Selasa, 09 April 2024

Campaigner Alan Bates to appear before Post Office Horizon IT inquiry – UK politics live - The Guardian

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Jason Beer KC, lead counsel for the inquiry, has effectively issued a very long legal dressing down to the Post Office for a track record of disrupting the inquiry with late disclosure of documents, despite the fact “the Post Office [said it] aspired to eliminate disruption wherever it was possible to do so.”

He is now saying that on 28 March the Post Office submitted another tranche of 1071 late documents that “make reference to 19 specific individuals within the Post Office.”

Beer says “15 documents were said to be, quote, of high relevance, and 44 documents were said to be documents of interest.”

The Post Office said some of these documents might be duplicates.

Today’s session at the Post Office Horizon IT inquiry has started with criticism of the repeated “late and problematic disclosure of evidence” from the Post Office, which has necessitated postponing some hearings in the past. This discussion is delaying the appearance of Alan Bates.

If you want to watch the Post Office Horizon IT inquiry today, then there is a live stream here. I will be following along and will bring you any key lines that emerge. It is Alan Bates giving testimony and so we are expecting to hear about his experience as a victm and then a campaigner.

He has already arrived at the inquiry.

At 10 o’clock the next state of the Post Office Horizon IT scandal inquiry starts, and I will be following it closely here. Alan Bates – the real life character featured in the ITV drama that did so much to focus attention on the scandal will take the stand at Aldwych House and tell his story. Our First Edition newsletter today featured Rupert Neate talking to our colleague Jane Croft, who has been covering the story since 2018, about it. Here is a snippet:

“The impact this scandal has had on thousands of people’s lives has been truly devastating,” Jane says. “These are ordinary people, without money and connections that have been caught up in this real David and Goliath battle.”

In personal impact statements to the inquiry, the victims have spoken about losing everything. “It’s not just their money,” Jane says. “It’s their liberty, their partners, their families, their homes. Some spoke about their children being bullied at school, being shunned by their local community, and being referred to as ‘the postmaster who stole old people’s pensions’.”

“They want justice and for the truth to come out,” Jane says. “It feels like the Post Office knew the Horizon IT system wasn’t working properly, but they continued to prosecute these innocent people anyway.”

In 2015 the Post Office told a House of Commons inquiry: “There is no functionality in Horizon for either a branch, Post Office or Fujitsu to edit, manipulate or remove transaction data once it has been recorded in a branch’s accounts.” This was untrue, a high court judge ruled in a landmark court case four years later.

A recording from 2013, unearthed by Channel 4 News, shows Susan Crichton, the Post Office’s head lawyer, confirm that former chief executive Paula Vennells had been briefed about a “covert operations team” that could remotely access the Horizon system and adjust branches’ accounts. In 2015 Vennells told the Commons business select committee that “we have no evidence” of miscarriages of justice.

Vennells, who has handed back a CBE awarded to her for “services to the Post Office and to charity”, will give evidence, live-streamed here, for three days from Wednesday 22 May.

Nadhim Zahawi, the former chancellor who was one of the MPs questioning Vennells in 2015, has called for a “thorough police investigation”.

“I don’t think it’s good enough that we keep falling back on ‘let the inquiry do its work’ – this is much more serious,” he said. “There needs to be an investigation into corporate manslaughter and individuals at the Post Office.”

Read more here: Tuesday briefing: What to expect from the next phase of the Post Office inquiry

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves also repeatedly attacked Conservative plans over non-dom tax status. Having defended the status against calls for abolition for years, in March Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt announced it would adopt Labour’s policy and scrap the status. However, the way they are planning to do so has been criticised for including a significant number of loopholes.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast this morning, Reeves said:

The government’s plans that they announced in March about non-doms, they said they were taking our policy, well it turns out they’ve taken it but left a load of loopholes in it. And so if you are a non-dom you can still get out of paying inheritance tax: in the first year of their policy there’s a 50% discount, we don’t get 50% discounts on our taxes.

People who go out and work today – teachers, plumbers, doctors, they don’t get a 50% discount – why should some of the wealthiest people in the country get that discount? We would abolish that and we would put that money into frontline public services, where it belongs.”

Shadow cabinet minister Bridget Phillipson said ahead of the March budget that it would be an “abject humiliation” for the Tories if they implemented Labour’s policy.

Non-dom status allows foreign nationals who live in the UK, but are officially domiciled overseas, to avoid paying UK tax on their overseas income or capital gains. Rishi Sunak’s wife, Akshata Murty, has previously enjoyed non-domiciled status. In April 2022 she agreed to pay UK tax, saying her arrangements were not “compatible with my husband’s job as chancellor”.

Back with shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves for a moment, one other theme she picked up in her media round this morning was that by investing in HMRC she expected a Labour government would do a better job of bringing in tax revenue than under the current administration. Labour has said it will invest up to £555m a year in boosting the number of compliance officers.

She told viewers of BBC Breakfast:

You can ramp it up pretty quickly. At the start you might need to bring in extra resource but then you need to train people up within the government to do this work.

This isn’t rocket science, previous governments have managed to close that tax gap, as it’s called.

Labour’s shadow financial secretary to the Treasury James Murray also touched on the topic when he was on Sky News this morning. He said:

We’ve got to invest in and improve the customer service at HMRC because, you know, we had this urgent question in parliament just before the recess, which was about HMRC closing its phone line for six months a year. Because the service was so bad, they just decided to close the phone line. And we say, look, you have to invest in digital solutions and modernise HMRC.

Former home secretary Suella Braverman has said that the Conservatives are heading for a certain defeat in the next election, but appeared to rule out standing against Rishi Sunak in a leadership contest in the short-term.

Speaking on LBC, PA Media reports Braverman said:

I’m very concerned, I’m very concerned about what poll after poll demonstrates, and it’s my job – and I sought to do this as home secretary – to speak honestly, to speak the truth, even if it may be uncomfortable.

I owe that to the people who have sent me to parliament, and I owe that to you, and so the honest truth is that we are heading for a defeat, to put it mildly, at the general election.

I very much hope that we change course and that we improve the offer to the British people. Ultimately, measures on tax cuts, measures on migration, measures on national security and social cohesion are insufficient by this government.

We need to go further, we need to demonstrate to the British people that we’re on their side, that we’re serious about stopping the boats, that we’re actually serious about curbing unprecedented levels of illegal migration, and unfortunately we haven’t managed to do that.

She added “I’m not thinking about any kind of leadership campaign. Rishi Sunak is our prime minister, I fully expect him to lead us into the next general election.”

Braverman departed as home secretary during Liz Truss’s short term as prime minister for causing a security breach by sending official documents from a personal email account. Rapidly reinstated into the same job by Rishi Sunak when he formed his first cabinet, she was sacked by him in November for writing an article criticising London’s police which had not been agreed in advance by No 10.

My colleague Martin Pengelly in Washington has had an early sight of the new Liz Truss book, the apocalyptically titled Ten Years To Save The West from the woman who had 49 days in Downing Street. Here is a snippet from his piece:

When the queen died so soon after Truss had become her 15th and final prime minister, Truss writes, the news, though widely expected after the monarch’s health had deteriorated, still came “as a profound shock” to Truss, seeming “utterly unreal” and leaving her thinking: “Why me? Why now?”

Insisting she had not expected to lead the UK in mourning for the death of a monarch nearly 70 years on the throne and nearly 100 years old, Truss says state ceremony and protocol were “a long way from my natural comfort zone”.

Other prime ministers, she writes without naming any, may have been better able to provide “the soaring rhetoric and performative statesmanship necessary”.

Read more here: Liz Truss says in book Queen told her to ‘pace yourself’, admits she didn’t listen

Labour’s shadow financial secretary to the treasury James Murray was also on the media round this morning, and while on Sky News, that David Cameron visit to meet Donald Trump led to an awkward exchange where Kay Burley was pushing him to say whether shadow foreign secretary David Lammy should also be making overtures to the presumptive Republican nominee for the US election in November.

Murray said:

I know David’s been to America quite a bit. He’s got colleagues on both sides of the aisle. There’s Republicans as well as Democrats. You know, he’s built those bridges because I think he recognises that we need to have an alliance. I don’t know his diary. But you know, if we get into government, if president Trump is reelected, we need to have a relationship with the US whoever is in the White House.

David Cameron has held talks with Donald Trump in Florida. In a statement on Monday, a Foreign Office spokesperson said: “Ahead of his visit to Washington, the foreign secretary will meet former President Trump in Florida today. It is standard practice for ministers to meet with opposition candidates as part of their routine international engagement.”

Cameron’s counterpart, US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, met with people from the opposition Labour party on his last visit to the UK.

Cameron will head on to Washington where he is expected to hold talks with Blinken, the national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, and the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell. He is also hoping to meet the House speaker, Mike Johnson. We are expecting at least some public words from Cameron during the day.

Labour figures continue to be asked in the media about Angela Rayner’s housing arrangements from a decade ago. Speaking on BBC Breakfast, shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said Rayner was “a good friend and a colleague of mine and I have full faith and trust in her.”

Speaking on the Today programme when asked about the issue, Reeves told listeners:

I think she was on this programme and answered questions about the sale of her house almost a decade ago now, when she was married to her former husband.

So these allegations are from something that happened a decade ago. She has sought legal advice since Michael Ashcroft wrote this book.

She’s confident and I’m confident that she has paid her tax, but today is about asking the wealthiest in our country to pay their fair share of tax to fund our public services.

Rachel Reeves has said Labour’s spending plans will make a “massive difference” to the lives of people, promising two million additional appointments a year in the NHS, 700,000 emergency dental appointments, free breakfast clubs in all primary schools as well as investment in scanners and new technology in hospitals.

Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, despite cautioning that should it form the next government, Labour would face “the worst economic inheritance since the second world war.”

She said:

I’m under no illusions about the scale of the challenge that I would inherit if I become chancellor. Both the economic inheritance that I’ve spoken about with debt, living standards and taxes, but also the inheritance in terms of the state of public services on their knees after 14 years of Conservative government, particularly our NHS.

That is why the focus today is about how we can raise that additional £5bn by the end of the parliament. Numbers that don’t just come from me, but which come from the National Audit Office, and a speech given in January this year about the money that is on the table that we could bring in through cracking down on tax avoidance by properly resourcing HMRC.

Nick Robinson suggested the figures were insignficant compared to the total government budget, descrbing them as a “rounding error” and “loose change down the back of the treasury sofa”.

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves has said an incoming Labour government would launch a £5bn crackdown on tax avoiders to close a gap in its spending plans exposed by Jeremy Hunt scrapping the non-dom regime to finance tax cuts.

Warning households and businesses that Labour was prepared to adopt tough measures to tackle tax fraud and non-compliance, Reeves said the funding would be used to pay for free school breakfast clubs and additional NHS appointments.

Labour’s plan will reduce “the tax gap” – the difference between the amount of money HMRC is owed and the amount it actually receives – to previous levels after it increased by more than £5bn over the past year.

Reeves will also raise £2.6bn over the next parliament by closing what she described as loopholes in the government’s plans to abolish exemptions for non-doms – people who are not “domiciled” in the UK for tax purposes.

The government reforms will allow non-doms to use family trusts to avoid inheritance tax and to have a 50% discount in the first year of when new rules apply. Reeves said she would ban the use of trusts to avoid the tax and scrap the 50% discount.

It comes a month after Labour’s spending plans were thrown into question by Hunt adopting two of the party’s top revenue-raising policies at the budget to fund a cut in national insurance.

Read more of Phillip Inman’s report here: Labour plans £5bn crackdown on tax avoiders to close non-dom spending gap

Good morning. Labour has been setting out plans to try to recoup more money from tax avoidance in an attempt to show that it has the money on hand to fund its pledges without breakign the fiscal rules it has set for itself. Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves has been doing the media round today, more on that in a moment. Here are your headlines today …

Westminster, the Scottish parliament and the Senedd are in recess, but there is some business scheduled at Stormont.

The main event today though will be when the Post Office Horizon IT inquiry resumes in London. Alan Bates, former subpostmaster and founder of the Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance appears. The inquiry, chaired by the retired judge Sir Wyn Williams, began in 2022.

It is Martin Belam here with you again today. I do try to read all your comments, and dip into them where I think I can be helpful, but if you want to get my attention the best way is to email me – martin.belam@theguardian.com – especially if you have spotted my inevitable errors and typos, or you think I’ve missed something important.

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2024-04-09 08:00:00Z
CBMimQFodHRwczovL3d3dy50aGVndWFyZGlhbi5jb20vcG9saXRpY3MvbGl2ZS8yMDI0L2Fwci8wOS9zdW5hay1zdGFybWVyLWJhdGVzLWhvcml6b24tcG9zdC1vZmZpY2UtcmFjaGVsLXJlZXZlcy1jYW1lcm9uLWNvbnNlcnZhdGl2ZXMtbGFib3VyLXVrLXBvbGl0aWNzLWxpdmXSAZkBaHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAudGhlZ3VhcmRpYW4uY29tL3BvbGl0aWNzL2xpdmUvMjAyNC9hcHIvMDkvc3VuYWstc3Rhcm1lci1iYXRlcy1ob3Jpem9uLXBvc3Qtb2ZmaWNlLXJhY2hlbC1yZWV2ZXMtY2FtZXJvbi1jb25zZXJ2YXRpdmVzLWxhYm91ci11ay1wb2xpdGljcy1saXZl

Senin, 08 April 2024

Bradford stabbing: Murder suspect was on bail for 'threats to kill' at time - Sky News

A man suspected of fatally stabbing a mother in Bradford city centre was on bail at the time for allegedly threatening to kill her, it has emerged.

West Yorkshire Police have launched a manhunt for Habibur Masum - who is wanted on suspicion of murdering 27-year-old Kulsuma Akter on Saturday.

According to the PA news agency, Masum was conditionally bailed in November after being charged with assaulting and threatening to kill Ms Akter - who is from Oldham, Greater Manchester.

Both offences were alleged to have happened in Manchester.

Court documents seen by PA say the 25-year-old man had pleaded not guilty to both offences at a hearing on 27 November and was ordered by Manchester Magistrates' Court not to contact Ms Akter.

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'No confirmed sightings' of murder suspect

Masum's bail conditions also prevented him from contacting a second unnamed person or visiting a particular address.

West Yorkshire Police have referred themselves to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) watchdog as they had previous contact with Ms Akter.

Greater Manchester Police also referred themselves to the IOPC because they had contact with both Masum and Ms Akter.

Police release CCTV image of suspect wanted after a woman was stabbed to death in Bradford. Pic: West Yorks Police
Image: Masum was last seen wearing a duffle coat with three large horizontal lines. Pic: West Yorks Police

West Yorkshire Police said earlier that Ms Akter was attacked at around 3.20pm on Saturday while with her baby in the Westgate area of Bradford city centre.

Assistant Chief Constable Damien Miller said in a press conference: "Despite the best efforts of members of the public, ambulance crews and hospital staff, Kulsuma sadly lost her life due to the injuries.

"Her baby is safe and well and was not harmed in this incident."

Officers searching for Masum say they have carried out "a number of raids" in Burnley, Oldham, and Chester, as part of the investigation.

Habibur Masum seen on CCTV. Pic: West Yorkshire Police
Image: Masum was last seen at 3.42pm on Killinghall Road on Saturday. Pic: West Yorkshire Police

West Yorkshire Police arrested a 23-year-old man on suspicion of assisting an offender as a result but said the search continues for the suspect, who has links to Burnley and Chester.

According to his LinkedIn profile, Masum studied for a masters in marketing and digital marketing at the University of Bedfordshire between 2021 and 2023.

His Facebook page states he is from Sylhet, Bangladesh, and he is believed to be in the UK on a student visa, and later a post-graduate visa after he obtained his degree.

Read more:
Men who murdered footballer in nightclub jailed for life
Victim identified after human remains found in park

'Evil monster' cut his wife's body into 224 pieces

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Police search home in Bradford murder case

According to officers, Masum was last seen wearing a duffle coat with three large horizontal lines, grey tracksuit bottoms and maroon trainers.

A witness also told West Yorkshire Police they saw him wearing a grey hoodie with the hood up.

Officers said Masum was seen on CCTV getting on a bus on Market Street in Bradford at 3.30pm on Saturday.

The last confirmed sighting of the suspect was when he exited the bus at 3.42pm on Killinghall Road and walked in the direction of Bradford Moor Park.

Mr Miller added: "I believe him to still be in the country at this moment in time."

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Greater Manchester Police say they are assisting West Yorkshire Police with their investigation.

"Due to his links to Greater Manchester, we have our specialist officers following several lines of enquiry to locate him," said Detective Superintendent Jude Holmes from the force's Oldham district.

"I urge members of the public to remain vigilant, and if you have any information on his whereabouts, call 999 as a matter of urgency."

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2024-04-08 21:56:15Z
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Bradford stabbing: Nationwide manhunt for Habibur Masum over mother's death - BBC

Habibur MasumWest Yorkshire Police

Every police force in the country is looking for a man suspected of fatally stabbing a mother who was pushing her baby in a pram, officials said.

Habibur Masum, 25, is wanted after a 27-year-old woman was attacked in the Westgate area of Bradford on Saturday.

West Yorkshire Police confirmed the baby was not harmed in the attack.

West Yorkshire's deputy mayor for policing and crime said Mr Masum was known to the victim and was considered "very dangerous".

Speaking to BBC Radio 4 on Monday, Alison Lowe said: "Habibur Masum is still at large.

"There is a very complex investigation currently ongoing with all forces in the country trying to locate the suspect.

"We don't think this was a random killing, the police know the two people were known to each other."

Specialist search teams in Westgate, Bradford

Anyone who sees Mr Masum is urged not to approach him and to phone 999 immediately.

Mr Masum, who is described as Asian and of a slim build, is from the Oldham area and is believed to have links to the Burnley and Chester areas.

CCTV footage appears to show him wearing a duffle coat with three large horizontal lines of grey, white and black, light blue or grey tracksuit bottoms with a small black emblem on the left pocket and maroon trainers.

Officers said a knife was recovered from the scene but could not confirm whether Mr Masum was armed.

A Facebook page believed to belong to Mr Masum suggests he is a Bangladeshi national and is studying digital marketing at the University of Bedfordshire.

The university declined to comment or confirm if Mr Masum was one of its students when contacted by the BBC.

Flowers left at the scene of a murder in Bradford
BBC/Charles Heslett

Geo Khan, who runs a fruit and veg shop close to the scene of the incident, told the BBC how he had tried to save the victim after he found her body on Saturday afternoon.

Mr Khan said he knew the woman by sight and that she had been coming into his store for a "few weeks".

"I was sitting in my shop when I heard screaming," he said.

"I came out and ran to the scene and there was a body lying on the floor. I tried to check her pulse and there was none.

"Within a few minutes a doctor arrived and we tried to turn her over. There was blood everywhere. I got a sheet and I put that over her until the ambulance arrived.

"It was really, really bad. I couldn't take it in.

"She was a good, charitable lady and all the time there was a smile on her face.

"The local area is distressed. I just feel really sorry for her and for what happened."

Geo Khan
BBC/Charles Heslett

The Rev Duncan Milwain, assistant curate at Bradford Cathedral, said churches and mosques in the city would be open to people wishing to grieve.

He said: "The cathedral is open at all times for anybody who wants to come and sit down, talk to somebody, pray or light a candle.

"Bradford's a city of faith. This must be used to bring the community together, rather than pull people apart.

"Being towards the end of Ramadan, it's a terrible time for this to have happened."

Mr Milwain said "people who don't know Bradford" should be assured the incident was "isolated".

"Bradford is a young and vibrant city," he added.

"It's really an optimistic place. We don't want a narrative that Bradford's an unfortunate place to be. It's a place of great hope."

Duncan Milwain, assistant curate at Bradford Cathedral
BBC/Charles Heslett

A large police presence was reported in Bradford's city centre over the weekend following the woman's death.

Ms Lowe said people in the community were "shocked and distressed" by what had happened.

She added: "The reason I'm speaking today is to give reassurance to that community that everything is being done to locate this suspect and to reassure them that these incidents are really rare.

"This was someone who knew the victim and is highly unlikely to be a risk to anybody else in Bradford or wider West Yorkshire."

The victim has not yet been formally identified but police said her family had been informed and was being supported by officers.

Police tape at the scene of a murder in Bradford on 6 April
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Charles Heslett, BBC News, at the scene

There's a group of photographers and camera crews on Westgate on the outskirts of Bradford city centre.

Police tape that provided a cordon for the area has now been taken down. Bits of it are still tied to railings along Westgate.

Shopkeepers in the area are reluctant to talk due to the media attention and the sensitivity of the subject, but the overall feeling is one of great sadness that a 27-year-old young mother had lost her life and a baby had been left without a parent.

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2024-04-08 10:48:10Z
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Royal Navy nuclear sub whistleblower claims being left in limbo after sexual abuse allegations is like 'a second injury' - Sky News

A whistleblower who raised the alarm 18 months ago about alleged sexual harassment and abuse onboard the UK's nuclear-armed submarines says she feels let down and left in limbo by the Royal Navy.

Admiral Sir Ben Key, the head of the navy, ordered an internal inquiry into the claims made in a newspaper interview in October 2022 by Sophie Brook, a former naval officer, and other women about their treatment while serving in the elite Submarine Service.

Summing up her core allegation, Ms Brook, 32, told Sky News: "There is sexual assault, sexual harassment, and misogyny is widespread within the Submarine Service."

After first going public, she said she had "multiple people contacting me saying the same thing happened to me... that ranged from minor sexual assault all the way up to rape".

Ms Brook, who could have become the first female captain of a submarine but has since resigned from the navy, gave evidence to the investigation as well as to the military police.

Sophie Brook
Image: Sophie Brook

She said she was told last year by the navy that the outcome of the inquiry would be made public very soon, but she is still waiting for any kind of update.

"I believe it was back in 2023 - sometime in the summer when they promised that the report was imminent - was the last time I heard from the navy," she said, sitting with her father, David, also a former naval officer, who has been a huge support to her.

More on Royal Navy

Asked how this made her feel, she said: "It's rude... it's like having a second injury."

Sky News revealed last year how victims of alleged sexual harassment and bullying in the Red Arrows felt they had suffered a second wound from the Royal Air Force after a separate - similarly internal - inquiry dragged on for almost two years, largely in secret.

Sophie with her father, David, who also served in the Navy
Image: Sophie with her father, David, who also served in the Royal Navy

Sarah Atherton, a Conservative MP, army veteran and member of parliament's defence select committee, has worked tirelessly to raise awareness about the treatment of women in the armed forces.

She said she was appalled at the length of time it was taking for the Royal Navy to investigate the submarine allegations without providing any kind of update to the victims.

Ms Atherton also called into question the fairness of the entire system of military justice, which enables the individual services to launch so-called non-statutory inquiries into serious allegations that their own officers are then tasked with investigating.

'Justice delayed is justice denied'

"For victims, witnesses and alleged perpetrators to have to wait 18 months for an outcome - and by all accounts not even being kept up to date - is completely unacceptable," Ms Atherton told Sky News.

"Justice delayed is justice denied. And the use of non-statutory investigations by the Ministry of Defence is just another way that they're just marking their own homework."

Sarah Atherton MP
Image: Sarah Atherton MP

A spokesperson for the Royal Navy said: "The First Sea Lord is clear that any behaviour which falls short of the highest standards will not be tolerated and anyone found culpable will be held accountable.

"Work around an investigation into allegations of inappropriate behaviour in the Submarine Service is ongoing and given the complex nature of the allegations, it is important to take time to do this thoroughly."

'Hostility and harassment from the start'

Ms Brook chose to join the Submarine Service after a ban on female submariners was lifted in 2011. However, she alleged that she suffered hostility and harassment from the start.

The situation was so grave she said it badly impacted her mental health, prompting her to start self-harming even while serving for months at a time onboard the nuclear-armed submarines that provide the UK's nuclear deterrence - the cornerstone of UK security.

The Vanguard submarine as it arrives back at the Clyde Naval Base (file photo). Pic: LPhot Bill Spurr/MoD/Crown Copyright/PA
Image: Pic: PA

She said she initially raised concerns internally about her alleged mistreatment.

But she claimed that the Royal Navy turned on her, accusing her of fraud and of revealing information about the movement of a submarine.

On the fraud charge, Ms Brook said she decided to plead guilty at court-martial because she had not been allowed more time to produce bank records that she claimed showed she had made car journeys that she had claimed petrol money for.

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'I didn't gain a penny'

Showing the Tesco bank records to Sky News, Ms Brook said: "I did not gain a single penny.

"I made many, many journeys home, probably over 20 journeys home that year to see my family. However, they were not always on the exact day that I had put the claim in for, sometimes they were a week later, sometimes they were a week earlier, and sometimes they were on the right day and, you know, the admin was correct.

"But, the navy, I perhaps provided them with an open goal. I was someone that was complaining and making problems, and I absolutely made an admin error and where I believe anyone else and any other male certainly would have been told this is incorrect admin, do it properly next time, I was taken to court martial for it."

Sophie showed her bank records to Sky News
Image: Sophie showed her bank records to Sky News

Read more:
Ministers urge government to increase defence spending
Army must 'prepare genuinely for war', security chiefs warn

Ms Brook said evidence of her fragile mental health had also not been considered by the court.

She read a letter from a senior doctor detailing her mental state at the time.

It said: "Miss Brook's mental health was discussed with a senior psychiatrist. At this time, her mental health would undoubtedly have affected her judgement. And as such, I do not feel she can be held accountable for her actions."

Asked about the litigation, the Royal Navy spokesperson said: "All court martial trials are independent and presided over by a judge advocate, who is appointed in the same way as judges in other courts and ensures that matters are handled fairly and in compliance with the law."

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Bradford stabbing: Mother's death prompts nationwide manhunt - BBC

Habibur MasumWest Yorkshire Police

Every police force in the country is looking for a man suspected of fatally stabbing a mother who was pushing her baby in a pram, officials said.

Habibur Masum, 25, is wanted after a 27-year-old woman was attacked in the Westgate area of Bradford on Saturday.

West Yorkshire Police confirmed the baby was not harmed in the attack.

West Yorkshire's deputy mayor for policing and crime said Mr Masum was known to the victim and was considered "very dangerous".

Speaking to BBC Radio 4 on Monday, Alison Lowe said: "Habibur Masum is still at large.

"There is a very complex investigation currently ongoing with all forces in the country trying to locate the suspect.

"We don't think this was a random killing, the police know the two people were known to each other."

Specialist search teams in Westgate, Bradford

Anyone who sees Mr Masum is urged not to approach him and to phone 999 immediately.

Mr Masum, who is described as Asian and of a slim build, is from the Oldham area and is believed to have links to the Burnley and Chester areas.

CCTV footage appears to show him wearing a duffle coat with three large horizontal lines of grey, white and black, light blue or grey tracksuit bottoms with a small black emblem on the left pocket and maroon trainers.

Officers said a knife was recovered from the scene but could not confirm whether Mr Masum was armed.

'Shocked and distressed'

A large police presence was reported in Bradford's city centre over the weekend following the woman's death.

Ms Lowe said people in the community were "shocked and distressed" by what had happened.

She added: "The reason I'm speaking today is to give reassurance to that community that everything is being done to locate this suspect and to reassure them that these incidents are really rare.

"This was someone who knew the victim and is highly unlikely to be a risk to anybody else in Bradford or wider West Yorkshire."

The victim has not yet been formally identified but police said her family had been informed and was being supported by officers.

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Minggu, 07 April 2024

LIVE: Greater Manchester Police hold press conference after man's remains found in Salford - latest updates - Manchester Evening News

Police will this morning issue an update on a murder investigation launched after human remains were found wrapped in plastic in a nature reserve in Salford. Greater Manchester Police are holding a press conference at Kersal Wetlands, close to where the gruesome discovery was made by a passer-by on Thursday afternoon.

Yesterday police revealed the body parts belong to a man 'likely to be older than 40' who 'could not have survived'.

Forensic investigators, search teams and the dog unit have been 'working round the clock' and remain at the scene, but as of yesterday morning no other remains had been discovered.

READ MORE: Quiet community rocked by discovery of man's remains as major Salford murder investigation continues

Police say the man had been deceased for a 'only matter of days'. Efforts are now being made to identify the victim, including the use of DNA tests.

Speaking yesterday Chief Supt Tony Creely said: "At the heart of our investigation is this man and his family. We are using all forensic techniques available to identify him as soon as we can so we are able to support his loved ones during this devastating time."

The press conference is due to begin at 11am. Follow our live blog below for updates...

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