken down by vaccination status, which revealed 458  cases died 21 days after their second dose. Further analysis determined that only 256 of these had tested positive at least 14 days after their second dose

However, most of the fatalities in the six months of the research occurred during the height of the second wave, before the vaccines had become widely available.

The majority of elderly and vulnerable Britons were not fully vaccinated until spring, which skews the findings.  

More recently, fully vaccinated people have started to make up a greater proportion of Covid deaths but this is due to how successful uptake of the jabs has been.

More than 90 per cent of at-risk people are fully-jabbed, and because no vaccine is perfect, a small number continue to die. 

 

Professor Simon Clarke, a microbiologist at the University of Reading who is in favour of jabbing children, warned that giving youngsters the final say could lead to children being bullied by their peers into taking the jab.

He told MailOnline: 'It will cause rows I think, if they insist on full consent from parents before vaccination. You may end up in a situation where a minority, it will probably be the unvaccinated, get bullied and excluded by other children.'

Headteachers revealed they were already receiving letters from pressure groups threatening legal action if schools take part in an under-16 vaccination programme.

Amid fears about a conflict with parents, the teachers' union NAHT demanded urgent reassurance that medics will be responsible for questions and concerns about consent and vaccination rather than being left to schools.

Professor Whitty and his counterparts in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland said a secondary school rollout will help prevent outbreaks in classrooms and further disruptions to education this winter.

The programme in the UK has until now been limited to children with serious underlying health conditions and youngsters who live with extremely vulnerable relatives.

Under-16s will initially only be offered a single dose of the Pfizer vaccine, which has shown to be up to 55 per cent effective at preventing infection from the Delta variant.

A decision on second doses is still to be determined when more data is available internationally, with a decision expected by the spring term at the earliest. Officials will weigh up the risk of heart complications, which are slightly more common after the second shot.

The chief medical officers said that even though Covid poses a small risk to children's health, the negative impacts of school closures on their life prospects and mental wellbeing tipped the balance in favour of vaccination.

Professor Whitty and the CMOs in the devolved nations were asked to look at the 'broader' societal benefits of vaccinating schoolchildren at the start of the month after the Government's advisers ruled against the move.

The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) said immunising healthy under-16s would only provide 'marginal' benefit to their health, and not enough to recommend a mass rollout.

But it advised the Government to seek further advice from its chief medical officers about the wider benefits of vaccination on the pandemic, which was beyond the scope of its review.

In their advice to the Government, the UK's CMOs said they were recommending vaccines on 'public health grounds' and it was 'likely vaccination will help reduce transmission of Covid in schools'.

They added: 'Covid is a disease which can be very effectively transmitted by mass spreading events, especially with Delta variant.

'Having a significant proportion of pupils vaccinated is likely to reduce the probability of such events which are likely to cause local outbreaks in, or associated with, schools.

'They will also reduce the chance an individual child gets Covid-19. This means vaccination is likely to reduce (but not eliminate) education disruption.'

They admitted the rollout will likely only stop about 30,000 infections among 12 to 15-year-olds between now and March.

But the vaccines will prevent tens of thousands more from having to self-isolate and miss school as a result, they claim.

Modelling of the winter term estimated that without the vaccines there could be about 89,000 infections among 12 to 15-year-olds, compared to 59,000 with the rollout.

Without vaccination they warn of 320,000 school absences by March, whereas this could be reduced to 220,000 with the jabs.

The CMOs think a single dose will reduce significantly the chance of a young person getting Covid and passing the virus on, with studies showing the Pfizer vaccine is 55 per cent effective at blunting infection in adults after one dose.

But they have asked for the JCVI now to look at whether second doses should be given to children and young people aged 12 to 15 once more data comes through internationally. This will not be before the spring term.

Earlier this month the JCVI said it could not recommend Covid jabs for healthy 12 to 15-year-olds because the direct benefit to their health was only marginal. It also looked at the risk of health inflammation - known as myocarditis - in young people given the Pfizer vaccine, which was still very small but slightly more common after a second dose

Earlier this month the JCVI said it could not recommend Covid jabs for healthy 12 to 15-year-olds because the direct benefit to their health was only marginal. It also looked at the risk of health inflammation - known as myocarditis - in young people given the Pfizer vaccine, which was still very small but slightly more common after a second dose

Latest estimates from a symptom-tracking app suggested under-18s had the highest number of Covid cases in the UK (blue line) last week. Schools in England, Wales and Northern Ireland started going back on September 1. The data is from the ZOE Covid Symptom Study

Latest estimates from a symptom-tracking app suggested under-18s had the highest number of Covid cases in the UK (blue line) last week. Schools in England, Wales and Northern Ireland started going back on September 1. The data is from the ZOE Covid Symptom Study

Boots is refusing to refund customers for late PCR results 

Boots is among a series of government-approved Covid testing firms that are refusing to refund customers for late PCR results in a potential breach of consumer law.

Travellers arriving in Britain from countries on the green and amber list must pay for PCR tests within two days of landing. Non-vaccinated people who have come from amber list nations must also have a test on day eight or face a £2,000 fine.

Shockingly, Boots is one of several firms whose terms and conditions say these tests are non-refundable even if they are never delivered - despite the Consumer Rights Act allowing customers to claim for money back if a service is not as described.

Richard Claughton and his wife, who are both NHS workers, paid £150 for a pair of day two tests after a trip to Spain in July. Only one test arrived, which was late and damaged beyond use.

But Boots refused to refund them, claiming that, according to its terms and conditions: 'The service is deemed to have been provided in full by Boots and ReCoVa-19 by providing the customer with their booking reference number.'

The company told the Guardian that rather than giving a refund, it would replace any missing or faulty kit free of charge. But in the Claughton's case this would have meant the test results arriving after the official quarantine period had ended.

After seeking advice from a range of experts, including medical colleges, the CMOs said they consider education 'one of the most important drivers of improved public health and mental health'.

They added: 'The effects of disrupted education, or uncertainty, on mental health are well recognised. There can be lifelong effects on health if extended disruption to education leads to reduced life chances.

'Whilst full closures of schools due to lockdowns is much less likely to be necessary in the next stages of the Covid-19 epidemic, UK CMOs expect the epidemic to continue to be prolonged and unpredictable.

'Local surges of infection, including in schools, should be anticipated for some time. Where they occur, they are likely to be disruptive.'

The NHS in England had already been asked to prepare to roll out vaccines for all 12 to 15-year-olds in the event that the CMOs recommend the programme.

But there are fears that giving children the ability to overrule their parents could lead to conflict.

Headteachers are receiving letters from pressure groups threatening legal action if schools take part in Covid vaccination programmes, a union has said.

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), said: 'Many of our members have been receiving letters from various pressure groups threatening schools and colleges with legal action if they take part in any Covid vaccination programme.

'This is extremely unhelpful and we would ask those involved in this correspondence to stop attempting to exert pressure on schools and colleges.

'The question of whether or not to offer vaccinations to this age group has clearly been thoroughly considered and the decision on whether or not to accept this offer is a matter for families.'

Others have called for the Government to spell out exactly where the final decision will lie.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of school leaders' union NAHT, said: 'Now that a decision has been made, it is essential that the Government immediately confirms that the process surrounding vaccinations will be run and overseen entirely by the appropriate medical teams.

'Where parents have questions, including about important matters such as consent, these must be handled by those same medical teams.

'There must be no delay in confirming this otherwise school leaders will be put in an impossible position of facing questions to which they simply do not have the answers.'

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2021-09-13 15:26:50Z
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Boris Johnson dismisses Nicola Sturgeon call for second independence referendum - Daily Record

Boris Johnson has dismissed out of hand Nicola Sturgeon’s appeal to agree to another Scottish independence referendum “in the spirit of co-operation”.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman rejected the core message in the First Minister’s address to the SNP conference even before she had finished speaking.

At a briefing for journalists in Downing Street, the PM’s spokesman said the focus of all governments should be on covid recovery and repeated the mantra that “now is simply not the time” to consider a second referendum.

It comes as Nicola Sturgeon insisted Scotland's membership of the Union was "voluntary" and the UK Government had no right to block an IndyRef2.

Nicola Sturgeon meeting Boris Johnson outside Bute House in 2019
Nicola Sturgeon meeting Boris Johnson outside Bute House in 2019

The spokesman said: “We’ve said this many times before, Ministers and officials across the UK Government departments are focusing on tackling COVID 19 pandemic and supporting the economic recovery.”

“Scottish people have been clear they want to see the UK Government and devolved governments working together to defeat pandemic, that’s our priority.”

“Last week we announced further investment in health and social care across the UK, including £1.1 billion to Scotland by 2025, and we’ll continue to work closely with our Scottish counterparts.”

“As I said, we are very much focused with them on recovering from this pandemic.”

Addressing delegates at the SNP's virtual party conference, Sturgeon said: "Judged by any standard of democracy, our victory in May represents an unarguable mandate to implement the manifesto we put before the country.

"And that is what we intend to do. It is called democracy.

"During the election we said that tackling the pandemic would come first – and it will.

"We said we would pursue the most ambitious programme for government ever put before the people of Scotland – we are doing exactly that."

Scottish politics

The First Minister added: "So it is in that spirit of co-operation that I hope the Scottish and UK governments can reach agreement - as we did in 2014 - to allow the democratic wishes of the people of Scotland to be heard and respected.

'But, this much is clear. Democracy must - and will - prevail. The United Kingdom is after all a voluntary union of nations.

'Until recently no-one seriously challenged the right of the people in Scotland to choose whether or not they wished to become independent.

"Frankly it is not up to a Westminster government which has just six MPs in Scotland to decide our future without the consent of the people who live here."

Downing Street also refused to back accept the idea of a referendum “in principle” as other Tory cabinet Ministers have.

Both Michael Gove, the cabinet Minister handling Union affairs, and Scottish Secretary Alister Jack have said that a vote could be held if support for staging a referendum was consistently running at 60 per cent.

But the Prime Minister’ spokesman did not back the change in tone from other ministers

The official said: “We’ve never set a position on that. We haven’t said any sort of target. Our view, as set out ,is that now is simply not the time to be dealing with this.”

He added: “The public are looking to governments and leaders across the UK to focus on dealing with this ongoing pandemic and recovering the economy."

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2021-09-13 11:44:44Z
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M25 traffic: 11 arrested after climate activists block slip roads, with drivers warned to avoid parts of the motorway - Sky News

Twelve people have been arrested after climate protestors blocked parts of the M25.

Police warned motorists to avoid parts of the motorway after demonstrators sat on the roads during rush hour.

Protestors for Insulate Britain blocked the slip roads at a number of junctions just after 8am on Monday - including junction 3 from Swanley, junction 6 in Godstone, junction 14 for Heathrow, junction 20 for Hemel Hempstead and junction 31 for Lakeside.

A number of the roads have since reopened but are experiencing residual delays.

Essex Police originally said 11 people were arrested on suspicion of highways obstruction and are currently in custody - before later confirming a 12th person had been arrested.

Chief Inspector Paul Austin said: "This incident caused significant disruption and our officers worked to resolve it as quickly and safely as possible.

"I want to thank the drivers affected for their patience and understanding."

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One motorist told Sky News there were around 2.5 miles of queueing clockwise on the M25 at junction 14 this morning.

Surrey Police tweeted: "We're currently overseeing a protest at J6 M25 reported just before 8am

Footage shared on social media showed angry drivers attempting to drag the protestors from the road.

Video also showed protestors moving out the way to allow an ambulance to pass through.

"[A number] of protesters from Insulate Britain are at the location, slip road closed+diversion being set up. No arrests made at this stage. Pls avoid the area for the time being."

Kent Police added: "Motorists attempting to join the M25 from Swanley, at junction 3, may encounter delays due to an obstruction caused by a group of people.

"Our officers are at the scene and engaging with those involved. Traffic is moving and being diverted to join the M25 at junction 4."

Insulate Britain is a campaign group launched by members of Extinction Rebellion who want the government to reduce home heating emissions to zero.

The protest group said today's disruption was "just the start", adding: "Actions will continue until the government makes a meaningful commitment to insulate Britain's 29 million leaky homes, some of the oldest and most inefficient in Europe".

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMigAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9tMjUtdHJhZmZpYy1kcml2ZXJzLXdhcm5lZC10by1hdm9pZC1wYXJ0cy1vZi1tb3RvcndheS1hcy1jbGltYXRlLXByb3Rlc3RlcnMtYmxvY2stc2xpcC1yb2Fkcy0xMjQwNjk0NNIBhAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvbTI1LXRyYWZmaWMtZHJpdmVycy13YXJuZWQtdG8tYXZvaWQtcGFydHMtb2YtbW90b3J3YXktYXMtY2xpbWF0ZS1wcm90ZXN0ZXJzLWJsb2NrLXNsaXAtcm9hZHMtMTI0MDY5NDQ?oc=5

2021-09-13 09:45:00Z
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