Rabu, 20 April 2022

Prince Harry reveals he misses family in UK and working from home has been 'really hard' in interview with Hoda Kotb - Sky News

Prince Harry has said he misses his family in his latest television interview - and admitted that working from home has been "really hard" especially with young children in the house.

In an interview with NBC's Today show host Hoda Kotb in the Netherlands about the Invictus Games, the Duke of Sussex spoke openly about his family and how he wants to make the world a "better place for his kids".

He also said how he feels the guidance of his mother "more than ever before".

Prince Harry has sat down for an interview with Hoda Kotb at the Invictus Games
Image: Prince Harry sat down for an interview with Hoda Kotb at the Invictus Games

Asked if he missed his family at home, he said "yes", adding "especially over the last two years, for most people, have we not missed their families? Right?"

But when asked specifically if he missed his brother and father, Prince William and Prince Charles, he stopped short of answering directly, saying he was focused on competitors at the Invictus Games.

"Look, I mean... at the moment, I'm here focused on these guys and these families and giving everything I can, 120% to them to make sure that they have the experience of a lifetime," he said.

"That's my focus here. And when I leave here, I go back, and my focus is my family, who I miss massively."

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Harry's Platinum Jubilee uncertainty

The duke said he does not know if he will return to the UK to celebrate the Queen's Platinum Jubilee, saying there are "security issues and everything else".

He said he was "sure" his grandmother was looking forward to her celebrations, but was not sure he would be able to attend.

When asked if he would be there, he said: "I don't know yet. There's lots of things - security issues and everything else.

"So this is what I'm trying to do - trying to make it possible that, you know, I can get my kids to meet her."

There has been speculation whether Harry will make a balcony appearance with the Queen during the Platinum Jubilee celebrations.

Working from home 'not all it's cracked up to be'

He said days revolve "around the kids as much as humanly possible" and they would interrupt their Zoom calls.

The 37-year-old added: "This whole working from home stuff is not all it's cracked up to be - certainly post-COVID - because it's really hard.

"But when your kids and you are in the same place, it's really hard to separate the work from them, because they kind of overlap. I mean, Archie spends more time interrupting our Zoom calls."

It was pointed out to Harry that he had lived in the US for two years and he was asked if he feels "peaceful now".

He said: "I don't know how many people feel truly peaceful, you know? I feel, at times, I feel massively at peace.

"And we as human beings are compassionate people. But when your life becomes really hard, it can be, for some, harder to find the compassion for other people.

"But what I've learned over the years is - certainly for myself - I find healing in helping others. And I think that's what we should really be focusing on."

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'US welcomed us with open arms'

Harry says his mother is 'helping me set up'

Harry said he had "always wanted to be a dad" and "I've got two little people who I'm responsible for" and had been telling them about his mother, who died in 1997.

Of his son, Archie, two, the duke said: "I don't tell him all the stuff that happened, but certainly this is, you know, Grandma Diana and a couple of photos up in the house."

Asked if he feels the presence of his mother, Harry added: "It's constant. It has been over the last two years. More so than ever before.

"It's almost as though she's done her bit with my brother and now she's very much back to helping me. Got him set up, now she's helping me set up. That's what it feels like.

"He's got his kids. I've got my kids. You know, circumstances are obviously different.

"I feel her presence in almost everything that I do now. But definitely more so in the last two years than ever before."

The Duke of Sussex plays table tennis at the Dusseldorf 2022 stand during the Invictus Games at Zuiderpark the Hague, Netherlands. Picture date: Tuesday April 19, 2022.
Image: The Duke of Sussex plays table tennis at the Invictus Games

Duke tells of responsibility 'I feel' as a parent

He said there was "so much to be happy about in the outside world, but there's also so much to worry about" and it was about "trying to make the world a better place for my kids".

He added: "Otherwise, what's the point in bringing kids into this world, right? It's a responsibility that I feel as a parent."

The Duke of Sussex was joined by his wife, Meghan, to visit the Queen during their journey to the Invictus Games last week.

Harry said his grandmother was "on great form" and he wanted to make sure she was "protected" and had the "right people around her".

Queen to celebrate birthday at Sandringham

Meanwhile, the Queen has arrived at her Norfolk estate where she will celebrate her 96th birthday on Thursday.

The monarch was flown by helicopter from Windsor Castle to her Sandringham home, where she enjoyed family gatherings with the Duke of Edinburgh.

The Queen has been experiencing mobility issues in recent months and cancelled appearances at a number of events.

She was able to attend Philip's memorial service and has continued carrying out her duties of state and hosting virtual events.

It is thought the monarch will stay at the Duke of Edinburgh's cottage Wood Farm while at Sandringham, a property she said her late husband "loved".

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2022-04-20 14:35:25Z
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Scarborough man jailed for attempted murder of ex-girlfriend - BBC

Jack Darrion Sutton
North Yorkshire Police

A man who stabbed his ex-girlfriend in a "brutal attack" has been jailed for 16 years for attempted murder.

Jack Darrion Sutton, 24, admitted stabbing his former partner multiple times in her face, arms and chest in Scarborough last December.

After attacking the 23-year-old, Sutton fled before eventually being found in a garden on Mount View Avenue.

Det Ch Insp Graeme Wright said Sutton's ex-partner was lucky she had "escaped with her life".

Leeds Crown Court was told the attack happened on Londesborough Road on the evening of 10 December 2021.

Officers were called and they managed to stem the woman's bleeding before she was taken to hospital for emergency treatment.

As well as pleading guilty to attempted murder, Sutton, of Mount View Avenue, Scarborough, admitted possession of an offensive weapon and was given an extended licence period of four years.

Det Ch Insp Wright said: "This was an extremely brutal and frightening attack in which the victim was very lucky to escape with her life.

"Sutton now accepts his actions that night were reprehensible and could have resulted in fatal injuries to the brave victim."

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2022-04-20 08:49:35Z
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PMQs: Boris Johnson accused by Sir Keir Starmer of 'blaming everyone else' in furious Commons row - Sky News

Sir Keir Starmer has accused Boris Johnson of "blaming everyone else" over partygate during a furious exchange in the Commons.

The Labour leader said the prime minister chose to "slander decent people" in private but lacked the "backbone to repeat it in public".

He claimed that Mr Johnson showed a different attitude "once the cameras were off" during bad-tempered exchanges at Prime Minister's Questions.

Sir Keir accused him of going "back to blaming everyone else" for his woes - including the Archbishop of Canterbury - after his partygate apology.

Politics Hub: Boris Johnson's brewing row with Church

He called it "a mealy mouthed apology when the cameras roll, a vicious attack on those who tell the truth as soon as the cameras are off. Slander decent people in a private room, let the slander spread without the backbone to repeat it in public."

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Tory MP on PM's 'pantomime' meeting

His comments centred on reports that Mr Johnson had criticised the archbishop, Justin Welby, at a closed-door meeting of Tory backbenchers hours after his Commons appearance.

Sir Keir also pointed out that the prime minister's spin doctor Allegra Stratton, COVID adviser Professor Neil Ferguson and health secretary Matt Hancock had all resigned over their actions during the pandemic.

He asked: "Why does the prime minister think everybody else's actions have consequences except his own?"

More on Boris Johnson

Mr Johnson hit back by accusing Sir Keir of being "in some kind of Doctor Who time warp" and describing him as a "Corbynista in a smart Islington suit".

Sir Keir said the prime minister had attacked BBC coverage of the invasion of Ukraine - but Mr Johnson said this claim showed that the Labour leader was "out of his tiny mind".

It was the second day of pressure from MPs on Mr Johnson over partygate, after he apologised to the Commons on Tuesday following his fine last week for breaking lockdown rules.

Boris Johnson
Image: Boris Johnson said Sir Keir Starmer was a 'Corbynista in a smart Islington suit'

Sir Keir said: "Yesterday's apology lasted for as long as the prime minister thought necessary to be clipped for the news.

"But once the cameras were off the prime minister went to see his backbenchers and he was back to blaming everyone else.

"He even said that the Archbishop of Canterbury had not been critical enough of Putin.

"In fact, the archbishop called Putin's war an act of great evil."

Mr Johnson faced fresh calls to resign from other opposition MPs including the SNP's Richard Thomson, who was told to withdraw his description of Mr Johnson as a "Pinocchio prime minister" whom the public want to see "pack his bags and go".

Plaid Cymru's Westminster leader Liz Saville Roberts asked Mr Johnson whether he will support a law banning "lying in politics".

He replied: "It is well known that the rules of this House demand that we tell the truth in this House and that's what we try to do."

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Sky's deputy political editor Sam Coates said the prime minister was trying to move on from partygate but that Sir Keir "clearly got under the prime minister's skin".

"Keir Starmer was on better form and Boris Johnson arguably slightly tetchier form than I can remember for some time," he said.

"Keir Starmer did what he doesn't always do which is to have quite specific questions which clearly got under the prime minister's skin."

On Thursday the prime minister will face a vote on a motion tabled by opposition parties calling for parliament's privileges committee to investigate whether he misled the House with his initial claims that no rules were broken during partygate - though Mr Johnson himself will be in India.

The wording of the motion - which will need to attract the support of some Tory MPs to succeed - orders that the investigation cannot begin until police inquiries into partygate have concluded.

What is the Privileges Committee and will it investigate Boris Johnson?

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has tabled a motion, backed by other opposition parties, calling for the PM to be investigated for misleading Parliament.

A debate and vote will be held on Thursday, despite Boris Johnson due to be on an official visit to India at that time.

The motion calls for the prime minister to be investigated by the Committee of Privileges - a panel of seven MPs, which has a Conservative majority but is chaired by Labour's Chris Bryant.

The committee has responsibility for investigating issues relating to contempt of parliament.

It has the power to request reports and documents, meaning they could in theory ask Downing Street for the final report by senior civil servant Sue Gray, or any photos taken by the PM's official photographer.

However, because the Conservatives have a majority of 75 it would require a huge rebellion for the motion to be passed by MPs.

Currently, there are not thought to be enough Tory MPs ready to turn on Mr Johnson for this to be likely.

But Labour clearly believes there is sufficient political capital to be gained for them to push ahead with it anyway.

Sir Keir said: “The British public know that the rules were broken in Downing Street.

"Voting to say otherwise won’t persuade the public that everything was fine but will further damage the reputation of any Conservative MP who is happy to say it was one rule for the public and another for this government."

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2022-04-20 13:34:01Z
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Boris Johnson: Tory MPs told to block inquiry into Downing Street parties - The Times

Boris Johnson will order his MPs tomorrow to block an investigation into claims that he misled parliament over lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street.

The prime minister offered a “wholehearted apology” yesterday after being issued with a fixed-penalty notice for attending a gathering in the cabinet room to celebrate his 56th birthday.

Johnson insisted, however, that he had not misled the Commons when he said last December that Covid rules were followed at all times in Downing Street. “It did not occur to me, then or subsequently, that a gathering in the cabinet room just before a vital meeting on Covid strategy could amount to a breach of the rules,” he said.

Johnson apologises to Commons over partygate fines

At a meeting of Tory MPs last night, Johnson again expressed “genuine regret” but

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2022-04-20 08:45:00Z
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Selasa, 19 April 2022

Rwanda asylum seeker policy: Ex-PM Theresa May criticises government plan - BBC

Theresa May

Former prime minister Theresa May has criticised the government's plan to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda.

Mrs May told the Commons she did not support the policy due to her concerns over whether it met standards on "legality, practicality and efficacy".

Home Secretary Priti Patel said the scheme would be "a major blow to people smugglers" and would stop people dying on dangerous routes to the UK.

The policy has been criticised by charities and opposition parties.

Mrs May, who also served as home secretary overseeing the UK's immigration policy between 2010 and 2016, asked if the trial scheme would lead to an increase in trafficking of women and children - after reports that only single men making illegal crossings to the UK would be sent to Rwanda.

Under the scheme - announced last week - people deemed to have entered the UK unlawfully will be flown to the African country, where they would be processed, and if successful, would have long-term accommodation in the African country.

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Responding to a statement on migration by Ms Patel, Mrs May said: "From what I have heard and seen so far of this policy, I do not support the removal to Rwanda policy on the grounds of legality, practicality and efficacy.

"If it is the case that families will not be broken up, does she not believe and where is her evidence that this will not simply lead to an increase in the trafficking of women and children?"

But Ms Patel defended the policy saying: "Change is needed because people are dying attempting to come to the UK."

She told MPs: "This partnership is the type of international co-operation needed to make the global immigration system fairer, keep people safe, and give them opportunities to flourish.

"This will help break the people smugglers' business model and prevent the loss of life, while ensuring protection for those who are genuinely vulnerable."

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Map showing the distance from the UK to Rwanda

How would the Rwanda trial scheme work?

  • According to a memorandum of understanding between the two governments, the UK would screen asylum seekers "without delay" after their arrival in the UK and then provide Rwanda with basic details of each person it wanted to transfer
  • Rwanda would have to approve all requests before they were transferred, and the arrangement would last for five years.
  • After arriving in Rwanda each asylum seeker would be given accommodation and support and would be free to come and go from their accommodation at all times, the memorandum says.
  • If successfully processed, the asylum seeker would be offered long-term accommodation in the African country
  • The UK would also resettle "a portion of Rwanda's most vulnerable refugees" in the UK.
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Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper condemned the policy as "unworkable, unethical and extortionate" and said it was designed to "distract from years of failure" to tackle illegal immigration.

Ms Cooper highlighted the lack of information from the home secretary on costs.

She said: "Will she admit the £120m she has announced doesn't pay for a single person to be transferred.

"She hasn't actually got an agreement on the price for each person. In fact, the £120m is the eyewatering price the Home Office is paying just for a press release."

The home secretary added that some of the tone used to describe the UK's partnership with Rwanda was "quite xenophobic".

Ms Patel personally pushed through the scheme with a rare "ministerial direction", meaning she has taken responsibility for it.

She had to personally approve the scheme after her officials voiced concern over the lack of evidence to demonstrate value for money.

It is only the second time in 30 years that the power has been used.

Last year, 28,526 people are known to have crossed the English Channel in small boats, up from 8,404 in 2020.

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2022-04-19 16:34:22Z
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Partygate: MPs to vote over whether Boris Johnson should be investigated for misleading Parliament - Sky News

Boris Johnson will face a Commons vote on whether claims he misled MPs over partygate should be investigated.

Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle granted a request from opposition MPs for a vote which will be held on Thursday - and which Sky News understands will seek to refer Mr Johnson for investigation by the privileges committee.

The Speaker's ruling came as Mr Johnson prepared to face Parliament for the first time since he was fined last week for attending a gathering to mark his birthday in June 2020, in breach of his own government's social distancing rules.

Politics Hub: Johnson to face MPs for first time since partygate fine - latest updates from Westminster

Sir Keir Starmer asks Boris Johnson why he hasn't resigned yet
Image: The Labour leader will table a motion for debate

The debate on Thursday will centre on the question of whether Mr Johnson misled MPs when he initially said, after claims about parties in Downing Street first surfaced, that no rules were broken.

It will take place at a time when the prime minister himself is scheduled to be away on a visit to India.

Sir Lindsay told MPs it was not for him "to determine whether or not the prime minister has committed a contempt" but rather whether there was "an arguable case to be examined".

More from Politics

The Speaker ruled, having considered the issue, that Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer could table a motion for debate.

Labour sources say the committee has wide-ranging powers which may mean it could ask for civil servant Sue Gray's yet-to-be-published report into the affair as well as photos, and that it has the power to recommend sanctions.

But for the investigation to take place, opposition parties will have to persuade Tories disquieted by the PM's behaviour to join them in voting for the probe.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey urged Conservatives to "do their patriotic duty" in Thursday's vote while Labour's shadow attorney general Emily Thornberry earlier told Sky News that Tory MPs should "look at their consciences".

However, one backbench critic of the PM, Tobias Ellwood, appeared to rebuff the notion of cooperating with opposition parties, telling Sky News the matter should be kept "in house".

Police have been investigating 12 events in Downing Street and Whitehall during 2020 and 2021 when lockdown rules were alleged to have been broken and so far more than 50 fines have been announced.

Last week it was revealed that Mr Johnson had been fined over a gathering on his birthday in June 2020, with his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak also each receiving a punishment.

Downing Street is understood to be braced for more fines for the PM and reports over the weekend painted him as the instigator of leaving drinks for a staff member in November 2020 - another of the events being investigated.

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PM COVID penalty 'like a parking fine'

Ministers have rallied around the prime minister with Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis likening his fixed penalty to a parking fine.

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2022-04-19 15:23:53Z
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Woman dies at Lansdowne Court in Bristol: Updates after 'fall' at block of flats - Bristol Live

A woman has died following a fall from a block of flats in Bristol this morning (Tuesday, April 19), police have confirmed.

The emergency services were called by a member of the public at around 12.30am, and police found a woman lying at the bottom of Lansdowne Court in Easton. Police officers carried out first aid to no avail, and she was pronounced dead at the scene.

A spokesperson for Avon and Somerset police said a man has been arrested on suspicion of murder, and an investigation is underway. Police also said they will be carrying out extra patrols in the area, and pictures from the scene show a cordon is in place.

Also read: Police update after boy, 16, dies in through-about crash

We will bring you the latest updates on this tragic incident, as and when we get them, in an updates below. This is a live blog - scroll down for the latest:

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2022-04-19 10:34:44Z
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