Selasa, 17 Oktober 2023

Teenage girls feared among kidnapped in Gaza after Sunak confirms six Britons killed - Evening Standard

T

wo British teenage sisters are feared to have been kidnapped and are among 10 UK nationals still missing following Hamas’ attack on Israel.

Rishi Sunak on Monday confirmed at least six Britons have been killed in the “progrom”, as he told MPs he was increasing aid to the Palestinian people by a third.

Two teenage sisters Noiya, 16, and Yahel, 13, are among those still missing, the BBC reported.

The sisters, whose surname has not been released, are thought to have been kidnapped from Kibbutz Be’eri by Hamas militants before being taken into Gaza, according to the BBC. Their mother is reported to have been killed.

The British family of their mother said she was “a beloved daughter, sister, mother, aunt and friend who enriched the lives of all those lucky enough to have known and loved her”.

“She lived a beautiful life and will be sorely missed by the heartbroken family and friends she leaves behind,” the BBC reports.

The Prime Minister said on Monday the UK must “support absolutely Israel’s right to defend itself” as it targets Hamas, as he called for the immediate release of the around 200 hostages taken by the militant group.

But he also recognised in a Commons statement that the Palestinian people are “victims of Hamas too” as he announced an extra £10 million of aid funding.

With the families of some of the missing watching his statement in Parliament, Mr Sunak recounted that more than 1,400 people were murdered, more than 3,500 wounded and almost 200 taken hostage in Hamas’s attack.

“The elderly, men, women, children, babes in arms, murdered, mutilated, burned alive,” he continued.

“We should call it by its name: it was a pogrom.”

Mr Sunak said the “terrible nature of these attacks means it is proving difficult to identify many of the deceased” but at least six Britons were killed.

Of the further 10 missing, he said some are feared to be among the dead as the UK works with Israel to establish the facts and support the families through their “unimaginable pain”.

He said eight flights so far have brought back 500 British nationals from Israel, with more leaving in the coming hours.

Addressing the British Jewish community, Mr Sunak said: “We stand with you now and always. This atrocity was an existential strike at the very idea of Israel as a safe homeland for the Jewish people.”

The Prime Minister said he is “sickened” that antisemitic attacks have increased since the wave of bloodshed in Israel, as he vowed to do “everything we can to protect you”.

But he said “we stand with British Muslim communities too” as he noted the “moment of great anguish” for those appalled by Hamas’s actions while being fearful of the response.

“We must listen to these concerns with the same attentiveness,” he said.

“Hamas is using innocent Palestinian people as human shields.

“We mourn the loss of every innocent life, civilians of every faith, every nationality who have been killed.

“And so let’s say it plainly: we stand with British Muslim communities too.”

Mr Sunak announced that a further £10 million in humanitarian aid would be provided to civilians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, up from the £27 million existing funding this year.

“An acute humanitarian crisis is unfolding to which we must respond, we must support, because they are victims of Hamas too,” he said.

He said the UK would continue to press Israel to “take every possible precaution to avoid harming civilians”, with more than 2,750 Palestinians reported to have been killed and 9,700 wounded since the fighting erupted.

More than 1,400 Israelis have died, the vast majority civilians killed in the October 7 assault, while the country’s military said that at least 199 hostages had been taken to Gaza.

Sir Keir Starmer said it is “crucial that this House speaks with one voice in condemnation of terror, in support for Israel in its time of agony and for the dignity of all human life”.

The Labour leader added that civilians “must not be targeted” as he called for humanitarian corridors to be opened to allow the supply of food, water and electricity to the Gaza Strip.

Earlier in the day, Mr Sunak expressed his condolences for the deaths of civilians in a call with President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas and discussed providing humanitarian aid to Gaza and measures to protect civilians.

He also held a call with Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan to discuss the need to send aid to Gaza.

British officials have been pressing for Egypt to open the Rafah crossing with Gaza to allow Britons, dual nationals, as well as their spouses and children, to flee and to allow humanitarian aid into its more than two million people.

However, expectations in Government for opening the crossing were understood to be very low on Monday.

Mr Sunak raised the border crossing in a call with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi last week, and it is understood that opening the border for foreign nationals and for Palestinian refugees could be treated separately.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “We do think it is important, both in the interests of British nationals and others, but also important for the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.”

Defence minister James Heappey warned that combat in Gaza – as Israel is expected to launch an offensive by sea, air and land – is likely to be “horrendous”.

“I think you have to be clear that international law allows Israel to prosecute a mission that is legal, proportionate and necessary, and that, I’m afraid, does not necessarily mean that Israel has to be able to guarantee that there will be no civilian loss of life,” he told ITV’s Good Morning Britain.

“It is almost inevitable, given the complexity of the mission, that there will be (an) innocent civilian population that is very badly affected. I just don’t think there’s any point pretending otherwise.”

The United Nations and global aid agencies have expressed alarm about the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza, after Israel ordered civilians to evacuate the north ahead of an imminent attack.

Western diplomats are also concerned that the war between Hamas and Israel could spark a wider conflict in the Middle East.

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2023-10-17 05:17:03Z
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Senin, 16 Oktober 2023

Justice secretary to announce phasing out of short-term prison sentences – UK politics live - The Guardian

At the SNP conference in Aberdeen the party yesterday agreed a new version of its plan to use the general election as a test of whether it should have a mandate for a second independence referendum. Severin Carrell and Libby Brooks have the story here.

Keith Brown MSP, the SNP’s deputy leader (or depute leader in Scotland – the party uses the Scots word) has been doing an interview round this morning and he told the BBC’s Good Morning Scotland that the the party took the view it would still have a mandate for independence negotiations if it won the most seats in Scotland – even it its support was down from the result in 2019. He said:

If in the UK, a party of government, as has happened many times in the past, have won the election again with fewer votes – you’re saying they didn’t have a mandate. Of course, that’s not the case.

We would have that mandate because we would have won the election and I think people understand that.

And if we do that, then we will enter independence negotiations and set in train in other processes, which will lead to Scotland taking a different path from the rest of the UK.

Brown is addressing the SNP conference later. According to extracts released in advance, he will say Scots will have a choice between “Westminster control and independence” at the next election. He will say:

The next election in Scotland will be a clear choice between Westminster control and independence.

Scotland can escape the chaos of Westminster mismanagement – from the hard-right economic destruction of a Tory budget to the lurch to the right from Labour on everything from workers’ rights to immigration.

Now, with the party united behind the independence strategy, our job is to take the substance of the independence debate to the people – to build support and to deliver independence.

Humza Yousaf addressing the SNP conference yesterday.

James Heappey, the armed forces minister, was doing a morning interview round on behalf of the government earlier. Speaking about the Israel-Hamas war, he told LBC that he thought Israel was “balancing correctly” the need to protect protect innocent lives against the need to deal with Hamas effectively.

Asked whether the government supports the blockade of water, medical supplies and power from Gaza, Heappey told LBC:

I think what we are recognising is that there is military necessity rubbing up against humanitarian necessity and what we’re saying to Israel is that they need and are, need to show the balance between those two imperatives.

Echoing the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, Heappey said democracies hold themselves to a “higher standard” and “of course we are encouraging Israel to make sure it does hold itself to that higher standard”. He went on:

It is the devil’s own choice that Israel has got to make but for my money they are balancing correctly the need to preserve innocent human life as best they possibly can while accepting that the adversary that they will soon launch an attack on, uses humans and shields and deliberately seeks to hide within civilian population and infrastructure.

Good morning. Governments that have been in power a long time often have to reverse decisions they have taken earlier, but under this administration this practice has become endemic. Two of the most important acts of public service reform under David Cameron were privatisation of the probation service and the Health and Social Care Act 2012, which put competitive tendering at the heart of the provision of NHS services. Both reforms were subsequently regarded as flawed (or disastrous in the case of probation), and reversed. On tax, the Tories spent the first half of their time in office reducing corporation tax, and putting the income tax allowance up. Now they’re doing the opposite. At the Tory conference Rishi Sunak announced a colossal U-turn on HS2, one of the biggest infrastructure schemes in British history. And today, on sentencing police, Alex Chalk, the justice secretary, is set to announce another U-turn.

Arguably, it’s a U-turn on a U-turn. When David Gauke was justice secretary in 2019, he announced plans to abolish short-term jail sentences. A few months later Boris Johnson became MP, Robert Buckland replaced Gauke as justice secretary, and the plans were ditched. Today, in a statement to MPs, Chalk will revive them.

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph yesterday, Chalk said:

We need to keep people safe – and that means moving away from short-term prison sentences that make hardened criminals rather than rehabilitated offenders. So we need to look again at low-level offenders. Because while the overall reoffending rate is 25%, the rate for people who spend fewer than 12 months in prison is over 50%.

A short stretch of a few months inside isn’t enough time to rehabilitate criminals, but is more than enough to dislocate them from the family, work and home connections that keep them from crime. Too often, offenders routinely turn back to crime as soon as they walk out of the prison gates.

No prison system should further criminalise offenders or trap criminals who might otherwise take the right path in a cycle of criminality through a merry-go-round of short sentences. This is the wrong use of our prison system and taxpayers’ money. It doesn’t deliver for victims and it doesn’t cut crime. We need to fix this.

There are alternatives to having low level offenders languishing in prison. Judges can make them repay their debt to society in communities – cleaning up neighbourhoods, scrubbing graffiti off walls, and even helping to plant new forests. And with technology moving on rapidly, these options are growing. The latest GPS tags, for example, offer many more options than the radio frequency versions, which were the only ones available to the court when I first started my career as a prosecutor.

All this sounds quite liberal – and not the sort of thing likely to appeal to the Tory core vote which, as the party conference revealed, seems increasingly to be the focus of government policymaking. But Chalk is in a bind because the prisons in England and Wales are full. And so, as Helen Pidd reports, his announcement about phasing out short-term sentences will be combined with one about deporting more foreign criminals.

Ingeniously, the Ministry of Justice has even managed to put a punitive spin on abolishing short-term sentences. The Sunday Telegraph wrote a story based on Chalk’s article yesterday saying that he would be bringing Texas-style justice to the UK. Given that the best known fact about the Texas justice system is that it has by far the highest execution rate for any US state, this made it sound as if Chalk was embracing a policy about which even Suella Braverman might have second thoughts. But the headline was just based on a line in the Chalk article in which he said even US states like Texas were using tagging more for some offenders.

Danny Shaw, the BBC’s former home affairs correspondent, has a good take on X.

What a waste of 4 years.

On 18 July 2019, @DavidGauke – then Justice Secretary – announced limits on the use of short prison sentences to cut reoffending & reduce costs.

But 5 days later Gauke resigned. Boris Johnson became PM & the plans were scrapped.

Now, they’re back …

An acute shortage of prison places has forced the current Justice Secretary’s hand…

So @AlexChalkChelt is adopting Gauke’s 2019 plan - to get courts to use tough community sentences rather than 6 or 12 month jail terms.

Worth a try - but it must be evaluated properly…

There’ll also be other emergency measures from @AlexChalkChelt to free up space…

…like extending early release schemes…

… and trying (yet again) to persuade other countries to take back foreign offenders locked up here - there are 10,500 in jails in England/Wales …

To sweeten the early release pill @AlexChalkChelt will outline some tougher sentences…

…but this shouldn’t deflect from the big story here:

A grotesque failure by @MoJGovUK to plan for the rise in the prison population which its own statisticians had forecast.

In a statement issued yesterday, Shabana Mahmood, the shadow justice secretary, said the government was to blame for a “crisis of epic proportions” in prisons. She said:

The only thing Texan about this government is that they are running the country like cowboys.

13 years of reckless mismanagement of the criminal justice system has led to a crisis of epic proportions where they are now coming up with policy on the hoof, which does nothing to deal with the immediate overcrowding crisis …

With thousands of offences – including sexual offences – committed by people on bail every year, the government is seeking to distract from the issue at hand, instead of giving answers on how they plan to keep our streets safe now.

Labour would uphold law and order in this country by building the prison places we need and by putting criminals behind bars.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Rishi Sunak makes a visit to show support for the Jewish community.

10.30am: The SNP conference resumes with a session on priorities for Scotland, debates on resolutions including one on wind turbines and a speech from Rhun ap Iowerth, the Plaid Cymru leader.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

2pm: Keith Brown, the SNP’s deputy leader, addresses the SNP conference.

2.30pm: Michael Gove, the levelling up secretary, takes questions in the Commons.

After 3.30pm: Sunak makes a statement about the Israel-Hamas war.

After 4.30pm: Alex Chalk, the justice secretary, makes a statement about prisons.

If you want to contact me, do try the “send us a message” feature. You’ll see it just below the byline – on the left of the screen, if you are reading on a laptop or a desktop. This is for people who want to message me directly. I find it very useful when people message to point out errors (even typos – no mistake is too small to correct). Often I find your questions very interesting, too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either in the comments below the line; privately (if you leave an email address and that seems more appropriate); or in the main blog, if I think it is a topic of wide interest.

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2023-10-16 09:20:53Z
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Aine Davis: Man linked to Islamic State 'Beatles' cell pleads guilty to terror offences - Sky News

A man linked to the so-called Beatles Islamic State cell has pleaded guilty to terrorism offences.

Aine Davis, 39, originally from Hammersmith, west London, was arrested at Luton Airport last August after being deported from Turkey.

He previously denied charges against him but changed his pleas at a hearing at the Old Bailey today.

Davis admitted possession of a firearm contrary to Section 57 of the Terrorism Act 2000, and two charges relating to the funding of terrorism.

He appeared by videolink from Belmarsh prison wearing a grey prison-issue tracksuit.

The judge Mark Lucraft KC remanded him in custody ahead of sentencing at the same court on 13 November.

Davis was arrested in Istanbul in November 2015 and sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in Turkey for membership of IS.

More on Terrorism

He has always denied being part of the Beatles cell - named after the British accents of the group of men who tortured and beheaded western hostages in Syria.

Two members, British nationals El Shafee Elsheikh and Alexanda Kotey, are now serving life sentences in US jails.

The third, Mohammed Emwazi, dubbed Jihadi John, who was believed to feature in shocking videos of IS beheadings of a number of captives, was killed in a drone strike in 2015.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News App. You can also follow @SkyNews on X or subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news.

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2023-10-16 09:38:32Z
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Rishi Sunak latest news: Tories must win by-election this week to 'keep flame of hope alive' - The Telegraph

Rishi Sunak and the Conservative Party must win at least one of the two by-elections this week to keep their general election hopes alive, a leading polling expert has suggested. 

Professor Sir John Curtice said it would be “rather useful” for the Tories to hang onto either Tamworth or Mid Bedfordshire “in terms of keeping the flame of hope alive” that they can defeat Labour at the next national contest. 

The Tories are defending a majority of more than 24,000 in Mid Bedfordshire and more than 19,000 in Tamworth. 

But Labour, riding high in national opinion polls with a steady double digit lead over the Tories, are hoping to deliver an upset when voters go to the ballot box in the two constituencies on Thursday. 

Sir John told the Daily Mail: “I think we expect a fairly substantial fall in the Conservative vote in both constituencies. But whether that will result in the Conservatives losing either or both seats is uncertain. The best that the Tories can hope for in Tamworth is to hang on narrowly and the best they can hope for in Mid Bedfordshire is that the opposition vote is split.”

He added: “If the Tories hang on to one of the two seats, certainly in terms of keeping the flame of hope alive among the parliamentary party [for the next election], that would be rather useful. But losing them both, given the difficulties for the opposition of winning these two seats, would be a bad night.”

You can follow the latest updates below. 

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2023-10-16 08:45:08Z
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Home 'frozen in the 60s' goes on sale for first time in decades - Liverpool Echo

A home with lots of "original features" has come on the market for the first time since the 60s.

The four-bedroom semi-detached home on Church Avenue in Aintree is being listed by SDL Property Auctions and is due to go under the hammer later this month. The house is located in a quiet cul-de-sac just around the corner from Aintree Racecourse.

The front of the property has a brick fence and bushes, which are great for those looking for a little bit of extra privacy. The front entrance also boasts a front garden, driveway and secure gates into the back garden.

READ MORE: Dad called police when he looked in his garden after Amazon delivery

READ MORE: Boy racer who killed pregnant mum gets added jail time after 'insulting' sentence

As you enter the front door, you come into a large hallway with beautiful original floors. There's one large bedroom downstairs along with a kitchen, utility room, bathroom, and living room.

Upstairs there's a further bathroom and three bedrooms with some rooms boasting original features such as wood floors, tiles and huge windows. There's a charm to some of the bedrooms, which still have basins and appear frozen in time.

The four bedroom semi-detached home on Church Avenue in Aintree
The four bedroom semi-detached home on Church Avenue in Aintree

Outside there's a big landscaped garden complete with a beautiful green lawn, patio and a large outbuilding.

The property auction company have listed the home with a guide price of £164k and describe it as a house with "so much potential".

The listing reads: "Located in a cul-de-sac, this four-bed Semi-detached house offers so much potential. Full of character and ready for you to put your stamp on, this property offers so much in the way of usage: large family home, flat conversion, HMO (subject to planning).

The four bedroom semi-detached home on Church Avenue in Aintree
The four bedroom semi-detached home on Church Avenue in Aintree

"Located in the popular area of L9 and a short distance from the Aintree racecourse, you have the benefit of having all local transport links and shops on your doorstep."

The auction for Church Avenue will take place at 10am on Thursday, October 26. For more information, click here.

Don't miss the biggest and breaking stories by signing up to the Echo Daily newsletter here

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2023-10-16 03:30:00Z
2511108883

Rishi Sunak latest news: Tories must win by-election this week to 'keep flame of hope alive' - The Telegraph

Rishi Sunak and the Conservative Party must win at least one of the two by-elections this week to keep their general election hopes alive, a leading polling expert has suggested. 

Professor Sir John Curtice said it would be “rather useful” for the Tories to hang onto either Tamworth or Mid Bedfordshire “in terms of keeping the flame of hope alive” that they can defeat Labour at the next national contest. 

The Tories are defending a majority of more than 24,000 in Mid Bedfordshire and more than 19,000 in Tamworth. 

But Labour, riding high in national opinion polls with a steady double digit lead over the Tories, are hoping to deliver an upset when voters go to the ballot box in the two constituencies on Thursday. 

Sir John told the Daily Mail: “I think we expect a fairly substantial fall in the Conservative vote in both constituencies. But whether that will result in the Conservatives losing either or both seats is uncertain. The best that the Tories can hope for in Tamworth is to hang on narrowly and the best they can hope for in Mid Bedfordshire is that the opposition vote is split.”

He added: “If the Tories hang on to one of the two seats, certainly in terms of keeping the flame of hope alive among the parliamentary party [for the next election], that would be rather useful. But losing them both, given the difficulties for the opposition of winning these two seats, would be a bad night.”

You can follow the latest updates below. 

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2023-10-16 08:00:04Z
2510440359

Met Office issues weather warnings for heavy rain and strong winds - The Independent

The Met Office has issued several severe weather warnings as wet and windy conditions are set to take over the country in the coming week with the “possibility of disruptive rainfall”.

The forecaster is warning of “significant disruption”, especially in eastern and central Scotland, where exceptionally high rainfall is expected to hit areas where there is already saturated ground.

The change in weather comes just days after southern parts of the country were enjoying the Indian Summer sunshine, with the hottest October day in five years recorded in Kew Gardens as temperatures reached 25.8C.

The unsettled weather is expected to become widespread from the middle of the week, with wet and increasingly windy conditions moving in from the southwest of England and Wales on Tuesday.

These conditions will spread across the UK through Wednesday, with an area of high pressure over Scandinavia causing fronts to stall over Scotland, which was already battered by heavy rainfall and flooding this month. This stalling is anticipated to lead to persistent heavy rainfall in the region through Thursday and Friday.

“Many parts of the UK will see a very unsettled spell of weather through the second half of the coming week, into next weekend,” deputy chief meteorologist Steven Keates said.

“A number of areas have the potential to see a lot of rain as well as strong winds at times. Of particular concern at the moment is eastern and central Scotland where some exceptional rainfall totals could build up, falling on ground already saturated after recent heavy rainfall.”

“This could lead to some significant and widespread disruption."

Weather Outlook

Monday: A chilly start will give way to a cold day with sunny spells, except for scattered light showers in the far north and southeast. Breezy conditions are expected in the north.

Tuesday: Mostly dry with bright or sunny spells for many regions. Later in the day, it will turn windier from the southwest with rain likely in southwest England and southwest Wales.

Wednesday to Friday: Increasingly unsettled conditions with heavy outbreaks of rain and stronger winds, especially over higher ground. Temperatures will return to average, and milder nights are anticipated.

In its long term forecast for the weekend, the Met Office predicts the start of the period to be “very unsettled across much of the UK”, with parts of northeast Britain expected to experience heavy, persistent rain accompanied by strong to gale force winds.

Further heavy rain and strong winds may also impact parts of southern Britain.

The following week might see a slight reduction in the unsettled conditions, with the driest weather expected in the northeast and wettest conditions likely in the southwest.

Temperatures are expected to remain around average, with fluctuations between milder and colder spells throughout the forecast period.

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2023-10-16 04:55:03Z
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