Selasa, 05 Juli 2022

Climate protesters glue themselves to John Constable masterpiece - BBC

Just Stop oil protestPA Media

Climate protesters have attached their own "apocalyptic vision of the future" to a John Constable masterpiece in the National Gallery.

Two activists from Just Stop Oil (JSO) stepped over the rope barrier in front of the Hay Wain oil painting before attaching their own version.

Then they glued themselves to its frame, National Gallery (NG) said.

Art lovers, tourists and 11-year-old schoolchildren were among those ushered out of the room.

NG said police attended at about 14:25 BST and removed the protesters by 16:40. They were then arrested.

The painting was removed from the wall and examined by NG's conservation team who found it had minor damage to its frame and some "disruption to the surface of the varnish on the painting - both of which have now been successfully dealt with", NG added.

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The protesters, a man and a woman wearing white T-shirts with the slogan Just Stop Oil, each placed a hand on the frame of the painting and kneeled beneath it before loudly stating their concerns as visitors were directed out by security staff, NG said.

They were later named by JSO as music student Eben Lazarus, 22, and psychology student Hannah Hunt, 23, both of Brighton.

Painted in 1821, the Hay Wain shows a hay wagon travelling across fields in the Suffolk countryside. It is one of the most popular paintings in the National Gallery.

JSO said they had attached an "apocalyptic vision of the future" that depicts "the climate collapse and what it will do to this landscape".

Two protesters attach their own version of the painting
PA Media
Protesters
PA Media

'Road to disaster'

The colour printout shows double yellow lines and pollution.

Mr Lazarus, who described himself as an art lover, said: "Art is important, it should be held for future generations to see, but when there is no food what use is art?

"When there is no water, what use is art? When billions of people are in pain and suffering, what use then is art?

"We have stuck a reimagined version of the Hay Wain that demonstrates our road to disaster."

The painting will be rehung in Room 34 ready for when the National Gallery opens on Tuesday.

National Gallery
PA Media

Earlier this week JSO allegedly targeted a Scottish art gallery and stormed Sunday's British Grand Prix.

A 19th-century landscape by Horatio McCulloch called My Heart's In The Highlands was the target of five JSO members, who are also alleged to have sprayed the group's logo on the walls and floor of Glasgow's Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum.

And a track invasion during the opening lap of the race at Silverstone saw five men, aged between 21 and 46, and two women, 20 and 44, arrested.

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2022-07-05 05:52:36Z
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Boris Johnson told 'in person' of Chris Pincher allegation in 2019, claims former senior civil servant - Sky News

Boris Johnson was briefed "in person" about an allegation of inappropriate behaviour against disgraced MP Chris Pincher in 2019, a former senior civil servant has claimed.

Since the deputy chief whip resigned his post last week after allegations of groping two men, Number 10 has said the prime minister was not aware of specific allegations.

But Lord McDonald, who was the permanent secretary in the Foreign Office between 2015 and 2020, has written to parliament's standards commissioner saying Downing Street had made "inaccurate claims".

Politics Hub: Boris Johnson under mounting pressure for explanation

Tweeting the letter, he said: "This morning I have written to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards - because No 10 keep changing their story and are still not telling the truth."

In the letter, he wrote: "The original No 10 line is not true and the modification is still not accurate. Mr Johnson was
briefed in person about the initiation and outcome of the investigation.

"There was a 'formal complaint'. Allegations were 'resolved' only in the sense that the investigation was completed; Mr Pincher was not exonerated. To characterise the allegations as 'unsubstantiated' is therefore wrong."

More on Chris Pincher

Mr Johnson led a cabinet meeting this morning, letting cameras in for his opening remarks - but not allowing any questions from journalists.

Surrounded by his serious-faced ministers, the PM spoke about the cost of living crisis and his plans to tackle it, but there was no mention of Mr Pincher or Lord McDonald's letter.

Shortly before the letter was published, Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab told Sky News' Kay Burley that he knew about the allegation when he was foreign secretary in 2019.

He said he had "made it clear in no uncertain terms" to Mr Pincher that the behaviour "must never be repeated", and he referred it to both the civil service and Cabinet Office for investigation.

Full text of the letter

Five days after Mr Pincher's resignation as deputy chief whip, there remains significant confusion surrounding complaints about his behaviour prior to the drunkenness he admits at the Carlton Club on 29 June.

Inaccurate claims by 10 Downing Street continue to be repeated in the media. On 3 July, the BBC website reported: "No official complaints against [Mr Pincher] were ever made."

This is not true. In the summer of 2019, shortly after he was appointed minister of state at the Foreign Office, a group of officials complained to me about Mr Pincher's behaviour. I discussed the matter with the relevant official at the Cabinet Office. (In substance, the allegations were similar to those made about his behaviour at the Carlton Cub.) An investigation upheld the complaint; Mr Pincher apologised and promised not to repeat the inappropriate behaviour. There was no repetition at the FCO before he left seven months later.

The same BBC website report continued: "Downing Street has said Boris Johnson was not aware of any specific allegations when he appointed Mr Pincher deputy chief whip in February." By 4 July, the BBC website reflected a change in No 10's line: "The prime minister's official spokesman said Mr Johnson knew of "allegations that were either resolved or did not progress to a formal complaint", adding that 'it was deemed not appropriate to stop an appointment simply because of unsubstantiated allegations'."

The original No 10 line is not true and the modification is still not accurate. Mr Johnson was briefed in person about the initiation and outcome of the investigation. There was a "formal complaint". Allegations were "resolved" only in the sense that the investigation was completed; Mr Pincher was not exonerated. To characterise the allegations as "unsubstantiated" is therefore wrong.

I am aware that is unusual to write to you and simultaneously publicise the letter. I am conscious of the duty owed to the target of an investigation but I act out of of my duty towards the victims. Mr Pincher deceived me and others in 2019. He cannot be allowed to use the confidentiality of the process three years ago to pursue his predatory behaviour in other contexts.

But Mr Raab said the inquiries did not "trigger disciplinary action", and he had only told the PM about the incident "in recent days".

The deputy PM also described Mr Pincher as "an exceptional minister" and said it was right to allow the independent investigation to make its own conclusions.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner said it was "now clear that the prime minister knew about the seriousness of these complaints but decided to promote this man to a senior position in government anyway", adding: "He refused to act and then lied about what he knew.

"Boris Johnson is dragging British democracy through the muck. His appalling judgement has made Westminster a less safe place to work."

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What Raab knew about Pincher

Mr Pincher resigned as the government's deputy chief whip on Thursday after allegations he drunkenly groped two men at a private members club in London earlier that week.

The party whip was only removed from him - leaving him sitting as an independent MP for his Tamworth constituency - on Friday afternoon after the PM bowed to pressure, and a formal complaint was made to parliament's Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme (ICGS).

A number of ministers have since taken to the airwaves to reiterate Number 10's defence of Mr Johnson, including education minister Will Quince, who said he had been given "categorical assurance" the PM was not aware of any serious specific allegations.

But on Monday, Sky News revealed the PM's wife, Carrie Johnson, also questioned Mr Pincher's suitability as a government whip as far back as 2017.

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Labour's shadow attorney general, Emily Thornberry, said Downing Street "tells us different things on different days... and as time goes on, the truth starts to come out".

She told Sky News that Mr Johnson had been "turning a blind eye to any allegations because it suited the prime minister to turn a blind eye to it", adding: "We need a country that is led by a decent, honourable person."

The deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats, Daisy Cooper, also said Lord McDonald had "shone a new light on this murky cover-up".

She added: "Boris Johnson needs to own up to his web of lies and finally come clean today. Every day this carries on our politics gets dragged further through the mud."

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2022-07-05 08:37:30Z
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Senin, 04 Juli 2022

Boris Johnson was made aware of formal Chris Pincher complaint - BBC

Chris PincherEPA

Boris Johnson was made aware of a formal complaint about Chris Pincher's "inappropriate behaviour" while Mr Pincher was a Foreign Office minister from 2019-20, BBC News can reveal.

It triggered a disciplinary process that confirmed the MP's misconduct.

BBC News understands the PM and the foreign secretary at the time - Dominic Raab - knew about the issue.

The complaint raises fresh questions about what the PM knew before appointing the MP deputy chief whip.

The prime minister's spokesman said Mr Johnson was aware of media reports and some allegations that were "either resolved or did not progress to a formal complaint".

He added: "It was in one way concluded in some form. These issues tend to be anonymous."

Mr Pincher apologised after the process concluded, BBC News has been told, but at the time of publication the MP had not responded to our request for comment.

The MP for Tamworth was suspended as a Conservative Party MP last week over allegations he had groped two men at a private members' club in London.

He quit as Tory deputy chief whip last Thursday, but has since said he was seeking professional medical support and had no intention of resigning as an MP.

In recent days, Mr Pincher has denied a series of new allegations of inappropriate behaviour stretching back several years.

Mr Johnson appointed Mr Pincher as deputy chief whip, which involves ensuring party discipline among Tory MPs, during a cabinet reshuffle in February this year.

Mr Pincher was appointed a Foreign Office minister in July 2019 by Mr Johnson, and stayed in the post until February 2020.

During his tenure as a Foreign Office minister, an official complaint was raised about Mr Pincher for "inappropriate behaviour".

This triggered a process, overseen by the Cabinet Office, which resulted in a report that confirmed misconduct.

Both the prime minister and Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary at the time, were made aware of the disciplinary process, the BBC has been told.

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Mr Raab's team have been approached for comment, and the Foreign Office said: "We have robust measures in place to respond to any allegations of inappropriate behaviour. It's our long-standing policy not to comment on individual cases."

The prime minister's official spokesman has previously said that before Mr Pincher was appointed a deputy chief whip, advice was sought from the government's propriety and ethics team, part of the Cabinet Office, who did not advise against the move.

On Monday evening, No 10 reiterated that the prime minister was not aware of any "specific allegations" being looked at, and that in the "absence of a formal complaint it would not be appropriate to stop the appointment".

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2022-07-04 21:40:12Z
1487432988

Firefighters tackle 'major gas explosion' in Bedford as emergency services warn public to keep windows and doors shut - Sky News

Firefighters are tackling a "major gas explosion" in Bedford which lead to a fire "engulfing" a block of 20 flats.

Two people have been taken to hospital - one with serious injuries.

Emergency services are warning people to stay indoors and keep their windows and doors closed.

Pictures from the scene showed a three-storey block of apartments on fire, and an adjacent building has been evacuated.

A spokesperson for Bedfordshire Fire and Rescue Service said: "We are currently in attendance at a major gas explosion on Redwood Grove, Bedford.

"There are currently six appliances, two water carriers, an incident command unit at the scene. Please avoid the area and keep windows and doors closed."

Read more:
Man seriously injured following Burnley house explosion
Woman found dead after Birmingham house destroyed in gas explosion

A statement from Bedfordshire Police said: "Emergency services have responded to an explosion at Redwood Grove, Bedford this morning.

"This resulted in a significant fire at a three storey block of 20 flats, which has engulfed the whole building and caused a large portion of the roof to collapse.

"There are two people who have been taken to hospital, one with serious injuries to Addenbrooke's.

"Police, fire and the ambulance service all remain in attendance."

Adam Fisher said: "A huge explosion [was] heard - everyone went to our work car park to see what was happening.

"Our building is adjacent to the apartment complex - immediately an inferno (was) visible, huge smoke cloud billowing, people screaming and people frantically calling for emergency services."

Another witness, who did not want to be named, told the PA news agency: "I walked to town and saw the flames and also witnessed someone jump from the second-floor window whilst flames were blaring out."

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2022-07-04 10:30:00Z
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Fuel protests: Go-slow convoys cause motorway delays - BBC

Vehicles on the A12 near Colchester

Protesters are targeting motorways in England, Wales and Scotland in a demonstration over high fuel prices.

Police have warned there could be "serious disruption throughout the day" as demonstrators call for a cut to fuel duty.

The action is mainly targeting three-lane motorways and is seeing convoys of vehicles driving slowly in two lanes - leaving the "fast" outside lane free.

One person has been arrested for "unsafe driving", police said.

Among the roads affected by disruption are:

  • the M4 and Prince of Wales Bridge
  • the M5 in Devon
  • the M32
  • the A38
  • the M180 in Lincolnshire
  • the A12 in Essex
  • the A92 in Scotland
  • the A64 near York

Rolling roadblocks brought parts of the M4 to a standstill with convoys travelling towards the Prince of Wales Bridge, which crosses the River Severn between England and Wales, from both directions.

The bridge was closed in the eastbound direction, while officers stopped the protest on the westbound carriageway before it reached the crossing.

But shortly before midday Gwent Police said the bridge had reopened in both directions.

Superintendent Tom Harding said the force had seen "significant delays".

M180

Avon and Somerset Police said there had been slow-moving roadblocks on the M4, M5 and M32 but said protesters were expected to take a break before returning along the route.

Earlier, Devon and Cornwall Police said it was aware of a go-slow protest heading northbound from Exeter services of the M5.

The force also said a second protest had begun on the A38 heading north from Ivybridge, where a man in his 50s was arrested after ignoring a warning about unsafe driving.

"Unfortunately we have had unsafe driving on the A38 including vehicles travelling at a dangerously low speed," a force spokesman said.

Police Scotland said it was aware of protests on motorways and trunk roads and urged motorists to drive at an appropriate speed for the road conditions.

But the force warned that journey times could be longer than normal.

In Lincolnshire police blocked junction one between the M180 and M18 forcing protesters to remain on the former, and West Yorkshire police said officers had deployed a "single tyre deflation device" - also known as a "stinger" - at the Ferrybridge services in the early stages of the protest.

The force said the device had not been used, no damage had been done to vehicles and it had since been withdrawn.

Protesters talk to the police after they deployed a stinger on the exit junction at Ferrybridge services
Getty Images

West Mercia Police said some of the tactics used during a protest on the M54, which had ended by about 08:30 BST, had "compromised the safety of other road users" and said officers would take action against those who committed traffic offences.

Fuel prices have risen to record highs in recent weeks with figures from data firm Experian showing the average price of a litre of petrol at UK forecourts had hit 191.5p and 199.0p for diesel on Sunday.

RAC fuel spokesman Simon Williams said there did not appear to be any sign of retailers reducing forecourt prices despite weekly wholesale costs having fallen for five weeks.

Gordon Balmer, executive director of the Petrol Retailers' Association, which represents independent forecourts, said rising wholesale prices were related to international events and the weakness of the pound against the US dollar.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has said he will carefully consider calls for a "more substantial" fuel duty cut after the 5p per litre reduction implemented in March failed to halt price rises.

Rising fuel prices have been pushed even higher by the war in Ukraine, with Russia, one of the world's largest oil exporters, facing sanctions.

Slow moving traffic heading in to Aberdeen
Newsline Media
Police escort vehicles across the Prince of Wales Bridge, which runs between England and Wales
PA Media

The government has said while it understands people are struggling with rising prices and have a right to protest, "people's day-to-day lives should not be disrupted" and warned traffic delays "will only add to fuel use".

Howard Cox, founder of campaign group FairFuelUK, said other countries had cut fuel duty more than the UK and called for a reduction of at least 20p.

While he said his organisation was not involved in the protests he said there was an appetite for them and if the government did not deliver on the issue there could be "some serious escalation of protests".

One of those taking part in the protest was Scunthorpe truck driver Tariq Akram who told the BBC his company had added £4,000 to its fuel bill in the past four months because of price rises.

Tariq Akram
Tariq Akram

He said his was one of 50 vehicles making the 60-mile journey through Scunthorpe and Doncaster at 20mph.

"The turnout was absolutely fantastic. There were 35 vehicles from our yard alone who took part," he said.

"At one point, I thought some cars wanted to overtake so I tried to let them by, then I realised they were joining in."

BBC Radio Humberside's Amanda White said when the convoy u-turned at the A15 the queues were extraordinary with "hundreds if not thousands of vehicles nose to tail crawling along".

She said while some motorists were angry others supported the protest and some even joined the convoy in their own vehicles.

Another person taking part in a protest was former HGV driver Vicky Stamper, 41, from Cwmbran, who said she and her partner had to leave their jobs in Bristol because they could not afford the fuel any longer.

"I then lost a job two weeks ago because the company couldn't afford to put fuel in that many lorries so, last in first out," she said.

Additional reporting by Jasmine Andersson.

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2022-07-04 11:33:07Z
1478153765

Minggu, 03 Juli 2022

Labour ready to fight Johnson over effects of Brexit, says Starmer - Financial Times

Sir Keir Starmer will on Monday signal that Labour is willing to fight Boris Johnson over his Brexit legacy at the next election, setting out a five-point plan to tackle the economic pain caused by Britain’s EU exit.

In a big tactical shift, Starmer will use a speech to denounce the “mess” created by the UK prime minister’s 2020 Brexit deal and the breakdown of trust with the EU caused by the row over the trading arrangements for Northern Ireland.

The Labour leader has until now shied away from talking about Brexit, fearing it would alienate Leave voters, but he has been emboldened by emerging evidence of the hit the departure has inflicted on the economy.

He will claim that Labour can “make Brexit work”, arguing that Johnson’s Brexit deal had contributed to a sense of a country that was “stuck”, with wages and growth stagnating and broken public services.

“They have created a hulking ‘fatberg’ of red tape,” he will say in a speech, comparing Brexit to the “wet wipe island” found in the river Thames. “It is hampering the flow of British business — we will break that barrier down.”

Brexit had become something of a taboo subject for Labour’s leadership: one-third of Labour supporters voted Leave in 2016 and Starmer was associated with the ill-fated campaign to overturn that result.

But new data has started to separate the economic effects of Brexit from the Covid pandemic, showing a dismal UK performance for trade and investment compared with other G7 countries.

An Ipsos UK study found last week the proportion of Britons who think Brexit has made their daily life worse has risen from 30 per cent in June 2021 to 45 per cent; only 17 per cent said their lives had been made better.

Starmer will insist that a Labour government would not seek to rejoin the EU’s single market or customs union or reintroduce freedom of movement — let alone seek to reverse the 2016 Leave vote.

“Nothing about revisiting those rows will help stimulate growth or bring down food prices or help British business thrive in the modern world — it would simply be a recipe for more division,” he will say.

Labour would seek a veterinary agreement with the EU to cut onerous agrifood checks, mutual recognition of product standards and a deal on mobility to facilitate short business trips and help artists tour in Europe.

Starmer would use the agrifood deal to remove most checks on trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland and negotiate a trusted trader scheme to end the stand-off with Brussels over the rules, contained in the part of the Brexit deal called the Northern Ireland Protocol.

The Labour leader said business leaders wanted to safeguard the protocol, which leaves Northern Ireland in the single market for goods. “The solutions are there, the desire is there — what is lacking is trust,” he will say.

The German and Irish foreign ministers on Sunday wrote an opinion article in The Observer accusing Johnson of not engaging with Brussels on the protocol in “good faith”. They wrote there was no “legal or political justification” for his decision to introduce legislation to rip up parts of the agreement.

Starmer will say Labour would negotiate mutual recognition of professional qualifications and keep Britain in EU science programmes, including the €95bn Horizon scheme, which is cherished by UK researchers.

Data adequacy rules would be aligned but Starmer would follow Johnson in pursuing a different course on City regulation, he will say in an address to the Centre for European Reform.

The plan would also include more co-operation with the EU on justice and police matters including a new “security pact”.

Johnson is likely to portray Starmer’s speech as evidence of Labour wanting to unpick Brexit, a policy that was embraced by many working class voters in the former “red wall” in northern England.

Some senior Labour figures, including London mayor Sadiq Khan, want Starmer to go further and to commit to rejoining the EU single market, but that has been ruled out by party strategists.

Even the Liberal Democrats, who favour a return to the single market, have not set any timetable for the move, reluctant to re-engage the British public in a debate whose scars remain unhealed.

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2022-07-03 21:30:29Z
1482898335

Rise in UK Covid cases braces NHS for a bumpy ride - The Times

The number of people in hospital with Covid is expected to rise further, fuelling concerns about the ability to treat other illnesses, a top health official said today.

Jenny Harries, the chief executive of the UK Health Security Agency, said that the present wave of infections had not yet peaked and asked people to “go about their normal lives” but in a “precautionary way”.

Meanwhile, an organisation that represents NHS trusts said that hospital bosses were braced “for a bumpy ride” with coronavirus infections expected to add to seasonal flu pressures later this year. A heavy start to Australia’s flu season, which runs ahead of Europe’s, has been read as a potential warning sign for the UK.

About 1,300 people a day are being admitted

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2022-07-03 17:00:00Z
1486403544