Selasa, 08 Maret 2022

Ukraine war: UK can and will do more for refugees - minister - BBC

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The UK needs to speed up the processing of visas for refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine, the defence secretary has said.

Ben Wallace told the BBC the government could and would do more to support refugees, and his department would help the Home Office accelerate the system.

The UK has granted visas to 300 Ukrainian refugees under its new scheme so far, the Home Office said.

It said 17,700 applications to re-join relatives had been started.

But about 600 refugees are stuck in Calais, with many saying they were turned away for lack of paperwork.

Almost 300 people have been turned away while trying to cross to the UK, French officials told the BBC.

The Home Office said it was "in the process" of setting up a second visa application centre in France, but the primary centre would remain in Paris.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss told MPs on Tuesday that Home Secretary Priti Patel had "announced a new pop-up [visa] application site in Lille".

Up until now people in Calais have been told to go to Paris to apply for their visa, with some Ukrainians telling the BBC they faced a wait of more than a week just for an appointment in the French capital.

The UN says that more than two million people have now fled the war in Ukraine - most of them to Poland.

Unlike the European Union - which is allowing Ukrainians three-year residency without a visa - the UK has retained controls on entry, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson saying it was "sensible" to "have some basic ability to check who is coming in and who isn't".

There are two main routes to a visa for refugees from the war, requiring them either to have family in the UK, or a British sponsor for their application.

After criticism from France that the UK's approach showed a "lack of humanity", Ms Patel said she had "surged a Home Office team" to help at Calais - and denied anyone had been turned back at the border.

But the BBC found a Home Office presence at a local administrative building disappeared on Monday morning, while a sign at the hostel where many refugees were staying directed them to Brussels or Paris for visa applications.

Calais' sub-prefect VĂ©ronique Deprez-Boudier said that 286 Ukrainian refugees have been turned away by UK authorities so far.

She told the BBC it is "important to build a more organised team" in Calais to assist them to get visas, rather than make them travel elsewhere to secure one.

The Home Office has said there was no visa application centre in Calais and urged people not to travel there.

It said staff have been "surged" at appointment centres across Europe - including in Poland, Romania, Hungary, Moldova and the Czech Republic - as well as in the UK in order to process applications as quickly as possible, while maintaining "essential security checks".

A spokesperson said the UK stands "shoulder-to-shoulder" with the Ukrainian people and it was "working at pace to process applications as quickly as possible".

Ukraine has begun evacuating civilians from the town of Irpin, near the capital Kyiv, and the northern city of Sumy after Russian and Ukrainian officials agreed to set up humanitarian corridors.

Ukrainian cities have continued to suffer heavy bombardment from Russian forces, causing several civilian evacuation plans to collapse.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, the defence secretary said the UK's visa scheme for Ukrainian refugees was "generous" but conceded "we can... and will do more".

Insisting the "vast" scheme would allow hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians to enter the UK, he said: "It's not the case that we are only allowing 300 people in...the system has not been quick enough, which is what we're going to address."

He added: "We need to upscale it. I know that the home secretary has already doubled, or trebled in some cases, more people in different processing centres."

Challenged on the 600 Ukrainians stuck in Calais and whether visas should be processed there, Mr Wallace insisted he was "not the home secretary" and the detail on how to process the visas was a matter for Ms Patel's department.

He said she was "determined" to speed up the process and - revealing his department has offered to help - added: "we'll all lean in to help the Home Office deliver that".

Meanwhile, Mr Wallace also said the UK will increase its "lethal and non-lethal aid" to Ukraine and he will set out further details in a statement MPs on Wednesday.

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'No-one can help us here'

By Mark Easton, BBC home editor in Calais

Raminishvili family

Misha Raminishvili was close to despair, his daughter in tears, as the news came through.

"No visa for at least another week," he said, simply. "No-one can help us in Calais."

I met Misha, with his Ukrainian wife Maria and two children, at a hostel in the French port which is accommodating 137 Ukrainian refugees.

Misha has a house in Hornchurch, east London, but lives between there and Kyiv.

He and his son, Misha Jr, have UK passports. But his wife Maria, and daughter Gabrielle, do not - and therefore need visas to enter the UK, which require biometric checks.

Misha has been stuck in Calais for five days, unable to get his family across the Channel, in what would be the last leg of a journey that began on 24 February.

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The Home Office repeated its claim that it was the first visa scheme to launch since the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Since the Ukraine Family Scheme launched on 4 March, 8,900 applications have been submitted, while 4,300 applicants have made appointments to submit their biometric details.

Of these, 640 applications have been confirmed, the Home Office said, and 300 visas have been issued so far.

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War in Ukraine: More coverage

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Former home secretary Amber Rudd told the BBC she found it "baffling and disappointing" the number of visas issued by the UK were so "tiny" compared to other European countries.

Refugee and migrant rights director Steve Valdez-Symonds said the Home Office was "once again too slow and too bureaucratic in response to a refugee crisis that almost everyone saw coming".

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the government should be offering a "simple route to sanctuary" for people in danger, and said the Home Office is "in a complete mess".

Ukraine refugee map
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2022-03-08 10:56:33Z
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Senin, 07 Maret 2022

Aldgate fire: Large blaze at high-rise London tower block - BBC

Fire in Whitechapel
@azizur_jahir

A large fire has started in a high-rise block of flats and offices in east London, with footage showing burning debris falling to the ground.

More than 125 firefighters are at the tower on Whitechapel High Street, in Aldgate East, with London Fire Brigade (LFB) asking people to avoid the area.

Large flames could be seen fanning out of the 17th floor of the building.

One eyewitness tweeted: "Huge fire in #aldgate huge glass panels falling 100s of metres to the ground, awful scenes."

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Some 20 fire engines are at the scene and firefighters are using a ladder, which can reach 64m (210ft).

The Metropolitan Police said the building was being evacuated. There have not been any reports of injuries.

London Ambulance Service has advised people to keep their windows closed and stay indoors.

'Very scary'

Lynn Ling, 25, lives on the 20th floor of the tower block with her husband Yuri.

Ms Ling said: "I did not hear an alarm. I think there was a fire alarm on the ground floor but I could not hear it clearly on the 20th.

"I went out of my door but I found there was smoke in the corridor so I went downstairs. I forgot to take my coat. It was very scary."

Close up of fire in tower block
PA Media

Some roads in the area are closed, with Whitechapel High Street shut between Commercial Road and Old Castle Street. Commercial Road is also closed.

The fire service said the cause of the blaze was not yet known.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said he was in close contact with Fire Commissioner Andy Roe regarding updates and suggested Londoners "follow @LondonFire for updates".

The building is a 22-storey mixed use development of commercial office space and 207 residential apartments, according to property developer Hondo Enterprises, which sold the building in 2018.

It is located over Aldgate East Tube Station between the City - the financial heart of London - and neighbourhoods Aldgate and Spitalfields.

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At the scene

BBC Radio London's Helen Hoddinott

As soon as I got out of the Tube, the doors opened and you could smell the thick smoke in the air.

Seventeen floors up, the smoke is billowing out of a gap in the building. Four floors above that, the building is charred with smoke.

There's a huge presence from the emergency services here.

The London Fire Brigade has brought their biggest crane of 64 metres. There are two firefighters making very slow progress towards the fire.

People are being told to avoid the area, but there are big crowds gathering to look up at the smoke.

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The fire in the tower block with burning debris falling to the ground below
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The fire in the tower block
@422error
Smoke billows out of a tower block in Whitechapel
London Fire Bridage
The fire in the tower block
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2022-03-07 18:11:02Z
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Baby killed in suspected dog attack at Ostler's Plantation - BBC

Ostler's Plantation

A three-month-old girl has been killed in a suspected dog attack at a beauty spot.

Paramedics were called to Ostler's Plantation, near Woodhall Spa, Lincolnshire, at 23:13 GMT on Sunday.

They called police to the scene, who arrested a 40-year-old woman and a 54-year-old man on suspicion of being in charge of a dog which was out of control. Both remain in custody.

Officers have not released information about how the baby died.

Ch Supt Andy Cox said Lincolnshire Police was doing "everything we can" to establish the circumstances.

"This is an exceptionally sad incident, and one that we know will impact the local community, or indeed anyone hearing about it," he said.

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2022-03-07 15:37:18Z
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Ukraine war: Boris Johnson defends UK support for refugees and says 'nothing is off the table' when it comes to sanctions - Sky News

Boris Johnson has defended the UK's support for fleeing Ukrainian refugees and has said "nothing is off the table" when it comes to sanctioning Russian oligarchs.

Yesterday, the Home Office revealed that only "around 50" visas had been issued under the Ukraine Family Scheme - which allows Ukrainian refugees who have family settled in the UK to apply to come to Britain for three years.

Speaking to broadcasters today, the prime minister disputed this figure, but was unable to say how many fleeing Ukrainians have been granted visas to the UK.

Ukraine 'retakes town' in sign of difficulty for Russia - latest Ukraine updates

"I can't give you the number, we're processing thousands right now," he said.

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David Carter is a British citizen struggling to get a visa to come home from Ukraine

PM: UK govt's approach to Ukrainian refugees 'very, very generous'

"We will continue to make sure that we have a very, very generous approach."

More on Boris Johnson

Mr Johnson continued: "Clearly this crisis is evolving the whole time. I've said before that the UK will be as generous as we can possibly be and we intend to do that.

"We have two very, very generous routes already - so the family reunion route, which is uncapped, which could potentially see hundreds of thousands of people come to this country, plus the humanitarian route. Under that scheme, people can sponsor people coming from Ukraine."

Key developments:
Kremlin spokesman: Russian military action will stop 'in a moment' if Ukraine meets its conditions
Boris Johnson meets foreign leaders to build united front against Putin
Adviser to the Ukrainian president says the next round of talks with Russia will begin at 4pm local time
Foreign Office minister defends UK's support for refugees as only 'around 50' visas granted so far
Former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko asks for military aircraft to help fight the Russians

The prime minister added that the UK government would not introduce a system whereby Ukrainian refugees can come to the UK "without any checks or any controls at all".

Analysis: Why have so few visas been issued for refugees hoping to come to the UK?

"What we won't do, and let me be very clear, what we won't do is have a system where people can come into the UK without any checks or any controls at all, I don't think that is the right approach," he told broadcasters.

"But what we will do is have a system that is very, very generous."

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Europe Minister James Cleverly clashes with Kay Burley over why the government has only issued 50 visas to Ukrainian refugees

Minister: Via process 'only just started'

Earlier this morning, Foreign Office minister James Cleverly said the UK government has "made it absolutely clear we want to support Ukrainians who are seeking refuge", adding that most of those who have left Ukraine are currently in bordering countries.

Acknowledging that "only small numbers" have come to the UK so far, Mr Cleverly told Sky News "the process has only just started".

Meanwhile, Downing Street said a "humanitarian route" for Ukrainian refugees reportedly being examined by the Home Secretary was in fact a sponsorship scheme that had already been announced by the government.

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A Downing Street spokesman told reporters: "We've set out the details of the two routes that we are putting in place to help those displaced Ukrainians who would like to come to the UK.

"We will set out more details this week around the sponsorship scheme, which as I say will provide a route for Ukrainians without any family ties to the UK - and there is no limit to that scheme. That will welcome as many Ukrainians as wish to come and that have matched sponsors."

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Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has spoken out in a new video message as the conflict continues across the country

PM: 'More to be done' on sanctions

Mr Johnson also defended the UK's response to the crisis, adding that the UK government "want to go as fast as we possibly can" in imposing sanctions against Vladimir Putin's allies.

The PM's official spokesperson later clarified that Mr Johnson will be speaking to the leaders of the US, France and Germany at 15:30.

Mr Johnson is expected to put more pressure on the international leaders to take further action to remove Russia from the SWIFT payment system, while pushing them to back his six-point plan to tackle Russian aggression.

Yesterday, shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper criticised the Home Office for "completely failing" to understand the urgency of the crisis in Ukraine.

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Just outside Kiev, the town of Irpin has endured another day of sustained shelling by Russian forces

MPs to debate Economic Crime Bill

It comes as MPs prepare to fast-track the Economic Crime Bill through the Commons this afternoon.

The legislation, which has the intention of targeting money-laundering by foreign oligarchs, will mean foreign property owners will have to declare their identities rather than using companies.

Read more: What sanctions are different countries around the world are imposing on Russia?

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said amendments to the Economic Crime Bill would "give us the chance to bring even more crippling sanctions against Putin and his regime".

Labour is set to put pressure on ministers to further reduce the time period before foreign-owned UK property needs to be registered under new plans.

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2022-03-07 12:50:39Z
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Sabtu, 05 Maret 2022

Ukraine invasion: 'Putin must fail' - PM's six-point plan for resolving crisis ahead of talks with world leaders - Sky News

Boris Johnson has claimed Vladimir Putin is trying to "rewrite the rules" of international order "by military force" - as he prepares to host world leaders for talks at Downing Street.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mark Rutte of the Netherlands will visit Number 10 on Monday.

On Tuesday, Mr Johnson will host leaders of the V4 group of central European nations - the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia - which are already experiencing the impact of Ukraine's humanitarian crisis.

Ukraine invasion: Live updates

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London protests over Russian invasion

In an essay in The New York Times, Mr Johnson wrote: "Putin must fail and must be seen to fail in this act of aggression. It is not enough to express our support for the rules-based international order - we must defend it against a sustained attempt to rewrite the rules by military force.

"The world is watching. It is not future historians but the people of Ukraine who will be our judge."

In the same article, Mr Johnson has also launched a six-point plan of how the international community should resolve the crisis - including humanitarian and military support, economic sanctions, an attempt to find a diplomatic solution, and a renewed effort to strengthen security across Europe.

More from World

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has conceded Western countries were too slow to change their approach to Russia, especially after the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the Salisbury Novichok poisoning in 2018.

"I believe that the whole West should have done more earlier," she told the Sunday Express.

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Russian helicopter 'shot down'

"We didn't do enough as Putin staged invasions into neighbouring countries. There is a great sense of resolve now to take a completely different approach."

She also said petrol and household energy bills may rise but it is incomparable to the price of not holding Putin to account: "The cost of not stopping him now would be disastrous."

Labour is urging the prime minister to bring forward new legislation to block Russian oligarchs from pursuing vexatious high-cost legal claims through British courts to avoid sanctions.

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Putin calls sanctions 'war'

The so-called Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation have previously been used to censor and threaten journalists and activists.

Read more:
Sky News team's harrowing account of their violent ambush in Ukraine this week
'Welcome to Hell' - the message facing Russian invaders as Kyiv prepares for the fight of its life
Exhausted women and children shelter in tents after fleeing Putin's war

Sir Keir Starmer said: "We are already behind the rest of the world in enforcing sanctions against oligarchs funding Putin's murderous invasion of Ukraine.

"We can't then also give room for them to sue their way out of sanctions, while gagging the UK's media. Lawfare is not the way we do things in this country. The freedom of the British press is to be cherished, respected, and protected."

Analysis: PM pushes for harsher sanctions - but is he acting fast enough?

Political correspondent Joe Pike
Joe Pike

Political correspondent

@joepike

None of Boris Johnson's six-point plan is new, but government sources argue it is intended to set out the breadth of the UK's response and ensure key commitments are acted upon.

Mr Johnson has certainly been vocal in pushing for harsher sanctions, but Labour has criticised the speed of UK measures and suggested some oligarchs will be able to move assets before their finances are restricted.

The prime minister is no doubt passionate about the central role the UK can play in this crisis, but after months of instability in No 10, it is also an opportunity to improve his battered domestic reputation and present himself as a statesman on the world stage.

His advisers will be hoping next week's photocalls and news conferences alongside Western leaders will help bolster that image.

Meanwhile, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has warned President Putin not to underestimate the West as he said if allies stuck together and refused to be intimidated, he was sure the Russian leader would fail in his invasion of Ukraine.

In an interview with The Sunday Telegraph, Mr Wallace said the West "must not be afraid of Putin", who he said was "acting irrationally and inflicting horrors on Ukraine".

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2022-03-05 22:35:36Z
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Ukraine: Workers refuse to unload Russian oil from ship - BBC

People walk past the vessel berthed on the Mersey
Reuters

Workers are refusing to unload Russian oil from a German-flagged ship which is moored at a major British oil refinery.

The Seacod vessel is at a terminal on the River Mersey, from where oil is usually pumped to Stanlow Oil Refinery.

The UK government has banned ships with "any Russian connection" from entering its ports due to the country's invasion of Ukraine.

However, the Unite union said cargo was not included in the ban and has called for ministers "to close this loophole".

Stanlow operators Essar said a German-flagged vessel was granted approval to berth by the Port Authority on Thursday.

A spokesperson for the refinery, which supplies 16% of road transport fuels in the UK, said Essar "remained deeply concerned by the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Ukraine" and was "fully complying with the statutory framework implemented by the UK government with regard to Russia-related entities".

The firm said it had turned away Russian-flagged tankers earlier this week.

It added it had been "working urgently to find alternative sources of diesel while simultaneously ensuring uninterrupted supply of fuel to the North West of England".

Seacod at Stanlow Refinery
Reuters

Sharon Graham, general secretary of Unite, said they had informed the company that "Unite workers at the facility will under no circumstances unload any Russian oil regardless of the nationality of the vessel which delivers it".

Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the UK became the first country to ban all ships that are Russian-owned, operated, controlled, registered or flagged from entering its ports.

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Russia attacks Ukraine: More coverage

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However BBC business correspondent Simon Browning has said that many Russian businesses use transport that is licensed and registered in other countries, which experts describe as a "loophole" for sanction enforcement.

A government spokesperson said "the UK is in no way dependent on Russian gas, with imports making up just 4% of demand".

"Ministers are exploring options to further reduce the already small amount of imports we do get from Russia and we continue to urge Europe to put in place plans to end their dependence on Russian gas."

Earlier this week, dockers in Kent refused to unload two tankers of Russian gas, prompting the vessels to be diverted.

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2022-03-05 12:17:55Z
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Clive and Valerie Warrington: Son charged with murdering parents in court - BBC

Couple at wedding
Gloucestershire Police

A man has appeared in court charged with the murder of his parents.

William Warrington, 40, of St George's Street, Cheltenham, appeared before Cheltenham magistrates via video link earlier.

He is charged with the murder of his father Clive, 67 and mother Valerie, 73, who were found dead on Wednesday.

Chairman of the bench, Andy Hill, remanded Mr Warrington in custody to appear at Bristol Crown Court on Tuesday.

Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of William Warrington
PA Media

The body of Clive Warrington was found at Sherborne Place in Cheltenham at 06:25 GMT on Wednesday.

Shortly afterwards, the body of his ex-wife, Valerie Warrington, 73, was found at a property about 15 miles (24km) away in Whiteshoots Hill, Bourton-on-the-Water, in the Cotswolds.

They were both found with fatal stab wounds and their family said they were devastated by the "sudden and tragic loss".

"We thank everyone for their messages of love and support, which are of great comfort to us," they added in a statement.

Police cars at the crime scene

William Warrington was arrested on Wednesday morning near Sherborne Place in Cheltenham and questioned for three days before being charged on Friday evening.

He spoke to confirm his name and date of birth during the remand hearing.

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2022-03-05 11:56:26Z
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