Selasa, 13 Desember 2022

Unimaginable pain over boys' Solihull lake deaths - aunt - BBC

A woman lays flowers among the tributes near to Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst, Solihull, after the deaths of three boys aged eight, 10 and 11 who fell through ice into a lake in the West Midlands.PA Media

Families of three young boys who died after being pulled from an icy lake are suffering unimaginable pain, a family member has said.

The children, aged eight, 10 and 11, died after emergency calls to Babbs Mill Park, near Solihull, on Sunday.

The 10-year-old has been named as Jack Johnson but the identities of the other two boys are yet to be confirmed, as mourners leave tributes near the lake.

Another boy, six, rescued from the water remains in a critical condition.

Searches of the lake continued throughout Tuesday but police stressed there was no suggestion anybody else was missing.

On Monday night, mourners gathered for a candle-lit vigil, leaving flowers, soft toys and balloons.

Upset mourners look at the flowers and tributes near to Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst
PA Media

Throughout the day, people were standing in shock not knowing what to do or say - and so remained quiet.

Jack's aunt Charlotte McIlmurray thanked the local community on social media for their support.

She described the boys' deaths as a nightmare, saying the pain of losing them was "unimaginable".

Messages of love and support have been left for the boys and their families along with flowers and soft toys.

One tribute, in a child's writing, read: "Rest in peace, I'm going to miss you forever."

Birmingham City Football Club head coach John Eustace laying flowers near to the scene in Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst, Solihull
PA Media

John Eustace, head coach at Birmingham City FC, was among those to lay flowers at the lakeside.

The blue and white arrangement held a card which read: "Sending our deepest condolences and love to those affected by this tragedy.

"You are in our thoughts. From everyone at Birmingham City Football Club."

He then stood for a moment in silence before leaving.

Onlookers applauded when a group of 21 police officers from the Chelmsley Wood neighbourhood policing team marched to the memorial spot.

They held a two-minute silence and on Twitter they thanked the community for the kindness shown towards the police force.

A child visiting the tributes left for the victims

"The support from residents for our staff and other emergency services that attended the incident has been overwhelming," they said.

Shaun Gordon, 45, told the BBC how he had had to break the news to his daughter, a classmate of Jack's.

"It was heart-breaking," he said. "As a parent, it's just tragic."

The family came to lay flowers on Tuesday which Mr Gordon said helped ease his daughter's pain.

Some of Jack's other classmates also came to lay flowers at the end of the school day.

The community here knows all the boys who have died but out of respect for the families they are waiting for their names to be formally confirmed by police.

Instead, on candles and notes they refer to them as little soldiers, three kings and the Babbs Mill Boys.

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

A neighbour of one of the boys was distraught when she opened the door to reporters earlier. She said what had happened was a "complete and utter tragedy".

Members of the public and police officers initially went into the water to try to get the children, before they were reached by specialist water rescue-trained firefighters.

West Midlands Police said one of its officers had to punch through the ice to try to rescue the boys.

The force is being guided by the families as to how much information is made available to the media, Supt Richard Harris said, adding it was doing "everything we possibly can to support them".

Soft toys left at the scene with a note reading 'RIP Babbs Mill Boys'
PA Media

"People have said it feels like being in a movie," said Reverend Mandy Harris, from the nearby St Barnabas Church.

"This is what happens everywhere else, this doesn't happen in Kingshurst."

She said some of the boys' classmates had come to the church "not knowing where to turn or give voice to their grief".

She spoke of the strength of community spirit in the area as people pull together to mourn.

The chair of governors at Jack's school, St Anthony's Catholic Primary, said the community was "very, very close-knit".

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

"We've got families that have been here for five generations," Marcus Brain told BBC Radio 5 Live. "Everybody knows everybody else.

"Everybody I've spoken to... are in an utter state of shock."

'Grabbed jackets'

The school shut on Monday after the incident and reopened on Tuesday morning.

Speaking in the House of Commons, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak expressed his sympathies to the families of the children who had died.

One resident, Dan, said he had heard sirens from his flat that overlooks the lake after the children got into trouble on Sunday afternoon.

He said he had grabbed jackets and towels which were given to the boys when they were pulled from the water.

"Then 15 minutes later I am back in my flat and they'd brought them up on stretchers," Dan said.

Police divers search the lake in Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst, Solihull
PA Media
Police break the ice on the lake at Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst
PA Media

Another vigil for the boys is due to be held on Sunday.

A local Rotary club has cancelled its annual Santa sleigh charity event which had been due to go around Kingshurst on Wednesday and Thursday.

Presentational grey line

Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: newsonline.westmidlands@bbc.co.uk

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiN2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy91ay1lbmdsYW5kLWJpcm1pbmdoYW0tNjM5NTQ3MzPSATtodHRwczovL3d3dy5iYmMuY29tL25ld3MvdWstZW5nbGFuZC1iaXJtaW5naGFtLTYzOTU0NzMzLmFtcA?oc=5

2022-12-13 17:15:13Z
1691685842

Rishi Sunak promises new laws to stop illegal migration and 'spurious' appeals - Sky News

Rishi Sunak has promised to bring in new laws to tackle illegal immigration, saying anyone who comes to the UK illegally will not be allowed to stay.

Making a raft of announcements in the Commons, the prime minister said the legislation would be introduced early next year and mean people who do not come to the country through legal and safe routes "will be detained and swiftly returned either to [their] home country or a safe country where [their] asylum claim will be considered".

He said those coming illegally would "no longer be able to frustrate removal attempts with late or spurious claims or appeals" and, once removed from the UK, "should have no right to re-entry settlement or citizenship".

Downing Street clarifies pledge to tackle asylum backlog - politics latest

But he pledged to work with the UN Refugee Agency to create more legal routes "so the UK remains a safe haven for the most vulnerable".

"The solution shouldn't just be what works, but what is right," said Mr Sunak. "It is unfair people come here illegally.

"Enough is enough."

Labour attacked the government announcements as merely "gimmicks", while the Liberal Democrats said the plans would "weaken crucial protections for victims of human trafficking and modern slavery".

One of the pledges made by Mr Sunak in the Commons was to clear the backlog of asylum cases by the end of next year - but Downing Street have since clarified that this only applies to claims made before June.

The prime minister's official spokesman told reporters this totalled 92,601 initial asylum claims and indicated there is no deadline to clear the entire backlog - which in September totalled around 143,000.

Reacting to this, shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said: "The prime minister doesn't even know what he's promised today.

"This claim to be able to tackle the backlog by the end of the year is already falling apart just hours after he made it.

"No one trusts the Conservatives to fix the asylum system they've broken over the last 12 years."

'Shameful day for government'

The chief executive of Refugee Action, Tim Naor Hilton, called it "a shameful day" for the government, adding: "Most of these changes are cruel, ineffective and unlawful, and will do nothing to fix the real problems in the system."

Among Tory backbenchers to praise the policies was former cabinet minister Simon Clarke, who called it "really strong and welcome action".

But former Prime Minister Theresa May told Mr Sunak "people-smuggling and human-trafficking are distinct and separate crimes and should not be treated or spoken of as one", adding: "The onus must be on the Home Office to improve its processing."

'We must act now'

The PM announced five key points to his plan to tackle illegal migration:

  • A new small boats operational command to bring together agencies trying to tackle Channel crossings
  • Extra resources to be freed up to increase the number of raids carried out by immigration officers
  • New sites, including disused holiday parks, former student halls and surplus military sites, to house asylum seekers - with 10,000 spaces identified costing half what is now being spent on hotels
  • A doubling of the number of asylum caseworkers and a streamlined process - with a promise to abolish the backlog by the end of next year
  • A new agreement with Albania to speed up the return of asylum seekers to the "safe" country, including Border Force officers being embedded in Tirana airport

The PM also announced the government would be restarting its controversial flights to Rwanda to deport those arriving illegally, and that MPs would soon be able to set an annual quota "to determine our capacity" to offer refuge to asylum seekers.

"We have a proud history of providing sanctuary for those most in need," said Mr Sunak. "No one can doubt our generosity of spirit.

"But today far too many of the beneficiaries of that generosity are not those directly fleeing war zones or at risk of persecution, but people crossing the Channel in small boats

"Many originate from fundamentally safe countries or travel through safe countries, their journeys are not ad hoc but coordinated by ruthless organised criminals, and every single journey risks the lives of women, children and… mostly men at sea.

"This is not what previous generations intended when they drafted our humanitarian laws. Unless we act now and decisively this will only get worse."

A group of people thought to be migrants are brought in to Dungeness, Kent, after being rescued by the RNLI following a small boat incident in the Channel. Picture date: Friday December 9, 2022.
Image: The number of people thought to have made dangerous Channel crossings this year is more than 43,000.

Speaking to reporters this afternoon, the prime minister's spokesman said no number has been set for the quota as "the first priority is to get a grip on the number making these illegal crossings".

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer agreed Channel crossings were "a serious problem, requiring serious solutions", but said "time and time again this government has refused to treat a serious problem seriously".

"Where there should have been solutions, we have had gimmicks," he added. "Plenty of newspaper headlines about wave machines, prison ships, and fantasy islands but no actual action.

"It's all designed to mask failure - to distract from a broken asylum system that can't process claims, can't return those with no right to be here, and can't protect our borders."

Sir Keir welcomed the fast-tracking of those who do not have claims to asylum, saying Labour had long been calling for the policy, and the addition of more staff to process claims.

But he attacked the "unworkable, unethical plan to deport people to Rwanda" and urged the government to "work internationally to end this cross-border crime".

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

'Unbelievably callous'

Refugee Action's Mr Naor Hilton condemned the announcements almost in their entirety, saying they would "cause misery for thousands of already traumatised people".

The charity leader added: "New laws to ban people who have no other choice than to cross the Channel from claiming asylum are unbelievably callous and mean refugees trying to reach family here could be deported back to danger.

"Meanwhile ministers remain unable to commit to creating safe routes - a move that could end most small boat crossings overnight.

"Changes to anti-slavery guidance and deporting people based on sweeping and incorrect assumptions about their nationality will mean many victims and refugees risk further danger and exploitation.

"And it beggar's belief that the government is still intent on opening new shared accommodation centres in after the fatal catastrophe at Manston, for which there has still been no pledge of an inquiry."

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Ex-PM: 'Modern slavery' a real threat

The announcements come after a year of record-breaking numbers of people making dangerous Channel crossings in small boats to get to the UK, with the figure thought to have exceeded 43,000.

The government has made a specific point about the rise in Albanians coming into the country via the route, saying they accounted for more than a third of the 33,000 who crossed in the first nine months of 2022, compared to 3% of all those who crossed in 2021.

It also comes amid criticism of the Home Office over the speed in which they process asylum cases.

Figures from the department in September showed more than 143,000 asylum seekers were still waiting for decisions, and nearly 100,000 of those had been waiting for more than six months - over three times higher than in 2019.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMib2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3Jpc2hpLXN1bmFrLWFubm91bmNlcy1wbGFuLXRvLWZhc3QtdHJhY2stcmVtb3ZhbC1vZi1hbGJhbmlhbi1hc3lsdW0tc2Vla2Vycy0xMjc2NzI2NtIBc2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9yaXNoaS1zdW5hay1hbm5vdW5jZXMtcGxhbi10by1mYXN0LXRyYWNrLXJlbW92YWwtb2YtYWxiYW5pYW4tYXN5bHVtLXNlZWtlcnMtMTI3NjcyNjY?oc=5

2022-12-13 17:15:00Z
1659303280

Train strikes: Rail bosses believe 'tide is turning' within unions — follow latest - The Times

Ministers and rail industry bosses believe the “tide is turning” within rail unions about strike action.

Mark Harper, the transport secretary, said that Network Rail’s pay offer to staff was “fair and reasonable” as he argued that lengthy strikes would deter passengers from train travel for good.

“They have had a fair and reasonable offer, which has been accepted by Unite staff at Network Rail. The TSSA are recommending acceptance of that offer, it’s just the RMT that are recommending that it be refused,” Harper said this morning.

“But even with them recommending refusal, almost 40 per cent of their staff actually voted in favour of it. So I think the tide is turning on public opinion. And people think that there is a fair

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiamh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZXRpbWVzLmNvLnVrL2FydGljbGUvdHJhaW4tc3RyaWtlcy1sYXRlc3QtbmV3cy1yYWlsLWRlY2VtYmVyLXVrLXVuaW9ucy1yaXNoaS1zdW5hay1mbjJ3amt4anbSAQA?oc=5

2022-12-13 16:00:00Z
CBMiamh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZXRpbWVzLmNvLnVrL2FydGljbGUvdHJhaW4tc3RyaWtlcy1sYXRlc3QtbmV3cy1yYWlsLWRlY2VtYmVyLXVrLXVuaW9ucy1yaXNoaS1zdW5hay1mbjJ3amt4anbSAQA

Rishi Sunak promises new laws to stop illegal migration and 'spurious' appeals - Sky News

Rishi Sunak has promised to bring in new laws to tackle illegal immigration, saying anyone who comes to the UK illegally will not be allowed to stay.

Making a raft of announcements in the Commons, the prime minister said the legislation would be introduced early next year and mean people who do not come to the country through legal and safe routes "will be detained and swiftly returned either to [their] home country or a safe country where [their] asylum claim will be considered".

He said those coming illegally would "no longer be able to frustrate removal attempts with late or spurious claims or appeals" and, once removed from the UK, "should have no right to re-entry settlement or citizenship".

But he pledged to work with the UN Refugee Agency to create more legal routes "so the UK remains a safe haven for the most vulnerable".

Politics live: PM unveils five point plan to tackle migration

"The solution shouldn't just be what works, but what is right," said Mr Sunak. "It is unfair people come here illegally.

"Enough is enough."

More on Conservatives

Labour attacked the government announcements as merely "gimmicks", while the Liberal Democrats said the plans would "weaken crucial protections for victims of human trafficking and modern slavery."

Among Tory backbenchers to praise the policies was former cabinet minister Simon Clarke, who called it "really strong and welcome action".

'We must act now'

The PM announced five key points to his plan to tackle illegal migration:

  • A new small boats operational command to bring together agencies trying to tackle Channel crossings
  • Extra resources to be freed up to increase the number of raids carried out by immigration officers
  • New sites, including disused holiday parks, former student halls and surplus military sites, to house asylum seekers - with 10,000 spaces identified costing half what is now being spent on hotels
  • A doubling of the number of asylum caseworkers and a streamlined process - with a promise to abolish the backlog by the end of next year
  • A new agreement with Albania to speed up the return of asylum seekers to the "safe" country, including Border Force officers being embedded in Tirana airport

The PM also announced the government would be restarting its controversial flights to Rwanda to deport those arriving illegally, and that MPs would soon be able to set an annual quota "to determine our capacity" to offer refuge to asylum seekers.

"We have a proud history of providing sanctuary for those most in need," said Mr Sunak. "No one can doubt our generosity of spirit.

"But today far too many of the beneficiaries of that generosity are not those directly fleeing war zones or at risk of persecution, but people crossing the Channel in small boats

"Many originate from fundamentally safe countries or travel through safe countries, their journeys are not ad hoc but coordinated by ruthless organised criminals, and every single journey risks the lives of women, children and… mostly men at sea.

"This is not what previous generations intended when they drafted our humanitarian laws. Unless we act now and decisively this will only get worse."

A group of people thought to be migrants are brought in to Dungeness, Kent, after being rescued by the RNLI following a small boat incident in the Channel. Picture date: Friday December 9, 2022.
Image: The number of people thought to have made dangerous Channel crossings this year is more than 43,000.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer agreed Channel crossings were "a serious problem, requiring serious solutions", but said "time and time again this government has refused to treat a serious problem seriously".

"Where there should have been solutions, we have had gimmicks," he added. "Plenty of newspaper headlines about wave machines, prison ships, and fantasy islands but no actual action.

"It's all designed to mask failure - to distract from a broken asylum system that can't process claims, can't return those with no right to be here, and can't protect our borders."

Sir Keir welcomed the fast-tracking of those who do not have claims to asylum, saying Labour had long been calling for the policy, and the addition of more staff to process claims.

But he attacked the "unworkable, unethical plan to deport people to Rwanda" and urged the government to "work internationally to end this cross-border crime".

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Ex-PM: 'Modern slavery' a real threat

The announcements come after a year of record-breaking numbers of people making dangerous Channel crossings in small boats to get to the UK, with the figure thought to have exceeded 43,000.

The government has made a specific point about the rise in Albanians coming into the country via the route, saying they accounted for more than a third of the 33,000 who crossed in the first nine months of 2022, compared to 3% of all those who crossed in 2021.

It also comes amid criticism of the Home Office over the speed in which they process asylum cases.

Figures from the department in September showed more than 143,000 asylum seekers were still waiting for decisions, and nearly 100,000 of those had been waiting for more than six months - over three times higher than in 2019.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMib2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3Jpc2hpLXN1bmFrLWFubm91bmNlcy1wbGFuLXRvLWZhc3QtdHJhY2stcmVtb3ZhbC1vZi1hbGJhbmlhbi1hc3lsdW0tc2Vla2Vycy0xMjc2NzI2NtIBc2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9yaXNoaS1zdW5hay1hbm5vdW5jZXMtcGxhbi10by1mYXN0LXRyYWNrLXJlbW92YWwtb2YtYWxiYW5pYW4tYXN5bHVtLXNlZWtlcnMtMTI3NjcyNjY?oc=5

2022-12-13 12:48:50Z
CBMib2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3Jpc2hpLXN1bmFrLWFubm91bmNlcy1wbGFuLXRvLWZhc3QtdHJhY2stcmVtb3ZhbC1vZi1hbGJhbmlhbi1hc3lsdW0tc2Vla2Vycy0xMjc2NzI2NtIBc2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC9yaXNoaS1zdW5hay1hbm5vdW5jZXMtcGxhbi10by1mYXN0LXRyYWNrLXJlbW92YWwtb2YtYWxiYW5pYW4tYXN5bHVtLXNlZWtlcnMtMTI3NjcyNjY

Solihull community in shock after death of boys at icy lake - BBC

A woman lays flowers among the tributes near to Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst, Solihull, after the deaths of three boys aged eight, 10 and 11 who fell through ice into a lake in the West Midlands.PA Media

The deaths of three young boys pulled from an icy lake after going out to play has left a community in shock.

The children, aged eight, 10 and 11, died after emergency calls to Babbs Mill Park in Solihull, on Sunday.

The 10-year-old has been named as Jack Johnson but the identities of the other two boys are yet to be confirmed as mourners leave tributes near the lake.

A six-year-old boy who was also rescued from the water remains in a critical condition in hospital.

Police said searches would continue throughout Tuesday but stressed there was no suggestion anybody else was missing.

On Monday night, mourners gathered for a candle-lit vigil, leaving flowers, soft toys and balloons.

Upset mourners look at the flowers and tributes near to Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst
PA Media

Dozens gathered for the vigil in the Kingshurst area on Monday night and the silence was striking.

Throughout the day, people were standing in shock not knowing what to do or say - and so remained quiet.

Jack's aunt Charlotte McIlmurray thanked the local community on social media for their support.

She described the boys' deaths as a nightmare, saying the pain of losing them was "unimaginable".

Messages of love and support have been left for the boys and their families along with flowers and soft toys.

One tribute, in a child's writing, read: "Rest in peace, I'm going to miss you forever."

People look at flowers and tributes near to Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst, Solihull
PA Media

Shaun Gordon, 45, told the BBC how he had had to break the news to his daughter, a classmate of Jack's.

"It was heart-breaking," he said. "As a parent, it's just tragic."

The family came to lay flowers on Tuesday which Mr Gordon said helped ease his daughter's pain.

The community here knows all the boys who have died but out of respect for the families they are waiting for their names to be formally confirmed by police.

Instead, on candles and notes they refer to them as little soldiers, three kings and the Babbs Mill Boys.

A neighbour of one of the boys was distraught when she opened the door to reporters earlier. She said what had happened was a "complete and utter tragedy".

Members of the public and police officers initially went into the water to try to get the children, before they were reached by specialist water rescue-trained firefighters.

West Midlands Police said one of its officers had to punch through the ice to try to rescue the boys.

The force is being guided by the families as to how much information is made available to the media, Supt Richard Harris said, adding it was doing "everything we possibly can to support them".

Soft toys left at the scene with a note reading 'RIP Babbs Mill Boys'
PA Media

"People have said it feels like being in a movie," said Reverend Mandy Harris, from the nearby St Barnabas Church.

"This is what happens everywhere else, this doesn't happen in Kingshurst."

She said some of the boys' classmates had come to the church "not knowing where to turn or give voice to their grief".

She spoke of the strength of community spirit in the area as people pull together to mourn.

The chair of governors at Jack's school, St Anthony's Catholic Primary, said the community was "very, very close-knit".

"We've got families that have been here for five generations," Marcus Brain told BBC Radio 5 Live. "Everybody knows everybody else.

"Everybody I've spoken to... are in an utter state of shock."

The school shut on Monday after the incident and reopened on Tuesday morning.

The feeling on Tuesday is one of sheer disbelief that three children have lost their lives after going out to play.

Speaking in the House of Commons, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak expressed his sympathies to the families of the children who had died.

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

One resident, Dan, said he had heard sirens from his flat that overlooks the lake after the children got into trouble on Sunday afternoon.

He said he had grabbed jackets and towels which were given to the boys when they were pulled from the water.

"Then 15 minutes later I am back in my flat and they'd brought them up on stretchers," Dan said.

Solihull councillor Ian Courts said: "We are completely stunned at what's happened.

"Clearly our thoughts and prayers have to be with the families in this situation. I can hardly imagine what the families are going through."

Police divers search the lake in Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst, Solihull
PA Media

Police believe there were a number of witnesses next to the water they are yet to speak to and are urging them to come forward.

Specialist officers have arrived from Nottinghamshire Police to continue searching the lake, which has a circuit of about 2.1 miles (3.5km).

Despite the temperature, visibility has improved since Monday, making the search slightly easier for the team.

With no further missing person reports, police no longer believe another body could be in the lake but are trying to make sure nothing has been overlooked.

Police break the ice on the lake at Babbs Mill Park in Kingshurst
PA Media

Supt Harris said the families affected by the tragedy were "absolutely devastated".

He added: "Also this time of year, it's on the run-up to Christmas, so close to the event itself, also adds to that tragedy."

Another vigil for the boys is due to be held on Sunday.

A local Rotary club has cancelled its annual Santa sleigh charity event which had been due to go around Kingshurst on Wednesday and Thursday.

Presentational grey line

Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: newsonline.westmidlands@bbc.co.uk

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiOWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtYmlybWluZ2hhbS02Mzk1NDczM9IBPWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtYmlybWluZ2hhbS02Mzk1NDczMy5hbXA?oc=5

2022-12-13 13:00:26Z
CBMiOWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtYmlybWluZ2hhbS02Mzk1NDczM9IBPWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLWVuZ2xhbmQtYmlybWluZ2hhbS02Mzk1NDczMy5hbXA

Senin, 12 Desember 2022

Solihull frozen lake deaths: Boy got his leg stuck in ice and the others tried to help, friend says - as police confirm three deaths - Sky News

A friend of one of the boys who died after falling through an icy lake in Solihull has told how the events unfolded.

Tommy Barnet, 10, said one of the boys got his legs stuck in the ice before his friends rushed over to help him, but they all fell in.

Police confirmed on Monday that three boys aged eight, 10 and 11 died after falling through ice into Babbs Mill Lake in Solihull.

A fourth boy, aged six, remains in a critical condition after the incident on Sunday afternoon.

Tommy told Sky News: "They were all playing on the ice, one got their legs stuck in the ice and then… his friends went to go and save him, but they all fell in.

"When it was summer, we used to go in the woods and play hide and seek next to the lake. But I wasn't here yesterday."

"It's so sad, I am upset," Tommy said, as he described how the community was waiting to hear the names of the other boys involved.

"They want them [the police] to reveal more information about it just to make sure who it is."

One of the boys who did not survive has been named locally as 10-year-old Jack Johnson, who has been described to Sky News as a "hero" because he went into the lake to try to save others.

A search is continuing after unconfirmed reports up to six children may have fallen in, but authorities warned it is "no longer a search and rescue operation".

The four children were all in cardiac arrest when rescue teams pulled them out.

They were taken to hospital but police said three of them "could not be revived".

Reports from the scene and social media videos indicate they were playing on the ice and fell through, the fire service said.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Officer 'tried to punch through the ice'

Search teams were still using boats and wading in the lake on Monday - and police said they would continue until they are "100% certain" there are no other victims.

One of the first officers on the scene entered the lake in his uniform and tried to punch through the ice to help the boys, said Superintendent Richard Harris from West Midlands Police.

Members of the public also jumped in.

Firefighters and specialist water teams arrived at the lake and managed to pull the boys out. They were given CPR and taken to hospital but all four arrived in a critical condition.

Police said it's currently unclear how long they were in the freezing water.

One witness told Sky News he'd seen firefighters smashing the ice and a number of people in distress.

Image: A search of the lake was continuing on Monday
Image: The four children were all in cardiac arrest when rescue teams pulled them out

The children's names haven't yet been released and police said they were supporting their "absolutely devastated" families.

The boys' school friends are also getting support.

Rescue underway on a lake in Solihull
Image: Emergency workers on the lake on Sunday evening

Teams in boats used torches to continue searching the lake overnight.

One police officer involved in the initial search suffered mild hypothermia and was taken to hospital but has now been discharged.

Superintendent Harris said at Monday lunchtime that they were still trying to piece together exactly what happened but no one had contacted them to report anyone else missing.

But because of conflicting reports about how many children were on the lake, the search will continue until police are certain no one else went in.

Two women left flowers at the scene on Monday
Image: Two women left flowers at the scene on Monday
Members of West Midlands Fire Service pay tribute to three boys who died after falling through ice into a lake at Kingshurst
Image: Members of West Midlands Fire Service pay tribute to three boys who died after falling through ice into a lake at Kingshurst
Pic: Sarah Lovatt
Image: The lake on Sunday morning. Pic: Sarah Lovatt

Local MP Saqib Bhatti visited the scene on Monday and praised emergency services for their "heroic" efforts.

"The (search) operation went on all night in these really tough conditions," he said, adding that "the whole community will be feeling the pain of this".

Police have asked people not to speculate or share any video of the incident.

Richard Stanton, area commander for West Midlands Fire Service, urged parents and carers to remind their children about the dangers of frozen water.

He said: "Please, adults and children alike, stay away from open water. Under no circumstances venture onto ice, regardless how thick or safe you think this ice may be."

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMipAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9zb2xpaHVsbC1mcm96ZW4tbGFrZS1kZWF0aHMtYm95LWdvdC1oaXMtbGVnLXN0dWNrLWluLWljZS1hbmQtdGhlLW90aGVycy10cmllZC10by1oZWxwLWZyaWVuZC1zYXlzLWFzLXBvbGljZS1jb25maXJtLXRocmVlLWRlYXRocy0xMjc2NzAyM9IBqAFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvc29saWh1bGwtZnJvemVuLWxha2UtZGVhdGhzLWJveS1nb3QtaGlzLWxlZy1zdHVjay1pbi1pY2UtYW5kLXRoZS1vdGhlcnMtdHJpZWQtdG8taGVscC1mcmllbmQtc2F5cy1hcy1wb2xpY2UtY29uZmlybS10aHJlZS1kZWF0aHMtMTI3NjcwMjM?oc=5

2022-12-12 18:50:45Z
1691685842

Nurses strike to go ahead in Wales - BBC

Nurses with placards outside the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in Victoria Tower Gardens, LondonPA Media

The nurses strike planned for Wales will go ahead after the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and Welsh government failed to come to a pay agreement.

Nurses in all but one health board in Wales will be striking on Thursday and 20 December.

The RCN said Health Minister Eluned Morgan had failed to put forward an increase to the current pay award.

The Welsh government said it could not make an increased pay offer without extra funding from the UK government.

A nurse at a screen

Helen Whyley, director of RCN Wales, said: "Strikes are inevitable in Wales because the Welsh government is making it so.

"This is the second time in as many weeks that the Welsh government have brought RCN Wales to a meeting where they clearly have no intention of coming to a resolution on our dispute."

She said the trade union was open for a "meaningful discussion" on pay for nursing, but this must be a significant increase.

"Low pay is fanning the flames of a workforce crisis, and the rising number of registered nurse vacancies is already putting patients at risk," she said.

"The pressure means nurses are caught between their responsibilities to their patients, their families, and their own health."

The RCN said nurses were "significantly" worse off than 10 years ago and the pay award on offer would leave them £1,000 worse off in real terms.

She added: "The Welsh government's prolonging of this unnecessary crisis is reckless, self-defeating, and in no one's interest."

In July, the lowest-paid nurses in Wales were offered a £1,400 flat pay increase, but, unions repeatedly argued this was not enough.

The strikes are expected to cause mass disruption, with thousands of routine operations and non-emergency appointments cancelled.

Some services are exempt from strike action, and will run as normal including chemotherapy, dialysis, intensive care and high dependency units, neonatal intensive care, paediatric intensive care, and accident and emergency departments.

The Welsh government said: "The minister for health and social services met again with NHS unions today.

"However, without additional funding from the UK government we are not able to make an increased pay offer without risking a reduction in services.

"Whilst we were unable to avert the forthcoming industrial action, all partners have agreed to keep talking and to continue to work together on key issues."

The UK government said: "The Welsh government is well-funded to deliver on its devolved responsibilities - we are providing a record £18bn per year settlement, which is still increasing in real terms over the 2021 Spending Review period."

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiLGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3VrLXdhbGVzLTYzOTUwMDMy0gEwaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvdWstd2FsZXMtNjM5NTAwMzIuYW1w?oc=5

2022-12-12 19:56:23Z
1691984770