Jumat, 02 Juni 2023

Train strikes prompt sports fans to set off by bus - BBC

Gillian and Stephen Young

Derek, aged 60, has been going to the Epsom Derby for half his life - but this year will be different.

For the first time, the horse-racing fan and his 13 friends will travel by minibus instead of the train.

Because this year, Derby Day falls on the same day as a rail strike.

If all goes well, Derek, who asked the BBC not to use his surname, reckons he'll use a minibus for future trips to Epsom instead of the train.

"I do think a lot of people will realise that there are other alternatives," he said.

He's not alone in seeking out other forms of transport.

After walkouts by Aslef train drivers on Wednesday and RMT rail workers on Friday, Saturday will be the third rail strike this week when Aslef drivers once again take industrial action in a long-running dispute over pay and conditions.

And the latest strikes happen to fall on a bumper weekend of sporting events.

As well as the Epsom Derby, there is the FA Cup final at Wembley on Saturday between old foes Manchester City and Manchester United, and the England v Ireland Test match at Lord's.

Meanwhile, for those whose tastes run to the more musical side of things, Beyonce is performing a concert at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium.

Manchester City fans Gillian and Stephen Young are journeying from Manchester to London to see their team attempt to collect the second leg of a historic treble.

By train, the trip usually takes around two hours but because they are having to travel by coach, it will take five hours.

On top of that, the couple are staying overnight near Euston, which is the station they would have arrived at if travelling by train.

"We planned to just walk round the corner," says Gillian. "But now we'll end up at Victoria Coach Station and have to travel back to Euston. It has messed us up a little bit."

'Oh no'

Derek said that when he first discovered there was a strike on Derby Day his stomach dropped. "I thought, 'Oh no, how are we going to get there? It is going to be chaos.'"

As well as people from the UK, his group includes friends from Australia and Ireland.

"Originally I thought we could maybe get Ubers but then we figured that, with that many people, it works out as really expensive," he says.

He then alighted on the idea of a minibus.

"I was pleasantly surprised that there were minibuses available and that they weren't going to be that much more expensive than going by train."

It works out around £5 more per person to take a minibus, which will provide a driver to take Derek and his group on the hour-long trip between central London and Epsom in Surrey.

He admits that the journey could be slower, but if it is successful, it is likely to be his preferred mode of transport for subsequent Derby Days.

And he thinks that people being forced to find other ways of travelling could end up hurting the rail industry in the long run.

"I think they are shooting themselves in the foot because a lot of people are realising, 'actually I don't really need to use the trains as much as I used to.'"

Whether all people will stick with this weekend's alternative mode of travel in the future isn't completely assured.

'We'll get there'

Gillian and Stephen were also nonplussed when they discovered there was a train strike on the day of the Cup final.

"[We were] not very happy at all because we've never used the coach before so we were a bit unsure how to get to London," says Gillian.

"It had been arranged for quite a number of weeks. We managed to get a refund but that doesn't help the fact that travel has been disrupted."

But they are philosophical. "We'll get there, that's the important thing," she says.

Coach travel has benefitted from the series of rail strikes.

John Boughton, commercial director at National Express, said: "On a normal strike day we'd expect to see at least 80% more passengers travelling on our network than on an equivalent non-strike day.

"That means that on strike days our services are virtually 100% full throughout the entire day."

He said that for National Express's coach services from Manchester "everything is sold out to London all the way through to tomorrow afternoon".

He said that while there are other factors that might help attract more passengers, "we know that rail strikes have a huge impact on the number of people travelling on coach."

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2023-06-02 13:52:33Z
2082901686

Johnson goes over Sunak's head to send WhatsApps 'directly' to inquiry - live - The Independent

Sunak refuses to rule out court action against Covid Inquiry

Boris Johnson has told the Covid-19 Inquiry that he is willing to hand over “all unredacted WhatsApp” messages – including 2020 material from a previous phone discarded for security reasons.

The former prime minister is under fire once again after it emerged on Thursday that he had only handed over Covid-related messages from May 2021 or later to Cabinet Office officials.

In a letter to inquiry chair Baroness Hallett, Mr Johnson said he would today hand over all the material already given to the Cabinet Office “in unredacted form” to her team.

Earlier, a minister said Rishi Sunak’s legal bid to prevent the inquiry from obtaining WhatsApp messages sent by Boris Johnson to government colleagues during the pandemic was likely to fail.

Science minister George Freeman, appearing on BBC Question Time, insisted the Cabinet Office decision to launch judicial review proceedings was not a “cynical waste of time” but admitted he thought the prospect of success unlikely.

The Cabinet Office is seeking a judicial review of inquiry chairwoman Baroness Hallett’s order to release the documents, arguing it should not have to hand over irrelevant material.

1685699331

Breaking: Johnson vows to send unredacted WhatsApps direct to chair

Boris Johnson said he would share with the Covid inquiry all the unredacted WhatsApps he provided to the Cabinet Office, as well as material from his old mobile phone.

In his letter to chairwoman Baroness Hallett, he wrote: “I am sending your inquiry all unredacted WhatsApps I provided to the Cabinet Office.

“I would like to do the same with any material that may be on an old phone which I have been previously been told I can no longer access safely.

“In view of the urgency of your request I believe we need to test this advice, which came from the security services.

“I have asked the Cabinet Office for assistance in turning it on securely so that I can search it for all relevant material.

“I propose to pass all such material directly to you.”,

Adam Forrest reports:

<p>Britain Coronavirus Inquiry</p>

Britain Coronavirus Inquiry

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 10:48
1685721615

ICYMI: 150 questions the Covid inquiry wants Boris Johnson to answer

Key questions the former PM has been asked include:

  • Did you say ‘let the bodies pile high’?
  • Was there any scientific evidence on Eat Out to Help Out?
  • Did the Cabinet secretary really suggest Covid ‘chickenpox parties?’
  • Did you really say you felt ‘manipulated’ by scientists into imposing a lockdown?
  • When and how did you first learn of Covid?

Jon Stone has more:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 17:00
1685718615

ICYMI: Suspended Labour MP ‘boasted about taking prostitutes to parliament’

A MP suspended by the party Labour over sexual harassment allegations is facing fresh claims he “boasted” about bringing sex workers into parliamentary bars.

Geraint Davies has been suspended pending an investigation into reports of “incredibly serious allegations of completely unacceptable behaviour”.

One woman has submitted a formal complaint, after Politico initially reported that five other women made sexual harassment claims against the politician. The MP said he did not “recognise” the claims.

Adam Forrest reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 16:10
1685716725

ICYMI: Brexit was ‘historic economic error’, says ex-US Treasury chief

Brexit was a “historic economic error” which has helped fuel high inflation in the UK, the former US Treasury chief Larry Summers has said.

The senior American economist also said he would be “very surprised” if Britain avoids a recession in the next two years.

Mr Summers said Brexit and other policies mean Britain’s economic woes are “frankly more acute than they are in most other major countries.”

Adam Forrest reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 15:38
1685714921

‘Eat out to get Covid’: Is this the real reason Rishi Sunak wants to hold back the WhatsApps?

The former chancellor’s Eat Out to Help Out scheme helped to lift the post-lockdown gloom, but might come back to bite him as PM, writes Andrew Grice.

Read Andrew’s full piece here:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 15:08
1685713242

Burnham in plea to ‘rewire’ Britain and boost devolution

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has said he understands the SNP’s claims that the Westminster government is “destroying devolution”.

The Labour politician cited his own conflict with the UK government during the Covid-19 pandemic, when he accused the Tories of “bullying” his region into accepting less than the requested £65 million business support package.

His comments came as first minister Humza Yousaf hit out at the UK government and claimed Scotland’s deposit return scheme could be scrapped after it failed to grant an Internal Market Act exemption that means glass can be included.

Rebecca McCurdy reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 14:40
1685710864

Boris tells Covid inquiry he wants to hand over all phone messages unredacted

Boris Johnson has told the Covid-19 Inquiry that he is willing to hand over “all unredacted WhatsApp” messages – including 2020 material from a previous phone discarded for security reasons.

In a letter to inquiry chair Baroness Hallett, Mr Johnson said he would today hand over all the material already given to the Cabinet Office “in unredacted form” to her team.

Adam Forrest has the full report:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 14:01
1685710233

SNP MP to make donation to charity after Independent reveals he expensed penalty charge

An SNP MP says he will be making a donation to charity after an Independent investigation found he had put a driving penalty charge on expenses.

Dave Doogan said he recognised he had made a mistake and had repaid the cash. He also apologised to his constituents for making the claim.

Mr Doogan was one of several MPs, including a Tory minister, to have expensed the penalties issued by Transport for London.

Jon Stone reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 13:50
1685709033

‘Kamikaze’ Boris sets his sights on Sunak revenge

There is no aspect of politics or public life that is any more than just a game for Johnson, and taking Sunak down with him would certainly count as a victory, writes Tom Peck

Read Tom’s full piece here:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 13:30
1685706614

How on earth did a Brexit trade deal come to be signed by Boris on a bit of paper from the loo?

The UK-Australia Free Trade Agreement wasn’t literally written on bog roll – but it may as well have been, so much did it damage British agriculture, writes Sean O’Grady

Read Sean’s piece here:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 12:50

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2023-06-02 16:06:26Z
2058364973

Bournemouth beach deaths: Police presence at cruiser - BBC

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Police investigating the deaths of two children pulled from the sea in Bournemouth are at the quayside of a boat that was in the vicinity when 999 calls started coming in.

A 12-year-old girl and a boy, 17, died after an incident involving a total of 10 swimmers on Wednesday.

Pleasure cruiser Dorset Belle is at anchor at Cobb's Quay in Poole Harbour, with a police van nearby.

Dorset Police said it was unable to comment.

Dorset Belle

According to the Marine Traffic website, Dorset Belle visited Bournemouth Pier, where the incident happened, at 16:00 BST.

The boat offers regular cruises around Bournemouth and the Dorset Coast leaving from the pier.

The BBC has tried to contact the owners of Dorset Belle.

The vessel's website states that it was purpose-built as a passenger boat to operate locally and could "cope with the occasional challenging swell conditions encountered at local piers".

Air ambulances on Bournemouth beach
@buhalis

Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole (BCP) Council's website says all passenger-carrying boats must be issued with a licence to operate in the area.

It also states from April to October, yellow marker buoys are set out 200m (656ft) from the low water mark to indicate that vessels must not "go beyond six knots, annoy or endanger other beach users or run ashore or launch from the beach".

Vikki Slade, leader of BCP Council, said: "There is no evidence to suggest any of those rules have been breached.

"We are confident with our partners that any lessons that need to be learned in the future will be learned."

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Tobias Ellwood, Conservative MP for Bournemouth East, urged Dorset Police to provide a "qualified statement" on the circumstances surrounding the incident, which resulted in the deaths of the girl from Buckinghamshire and boy from Southampton.

Speaking to BBC Radio Solent, he said: "Police must be given the space to do their investigation, but ultimately we do need to alleviate fears and remove the rife speculation that pours out because of social media, we have eight miles of beach and families want to know is it safe."

Dorset Police has declined to comment on any investigation into the Dorset Belle.

The force said it was working with the Maritime Accident Investigation Branch and Maritime and Coastguard Agency.

A flora tribute left on the beach

It comes after Assistant Chief Constable Rachel Farrell stressed investigations were still in the early stages and the force was only releasing certain details to address speculation. The exact circumstances of what happened remain unclear.

An earlier police statement confirmed there was no physical contact with a jet ski or boat and no-one jumped from the pier during the incident. A man arrested on suspicion of manslaughter has been released while inquiries continue.

The council leader previously told members of the press making sure the beach was safe would be a "top priority" for the authority.

She confirmed she would be meeting with MP Conor Burns to discuss pier safety on Friday.

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2023-06-02 11:31:16Z
2098588317

Bournemouth beach deaths: Police presence at cruiser - BBC

This video can not be played

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

Police investigating the deaths of two children pulled from the sea in Bournemouth are at the quayside of a boat that was in the vicinity when 999 calls started coming in.

A 12-year-old girl and a boy, 17, died after an incident involving a total of 10 swimmers on Wednesday.

Pleasure cruiser Dorset Belle is at anchor at Cobb's Quay in Poole Harbour, with a police van nearby.

Dorset Police said it was unable to comment.

Dorset Belle

According to the Marine Traffic website, Dorset Belle visited Bournemouth Pier, where the incident happened, at 16:00 BST.

The boat offers regular cruises around Bournemouth and the Dorset Coast leaving from the pier.

The BBC has tried to contact the owners of Dorset Belle.

Air ambulances on Bournemouth beach
@buhalis

Tobias Ellwood, Conservative MP for Bournemouth East, urged Dorset Police to provide a "qualified statement" on the circumstances surrounding the incident, which resulted in the deaths of the girl from Buckinghamshire and boy from Southampton.

Speaking to BBC Radio Solent, he said: "Police must be given the space to do their investigation, but ultimately we do need to alleviate fears and remove the rife speculation that pours out because of social media, we have eight miles of beach and families want to know is it safe."

Dorset Police has declined to comment on any investigation into the Dorset Belle.

The force said it was working with the Maritime Accident Investigation Branch and Maritime and Coastguard Agency.

This video can not be played

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

It comes after Assistant Chief Constable Rachel Farrell stressed investigations were still in the early stages and the force was only releasing certain details to address speculation. The exact circumstances of what happened remain unclear.

An earlier police statement confirmed there was no physical contact with a jet ski or boat and no-one jumped from the pier during the incident. A man arrested on suspicion of manslaughter has been released while inquiries continue.

Leader of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council, Vikki Slade, previously told members of the press making sure the beach was safe would be a "top priority" for the authority.

She confirmed she would be meeting with MP Conor Burns to discuss pier safety on Friday.

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2023-06-02 11:05:38Z
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Johnson goes over Sunak's head to send WhatsApps 'direct' to inquiry - live - The Independent

Sunak refuses to rule out court action against Covid Inquiry

Boris Johnson has told the Covid-19 Inquiry that he is willing to hand over “all unredacted WhatsApp” messages – including 2020 material from a previous phone discarded for security reasons.

The former prime minister is under fire once again after it emerged on Thursday that he had only handed over Covid-related messages from May 2021 or later to Cabinet Office officials.

In a letter to inquiry chair Baroness Hallett, Mr Johnson said he would today hand over all the material already given to the Cabinet Office “in unredacted form” to her team.

Earlier, a minister said Rishi Sunak’s legal bid to prevent the inquiry from obtaining WhatsApp messages sent by Boris Johnson to government colleagues during the pandemic was likely to fail.

Science minister George Freeman, appearing on BBC Question Time, insisted the Cabinet Office decision to launch judicial review proceedings was not a “cynical waste of time” but admitted he thought the prospect of success unlikely.

The Cabinet Office is seeking a judicial review of inquiry chairwoman Baroness Hallett’s order to release the documents, arguing it should not have to hand over irrelevant material.

1685699331

Breaking: Johnson vows to send unredacted WhatsApps direct to chair

Boris Johnson said he would share with the Covid inquiry all the unredacted WhatsApps he provided to the Cabinet Office, as well as material from his old mobile phone.

In his letter to chairwoman Baroness Hallett, he wrote: “I am sending your inquiry all unredacted WhatsApps I provided to the Cabinet Office.

“I would like to do the same with any material that may be on an old phone which I have been previously been told I can no longer access safely.

“In view of the urgency of your request I believe we need to test this advice, which came from the security services.

“I have asked the Cabinet Office for assistance in turning it on securely so that I can search it for all relevant material.

“I propose to pass all such material directly to you.”,

Adam Forrest reports:

<p>Britain Coronavirus Inquiry</p>

Britain Coronavirus Inquiry

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 10:48
1685706614

How on earth did a Brexit trade deal come to be signed by Boris on a bit of paper from the loo?

The UK-Australia Free Trade Agreement wasn’t literally written on bog roll – but it may as well have been, so much did it damage British agriculture, writes Sean O’Grady

Read Sean’s piece here:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 12:50
1685704513

Brexit: ‘Things can only get better’ say experts

The problems of Brexit red tape have hit a “low ebb”, according to David Henig, the independent trade adviser, in an Independent online event on Thursday. From this new baseline, “things can only get better”.

The panel agreed that there were changes that could be made, either by a Labour government or a Conservative one, over the next few years that would make trade easier without Britain going back into the EU single market or customs union.

Simon Calder, the Independent’s travel correspondent, said that the biggest single sin of Brexit on travel was the UK’s refusal to recognise EU identity cards. It has had a terrible effect on school trips coming to the UK, many of which are going to Ireland instead. It would be easy for the government to relax the rules.

John Rentoul reports:

Brexit: ‘Things can only get better’ say experts

The problems of Brexit red tape have hit “low ebb”, according to David Henig, the independent trade adviser, in an Independent online event on Thursday. From this new baseline, “things can only get better”.

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 12:15
1685702499

Dozens of refugees ‘left on the streets’ in Westminster for two nights

Suella Braverman has been asked to “urgently clarify” why a large group of asylum seekers were “left on the street” in Westminster for two nights running.

In a letter to the home Secretary, the leader of Westminster City Council expressed his “deep concern” that around 40 refugees were placed in the borough on Wednesday night “without appropriate accommodation or support available” and no prior communication with the local authority.

The group apparently refused to enter a Pimlico hotel where the Home Office had asked them to sleep “four people per room”.

Sophie Wingate reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 11:41
1685699433

Economists dismiss Tory push to scrap inheritance tax

Calls by senior Tories to abolish inheritance tax (IHT) have been met with scepticism from senior economists and tax experts.

More than 50 Conservative MPs, including former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, have urged prime minister Rishi Sunak and chancellor Jeremy Hunt to scrap the tax, according to the Daily Telegraph.

Sophie Wingate reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 10:50
1685697840

How Boris blundered into £10bn Australia trade deal concession scrawled on paper in the loo

He was bounced into signing a disastrous post-Brexit agreement after the Australians seized on a schoolboy howler over meat import quotas during negotiations.

Adam Forrest reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 10:24
1685695833

150 questions the Covid inquiry wants Boris Johnson to answer

The UK Covid-19 Inquiry wants to see WhatsApp messages and notebooks kept by the former prime minister to build a picture of how decisions were taken in government up to and during lockdowns.

But Rishi Sunak has refused to release unredacted documents as his government on Thursday launched legal action in a last-ditch attempt to protect the material.

Here are some of the key questions the inquiry intends to ask:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 09:50
1685694406

Public ‘sick and tired’ of government ‘ducking scrutiny'

The public is “sick and tired” of the government’s attempts to “duck scrutiny”, the Lib Dems said as they announced they would try to force Rishi Sunak to publish “all material” relevant to the Covid inquiry.

Christine Jardine, the party’s Cabinet Office spokeswoman, said the Lib Dems will table a humble address motion next week as the row over Boris Johnson’s WhatsApp messages rumbles on.

“People are sick and tired of the government’s attempts to duck scrutiny by refusing to hand over these messages in full,” Ms Jardine said. “Rishi Sunak promised to govern with integrity and accountability, instead it’s just more chaos and cover-ups.

"Bereaved families deserve full transparency instead of this endless game of smoke and mirrors.”

She added: "It’s time for MPs to come together, end this Conservative cover-up and force the government to come clean."

Speaking on Sky News, she denied her party is "playing politics" although the motion is unlikely to get a vote.

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 09:26
1685692833

Suspended Labour MP ‘boasted about taking prostitutes to parliament’

A Labour MP suspended by the party over sexual harassment allegations is facing fresh claims he “boasted” about bringing sex workers into parliamentary bars.

Geraint Davies has been suspended pending an investigation into reports of “incredibly serious allegations of completely unacceptable behaviour”.

One woman has submitted a formal complaint after the Politico website initially reported that five other women made sexual harassment claims against the politician. The MP said he did not “recognise” the claims.

Adam Forrest reports:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 09:00
1685691933

Government ‘directly responsible’ for ongoing rail dispute, union boss claims

Rail union boss Mick Lynch has claimed the government is “directly responsible” for an ongoing row over pay as some 20,000 train workers take part in a fresh wave of strikes.

Mr Lynch, RMT general secretary, accused ministers of costing the economy “£5bn in the course of this dispute” as he hit out at big dividend payments to train company shareholders.

Strikes by railway workers continued on Friday, causing fresh travel disruption for passengers. Members of the RMT, union employed by train operators across England, walked out in a long-running dispute over jobs, pay and conditions.

Train services were disrupted by the action, which comes almost a year after the RMT held its first strike in the same dispute.

More comments from Mr Lunch below:

Matt Mathers2 June 2023 08:45

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2023-06-02 11:15:13Z
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