Rabu, 12 Juli 2023

Fury over austerity threat as Hunt rules out extra money for public sector pay rises - The Independent

Jeremy Hunt has been warned by union bosses not to impose another round of damaging austerity cuts on frontline services after saying there would be no extra money to fund 6 per cent pay rises in the public sector.

The chancellor is ruling out extra cash if Rishi Sunak agrees to the pay hikes recommended by independent pay review bodies – sparking fears of swingeing cuts across departments.

But furious union leaders told The Independent that “burnt-out” public sector workers were already quitting over low pay – leaving the NHS and schools struggling to provide basic services.

Sharon Graham, Unite’s general secretary, said the government appeared to be threatening to give staff “a half-decent pay rise” only “if underfunded departments like health and education make further cuts to public services”.

She added: “They want us to think that the choice is between the devil and the deep blue sea. This is simply not true. If the government wanted to, it could well afford to pay public sector workers properly, while maintaining and indeed improving funding for schools and hospitals.”

Prof Philip Banfield, British Medical Association (BMA) council chair, said: “Talking about staff pay and frontline services as if they are distinct from each another is a complete fallacy.”

He added: “Staff are leaving because they are not being paid properly or fairly. Without staff, and particularly the expertise of our doctors, the NHS cannot provide frontline services – after all, you need pilots to fly planes.”

Mr Sunak and Mr Hunt are still considering whether to accept the recommendations of pay review bodies to offer millions of workers rises of around 6 per cent or risk further rows with unions by rejecting the suggestions on the grounds of affordability.

Reports in The Times suggest the review bodies have recommended that teachers should receive a 6.5 per cent pay rise for 2023-24, while police officers, prison officers and junior doctors should all get 6 per cent or more – all at a potential cost in excess of £5bn.

Sunak and Hunt set to decide on public sector pay

Mr Hunt raised the prospect of departments making cuts elsewhere when he ruled out borrowing at his Mansion House speech on Monday. Mr Hunt told ITV’s Peston on Wednesday that the government “won’t fund any public sector pay awards through additional borrowing”.

Warning of the inflationary impact, the chancellor told the programme: “If you fund any public sector pay rise by increasing borrowing that year, that pumps billions of pounds of extra money into the economy.”

But PCS union general secretary Mark Serwotka said civil servants need “both a pay rise and investment in their departmental budgets” to provide “the quality of service expected by the public”.

He added: “Cuts to wages and to departmental budgets will have the opposite effect, leading to fewer staff and worse services. Rather than peddling the myth that wage rises cause inflation, Jeremy Hunt should give our members the pay rise they deserve without cutting the services they provide.”

Paul Nowak, TUC general secretary, said teachers and NHS hospitals and social care staff were being “driven away” by low pay. “They are burnt-out, underpaid and cannot take it anymore. And all of us who depend on these services are suffering as a result.”

He added: “The government must come forward with a credible funding plan to protect our public services and the staff who work in them.”

Unison’s general secretary Christina McAnea said it “makes no sense to expect the cost of pay rises to come from existing budgets. Without extra funding, there’ll be even greater cuts and pressure on services. That helps no one.”

Striking teachers take part in a National Education Union (NEU) rally

Final decisions on the pay review are expected within days, with Mr Sunak warning that “we all live within budgets” and he had to take a “responsible” approach to the public finances and the wider economic picture.

Speaking to reporters accompanying him on his visit to the Nato summit in Vilnius, Mr Sunak said: “We all live within budgets … Everyone can see the economic context that we’re in with inflation where it is – borrowing costs for government, not just in the UK but across the world, are rising.

“We need to look at that context and then decide what is the right thing to do. That is not always easy but that is what being responsible looks like, and that is why we will take the time to get this right.”

Mr Hunt told a dinner event on Tuesday night that Mr Sunak could offer his “next five” pledges before the next election because the government is confident on delivering the five big promises set out in January.

“We’ll be able to say to them you can listen to us – because we delivered the last five, and here are the next five, and we’re a party that delivers,” he told the Onward think tank.

Shadow cabinet minister Lisa Nandy refused to say whether a Labour government would accept the pay review body recommendations in full.

The shadow housing secretary said: “We haven’t seen them all and we would obviously look at them carefully. In the end it is for governments to decide, though.”

She added: “We want a much greater focus on retention and recruitment in the pay review body recommendations, because we think that is becoming the major problem and it isn’t just a question of wages for public sector workers, there’s also the problem of workload.”

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2023-07-12 20:12:35Z
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Public sector pay: Government weigh up 6.5% increase - BBC

Members of the National Education Union (NEU) striking in WhitehallPA Media

The government is considering pay increases of between 6%-6.5% for public sector workers, the BBC understands.

Official pay review bodies for employees including teachers, junior doctors and police have recommended the pay rise. Inflation to May was 8.7%.

The prime minister and chancellor are expected to meet this week or next to decide whether to accept the rises.

Government sources have told the BBC any rises over 3.5% would need to come out of existing departmental budgets.

There have been reports the Cabinet is split over what to do next. Several cabinet ministers, including the health secretary and education secretary, have pushed internally for the review bodies' recommendations to be accepted, according to the Times.

Mr Sunak says pay awards should be "responsible" to avoid making inflation worse. He has made tackling rising prices his top political priority.

Ministers have had the recommendations from pay review bodies for weeks.

The BBC has been told that all of the independent bodies, which cover a range of jobs, have all recommended pay rises of between 6% and 6.5% percent for public sector workers.

A decision not to accept the recommendations would prompt fresh tensions with unions, raising the prospect of continuing public-sector strikes.

Submissions from departments to the pay review bodies said they could only afford rises around 3.5% from within their own budgets.

But it's expected the PM and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt will tell ministers any awards higher than this will have to be funded through cuts or savings elsewhere in their own departments.

Mr Hunt ruled out funding pay rises with government borrowing, during an interview on ITV1'S Peston.

Increasing public sector pay through borrowing would "pump billions of pounds of extra money into the economy" leading to businesses "putting up their prices" and driving further inflation.

In a speech to leading figures from finance and business at the Mansion House this week, he said: "Borrowing is itself inflationary."

It comes at a time when businesses, as well as households, are being hit by higher costs due to inflation remaining stubbornly high in the UK.

Rishi Sunak
PA Media

Speaking at a news conference at the Nato summit in Lithuania, Mr Sunak said his decision about pay would be guided by "fairness" to public sector workers and taxpayers, as well as "responsibility".

He said he didn't want to do anything that would "fuel inflation, make it worse or last for longer".

Speaking on Monday during a visit to Avon and Somerset police force, Home Secretary Suella Braverman would not answer directly whether the government should abide by recommendations on public sector pay.

Praising police officers, she said: "They do incredibly heroic work, day in, day out, and they save lives and it's right that we properly reward them for their sacrifice and their dedication.

"We know that there's an ongoing process - it is a decision for the whole of government.

"I don't want to pre-empt that process and the conclusions of that consideration, but it's right that we properly reward frontline police officers and bear in mind that we're in a very challenging situation, economically."

Taxing decisions

Mr Sunak has previously pledged to halve inflation this year to about 5%, as part of his top five priorities since becoming prime minister.

The rate at which prices are rising remained unchanged at 8.7% in May, despite predictions it would fall.

Persistent inflation levels would make it hard to cut taxes before the next election, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said in an interview with the Financial Times.

But Mr Sunak said he and the Chancellor were "completely united on wanting to reduce taxes for people".

"But the number one priority right now is to reduce inflation and be responsible with government borrowing," he added.

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What are pay bodies?

Almost half of public sector workers are covered by pay review bodies, including police and prison officers, the armed forces, doctors, dentists and teachers.

The pay review bodies are made up of economists and experts on human resources, with experience in both the public and private sector and are appointed by the relevant government department.

Their recommendations are not legally binding, meaning the government can choose to reject or partially ignore the advice, but it is usually accepted.

Some agreements have been reached, including a pay settlement for more than a million NHS staff in England.

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2023-07-12 15:37:49Z
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Senior Tories criticise Illegal Migration Bill but MPs reject Lords changes - BBC

Theresa MayParliament TV

Some senior Tory MPs have criticised the government's asylum reforms as MPs overturned changes made by the House of Lords to the Illegal Migration Bill.

Former PM Theresa May was among more than a dozen Tories arguing for a different approach from ministers.

But their calls did not stop MPs voting to reject revisions peers had made to the bill in the Lords.

The bill is central to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's pledge to stop small boats crossing the English Channel.

The Illegal Migration Bill seeks to deter people from making the crossing by toughening up the rules and conditions around seeking asylum.

As it was debated in the House of Commons on Tuesday, Mr Sunak said he was "throwing absolutely everything" at tackling Channel crossings.

But the passage of the bill has not been easy, with peers voting for 20 changes and campaigners calling on MPs to reject the government's proposals.

The amendments voted for by the Lords have been overturned by MPs in a series of 18 votes, although ahead of the debate, the Home Office offered several concessions, including on time limits for the detention of children and pregnant women.

The bill now heads to the Lords again, for peers to consider the changes made by MPs.

In a Commons debate, Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick accused peers of "wrecking" the government's asylum reforms by trying to make amendments.

Mr Jenrick said it was "vital" that the bill was passed quickly and described amendments made by the Lords as being "riddled with exceptions and get-out clauses".

The government's concessions were not enough to win the backing of some Tory MPs, who raised concerns over how the bill treats unaccompanied children and the victims of modern slavery.

Mrs May said the bill "will consign more people to slavery", adding she would have to "persist in disagreeing with the government" on this issue.

The former prime minister told MPs: "I know that ministers have said this bill will enable more perpetrators to be stopped, but on modern slavery I genuinely believe it will do the opposite.

"It will enable more slave-drivers to operate and make money out of human misery."

She was among 16 Conservatives who voted against the government's rejection of protections for people claiming to be victims of modern slavery.

There were also rebellions from Conservative MPs connected to the limits and conditions of detaining unaccompanied children.

One of the rebels, former Conservative minister Tim Loughton, said the "assurances that we were promised have not materialised or, if they have, I am afraid nobody understands them".

He complained about the timing of the concessions and said "more work needs to be done" on scrutinising the bill before it becomes law.

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One of the most controversial aspects of the bill would place a legal duty on the government to detain and remove migrants arriving in the UK illegally, either to Rwanda or another "safe" third country.

Stephen Kinnock, Labour's shadow immigration minister, said the government's Rwanda plan was "fundamentally flawed", and he accused Mr Jenrick of "pettiness" for painting over Mickey Mouse cartoons in an immigration centre.

Mr Kinnock said the bill would "only make a terrible situation worse" by increasing the asylum backlog, and "ensure people smugglers are laughing all the way to the bank".

Race to recess

With Parliament due to break for summer at the end of next week, the bill faces a prolonged stand-off between peers and the government during so-called parliamentary ping-pong, when legislation is batted between the Lords and Commons until agreement on the wording can be reached.

The latest figures show more than 13,000 migrants have made the crossing so far this year, including more than 1,600 in the last four days.

The government's efforts to curb the number of small boats crossing the Channel have been hampered in Parliament and the courts.

A plan to house asylum seekers on a barge moored in Dorset has been delayed.

And the government's policy of sending migrants to Rwanda is set for a legal battle in the Supreme Court.

On Monday, a senior Home Office official confirmed the department was paying to keep nearly 5,000 beds empty across the country, in case a sudden influx of migrants caused overcrowding at detention centres.

The government has stressed it remains committed to its plan to remove migrants to Rwanda, and has said it will challenge a Court of Appeal ruling last week that this was unlawful.

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2023-07-12 07:07:07Z
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Selasa, 11 Juli 2023

Handsworth murder probe live as man arrested after man dies - Birmingham Live

Police have launched a murder inquiry after a man was found dead at a house in Birmingham. The victim could not be saved after officers arrived at an address in Ashwin Road, Handsworth, just after 2.30pm today.

A 32-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of murder and was due to be questioned. Officers were still at the scene this evening and the road was sealed off, with a cordon also around an address in the street.

Anyone with information should contact police via Live Chat on its website, or by calling 101, quoting log 2654 of 11 July. Police forensics teams were also at the scene in white suits. Items were being taken out of police vans.

West Midlands Ambulance said:"We were called to a police incident at a private address on Ashwin Road at 2.36pm. Two ambulances and a paramedic officer attended the scene. More details will follow when available."

This is a breaking news story and we will bring you more as we get it. To sign up for free newsletter alerts - click here

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2023-07-11 16:34:34Z
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Ministers face rebellion by Theresa May and Sir Iain Duncan Smith over immigration - The Telegraph

Ministers face a Conservative rebellion on Tuesday led by former leaders Theresa May and Sir Iain Duncan Smith unless they make further concessions over their plans to deport modern slavery victims.

The two leaders are understood to be backing a Lords amendment to the Illegal Migration Bill that protects victims trafficked in the UK from deportation.

Ministers are proposing to reverse the amendment, put forward by Tory peer Lord Randall in the upper house, when the Bill is debated by MPs from lunchtime on Tuesday.

The amendment by Lord Randall, vice chairman of the human trafficking foundation, mirrors a similar proposal by Mrs May and Sir Iain to “exempt people who have been unlawfully exploited in the UK” from the plans to detain and swiftly deport migrants from the UK. Talks are understood to be continuing with Tories concerned about the proposals.

Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, and Victoria Prentis, the Attorney General, were said to be meeting MPs who had “concerns” about the Bill. But one MP said: “I don’t think we will be able to support the Government if it moves to strike out Lord Randall’s amendment.

“Mrs May was the architect of the modern slavery act when home secretary.”

‘Shutting the door on victims’

During the second reading of the Bill, she warned that the plans to refuse modern slavery claims by those who arrived illegally would be “shutting the door on victims while being trafficked into slavery in the UK”.

She said ministers had failed to provide evidence to justify its claims that small boat migrants were abusing the Modern Slavery Act.

It is one of three rebellions anticipated by backbench MPs today as the Government seeks to overturn 15 of the 20 defeats it suffered on amendments in the Lords.

It has offered five concessions by setting an eight-day time limit on detention for unaccompanied child migrants entering the UK illegally, a 28-day limit if there is a dispute over their age and a 72-hour limit for pregnant women.

It has also ditched plans to make the Bill’s powers to detain and deport migrants take effect retrospectively from March 7.

However, Tory MPs are still not satisfied with the assurances on the detention of child migrants and are expected to rebel unless there are further concessions.

MPs are also gearing up to press for a tighter timetable to introduce safe and legal routes for refugees to come to the UK, so that they would be set up within two months of the Bill being enacted.

It is thought unlikely any of the rebellions will see the Government defeated. However, they will encourage the Lords to push back and potentially reintroduce their amendments when the Bill returns to the upper house, creating a ping-pong battle in an effort to secure more concessions from ministers.

Mrs May has voted against the Government once before over Boris Johnson’s decision to abandon its commitment to spending 0.7 per cent of national income on foreign aid.

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2023-07-11 14:38:00Z
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Essex lorry deaths: Romanian people smuggler jailed for manslaughter of 39 migrants - Sky News

A people smuggler has been jailed for more than 12 years for the manslaughter of 39 migrants who were found dead in a lorry trailer in Essex in 2019.

Marius Mihai Draghici, 50, pleaded guilty at the Old Bailey last month to 39 counts of manslaughter and conspiracy to assist unlawful immigration.

The Romanian was described as a "right-hand man" in the people-smuggling gang responsible for the deaths of the Vietnamese migrants.

He fled the country after the bodies were discovered and was detained by police in Romania last August and returned to the UK.

Undated handout photo issued by Essex Police of Romanian national Marius Mihai Draghici, 48, who is suspected of being part of a conspiracy that led to the deaths of 39 Vietnamese nationals who were found in the back of a lorry. Issue date: Wednesday July 27, 2022.
Image: Marius Mihai Draghici was jailed on Tuesday

In a televised sentencing at the Old Bailey on Tuesday, Mr Justice Garnham jailed Draghici for 12 years and seven months.

He told the defendant he was an "essential cog" in a conspiracy which made "astonishing profits out of the exploitation of people desperate to get to the UK".

He said the conditions inside the trailer where the victims died were "unspeakable" with "people trapped inside the trailer with no ventilation and no way of getting out".

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People smuggler sentenced over 39 deaths

The victims - including men, women and children - were found dead in the back of a lorry on an industrial estate in Grays in October 2019.

They died after running out of air in temperatures of up to 38.5C (101F) in the trailer, which was shipped from Belgium to Purfleet docks in Essex.

"Their last hours must have entailed unimaginable suffering and anguish," prosecutor Bill Emlyn Jones KC said.

The defendant was recruited by fellow Romanian Gheorghe Nica, who was previously tried and convicted of involvement in the deaths, and they became "entirely inseparable", a court heard.

In 2021, four other defendants were jailed for their roles in the deaths of the victims. Nica and Eamonn Harrison were convicted in 2020, while lorry driver Maurice Robinson and haulage boss Ronan Hughes admitted manslaughter.

In January, Hughes was ordered to pay the bereaved families of the victims more than £180,000 in compensation.

Police and forensics at the crime scene in Grays, Essex, in October 2019
Image: Thirty-nine people were found dead in a lorry trailer in Grays, Essex, in October 2019

The victims - aged between 15 and 44 - had suffocated after being sealed inside an airtight unit for nearly 12 hours.

Hughes had deployed lorry drivers in the plot, including Robinson, 28, who discovered his human cargo had already suffocated in transit after picking up the trailer they were in at Purfleet.

Read more:
The perilous journey that left 39 dead

Shortly before Robinson opened the back of the container, Hughes had texted him to "give them air quickly" but "don't let them out".

As part of the investigation, police identified at least six smuggling trips, with migrants paying up to £13,000 for a "VIP" service.

The grim discovery ended what had been a long-running conspiracy to smuggle mainly Vietnamese migrants into the UK in the back of lorries.

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2023-07-11 16:11:18Z
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Senin, 10 Juli 2023

Tewkesbury school stabbing: Boy arrested in attempted murder inquiry - BBC

Staff and police at school gatesPA Media

A teenage boy is being questioned on suspicion of the attempted murder of a teacher who was stabbed at a school.

The male teacher was taken to hospital with a single wound after being attacked at Tewkesbury Academy in Gloucestershire just after 09:00 BST.

Firearms officers arrested the suspect two hours later in Stoke Orchard, about three miles (4.8km) away, and a knife was seized.

The injured teacher was discharged from hospital on Monday evening.

Tewkesbury Academy has said it would reopen on Tuesday.

Gloucestershire police received a call from the ambulance service on Monday morning saying a teacher had been injured in a corridor at the school.

A map showing the location of Tewkesbury Academy and the distance that the suspect travelled

Officers said a "thorough" search was conducted after initial reports suggested the boy was still on the school's property.

"It was initially thought that the suspect had fled the scene and hidden himself within the school grounds," said Assistant Chief Constable Richard Ocone, of Gloucestershire Police.

"This search was both complex and meticulous in nature as we sought to ensure there were no further injured parties as well as seeking the arrest of the suspect," he added.

Two other schools also went into lockdown following the stabbing and further searches were conducted to make sure no-one else was hurt.

"Specialist resources including the National Police Air Service and plain-clothed officers were deployed to search the wider area," said ACC Ocone.

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One teacher kept his pupils safe by sitting in front of a classroom door and barricaded it, said one parent.

Daniel said his daughter video called him and he could see her teacher "supporting the whole class".

"The teacher sat right by the door. He barricaded the door, put some boxes there and kept everyone cool even though he must have been scared himself," he added.

Michelle, whose 13-year-old son Alex is in Year 8, said she was very relieved to be able to collect him from school.

"You get the message from school to say it has been locked down and it says urgent," she said.

"Then you hear that a teacher has been stabbed and the children are all locked down. The first instinct is to get to the school as quickly as you can, which I didn't do, and I listened to the school and stayed away as long as I possibly could."

Michelle said the teacher involved was "very popular" with parents and pupils alike.

Police and ambulances at Tewkesbury School

Police said they were keeping an "open mind" about a possible motive and more patrols would be seen in the area.

"At this time there is no evidence to suggest it is terrorism related. However, we are keeping an open mind while further enquiries are carried out," said ACC Ocone.

Education Secretary Gillian Keegan said she was "deeply concerned" by the stabbing.

"We are closely monitoring the situation and remain hugely grateful to the emergency services who are currently on the scene," added Ms Keegan.

"My department is on hand to support the school as the situation unfolds."

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Martyn and Julia, parents of Year 7 student Katie, said the school and police had kept them informed.

"The school was communicating throughout the morning. The students were allowed to turn their phones on, which we were most grateful for."

Julia said: "Hearing about it this morning felt very strange - it doesn't happen here. I know it sounds a cliche and you see it happening on the news in other places."

Erica, who has a child at Tewkesbury Academy, said she was happy that the incident was resolved quickly.

"It is worrying that these things can happen in any school and all the more important that as parents we take responsibility for teaching our children awareness of the destructive nature of this type of incident," she said.

Police at the scene
PA Media

Richard Stanley, leader of Tewkesbury Borough Council, said it had been a difficult day for the community.

"Tewkesbury is a very safe place, it's a small community and I don't think there's a particular issue here. It's a national issue in terms of young people carrying knives."

Laurence Robertson, Conservative MP for the town, said he planned to meet with the education secretary and the home secretary to discuss knife crime.

"The government has taken certain steps to bring it [knife crime] back under control, but I would be the first to say that much more needs to be done," he told BBC Points West.

Following the incident, The National Education Union (NEU) tweeted that its thoughts were with all staff, pupils and parents involved.

"This is a shocking incident. Violence has no place in our schools and colleges," it said.

ACC Ocone said: "This was clearly a very distressing incident and our thoughts are with the victim, their family and everyone impacted by what happened.

"We are working with the school and other agencies to ensure appropriate support is available and local people will see more police in the area over the coming days as the investigation continues."

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2023-07-10 20:47:37Z
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