Sabtu, 22 Juni 2024

Nigel Farage repeating Putin's 'speaking notes' on Ukraine, ex-defence secretary says – UK election live - The Guardian

Yvette Cooper has promised to re-establish the Home Office’s Windrush unit, promising a Labour government would “turn the page” on the scandal with a series of measures such as expediting compensation claims.

Writing for the Guardian to mark Windrush Day she said the party would appoint a new “Windrush commissioner” who would “oversee the delivery of the compensation scheme” and be a “voice” for families and communities, adding that trust needed to be rebuilt between Windrush victims and campaigners and the Home Office.

A Labour government, she said, would start by ensuring that the Windrush compensation scheme is “delivered effectively”. It would also restore “community engagements to encourage applications, as well as the reconciliation events promised after the Wendy Williams Lessons Learned review but abandoned by the Conservatives”.

You can read the full story here:

Bloomberg has got sight of some internal Conservative polling this week that confirms public polling that projects a parliamentary majority for Labour as high as 200.

A senior Conservative minister, who was briefed on the polling, said he anticipated election night being like the Battle of the Somme, one of the bloodiest of the first world war, in which more than one million people were killed or injured.

Officials told Bloomberg that over half of the cabinet is at risk of losing their seats, something that would be unprecedented in British electoral history.

It has been reported previously that Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, could lose his seat to the Lib Dems, with fellow cabinet ministers Grant Shapps and Mark Harper among those who could be ousted by Labour.

Alex Wickham, Bloomberg UK’s political editor, wrote:

There are now growing concerns among Tory officials that Sunak’s own constituency of Richmond and Northallerton is no longer completely safe, after one poll implied he could be the first serving premier in history to lose his seat.

At the end of the interview, Nick Robinson asked Ben Wallace if there are some wishing that Boris Johnson stayed leader of the Conservative party given the dire position of the Tories in the polls.

Asked to comment on Johnson’s legacy as prime minister, Wallace said: “All I know is when I served with Boris Johnson as his defence secretary, and with Rishi Sunak, they both leant in and supported defence.”

He added: “I suspect my Labour counterpart (John Healey) if he were to be defence secretary will be wanting more from Rachel Reeves and will get precisely zilch.”

Labour has said it would have an “iron-clad commitment” to supporting Ukraine if they form the next government. Rishi Sunak has said the party would not match Tory defence spending.

The former defence secretary Ben Wallace has been on the Today programme, speaking about Nigel Farage’s comments about the west provoking Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

He said what threatens Vladimir Putin are the values embodied by the EU and Nato, adding that Putin’s “very bizarre view of the world” ignores the fact that Ukraine has been separate from Russia in its history longer than it has been together and ignores the treaties signed by Russia in the 1990s upholding the right for states to choose their own alliances.

Wallace told the BBC:

It is not about Nato. Yes, he wants that to be played across our constituencies and played into the hands of the likes of Mr Farage who is only too keen often to what looks like repeat what looks like some of president Putin’s speaking notes. But certainly that is not the actual historical case.

Farage expanded on his position on Ukraine, writing on X yesterday evening that he is “one of the few figures that have been consistent and honest about the war with Russia”.

Wallace, who is not standing in the upcoming general election, said Farage has been “consistently wrong” on the issue, stressing that Nato is a defensive alliance.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:

I think Nigel Farage is a bit like that pub bore we have all met at the end of the bar who often says if ‘I was running the country’ and presents very simplistic answers to actually I am afraid in the 21st century complex problems. It is not that easy to govern a country but also to find international solutions to problems

If he became prime minister tomorrow morning, what is his solution to dealing with a President Putin that he alleges he admires? A man who remember was involved in the murder of a British citizen Dawn Sturgess with deployment of nerve agent on Salisbury. Is his answer to that we provoked him? He is going to have to deal with the real world.

Good morning, and welcome to our continued coverage of the 2024 general election campaign.

Nigel Farage, the Reform party leader, has been criticised for suggesting the west “provoked” Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine by expanding the EU and Nato eastwards.

He told Nick Robinson in the BBC Panorama interview that aired last night:

I stood up in the European parliament in 2014 and I said – and I quote: ‘there will be a war in Ukraine’. Why did I say that? It was obvious to me the ever eastward expansion of Nato and the EU was giving this man a reason to his Russian people to say they are coming for us again and to go to war.

Robinson said that Farage was echoing Vladimir Putin’s narrative in justifying the war. Farage replied:

Sorry I have been saying this actually since the 1990s – ever since the fall of the wall. Hang on a second: we provoked this war. Of course, it is his fault.

Challenged on his beliefs over the invasion of Ukraine, and his stated admiration for Putin, Farage said he disliked the Russian president personally but “admired him as a political operator” because of the extent of his control over Russia.

James Cleverly, the home secretary, criticised Farage’s comments, saying he was “echoing Putin’s vile justification for the brutal invasion of Ukraine”, while the former defence secretary Ben Wallace said the Reform leader was voicing “sympathy” to someone who “deployed nerve agents on the streets of Britain”.

John Healey, the shadow defence secretary, called the comments “disgraceful”, adding that Farage has “shown that he would rather lick Vladimir Putin’s boot than stand up for the people of Ukraine. That makes him unfit for any political office in our country, let alone leading a serious party in parliament.” You can read more on this story here.

Here is some of what to expect on the campaign trail today:

  • Labour’s shadow environment secretary Steve Reed will visit a county on the south coast to talk about sewage. Reed has threatened to put water bosses in prison, ban their bonuses and impose fines for sewage spills. Water companies would also be unable to mark their own homework, with new independent water monitoring. The Labour party leader, Keir Starmer, meanwhile, will be out in London to unveil his party’s plans to expedite payments for the thousands of victims of the Windrush scandal.

  • Rishi Sunak will trail his party’s plan for pubs, clubs and festivals, which include ways to “crack down” on councils setting “disproportionate conditions and restrictions on licences” in an attempt to cut red tape for businesses in the entertainment sector.

  • Reform UK campaigning continues on the Tendring Peninsula in Essex, as Nigel Farage hosts a bumper set of campaign days in the Clacton constituency he is contesting.

  • SNP leader John Swinney will visit the Royal Highland Show in Edinburgh, where he will put the spotlight on his party’s drive for “sustainable funding for farming” with financial backing rising “to at least pre-Brexit levels”. The party has also called for a rural visa pilot scheme to “mitigate against the severe labour shortages” which it attributes to Brexit, and a veterinary agreement with the EU.

  • Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey will also visit a farm on the campaign trail in a week where the Conservatives have sought support from rural communities.

It is Yohannes Lowe here for the next couple of hours. If you want to get my attention then please do email me on yohannes.lowe@theguardian.com.

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2024-06-22 07:39:00Z
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Windrush scandal: Campaigners demand citizenship for all victims in first 100 days of new government - Sky News

Windrush campaigners are calling on the next government to grant citizenship to all victims of the immigration scandal in the first 100 days after the election.

Campaigners including Action for Race Equality (ARE) have warned that the current compensation and documentation scheme is "unwieldy" and in need of desperate reform.

The Windrush scandal refers to migrants from the Caribbean who started to arrive in 1948 to help rebuild Britain after the war.

They were given the right to live and work in Britain permanently but many were later wrongly deemed illegal immigrants.

Windrush
Image: Many people who arrived from the Caribbean on HMT Empire Windrush lost their UK jobs and homes. Pic: AP

As a result of the scandal, a Windrush Scheme for Documentation was established in 2018 so those impacted were able to retrieve their documents and demonstrate their right to citizenship.

The Home Office estimates that more than 16,800 people have been provided with their documents through the scheme.

However, ARE says a third of those who have received documents are from EU countries and claims more than 57,000 people impacted by the Windrush scandal may still be eligible.

The charity has also criticised the Windrush Compensation Scheme which the Home Office says has paid out £85.86m across 2,382 claims, as of March.

But Jeremy Crook OBE, ARE chief executive, believes almost 4,000 claims were rejected and says it is likely because the 44-page long application is "very bureaucratic" and "onerous".

"Our manifesto calls for legal aid to be put in place by the next government," says Mr Crook.

Jeremy Crook OBE, chief executive, Action for Race Equality
Image: Jeremy Crook OBE, chief executive, Action for Race Equality

'I still think they're gonna come for me'

Shane Smith, 44, was born in Trinidad and Tobago, but was brought to the UK by his British mum when he was just four months old.

He was at work, in his early thirties, when he was told he had no right to remain in the only place he knew as home.

"I was dragged into the office and they were like, you've got an immigration issue," says Mr Smith.

"I said, 'Can't you hear my voice? I'm a scouser!' That's when everything fell apart."

He lost his job as a result of the scandal and it took him years to obtain the documents he needed to be granted the citizenship he was already entitled to.

Mr Smith became homeless as a result of work insecurities, and years later is still battling with mental health issues.

"I just felt alone, I couldn't provide for my family anymore… I'm embarrassed, because I am a proud man, and before this I thought I was very, very strong," says Mr Smith.

"I still think they're gonna come for me."

Although he may be entitled to compensation, Mr Smith hasn't yet applied for the scheme, as he believes the process does not consider the complex lives created by the scandal.

Read more from Sky News:
Starmer makes 'Swift pit stop'... at the Eras Tour
Heatwave could hit UK next week - but there's a catch
Farage says West 'provoked' Russia's invasion of Ukraine

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"I've got to go through a dossier and provide all this stuff, when half the time I was homeless," he says.

He says when he received the compensation booklet, he couldn't face going through the paperwork.

"I just threw it in the bin."

Mr Smith also says even if he found the mental strength to fill it out, he's not sure he could accept the money based on principles.

"If I accept it, it's just like saying what you did to me is fine, and you are okay doing that to anyone else," he says.

It's this "lack of faith" in the government's ability to right the wrongs of the scandal that has inspired ARE, which is also calling upon the incoming government to establish a Windrush covenant for mental health.

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2024-06-22 06:33:45Z
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Jay Slater: Search for missing Brit in Tenerife enters sixth day - BBC.com

Search for missing Jay Slater enters sixth day

Mountain rescue teams near to the village of Masca, Tenerife. One man is using binoculars
Mountain rescue teams searched for Jay Slater near to the village of Masca, Tenerife, on Friday

The search for a British teenager who went missing after a night out in Tenerife has entered a sixth day.

Jay Slater, from Oswaldtwistle in Lancashire, travelled to the Spanish island for a music festival on his first holiday without his parents.

But the 19-year-old has not been heard from since he called a friend shortly before 09:00 BST on Monday, saying he was lost and needed water.

Lancashire Police said on Friday that it had offered to support officers on the Canary island in their efforts to locate Mr Slater - but added that their counterparts were "satisfied that they have the resources they need".

The apprentice bricklayer's last known location was on a path in the mountainous terrain of the Rural de Teno national park.

Mr Slater's friends and family have said he had earlier left the group he travelled with in the tourist hotspot of Playa de las Americas, on the south of the island.

After leaving NRG music festival at Papagayo night club, he got into a car with two men he met to drive to the national park in north-west Tenerife.

Jay Slater
Jay Slater has not been heard from since 09:00 BST on Monday

On Friday, search teams appeared to be methodically scouring a mountain road and focused on a ravine - before moving to a valley in the village of Masca.

Dog teams were scouring an area near farm buildings for much of the day, while police and mountain rescue officials examined a steep patch of land behind the apartment Mr Slater had reportedly been driven to.

The operation carefully combed through dead palm trees covering a river at the bottom of the hillside near to the property.

Investigators have been taking away bags of rubbish from the area to try and find any clues, but have not had any leads so far.

The apartment owner told reporters she saw Mr Slater walk up the road past her property but did not see him again after that - describing the situation as "worrying".

In a statement, Lancashire Police said it had "made an offer of support to the Guardia Civil to see if they need any additional resources".

The British force said the Spanish police had confirmed "at this time they are satisfied that they have the resources they need, but that offer remains open and they will contact us should that position change."

It added: "Our thoughts remain with Jay's family and friends at this distressing time."

Mr Slater was on his first holiday without family and had travelled to attend the festival with two friends.

Map of area showing Jay Slater's movements around Tenerife
Map of area showing Jay Slater's movements around Tenerife

Lucy Law, thought to have been the last person to speak to him, said he told her in their call that he had missed a bus and decided to walk the 10-hour journey home but was lost, needed water and his phone was on 1% battery.

The Rural de Teno is about a 40-minute drive from where Mr Slater and his friends were staying.

A remote and wild national park, it is a world away from Los Cristianos and Playa de las Americas, the party town holiday resorts of the island’s south coast.

Deep ravines and huge daunting mountains make the national park a difficult place for the Spanish search teams to navigate.

At night, the countryside becomes a maze, pitch black and disorientating.

A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesperson said: "We are supporting the family of a British man who has been reported missing in Spain and are in contact with the local authorities."

What we know so far

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Jumat, 21 Juni 2024

Focus on ravines as search for British tourist Jay Slater continues in Tenerife - The Guardian

Above a lush and rugged valley in Tenerife’s Rural De Teno national park, a police officer from Spain’s civil guard surveys the landscape with binoculars.

A few hundred yards below, members of the Canary’s civil defence force in orange hi-vis jackets are searching further into the valley close to where the British tourist Jay Slater disappeared five days ago.

The 19-year-old apprentice bricklayer from Oswaldtwistle in Lancashire was last heard from between 8am and 9am on Monday morning, when he had left the holiday cottage of some men he had gone back with after a music festival in the south of the island.

Slater’s last known location, according to his mobile phone, was around half a mile uphill from the cottage, on the outskirts of the village of Masca – in the opposite direction to the coastal resort where he was staying with friends.

Ofelia Medina Hernandez, the owner of the Airbnb where Slater went after the festival, said she was “very worried” about him, and added: “It’s not our fault.”

She said: “It’s dangerous walking around here, it’s easy to lose yourself. Here, people don’t get lost, there are routes everywhere. And he walked along the road when I saw him for the last time, up there … He was there alone.

“He was walking normally, though fast, a little fast.”

Hernandez said she had given all the information she had to the police, adding that Slater had asked about the bus, and she had told him that the bus leaves at 10am.

The Airbnb owner said the two men she hosted were friendly and had stayed one more night, spending the time in the house. She thought they had met Slater at the festival, but was not sure.

Friends of Slater also said he had met the men, believed to be from the south-east of England, at the festival. Some suggested police hadn’t questioned the men before they left the island, but other witnesses in Masca said officers had spoken to the men before they returned to the UK.

Police at the La Cruz de Hilda viewpoint, where the search has been concentrated, said on Friday that there were no updates.

In a statement, the Guardia Civil also said: “There is a search ongoing and the police operation is focused on the area of Masca (Tenerife). By now we cannot confirm any more information.”

Yesterday, a large group of Slater’s friends flew out to the island to help with the search. Members of his family including his mother, Debbie Duncan, have been in Tenerife since Tuesday.

“It’s just traumatic and it doesn’t feel real. It’s just awful, it’s horrendous,” she said. “He’s just a great person who everyone wanted to be with. He’s good looking, he’s a popular boy.”

Slater’s last known contact with friends was on Monday morning, when he texted his friend Lucy, who had been at the festival with him but had left before him.

He had told her he was lost, had been cut by a cactus, needed water, and that his phone battery was on 1%.

Lucy has been among those who have called for police reinforcements to be sent out from the UK to help with the search.

Friends of Slater have said more resources need to be dedicated to finding the missing teenager. “I just think they need to get as much help as they can out here,” Lucy told the Guardian.

“There are no helicopters here [now]. He’s been missing for that long now, what are they actually doing?”

Another friend said they had spent 12 hours driving “all down the coastal area”, had searched through dense undergrowth, and said “we were shouting, screaming”.

“We’ve been here since Tuesday and I’ve seen the helicopter once, we’ve seen the drones once, and I’ve seen one dog.”

Slater’s last Snapchat post was a photograph of him smoking a cigarette, believed to have been taken inside the Airbnb. Friends have been collecting cigarette butts they have found while searching in the undergrowth, in case they may come in useful as evidence later.

Yesterday the search had extended further across the valley, a considerable distance from where Slater was last seen. Personnel concentrated part of the search on a river named Barranco Madre del Agua at the bottom of a ravine, sifting through fallen dead palm trees with sticks.

On Thursday, one rescuer told the Guardian that search teams had not given up, and they believed it was possible to survive in the elements with current weather conditions.

Rescue workers told the Guardian on Friday that their search was focused on two ravines in the area and the paths around it, an area of about 30 square kilometres.

They said there were about 25 voluntary rescue workers involved, and that rescuers had spent the morning descending into the ravines to reach the bottom.

One added: “We still have hope that he’s alive, up until the last moment when the last hope is lost. The truth is that we feel a bit frustrated because we can’t find him. It’s so big [here] that it’s very difficult to search in such a steep area. But we’re doing everything we can.

“We haven’t found anything, we have combed this entire trail, we’ve been up and down but, until now, nothing.”

They said it was a “very difficult area to search”, with many areas covered in vegetation, as well as gaps and ravines.

A Facebook page dedicated to finding Slater, which had attracted more than 468,000 members, was paused after conspiracy theories about his disappearance began to spread wildly on social media profiles, including TikTok.

“It’s gone too far,” Rach Louise Harg, a friend of Slater and the Facebook page’s administrator, said in a post.

In a previous post, she said: “Struggling to find words at this time but all I can say is we are looking still and everyone is doing all they can.”

“I wish this would end now, this living nightmare,” she added. “Searches are ongoing and we remain positive.”

Separately, a fundraiser set up by Lucy to “get Jay Slater home” has received more than £23,500 in donations.

A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “We are supporting the family of a British man who has been reported missing in Spain and are in contact with the local authorities.”

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Nick Adderley: Northamptonshire Police chief constable sacked for gross misconduct - Sky News

A police chief has been sacked after being found guilty of gross misconduct over lying about his military record.

Nick Adderley, the chief constable of Northamptonshire Police, had been suspended on full pay since October for exaggerating his own rank and length of service and lying about his naval achievements.

The allegations included implying that he served in the Falklands War by wearing a medal - despite being 15 when the conflict broke out in 1982.

A panel, chaired by Callum Cowx, who served in the Royal Navy, the Army and the police, has now upheld all the allegations against him after a five-day hearing.

They found "his audacity to be quite staggering", adding that he had lied over many years with "arrogant temerity".

Pic: PA
BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE Suspended chief constable of Northamptonshire Police Nick Adderley arriving Northampton Saints Stadium, for his three-day misconduct hearing. Picture date: Tuesday May 28, 2024.
Image: Nick Adderley arriving for his three-day misconduct hearing. Picture date: Tuesday May 28, 2024. Pic: PA

Mr Adderley was dismissed without notice and placed on the police barred list by the panel, which said his "sustained brazen dishonesty and sustained lack of integrity will cause lasting harm to the police service".

The hearing was previously told Mr Adderley had lied on his CV and application form when applying for the job with the force by claiming he served in the Royal Navy for 10 years when he had served for only two - and had apparently included his service with the Sea Cadets from the age of 10 in his calculation.

He also said he had attended the prestigious Britannia Royal Naval College for four years, despite his application being rejected, and that he had been a military negotiator in Haiti, when he had never been to the country.

Mr Adderley claimed he had been a "commander or a lieutenant", even though he only achieved the rank of able seaman, and was further accused of failing to correct inaccurate newspaper articles about his naval career.

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Suspended chief constable found guilty

Falklands medal '110%' fake

Mr Adderley previously said the South Atlantic Medal (SAM) he had been pictured wearing since at least 2012 was given to him by his brother Richard when he emigrated to Australia in 2008.

The SAM was awarded to British military personnel and civilians for service in the Falklands conflict.

But the hearing was told the medal was deemed "110%" fake by a Ministry of Defence expert and the panel heard on Thursday Mr Adderley told a "pack of lies" about his brother's Falklands service.

John Beggs KC, representing the Office of the Northamptonshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner (OPFCC), said Richard Adderley did not embark for the Falklands until 2 July 1982, about three weeks after hostilities ceased.

The barrister said Mr Adderley's lies were an attempt to build "a military, naval legend that wasn't true" and that media reports of "stolen valour" were not exaggerated.

Mr Cowx said the panel would not give fully formed reasons for their decisions today and would prepare a written report, but agreed the allegations against Mr Adderley amounted to breaches of honesty and integrity and discreditable conduct.

Tom Herring, chair of the South Atlantic Medal Association, said Mr Adderley's actions were an insult to all veterans, telling Sky News: "It makes me feel bad and it's despicable of someone to do that."

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'Heartfelt apology'

Mr Adderley did not attend the final day of the misconduct hearing, but in a statement said the decision had brought to an end his 32-year career as a police officer, during which he had worked across Cheshire, Greater Manchester, Staffordshire and Northamptonshire.

He offered a "heartfelt apology" to his former colleagues who he said he had "failed" in his ambition to lead by example and "to uphold the highest standards of professionalism and integrity".

"One of the most painful aspects of this case is the hurt that I have caused to veterans of the armed forces. This has been compounded, as I come from a very proud family of veterans," he said.

"To those veterans I have offended, I apologise unreservedly."

Read more from Sky News:
Hackers 'publish stolen blood test data'
British tourist stabbed to death outside Spanish nightclub

Mr Adderley has 10 days to appeal against the decision.

In a statement, the Northamptonshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Danielle Stone said: "This case has put Northamptonshire Police in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons.

"We now need to set out to restore a reputation for honesty and integrity, which are fundamental values."

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Jay Slater: Friend says Tenerife teen could be in 'severe danger' as search continues - The Independent

Jay Slater’s mother makes desperate plea in search for teenager missing in Tenerife

Jay Slater‘s friend fears he is in “severe danger” in Tenerife as she criticised Spanish police’s search for the missing British teenager.

Jay Slater, 19, from Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire, was last heard from on Monday morning when he called his friend, Lucy Law.

He was attempting to take an 11 hours of walk back to his accommodation after missing a bus.

Recalling their final phone call, Ms Law described his disappearance as “suspicious and weird” and said he was lost, thirsty and only had 1 per cent battery on his phone.

She told Sky News that he had “cut his leg on a cactus and had no idea where he was”.

Speaking to The Sun, she said her friend “wasn’t stupid” and added: “There’s something weird going on. It is suspicious. In two days you’re telling me someone’s not seen him. There’s a restaurant 10 minutes away that he would have seen or walked past.”

Mr Slater was last seen wearing a white T-shirt with shorts and trainers, and his phone shows his last location as the Rural de Teno park, an area popular with hikers.

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Local says Jay Slater seen on his own

A Tenerife local Araceli, who works in the business next to the rental property where Jay Slater was last seen, told the Mirror stated: “I never saw the missing boy, but I know people saw him walking on his own. I saw the two British men who stayed here. They came in for cafe con leche a couple of times. One was aged about 40. The other one was slightly younger.

“The police have spoken to them both [the British men]. They arrived on Saturday and were due to stay until Monday, but they left on Tuesday.”

Asked if they had to remain to be interviewed by the police, she responded: “I don’t know.”

(REUTERS)
Barney Davis21 June 2024 08:00
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Jay Slater’s stepfather questions ‘why would he walk eight hours?’

Jay Slater’s stepfather Andy Watson has thrown doubt on the suggestion the teenager would have attempted to walk several hours back to his accommodation.

Speaking to MailOnline, he said: “He has me run him down to the hairdressers, 200 yards away - why would he walk eight hours?

“Who lives in the mountains? It would be wrong to speculate, but everyone has their own impression in their head. I wouldn’t have gone off with two people I didn’t know. But he’s 19, he’s impressionable, isn’t he? If someone said there’s more drink at our house, he’s going to go.”

Tara Cobham21 June 2024 07:00
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Mapped: Jay Slater’s last known movements before disappearance

(PA Wire)
Tara Cobham21 June 2024 06:00
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Recap: British teenager missing in Tenerife after telling friends he was lost and his phone was on 1%

A young British man has been reported missing while on holiday with his friends in Tenerife.

Jay Slater, 19, from Oswaldtwistle in Lancashire, was last heard from at around 8am GMT on Monday.

The Foreign Office confirmed it is supporting the family of a British man who has been reported missing in Spain.

Matt Mathers reports:

Tara Cobham21 June 2024 05:00
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Community members and friends gather at church for missing teen

Community members and friends of missing teenager Jay Slater gathered at a church in his hometown as the search continued.

Friends, family members, and people from the local community arrived at the West End Methodist Church in Oswaldtwistle, where Mr Slater lived, to show their support for the search and pray for his return.

The friends of the British teen tied blue ribbons to mark a service of hope and left messages.

A friend of Mr Slater who attended the church event told Sky News that he is the “life and soul of the party”. “Everywhere you see him he’s just constantly got a smile on his face. He’s always just a happy chap.”

“He’s just one of a kind really,” they added.

Another friend said they are at a loss for words and can’t seem to understand what and why has this happened to him.

“We feel like we can’t do anything about it because we’re over here and he’s over there. If we could get a flight tomorrow we would do,” the friend said.

Shweta Sharma21 June 2024 04:06
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In pictures: Desperate search for missing 19-year-old continues in Tenerife

Police officers search for a young British man in the Masca ravine on the island of Tenerife in Spain on Wednesday
Police officers search for a young British man in the Masca ravine on the island of Tenerife in Spain on Wednesday (REUTERS)
Police officers search for a missing British youth in the Masca ravine on the island of Tenerife in Spain on Thursday
Police officers search for a missing British youth in the Masca ravine on the island of Tenerife in Spain on Thursday (REUTERS)
A dog participates in the search of a young British man in the Masca ravine on the island of Tenerife
A dog participates in the search of a young British man in the Masca ravine on the island of Tenerife (REUTERS)
Tara Cobham21 June 2024 04:00
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Teenager’s friend calls for British police to help with search

Jay Slater’s friend has called for British police to be involved in the investigation, after the search continued for a fourth day with little sign of the teenager.

Speaking to the Mirror, Lucy Law said: “We need British police here. I just want to find my mate. He’s been missing three days. It’s not looking good now. We feel as though it’s down to us to find him and that we’re doing more than the police.

“The police here don’t speak English and don’t even have a translator after three days. I feel like they’re fobbing me off. They’re still asking me the same questions as when I first reported Jay missing.”

She added: “The two boys that he was last with have left the country. They need to be questioned by British police.”

Tara Cobham21 June 2024 03:00
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Fundraiser launched to help with search for missing Jay Slater hits more than £20,000

A fundraiser launched to help with the search for missing Jay Slater has now reached more than £20,000.

The GoFundMe page was set up on Thursday by one of the friends he travelled to Tenerife with.

Tara Cobham21 June 2024 02:00
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Watch: Former head of missing persons unit gives insight into search to find Jay Slater

Jay Slater's mother makes desperate plea in search for teen missing in Tenerife
Tara Cobham21 June 2024 01:00
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Mother of British teen missing in Tenerife says searching for son ‘horrendous’

The mother of a British teenager who has gone missing during a holiday in Tenerife said having to search for her son has been “horrendous”.

Jay Slater, 19, from Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire, was last heard from on Monday morning as he told a friend he planned to walk back to his accommodation after missing a bus, a journey expected to take around 11 hours on foot.

Mr Slater’s mother, Debbie Duncan, flew to Tenerife in Spain’s Canary Islands on Tuesday morning to search for him.

Sam Hall has the full story:

Tara Cobham21 June 2024 00:00

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NHS cyber attack: Sensitive data stolen from blood test provider by criminal group 'published online' - Sky News

Sensitive data stolen from an NHS provider in a cyber attack has apparently been published online.

NHS England says a criminal group claims it has released patient information hacked from Synnovis, which provides pathology services on blood tests.

Synnovis, which provides services primarily in southeast London, was the victim of a ransomware attack, understood to be carried out by Russian group Qilin, on 3 June.

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In a statement on Friday morning, NHS England said: "NHS England has been made aware that the cyber criminal group published data last night which they are claiming belongs to Synnovis and was stolen as part of this attack.

"We understand that people may be concerned by this and we are continuing to work with Synnovis, the National Cyber Security Centre and other partners to determine the content of the published files as quickly as possible.

"This includes whether it is data extracted from the Synnovis system, and if so whether it relates to NHS patients.

"As more information becomes available through Synnovis' full investigation, the NHS will continue to update patients and the public."

The cyber criminal group shared almost 400GB of data - including patient names, dates of birth, NHS numbers and descriptions of blood tests - on their darknet site and Telegram channel, the BBC said.

Spreadsheets containing financial arrangements between hospitals and GP services and Synnovis were also published, the BBC reported.

Synnovis said in a statement on Friday morning: "We know how worrying this development may be for many people. We are taking it very seriously and an analysis of this data is already under way."

More than 320 planned operations and 1,294 outpatient appointments were postponed at King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust between 10 and 16 June, the second week after the attack.

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Since the first week after the attack (3 to 9 June), the number of rearranged planned operations has gone down by 494, but a further 394 outpatient appointments have been missed.

So far, the data theft has led to more than 1,100 planned operations and 2,100 outpatient appointments to be postponed, according to NHS England London figures.

Urgent and emergency services have remained available as usual.

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