Selasa, 31 Januari 2023

Nicola Bulley: missing dog walker's phone was still on work call - The Times

A missing dog walker’s phone was still connected to a conference call when it was found, police have said.

Nicola Bulley, 45, disappeared while walking her springer spaniel after dropping her children at school on Friday morning. She was last seen at 9.15am on a footpath by the River Wyre in the village of St Michael’s on Wyre in Lancashire.

Her phone was found on a bench on the river bank and her dog was near by. The conference call was still going.

Ben Pociecha, director of Exclusively Mortgages, where Bulley is an adviser, told The Daily Telegraph that she had logged on to a team meeting at 9.01am on Friday.

“It seems as if she was muted and didn’t have her camera on. She

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2023-01-31 07:35:00Z
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Senin, 30 Januari 2023

UK firefighters vote to strike in row over pay - BBC

Firefighters tackle blazeGetty Images

Firefighters across the UK have voted for strike action in a row over pay.

The Fire Brigades Union said while it had a mandate to take its members out on strike, it would not announce any dates until after it meets employers.

More than 80% of members who voted backed strike action across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland when they were balloted last month.

The government said the threat of strikes would be "disappointing and concerning for the public".

The FBU said it would delay announcing any strike dates until after it had met fire service employers - the brigades in English local authority areas, the regional fire services in Wales and the national organisations in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

That meeting is scheduled for 8 February - where the FBU said it hoped to receive a revised pay offer.

The union says that since 2010, its members have experienced a 12% drop in real terms earnings.

It also says that in the same period, about one in five firefighter jobs have been cut.

Of the 73% of union members who voted, 88% of staff voted to take action.

In a separate ballot, control room staff in the north-west of England also agreed to the proposed walkouts.

The earliest likely date for any action would be 23 February.

If the strike goes ahead, it will be the first nationwide walkout over pay in 20 years.

Matt Wrack, general secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, said the government "need to wake up and wise up to the level of anger among their employees about falling real pay in the fire service".

He told the BBC's Radio 4 PM programme: "They clearly have misjudged the mood... and now they best move. Otherwise we'll be setting strike dates."

In response, Downing Street said the government would urge the FBU to "reconsider and keep negotiating".

The prime minister's official spokesman said the government was working to "mitigate the possible risks that [strike action] poses".

Elena Whitham, Scottish Government community safety minister, called the strike threat "disappointing".

She said: "At this point, we would encourage continued negotiations through the well-established collective bargaining arrangements."

But the FBU said the responsibility for any disruption "lies squarely" with union employers and government ministers.

Two firemen face a wall in their uniform
PA Media

Union members rejected a previous 5% pay offer in November, arguing it would equal a real-terms pay cut given current high rate of inflation.

Inflation measured by the Consumer Prices Index rose by 10.7% in the 12 months to November 2022.

Currently, a trainee firefighter in London can earn a salary of £28,730, including London weighting. Once they are qualified, their salary can increase to £37,032.

Outside London, trainee firefighters earn £24,191 rising to £32,244 after qualification.

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2023-01-30 18:23:13Z
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UK firefighters vote to strike in row over pay - BBC

Firefighters tackle blazeGetty Images

Firefighters across the UK have voted for strike action in a row over pay.

The Fire Brigades Union said while it had a mandate to take its members out on strike, it would not announce any dates until after it meets employers.

More than 80% of members who voted backed strike action across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland when they were balloted last month.

The government said the threat of strikes would be "disappointing and concerning for the public".

The FBU said it would delay announcing any strike strike dates until after it had met fire service employers - the brigades in English local authority areas, the regional fire services in Wales and the national organisations in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

That meeting is scheduled for 8 February - where the FBU said it hoped to receive a revised pay offer.

The union says that since 2010, its members have experienced a 12% drop in real terms earnings.

It also says that in the same period, about one in five firefighter jobs have been cut.

Of the 73% of union members who voted, 88% of staff voted to take action.

In a separate ballot, control room staff in the north-west of England also agreed to the proposed walkouts.

If the strike goes ahead, it will be the first nationwide walkout over pay in 20 years.

Matt Wrack, general secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, said firefighters were compelled to take action because "they have faced a sustained attack on pay for more than a decade".

But he said the government and local authority employers have the power to stop the strikes from happening by "making a credible offer".

"The ball is in their court," he added.

In response, Downing Street said the government would urge the FBU to "reconsider and keep negotiating".

The prime minister's official spokesman said the government was working to "mitigate the possible risks that [strike action] poses".

Elena Whitham, Scottish Government community safety minister, called the strike threat "disappointing".

She said: "At this point, we would encourage continued negotiations through the well-established collective bargaining arrangements."

FBU members rejected a previous 5% pay offer in November, arguing it would equal a real-terms pay cut given current high rate of inflation.

Inflation measured by the Consumer Prices Index rose by 10.7% in the 12 months to November 2022.

Currently, a trainee firefighter in London can earn a salary of £28,730, including London weighting. Once they are qualified, their salary can increase to £37,032.

Outside London, trainee firefighters earn £24,191 rising to £32,244 after qualification.

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2023-01-30 17:16:42Z
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Teachers' strike to go ahead after education secretary 'squandered the opportunity' to avoid action, union says - Sky News

Talks between the education secretary and the teaching unions have failed and the biggest teachers' strike in years will go ahead.

Last-minute talks were held by Education Secretary Gillian Keegan on Monday in a bid to resolve a teachers' pay dispute ahead of planned strikes this week.

Members of the National Education Union (NEU) in England and Wales will now walk out on Wednesday, with more industrial action planned in the following weeks.

The strike on Wednesday is expected to encompass up to half-a-million workers, with teachers due to be joined by train drivers, civil servants, university lecturers, bus drivers and security guards from seven trade unions in what will be the biggest day of industrial action in over a decade.

The NEU has announced seven days of strikes in England and Wales in February and March, with the walkout on Wednesday expected to affect over 23,000 schools.

Mary Bousted and Kevin Courtney, joint general secretaries of the NEU, said: "Gillian Keegan has squandered an opportunity to avoid strike action on Wednesday.

"The government has been unwilling to seriously engage with the causes of strike action.

More on Cost Of Living

"Real-terms pay cuts and cuts in pay relativities are leading to a recruitment and retention crisis with which the education secretary so far seems incapable of getting a grip.

"Training targets are routinely missed, year on year. This is having consequences for learning, with disruption every day to children's education."

Read more:
Fresh wave of strikes this year- who is taking action and when
Firefighters set to strike for first time since 2003 after real-terms earnings 'drop by 12%'

In a separate comment, Mr Courtney said: "I regret to say that we didn't hear anything that enables us to say that the strike shouldn't go ahead on Wednesday.

"There's no offer from the secretary of state trying to bridge the gap between us."

Meanwhile, a headteachers' union boss has described the talks with Ms Keegan as "deeply disappointing".

Following the meeting with the education secretary, Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), said: "Parents will have been looking for the government to avert the planned strike on Wednesday.

"Instead, the government continues to talk around the issues rather than putting anything on the table which allows for any meaningful negotiation.

"It is deeply disappointing."

Mr Barton added: "We are sorry to report that there is therefore no resolution to the dispute and the strike is set to go ahead."

The teachers' strike was confirmed shortly before British firefighters voted to carry out nationwide action in a dispute over pay.

About 88% of members of the Fire Brigades Union had voted in favour of strike action, on a 73% turnout, the union said.

Its members had rejected a 5% pay offer in November.

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2023-01-30 16:07:30Z
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Minggu, 29 Januari 2023

Nadhim Zahawi committed a serious breach of ministerial code, says Sunak - BBC

Britain's Minister without portfolio Nadhim Zahawi arrives for a Cabinet meeting at Downing Street in London, Britain, 17 January 2023EPA

Nadhim Zahawi has been sacked as Tory Party chairman after an inquiry by the PM's ethics adviser found he had failed to disclose that HMRC was investigating his tax affairs.

The PM said Sir Laurie Magnus's inquiry made clear there had been a "serious breach of the ministerial code".

Rishi Sunak asked for the investigation after reports Mr Zahawi had paid HMRC a penalty over previously unpaid tax.

Sir Laurie concluded the MP had failed to be open about his finances.

After receiving the findings, Mr Sunak wrote to Mr Zahawi praising his time in government but saying he had decided to remove him from government.

In response, Mr Zahawi thanked the prime minister and said he took pride in his achievements - highlighting the vaccine rollout and the Queen's funeral - but did not offer an apology for breaching the rules or mention his tax affairs.

He promised to support the prime minister "from the backbenches in the coming years".

In a four-page report to the prime minister, Sir Laurie criticised Mr Zahawi not only for failing to include the HMRC investigation in his register of interests until July 2022, but also for failing to update it once a settlement had been reached.

Taken together these "omissions" constitute a "serious failure to meet the standards set out in the ministerial code", he said.

Sir Laurie was also critical of Mr Zahawi for describing new stories about his tax affairs as "smears" in July 2022 and failing to correct the record until January 2023.

"I consider that this delay in correcting an untrue public statement is inconsistent with the requirement for openness," he said.

He concluded that Mr Zahawi had shown "insufficient regard for the general principles of the ministerial code and the requirements in particular to be honest, open and an exemplary leader through his own behaviour".

He praised Mr Zahawi's "willingness to assist with my inquiry" and said he appreciated the pressures of being a minister.

However, he added: "These factors, however, cannot mitigate my overall judgement that Mr Zahawi's conduct as a minister has fallen below the high standards that, as prime minister, you rightly expect from those who serve in your government."

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Analysis box by Nick Eardley, political correspondent

Nadhim Zahawi's tax affairs have been a headache for the government for the past 10 days.

Rishi Sunak has argued that due process is important. But he's faced accusations he was weak for not acting earlier to get rid of Mr Zahawi.

The PM got the report from his ethics adviser early this morning. He spoke to Mr Zahawi to tell him he was being sacked, then it was confirmed publicly.

The report from Sir Laurie Magnus left little room for any other conclusion than Mr Zahawi's departure.

He highlights a number of times Mr Zahawi should have declared more about his tax affairs - and didn't.

Hence the conclusion that there was a serious failure to follow the ministerial rulebook.

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In his letter to Mr Zahawi, Mr Sunak said the MP for Stratford-On-Avon could be "extremely proud of your wide-ranging achievements in government over the last five years".

He specifically cited Mr Zahawi's work overseeing the Covid vaccine, saying it was "critical to ensuring our country came through this crisis and saved many lives".

But Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner said Mr Zahawi should have been sacked "long ago" and accused the prime minister of being "hopelessly weak".

Ms Rayner and Labour Party chair Anneliese Dodds have now written to the prime minister asking him to "come clean" about when he was made aware of the HMRC investigation into Mr Zahawi.

Downing Street has previously insisted that Mr Sunak "was not informed of these details, informally or otherwise".

The SNP's Kirsty Blackman echoed Labour's concerns saying: "Sunak still has questions to answer over this whole affair about what he knew about the settlement and what advice he received about Zahawi's tax on his appointment."

Liberal Democrat Deputy Leader Daisy Cooper said Mr Zahawi should "do the right thing" and resign as an MP.

Levelling up Secretary Michael Gove told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg that it was important the facts were "investigated fully and properly" and the situation had required "cool forensic analysis".

Asked whether he should ever have been appointed, Mr Gove said his "understanding" was that there was "no information that was brought to the attention of the prime minister, either Rishi or indeed Liz Truss which would have led them to believe at the time it was inappropriate to have Nadhim on the team".

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During his interview, Mr Gove also said he expected Mr Zahawi to "reflect" on how he had told journalists looking into his tax affairs that they were attempting to smear him.

Dan Neidle, the tax lawyer who began investigating Mr Zahawi's taxes last year, told BBC News the MP had "set lawyers on me... he tried to shut me up".

"Regardless of what happened with the tax, his behaviour... I feel, was a breach of the ministerial code," said Mr Neidle, who is a Labour supporter but insists his investigations are non-partisan.

In his letter to Mr Sunak, Mr Zahawi expressed concern about the conduct of journalists in recent weeks, specifically mentioning one headline which said the "noose was tightening".

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Timeline

April 2021: HMRC starts having interactions with Mr Zahawi, including a meeting with him and his advisers. Mr Zahawi - who was vaccines minister at the time - told Sir Laurie he believed he was "merely being asked certain queries" rather than being investigated. Sir Laurie says Mr Zahawi should have understood this was "a serious matter" and included it in his declaration of interests

15 September 2021: Mr Zahawi is made education secretary by then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Sir Laurie says Mr Zahawi again failed to declare his interest

5 July 2022: He is promoted to chancellor. He completes a declaration of interest for his new role but makes no reference to an investigation by HMRC

10 July 2022: Mr Zahawi describes reports he is being investigated by HMRC as "smears"

15 July 2022: He receives a letter from HMRC and subsequently updates his declaration of interests to acknowledge an investigation was under way.

August 2022: Mr Zahawi reaches an agreement with HMRC for failing to take "reasonable care". The BBC has been told the total amount paid to the taxman was in the region of about £5m

September 2022: A final settlement is agreed with HMRC but Mr Zahawi does not update his declaration of interest form with the new information

September and October 2022: Mr Zahawi becomes a levelling up minister under Liz Truss's short-lived premiership and Tory Party chair under Rishi Sunak. Again, Mr Zahawi does not update his declaration of interest form

21 January 2023: Mr Zahawi issues a statement acknowledging he reached a settlement with HMRC following an investigation

23 January 2023: The prime minister asks his ethics adviser Sir Laurie to look into the disclosures made about the tax affairs of Mr Zahawi

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2023-01-29 15:45:36Z
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Hexham stabbings: Boy, 16, charged with murdering teenage girl - BBC

Holly NewtonFamily handout

A 16-year-old has been charged with the murder of a teenage girl who was stabbed to death in Northumberland.

Holly Newton, 15, was fatally wounded in the Priestpopple area of Hexham at about 17:10 GMT on Friday and later died in hospital.

A 16-year-old boy, who was also taken to hospital, suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

The teenager charged with murder has also been charged with attempted murder and possessing an offensive weapon.

The boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is scheduled to appear before magistrates in Newcastle on Monday.

Floral tributes laid at the scene

Northumbria Police Ch Supt Sam Rennison said Holly, of Haltwhistle, "still had so much left to look forward to in life, and this tragic incident has left her family devastated beyond words".

She added: "Their grief simply cannot be put into words, and our thoughts are with both families involved and their loved ones as we continue to support them in every way we can.

"The investigation is ongoing, and I'd like to show my appreciation to the people of Hexham - and beyond - who have greatly assisted with our enquiries and shown their support.

"While our enquiries continue, we do believe all those involved are known to each other and there is no wider risk to the public."

'Truly lovely student'

Holly was a pupil at Hexham's Queen Elizabeth High School.

A statement from the school said: "We are in shock after the terrible events of Friday evening and devastated at the loss of Holly, a truly lovely student who was quiet, conscientious, helpful and kind.

"Our thoughts are with Holly's family at this time of unbearable pain. We will come together as a school community on Monday to support each other as we grieve."

A candle-lighting service has been held at Hexham Abbey and the town's mayor, Derek Kennedy, was among those who attended.

He said: "The whole town is still coming to terms with this, it's been a massive shock.

"A young girl who's just starting life and attending the local high school, starting her education and getting out there, it's just terrible.

"It's going to have a big impact on all the schoolchildren when they go back on Monday because one of their own won't be coming back ever again."

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2023-01-29 13:52:41Z
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Nadhim Zahawi sacked: The seven major findings from the PM's Zahawi investigation - Sky News

Nadhim Zahawi's failure to disclose that he was in discussions with HMRC over his taxes was a "serious failure to meet" ministerial standards, a damning report into the affair has found.

Sir Laurie Magnus, who carried out the investigation as the prime minister's new ethics adviser, said the former chancellor "should have understood" from the outset that he was under investigation by HMRC and that it was a "serious matter".

He added that Mr Zahawi should have declared his correspondence with HMRC as far back as September 2021 when he became education secretary.

He also criticised the MP for Stratford-on-Avon for failing to correct the record for more than six months, after he dismissed reports that HMRC was "looking into" his tax affairs as "smears" during a July 2022 interview with Sky News's Kay Burley.

Mr Zahawi was sacked as Tory party chairman on Sunday by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak following the publication of Sir Laurie's report, which looked into whether the former minister had fallen foul of the ministerial code.

Here Sky News looks at the key points in Sir Laurie's report:

'Mr Zahawi should have understood this was a serious matter'

"Mr Zahawi has told me that he had formed the impression that he and his advisers were merely being asked certain queries by HMRC concerning his tax affairs, and that this impression persisted until he received a letter from HMRC on 15 July 2022.

Sir Laurie Magnus
Image: Sir Laurie Magnus

"On the basis of the confidential information to which I have had access, including correspondence between HMRC and Mr Zahawi personally, I consider that an individual subject to the HMRC process faced by Mr Zahawi should have understood at the outset that they were under investigation by HMRC and that this was a serious matter."

'Investigation was a relevant matter for a minister to declare'

"I consider that an HMRC investigation of the nature faced by Mr Zahawi would be a relevant matter for a Minister to discuss and declare as part of their declaration of interests.

"I would expect a Minister to inform their Permanent Secretary and to seek their advice on any implications for the management of their responsibilities.

Politics news - latest: Zahawi attacks media after sacking

"I would likewise expect a Minister proactively to update their declaration of interests form to include details of such an HMRC process."

'Mr Zahawi's failure to declare investigation did not meet ministerial standards'

"After his appointment as Chancellor on 5 July 2022, Mr Zahawi completed a declaration of interests form which contained no reference to the HMRC investigation.

"A later form acknowledged (by way of an attachment) that Mr Zahawi was in discussion with HMRC to clarify a number of queries.

"Only following receipt of HMRC's letter received on 15 July 2022, did Mr Zahawi update his declaration of interests form to acknowledge that his tax affairs were under investigation, but he provided no further details other than the statement made previously that he was clarifying queries.

File pic: Rishi Sunak and Nadhim Zahawi

"Given the nature of the investigation by HMRC, which started prior to his appointment as Secretary of State for Education on 15 September 2021, I consider that by failing to declare HMRC's ongoing investigation before July 2022 - despite the ministerial declaration of interests form including specific prompts on tax affairs and HMRC investigations and disputes - Mr Zahawi failed to meet the requirement to declare any interests which might be thought to give rise to a conflict."

'Mr Zahawi failed to declare HMRC investigation ended in penalty'

"The subsequent fact that the investigation concluded with a penalty in relation to the tax affairs of a Minister also requires declaration and discussion.

"It is a relevant interest which could give rise to a conflict, and particularly so in the case of HM Treasury Ministers and the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who has responsibility for the UK tax system.

Read more:
Nadhim Zahawi sacked as Tory chairman over tax affairs row
In full: Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's letter sacking Nadhim Zahawi

"As a result of my inquiries, I conclude that Mr Zahawi failed to update his declaration of interest form appropriately after this settlement was agreed in principle in August 2022.

"It was not until mid-January 2023 that details of the earlier HMRC investigation and its outcome were declared."

'Omissions constitute a serious failure to meet ministerial standards'

"I also conclude that, in the appointments process for the governments formed in September 2022 and October 2022, Mr Zahawi failed to disclose relevant information - in this case the nature of the investigation and its outcome in a penalty - at the time of his appointment, including to Cabinet Office officials who support that process.

"Without knowledge of that information, the Cabinet Office was not in a position to inform the appointing Prime Minister.

"Taken together, I consider that these omissions constitute a serious failure to meet the standards set out in the Ministerial Code."

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Zahawi in July 2022: 'I've always declared my taxes'

Nadhim Zahawi's interview with Sky News in July 2022

What Mr Zahawi said:

"There have been news stories over the last few days which are inaccurate, unfair and are clearly smears. It's very sad that such smears should be circulated and sadder still that they have been published.

"These smears have falsely claimed that the Serious Fraud Office, the National Crime Agency, and HMRC are looking into me. Let me be absolutely clear. I am not aware of this. I have not been told that this is the case.

"I've always declared my financial interests and paid my taxes in the UK. If there are questions, of course, I will answer any questions HMRC has of me."

What Sir Laurie said about the statement:

"Mr Zahawi has told me that at the time of this statement, he was under the impression that he was answering HMRC's queries, but that he was not under investigation.

"I consider that an individual subject to the HMRC process faced by Mr Zahawi should have understood that they were under investigation by HMRC and that this was a serious matter.

"Under the Ministerial Code, Ministers have a duty to 'be as open as possible with Parliament and the public'.

"Whilst this duty clearly does not extend to disclosing personal tax information, it does include a general duty to be accurate in statements to ensure a false impression is not given or maintained.

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PM took 'decisive action' on Zahawi, says Gove

"Mr Zahawi did not correct the record until 21 January 2023, when Mr Zahawi's public statement indicated that he had reached a settlement with HMRC following an investigation.

"I consider that this delay in correcting an untrue public statement is inconsistent with the requirement for openness."

'Insufficient regard for Ministerial Code'

"I consider that Mr Zahawi, in holding the high privilege of being a Minister of the Crown, has shown insufficient regard for the General Principles of the Ministerial Code and the requirements in particular, under the seven Principles of Public Life, to be honest, open and an exemplary leader through his own behaviour.

"I want to commend Mr Zahawi for his willingness to assist with my inquiry. I also fully appreciate the pressures faced by Ministers as they address the complex issues of government and the difficulties they encounter in balancing the demands of their personal lives and their ministerial responsibilities.

"These factors, however, cannot mitigate my overall judgement that Mr Zahawi's conduct as a Minister has fallen below the high standards that, as Prime Minister, you rightly expect from those who serve in your government."

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2023-01-29 11:32:45Z
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