Sabtu, 09 September 2023

Anarchy revealed inside prison-break Wandsworth jail where inmates call the shots - The Independent

The chief inspector of prisons has revealed the chaos inside overcrowded Wandsworth jail where inmates tell staff the rules – as questions mount about the “inside help” fugitive Daniel Khalife was given to make his dramatic escape.

Writing exclusively for The Independent, Charlie Taylor described “small, dark and cramped” cells plagued with damp and vermin, where inmates are routinely locked up for 22 hours a day with little access to education or training to break the cycle of offending.

Mr Taylor said the single biggest problem that faces Wandsworth is a lack of staff, with shortages in every area. He added that many staff were only recently out of school and so inexperienced that prisoners frequently have to tell new workers what they are supposed to do.

As the national manhunt edged into its fourth day, police detailed the first confirmed sighting of the 21-year-old British army soldier – who slipped past guards at the category B prison by clinging to straps placed underneath a food delivery truck – describing it as a significant lead.

Daniel Abed Khalife had been due to stand trial on 13 November

The terror suspect was spotted near Wandsworth roundabout, close to the prison, having jumped from the Bidford food truck on which he fled on Wednesday morning.

The revelation comes as:

  • It emerged that the Royal Signals Corps soldier previously served in a regiment providing support to Nato’s “premier reaction force” as spying concerns grow
  • Police release the first images of the chef’s outfit he would have been wearing when he escaped
  • A £20,000 reward has been offered to anyone with information that could lead to his capture
  • Met Police commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said the security breach was “clearly pre-planned” as police investigate a possible “inside job”
  • Helicopters scoured Richmond Park and South Kensington chasing up potential leads

Outlining the issues at the ageing prison, Mr Taylor said the “biggest problem” facing the Victorian-era jail was the lack of available staff.

An eyewitness spotted Khalife ‘climbing down’ from the lorry

An inspection last year found that 30 per cent of prison officers were unable to perform their duties, with the incessant influx of drugs causing high levels of violence. “For many years, it has been a jail that struggles in every area,” Mr Taylor said.

Speaking of the environment at HMP Wandsworth, whose performance was rated a “serious concern” last year, Mr Taylor said: “Without enough bodies on the ground to deliver a basic prison regime to these men, there are serious consequences.

“Prisoners will not be unlocked on time because there is nobody to do it. They will not get to education or employment because there is nobody to escort them. They will not have clean clothes or bedding. The demand, and thus the supply, of drugs will rise, and with it an illicit economy that leads to debt and to violence.”

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The former British army officer was dressed in a cook’s outfit when he escaped on Wednesday morning

His comments come as the police operation to find the terror suspect has swelled to over 100 officers as dozens of members of the public have come forward with potential leads.

Security officials told The Independent on Thursday that Khalife, a military computer engineer, may have been attempting to “graduate” to spying for Iran with material he is accused of gathering from the Ministry of Defence’s Joint Personnel Administration System.

He is understood to have served as a military computer engineer with the 22 Signal Regiment, whose role is to offer communications support to Nato’s Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC), described by one expert as the military alliance’s “premier reaction force”.

Former Nato analyst Dr Patrick Bury told The Independent that ARRC was “a juicy intelligence target” for the Western military alliance’s adversaries.

Speaking of the 22 Signal Regiment’s role at ARRC, he said: “It’s obviously sensitive stuff and you’re dealing with secure communications which is all manner of electronic and radio communications, and satellite and beyond, for Nato’s basically premier reaction force.

“So if you’ve got someone on the inside who can provide some information about that, the question is – what access did he have? We’ve seen from [Edward] Snowden how a computer network engineer often can get the whole gamut, legitimately or not.”

“It’s secure, it’s highly sensitive – it’s a juicy intelligence target. Why would the Iranians want to do it? To trade, of course, with the Russians, and perhaps to trade with China,” added Dr Bury, now a defence and security expert at the University of Bath.

A review found standards at HMP Wandsworth to be of a ‘serious concern’

Metropolitan Police chief Sir Mark Rowley on Friday appeared to confirm information from intelligence sources, as revealed by The Independent on Thursday, that officers were investigating the possibility that Khalife had help escaping HMP Wandsworth.

“The fact he could strap himself onto the bottom of the wagon, there’s obviously some logistics involved,” Sir Mark told LBC.

“Just to work out a prison escape – how you can do the logistics of it and get the right equipment, and how you’re going do it – is unlikely to be something you do on the spur of the moment.”

He added: “We’re going to have to look at everything as part of this investigation: did he do this on his own? Did anyone inside the prison help him? Did anyone outside the prison help him?”

Sir Mark warned it was “extremely concerning” that the former Royal Signals Corps soldier was “on the loose”, and said that “well into three figures” of officers were now involved in the hunt, in addition to Border Force and forces elsewhere in the country.

CCTV of the lorry used by Daniel Khalife to escape Wandsworth prison seen on London road

Khalife had been awaiting trial on three charges, including gathering information likely to be useful to an enemy.

He is also accused of planting fake bombs at his barracks in Stafford, before fleeing the military site and evading capture for a further 25 days.

The Met’s counter-terrorism commander, Dominic Murphy, told reporters on Thursday it was “a little unusual” that there had been no sightings of Khalife which is “perhaps testament to Daniel Khalife’s ingenuity”.

“He was a trained soldier – so ultimately he has skills that perhaps some sections of the public don’t have. He’s a very resourceful individual, clearly, and our experience of him shows that, so nothing is off the table with him at the moment.”

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2023-09-09 07:24:14Z
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Jumat, 08 September 2023

G20-bound Rishi Sunak defends ‘correct’ Raac school closures - The Guardian

Rishi Sunak has defended his government’s decision to shut down schools because of problems with crumbling concrete, as he aims to use this weekend’s G20 summit in New Delhi to draw a line under another bruising week in office.

The prime minister told reporters on the trip to India that his education secretary, Gillian Keegan, had done the right thing in ordering 147 schools to shut buildings made with aerated concrete, after officials became concerned about structural defects. On Friday evening the Scottish government said 16 of 32 local authorities have identified Raac in their schools.

Some in Whitehall have reportedly said Keegan has been overly cautious and has opened a “Pandora’s box” that could lead to swathes of public buildings having to be closed. Some close to Sunak are concerned that the issue could turn into another spiralling crisis that could drown out recent news pointing to the beginning of an economic recovery.

“[The Department for Education] have acted exactly correctly in response to new information that was relevant to them,” Sunak said. “We will ensure the safety of children and these buildings, and that’s why we put in place a very rapid process to do that.”

He said the example set by schools would not necessarily have to be followed by other types of public building, including prisons and hospitals. “Departments individually will follow that advice as it relates to their particular estate,” he said. “It is very specific to the circumstances of individual buildings and how in particular they can be monitored and assessed. For example, the NHS has been for years looking at this and has a mitigation programme in place which is funded with £700m already.”

Sunak hopes the schools issue will be sorted within weeks to give a boost to his beleaguered premiership. Polls show Labour has nearly a 20-point lead over the Conservatives, and several of the prime minister’s five priorities remain unfulfilled.

Sunak arrived in Delhi on Friday to be greeted by music and dancing, and was looking forward to a warmer reception than he often gets from British voters. As the UK’s first prime minister of Indian descent, he said he was looking forward to a “historic” trip where he would be greeted as “India’s son-in-law”.

Back at home, Sunak’s chief of staff has reportedly said any adviser who thinks the party cannot win the next election should quit. Meanwhile, Sunak has shaken up his Downing Street operation, naming Nerissa Chesterfield as his new head of communications and bringing in the former Conservative aides Jamie Njoku-Goodwin and Adam Atashzai to help try to regain control of the political narrative.

Sunak said the hires had helped inject new energy into his operation. “I can tell you, certainly in Downing Street, we are fired up,” he said. “As you can see, we’ve brought some new people in … these are very high-quality people that are joining the team because they believe that we will win. They are hungry to win, I am hungry to win, and they are fired up to deliver it.”

His words echo those made by former party leaders in similar situations. In 2015, facing accusations that he was not motivated enough to win the next election, David Cameron told an audience that he was “pumped up” by the small business revolution happening in the UK.

During that same campaign, Ed Miliband, the then Labour leader, was questioned over whether he was tough enough to become prime minister, to which he responded: “Hell, yes, I’m tough enough.”

Downing Street hopes that a combination of a positive trip to Delhi, an end to the concrete crisis and a new sense of purpose in Downing Street will help reset his premiership less than a year after it began.

Sunak said: “We’ve got plenty of time between now and the next election. I’m not complacent, there’s lots of work to do, but I’m entirely confident we can deliver for people.”

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2023-09-08 21:30:00Z
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UK-India trade deal ‘not guaranteed’, says Sunak before Modi meeting - The Guardian

Rishi Sunak has insisted a trade deal with India is not guaranteed, as he prepares to meet his Indian counterpart during the G20 summit in Delhi.

The British prime minister will speak to Narendra Modi this weekend at a crunch meeting that could determine the future of a free trade agreement between the two countries, as well as influence India’s approach to Russia.

Sunak is hoping to use the meeting to overcome some of the final hurdles that remain in the way of a deal, including the politically sensitive question of visas for Indian workers and students coming to the UK. But he warned in advance that success was far from guaranteed, even after 18 months of tortuous negotiations.

Speaking to reporters on the way to Delhi, Sunak said: “Without question, India is going to be one of the most significant countries geopolitically over the next years and decades, and it’s vitally important for the UK to deepen our ties, particularly economically and more broadly with India.

“That’s why we’ve been working towards an ambitious and comprehensive free trade deal. But it’s not a given: these things are a lot of work and a lot of time.”

Sunak’s immediate predecessors, Liz Truss and Boris Johnson, both pushed to have an agreement in place by last October, in time for Diwali. They were thwarted, however, amid arguments over everything from visas to rules governing intellectual property.

British officials say Sunak has put less emphasis on signing an agreement than either Truss or Johnson. But despite significant areas of disagreement, they remain hopeful a deal can still be done by the end of the year and before Modi hits the campaign trail for the Indian elections next spring.

In a sign that Sunak wants to prioritise good relations with India, he hinted that he would not use his meeting with Modi to raise the case of Jagtar Singh Johal, the British man who is facing the death penalty in India having been accused of terror offences.

More than 70 MPs have called on the prime minister to urge Modi to release Johal, who comes from Dumbarton, West Dunbartonshire, and whom the campaign group Reprieve says has been tortured and made to sign false confessions.

The prime minister refused to say he would do so. He added: “This is something that, just so people are reassured, has already been raised on multiple levels on multiple occasions.”

In another sign of Sunak’s keenness to strike a trade agreement, Downing Street said that business visas could be a part of an eventual deal – but not student visas. New Delhi says it does not want increased numbers of visas but merely a streamlined process for applying for intra-company transfers.

Officials on both sides believe they will be able to reach agreement on the visa issue, although Sunak faces political resistance from his allies at home if he does. This week, Suella Braverman, the home secretary, made clear to her cabinet colleagues that she would oppose any agreement that increased the UK’s record migration levels.

Speaking before his meeting with Modi, Sunak insisted he would not sign a deal just for the sake of it. “I’ve never put artificial deadlines on these trade deals, I’ve always said we shouldn’t sacrifice quality for speed,” he said. “And we need to end up with something that works genuinely for both sides.”

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2023-09-08 20:57:00Z
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Daniel Khalife: Police confirm first sighting of fugitive after Wandsworth escape - The Independent

Prison escape of Daniel Abed Khalife was 'clearly pre-planned', Met Police Chief says

The first sighting of fugitive Daniel Abed Khalife has been confirmed by the police after a witness has come forward.

A member of the public said they saw a man resembling Khalife walking away from the BidFood delivery van that had stopped near the south entrance to the Wandsworth roundabout, on Wednesday morning.

On the third day of the nationwide manhunt, Commissioner Mark Rowley said the escape was “clearly pre-planned” – pointing to “the fact he could strap himself onto the bottom of the wagon”, referring to the delivery van Khalife used to flee.

Asked if police are looking into whether it was an "inside job", he told LBC: "It is a question. Did anyone inside the prison help him? Other prisoners, guard staff?”

The Met chief said 150 officers are involved with help from other forces and Border Force and confirmed: “Richmond Park is one of the areas that we’ve been looking.”

However, the force has previously said it is “absolutely possible” that Khalife - who is accused of planting fake bombs at a military base before he allegedly “graduated” to attempted spying for Iran - has already left the country.

1694205053

Foreign secretary declined to comment if confident Khalife would be found

Earlier today, foreign secretary James Cleverly declined to comment on whether he was confident that escaped terror suspect Daniel Khalife will be found.

“We do have fantastic security services and police services. I don’t think it would be useful or credible for me to to speculate.

“The important thing is that we let the police, the investigators do their work,” he told ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme.

Holly Evans8 September 2023 21:30
1694202330

Timeline of events around hunt for terror suspect Daniel Khalife

Terror suspect Daniel Khalife had been in prison for more than seven months before he escaped.

The search for the 21-year-old – featuring help from the Border Force and police officers around the country – is in its third day.

Here is a timeline of the events leading to the hunt for Khalife:

Holly Evans8 September 2023 20:45
1694200830

Prison Officers’ Association chair says escape is example of budget cuts

Mark Fairhurst, the national chair of the Prison Officers’ Association, Mark Fairhurst, spoke about the prospect of an “inside job” at Wandsworth prison.

He said he could not rule out corruption or bribery, but paid tribute to the staff at Wandsworth prison.

“We can’t rule anything out, but what I will say about the staff of Wandsworth - they are an amazing group of people doing a fantastic job on behalf of society in extremely stressful and difficult circumstances,” he said.

He pointed to the escape as an example of government underfunding towards prisons.

“It highlights the crisis we are in because of the constant budget cuts by this government since 2010,” he said.

Holly Evans8 September 2023 20:20
1694199224

WATCH: CCTV footage of delivery van used in Khalife’s escape

The Met Police have released CCTV of the BidFood delivery van used by Daniel Khalife to make his escape

Newly released footage shows BidFood van used by Daniel Khalife to escape prison
Holly Evans8 September 2023 19:53
1694196525

Anarchy revealed inside prison-break Wandsworth jail where inmates call the shots

The chief inspector of prisons has revealed the chaos inside the overcrowded Wandsworth jail where inmates tell staff the rules – as questions mount about the “inside help” fugitive Daniel Khalife was given to make his dramatic escape.

Writing exclusively for The Independent, Charlie Taylor described “small, dark and cramped” cells plagued with damp and vermin, where inmates are routinely locked up for 22 hours a day with little access to education or training to break the cycle of offending.

Read more here

Holly Evans8 September 2023 19:08
1694195610

Met Police say ‘no sign’ of chef uniform being recovered so far in search

Counter-terror commander Dominic Murphy denied the force had little to go on in their search for escaped terror suspect Daniel Khalife.

Mr Murphy told Sky News: “I wouldn’t accept that. I would accept that we’re working on lots of leads, over 100 calls, as I say, from the public.

“This is just a next step in us trying to understand and, for Daniel’s information, that he really needs to hand himself in and we will be closing in on him.”

Mr Murphy said there was no sign of Khalife’s chef uniform being recovered so far, but he appealed to the public to call 999 if they find it.

He said he remained “opened minded” on whether the terror suspect had already fled the country, but said the search was currently focused on the London area and other parts of the UK, in addition to support from the Border Force.

Holly Evans8 September 2023 18:53
1694194674

Reward offered for information on Khalife

Police have confirmed the first sighting of fugitive Daniel Khalife near Wandsworth roundabout and have offered a £20,000 reward.

Police confirm first sighting of Daniel Abed Khalife and offer £20,000 reward
Holly Evans8 September 2023 18:37
1694193656

Chef uniform Daniel Khalife escaped prison in is revealed

The former British army soldier fled from HMP Wandsworth at 7.50am on Wednesday by clinging to the straps of a food delivery van while wearing the cook’s uniform he wore to work in the London prison.

Tara Cobham has more

Holly Evans8 September 2023 18:20
1694191669

Terror suspect was seen ‘climbing out from under the lorry’

Metropolitan Police counter-terror commander Dominic Murphy said terror suspect Daniel Khalife was seen climbing out from underneath the food company van by a member of the public.

He was wearing his prison chef’s uniform when he was spotted around a mile-and-a-half from Wandsworth Prison. He then made his way towards Wandsworth town centre.

Mr Murphy told Sky News: “That sighting was shortly after Daniel Khalife escaped from Wandsworth Prison, and it was at the junction of Trinity Road and Swandon Way at the Wandsworth roundabout where a member the public saw Daniel climbing out from under the lorry and walking towards Wandsworth town centre.”

He added: “I’m not saying I don’t have any CCTV. That’s part of our ongoing investigation.”

<p>Khalife was seen climbing out from underneath the lorry </p>

Khalife was seen climbing out from underneath the lorry

Holly Evans8 September 2023 17:47
1694190653

Khalife urged to hand himself in

The Met Police have called on Khalife to “hand himself in” and warned that officers were “closing in” on the terror suspect after he escaped prison.

Counter-terror commander Dominic Murphy said: “My message to him is to hand yourself in, either call us or go to a local police station and hand yourself in.

“With the reward we are offering today and the amazing support we have had from the public and the media, we will be closing in on you, Daniel, you really need to come in and give yourself up.”

Holly Evans8 September 2023 17:30

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2023-09-08 20:30:53Z
2404966269

Kamis, 07 September 2023

'Bankrupt' Birmingham council spent £9.8m on bike lane 'no one uses' - The Telegraph

Birmingham’s “bankrupt” council has been accused of wasting almost £10 million on a cycle highway that is wider than a bus lane.

The multi-million pound cycle lane was opened in 2019, but motorists say it has been barely used and is a prime example of the authority’s financial incompetence.

On Sept 5, the Labour-run council issued a section 114 notice, meaning it cannot meet its financial liabilities amid an outstanding £760 million of equal pay claims.

The council, which is Europe’s largest local authority, confirmed all but essential new spending must stop immediately.

Locals have since highlighted a number of examples of shocking wastes of money that have contributed to the town hall bosses’ perilous position.

They include a 2.5 mile “cycle highway” along the A34 – one of the busiest commuter routes into the city – which has been barely used by cyclists since opening four years ago.

Some locals are unimpressed with the cycle lane along the A34 Credit: Joseph Walshe / SWNS

Road users say the lane, between the city centre and Perry Barr, causes complete gridlock at rush hour and forces the bus lane farther into the road.

It means parts of the road have been left with just one lane for cars, while in other sections the cycle lane slices into the pavement.

Photographs taken on Wednesday show bumper-to-bumper gridlock with the bike lane sitting empty and one cyclist even ignoring it to ride down the main road instead.

Residents say the £9.85 million route only brought commuter chaos in an already over-congested city and cyclists continue to ride along the pavement or road. Birmingham City Council also forked out £16 million moving a National Express bus depot just 300 metres in time for the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

The original facility was to make way for an athletes’ village – which never even materialised and was turned instead into affordable housing.

‘Example of Labour incompetence’

The cost was even highlighted at the time in the House of Commons by Conservative MP Gary Sambrook, who represents Birmingham Northfield.

He said in January 2021: “In Birmingham, the city council originally budgeted £2 million to move a bus depot.

“That escalated to £16 million, which local people are going to have to pay, all to achieve a move down the road of only 300 metres.

“Is that not just a perfect example of Labour incompetence in local government?”

It also emerged that the council ignored advice not to host the Commonwealth Games despite serious financial difficulties.

Birmingham resident Emily Hill, 45, a mum-of-three and sales adviser, said: “I live in Perry Barr where in the last few years there has been some shocking wastes of cash.

“It is no surprise the council find themselves in this position having splashed £10 million on a cycle lane nobody uses and £16 million on moving a bus depot.

“The cycle lane is only a couple of miles long and reduces traffic to a single lane, causing absolute gridlock. It was a ridiculous decision.

“Cyclists use the main road or pavement anyway, it has made no difference at all. If anything it has made traffic worse.”

Dad-of-one Paul Turner, 36, an electrician from Kingstanding, Birmingham, added: “The people of this city have seen this coming for a while so it’s no surprise really.

“Their financial difficulties have been well publicised for a long time yet we went ahead and hosted the games even when they were warned not to.

“That cycle lane is a prime example of how out-of-touch these people are with reality and £16 million moving a bus depot that didn’t need moving is just farcical.

“It’s no wonder they got into such a mess and it’s the people of this city who will now probably suffer as a result of their financial incompetence.”

‘We need far fewer cars on the road’

A spokesman for Birmingham Council said: “Birmingham is a fantastic place to live, work and visit but we need people to use sustainable modes of transport when travelling – public transport, walking and cycling. In short, we need far fewer cars on the road.

“As a city, we have been far too reliant on private cars for far too long and we need to fundamentally change the way we move people and goods around the city.

“We must re-allocate road space so that pedestrians, buses and bikes are prioritised and drastically reduce the number of journeys people make by car. Cycle lanes are clearly a key part of this.”

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2023-09-07 16:54:00Z
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Rabu, 06 September 2023

Hunt for terror suspect ex-soldier Daniel Khalife after Wandsworth prison escape - BBC

Daniel KhalifeMet Police

A nationwide manhunt has been launched for a former soldier suspected of terror offences who escaped from prison on Wednesday morning.

Daniel Abed Khalife, 21, was awaiting trial at HMP Wandsworth in London after being accused of leaving fake bombs at a military base.

It is believed he escaped via a prison kitchen by strapping himself to the underside of a food delivery van.

Extra security checks at airports and ports have led to long delays.

The Prison Service is working with the Metropolitan Police to "urgently investigate" how Mr Khalife escaped.

A working theory is that Mr Khalife had been in the kitchen when he began his escape from HMP Wandsworth, a category B prison in south-west London, at around 07:50 BST.

He is 6ft 2ins tall and was last seen wearing a prison-issue chef's uniform of a white T-shirt, red and white chequered trousers and brown steel toe cap boots, police said.

Police believe Mr Khalife poses a "low risk" to the public but people are being urged not to approach him and to call 999 instead.

Mr Khalife, who joined the Army in 2019, has links to the Kingston area of London and to the North West, but the search has been expanded across the country.

As the manhunt stretches into the night, there are no signs that police have made a breakthrough - and the Met's decision to seek the public's help could suggest that any initial leads had gone cold.

Cdr Dominic Murphy, head of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command, confirmed all police forces and UK border points have been put on notice.

Airports and ports have been asked to carry out additional security measures, resulting in delays being reported across the UK, including at Heathrow Airport, Manchester Airport, and the Port of Dover.

Disruption at border departure points is expected to ease this evening.

Cdr Murphy said counter-terror officers were being deployed across London, where the search is being focussed.

But he said Mr Khalife "could be anywhere in the country at the moment and we are mindful of the risk of him potentially leaving the country".

The former soldier was on remand awaiting trial in relation to terrorism and Official Secrets Act offences, including preparing an act of terrorism and collecting information useful to an enemy. He was allegedly working for a hostile state.

In February, Westminster Magistrates' Court heard he allegedly left fake devices at MOD Stafford, where he was based, "with the intention of inducing in another the belief the item was likely to explode or ignite".

A previous court appearance heard he "elicited" personal information about soldiers from the Ministry of Defence Joint Personnel Administration System which was "likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism" in 2021.

Why was ex-soldier not in higher security jail?

Questions are privately being asked in government about whether it was appropriate that Mr Khalife was being held at a lower security prison, rather than a high security facility like Belmarsh in south-east London.

He had previously disappeared from his base on 2 January after the alleged offences, before being arrested "in or near his car" on 26 January after "active efforts to look for him", a previous court hearing heard.

Mr Khalife was denied bail and when he appeared in court via video link in July, he was being held at HMP Wandsworth, a category B facility.

Labour shadow justice secretary Shabana Mahmood said the government needed to "urgently explain how they can't do the basic job of keeping potentially dangerous criminals locked up".

Justice Secretary Alex Chalk has ordered an investigation into the escape and has sought "reassurances about security at the prison".

He has held two rounds of talks with officials at the Prison and Probation Service, as well as HMP Wandsworth's governor, to ask why Mr Khalife was not being held at a high security prison and whether proper protocols were followed once the alarm was raised.

It is understood that No 10 is being kept updated on the situation.

"An internal investigation is under way and the justice secretary is working to understand from operational colleagues this evening both the categorisation decision and the situation that led to the escape, what protocols were in place and if they were followed", a Prison Service spokesperson said.

Ian Acheson, a justice expert who has advised the government on counter-terrorism in prisons and was head of security at HMP Wandsworth in the 1990s, called the escape "very serious".

He told BBC News that the category B prison is "not an obvious place for somebody who has been charged with terror offences and is potentially a national security risk".

A graphic showing the layout of HMP Wandsworth

Rosena Allin-Khan, the Labour MP for Tooting - the constituency where the prison is situated - said the jail is "chronically understaffed".

She pointed to figures she obtained showing that around a third of the shifts that needed to be covered on a single day in December 2022 were unfilled.

At the time of his escape, Mr Khalife was being held on remand pending a trial due to begin on 13 November at Woolwich Crown Court.

The Ministry of Defence has confirmed he had been kicked out of the armed forces earlier this year, despite the fact he has not been found guilty.

A spokesman said: "As a result of being held on remand for these charges, Daniel Khalife was been discharged from the Army on 22 May, 2023."

Rare escapes

Prison escapes have been rare in recent years, with just five since 2017, and fewer than 20 since 2010.

The last infamous escape involving terrorism inmates was the escape from Whitemoor prison in 1994 by IRA prisoners.

A January 2022 report by HM Inspectorate of Prisons said a "serious security breach had led to an escape" from HMP Wandsworth in 2019.

The report said the inspectorate had been given "some assurance that action to prevent further escapes had been taken" but said "current local security data evidenced some concerns in the physical aspects of security".

The prison was placed on lockdown in the hours following Mr Khalife's escape but restrictions have now been lifted.

Additional reporting by George Bowden

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2023-09-06 23:05:55Z
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Starmer attacks Sunak's Tory 'cowboys' as full list of closures revealed - The Independent

Expert explains why Raac is more dangerous than standard concrete

Sir Keir Starmer has blamed the crumbling concrete crisis on “cutting corners” and “sticking plaster politics” as he grilled the prime minister in PMQs today.

The Labour leader: “It’s the sort thing you expect from cowboy builders saying everyone else is wrong, everyone is to blame, protesting that they’re doing an effing good job even if the ceiling falls in – except in this case the cowboys are running this country.”

He added: “Isn’t he ashamed that after 13 years children are cowering under steel supports, stopping their classroom roof falling in.”

Rishi Sunak said he was not sorry for the decision to close around 100 of the 156 schools with Raac, saying he would “make no apology for acting decisively in the light of new information”.

It comes as the Department for Education has published a full list of the schools affected with Raac in England.

Are you a parent whose child has been affected by RAAC closures? E-mail alexander.butler@independent.co.uk

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Thanks for following our live blog, we’re pausing our coverage for the evening but come back tomorrow for more updates.

Katy Clifton6 September 2023 20:02
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ICYMI: Seven questions from parents answered by experts

As schools return for a new year this week, hundreds have been caught up in a concrete crisis.

During an ‘Ask Me Anything’ session for The Independent, Schools Week editor John Dickens tackled a wide range of questions from parents worried about their child’s school.

Take a look at the Q&A below:

Katy Clifton6 September 2023 19:25
1694022432

Concrete crisis threatens pledge to cut NHS backlog

Rishi Sunak’s pledge to cut the NHS waiting list backlog is being threatened by the crumbling concrete crisis as affected hospitals warn they will be forced to shut wards and theatres.

Hospitals were told they had buildings prone to collapse in 2019 but four years later they are still dealing with the issue.

In a report last year, West Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust leaders said that work to replace Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (Raac) in its hospitals would hit general surgery, urology, gynaecology and orthopaedic care.

Wards have had to close, piling pressure on a crowded A&E as patients can’t be offloaded due to lack of beds, and threatening its ability to hit government targets to reduce waiting lists, it added.

Read more below:

Rebecca Thomas6 September 2023 18:47
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Keegan defends refusal

Education Secretary Gillian Keegan told MPs that it would be “inaccurate, incomplete, and inappropriate to disclose the details requested of the sensitive negotiations between His Majesty’s Treasury and individual Government departments”.

She added: “Inaccurate because it would only show part of the picture of a complex decision-making process that takes place between multiple departments, multiple ministers, officials and other individuals with varying priorities.

“Incomplete because such a process has to look across the board at priorities and trade-offs for all Government departments to ensure we can deliver for everyone, yet this motion focuses on only one.

“Inappropriate because it would be categorically in breach of the longstanding tradition and expectation of confidential and often commercially sensitive information not being disclosed into the public domain, and of allowing officials to give full and frank advice to ministers.”

Sam Rkaina6 September 2023 18:10
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Ministers refuse to hand over written advice on crumbling schools

Ministers have refused to heed Labour’s calls to hand over written advice the Prime Minister was given about crumbling concrete in schools while he was chancellor.

Rishi Sunak has become embroiled in the row about reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac) after suggestions that he approved 50 schools to be rebuilt a year when he was chancellor, rejecting an application for 200 to be given the same treatment.

Concerns over the safety of Raac has caused more than 100 schools across England to be partially or fully closed.

Labour used their opportunity to lead a Commons debate on Wednesday to demand the publication of evidence sent by the Department for Education (DfE) to both No 10 and the Treasury relating to the crisis.

It also pushed for the release of all related correspondence ahead of the 2020 and 2021 spending reviews and the 2022 spring and autumn statements to show what advice Mr Sunak was given as chancellor about the need to replace Raac.

Sam Rkaina6 September 2023 17:46
1694012062

Starmer: Sunak’s champagne Tories put bubbly tax cut ahead of bubbly concrete

Keir Starmer has accused Rishi Sunak of putting champagne drinkers ahead of school safety by cutting the budget for rebuilding classrooms while slashing duty on bubbly.

Ahead of a showdown with the prime minister in the Commons later the Labour leader highlighted Mr Sunak’s decision to slash investment in the school estate while reducing duty on sparkling wine.

“These are choices. [Sunak] didn’t say, ‘Well, I can’t do that in relation to champagne’. He took a choice to cut the rate in relation to champagne and not to sign off the necessary funding for school,” Sir Keir told BBC News.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain6 September 2023 15:54
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Decision to spend £34 million revamping offices ‘nothing to do with me,’ Keegan says

The decision to spend £34 million to revamp the Department for Education’s headquarters had “nothing to do with me”, the education secretary has said.

Labour’s Sarah Owen (Luton North) earlier told the Commons Gillian Keegan had to “get a grip and explain why her offices got a £34 million refurbishment when schools are crumbling under this Tory government”.

Responding to the opposition day debate, Gillian Keegan later said: “£34 million is a government building for the Department for Education that was signed off by the commercial director for the Department for Education, nothing to do with me, based on a decision made in 2019 before I was a minister.”

Maryam Zakir-Hussain6 September 2023 15:30
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Some schools with crumbling concrete may have to be demolished, experts warn

Some of the English schools found to have the crumbling concrete may have to be demolished if repairs become too expensive, experts have told The Independent.

Rishi Sunak’s government – under fire over years of “underinvestment” in school repair work – has been told it could be more cost effective to write off some of the older affected schools and build new ones.

Asbestos problems in some of the 147 schools identified as having reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac) – the problem material compared to an “Aero bar” – could complicate remedial work, said building specialists.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain6 September 2023 15:09
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No 10: ‘No specific timeline’ for resolution to crisis

The government will not publish a submission from the Department for Education (DfE) to the Treasury asking for money to deal with the crumbling concrete crisis blighting schools.

Rishi Sunak’s official spokesman cited a “long-standing approach” to not publish official advice to ministers, saying he would not release the submission.

Former DfE permanent secretary Jonathan Slater said this week a submission to the Treasury before a 2021 spending review to rebuild 200 schools a year was turned down despite warnings of a “critical risk to life”.

Asked about when schools which have been affected by the crumbling Raac concrete, the PM’s spokesman said the government “can not put a specific timeline on it”.

In the schools identified as hit by the problem, mitigations will be in place “in a matter of weeks”, but there “are still some outstanding surveys”.

One in 20 schools sent surveys to identify Raac by the DfE have not responded, the spokesman confirmed.

Maryam Zakir-Hussain6 September 2023 14:40
1694006689

School Raac concrete crisis: 7 questions from parents answered by expert as government list affected schools

Schools Week editor John Dickens tackled questions on homeschooling, further closures, contingency plans and more:

Maryam Zakir-Hussain6 September 2023 14:24

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