Senin, 29 April 2024

Lampedusa aid workers condemn UK’s Rwanda plan after Cleverly visit - The Guardian

Aid workers on the Italian island of Lampedusa, which is one of Europe’s busiest landing points for asylum seekers, have condemned Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda plan as they prepare for another busy summer of bedraggled arrivals and deaths at sea.

They have called on European governments to open more safe routes to claim refuge if they wish to “stop the boats”.

The comments follow a flying visit to Lampedusa on Wednesday by James Cleverly, the home secretary, on the day that the prime minister’s Rwanda deportation bill received royal assent.

Last year the dusty, rocky island, with a population of about 6,000, saw an estimated 110,000 arrivals, while there were 3,105 deaths across the Mediterranean.

In the main harbour, a flotilla of rescue boats run by charities and the Italian coastguard are being readied for another summer of crossings of the treacherous 118-mile stretch from Tunisia. Toddlers’ lifejackets and body bags for drowned victims are being counted out and placed on the decks.

Austin Cooper, 33, a mediator and care coordinator for the rescue charity Sea Watch who has been preparing a vessel for the summer, questioned Cleverly’s motivation for the short visit.

“It’s a strange place to come for a photo opportunity on the day your flagship UK policy gets signed into law. Maybe Cleverly wanted to go unnoticed – it’s not his initiative, and he probably knows it’s bullshit anyway. Of course the Rwanda plan won’t affect what we do here. If anything it is galvanising,” he said.

James Cleverly in Lampedusa

Cooper, who is UK-born and of Irish origin, said there had been a drop in the number of arrivals from Tunisia this calendar year but an increase in the number of deaths.

“There’s so many factors involved in why and how people make difficult journeys at sea, and what’s stopping them,” he said. “In the last few months the wind and waves have made it challenging. It could be that there are simply not enough boats being made to take the crossing. Most of the boats we find are so unseaworthy that it’s something of a miracle people arrive safely in Lampedusa at all.

“It’s also possible that the EU’s policy of pumping money, boats and training into authoritarian governments across north Africa to break up migratory routes and stop people moving is really working.”

Another worker for an international NGO, who asked not to be named, said Cleverly had misunderstood the island’s relationship with migrants.

“The history of Lampedusa is about migration. We are migrants, we welcome migrants. We do not think it is right or fair to send them to Africa,” they said.

Cleverly flew into the island by helicopter for a two-and-a-half-hour tour of a police boat and the empty detention facilities used to hold new arrivals.

His message was simple: Italy, like the UK, is a sought-after destination by migrants, and both governments are coming up with innovative policies to stop the boats.

Graffiti that translates as ‘protect people, not borders’ in the port of Lampedusa.

Symbols of migration are scattered across the island. Cleverly saw the smashed remains of migrant boats that had made it, piled in yards or left to rust in ports. Overlooking the island’s main marina, a mural entitled Rise Up Together shows two embracing women, a Lampedusa native and a newly arrived migrant wearing a lifejacket.

Lampedusa has its numbers swollen in the summer when those seeking to escape to Europe are joined by holidaymakers from the Italian mainland and Sicily. But with increased focus on the island as an entry point for migrants, the Italian government tightened security during the Covid crisis and tried to make migrants invisible, charity staff said.

Emma Conti, a humanitarian worker with the aid organisation Mediterranean Hope, which was set up by Protestant churches in Italy, said migrants used to mingle with local people.

“Islanders and migrants used to mix together. In Lampedusa now, one of the few places that they might meet is in the cemetery when burying their dead,” she said.

The treatment of immigrants across Europe was getting harsher, but the numbers arriving continued to rise because there were not enough safe and legal routes to enter Europe, Conti said.

“What we are seeing is the consequences of migratory policies. These are policies of the Italian governments, but also across Europe. If we wish to stop people arriving in boats, we have to offer them other routes. Without that, they will continue to come and we will continue to see tragedies.”

She added: “Governments condemn deaths at sea but are not doing enough to prevent them.”

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2024-04-29 05:00:00Z
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Humza Yousaf latest updates: Scotland's first minister considers quitting - BBC

Humza Yousaf needs the support of at least one member of the opposition at Holyrood to survive a vote of confidence in his leadership which could come as soon as Wednesday.

The Conservatives, Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the Greens all say they will vote against him.

That leaves Ash Regan, the sole MSP from Mr Salmond's Alba Party, as a possibly ally. But senior SNP sources have told the BBC there is zero chance of a deal with Alba.

If nothing changes, that leaves the first minister facing a grim choice — a humiliating defeat in a vote of no confidence at Holyrood, or resignation before it comes to that.

Last night a senior source close to Yousaf said no decision had yet been taken but resignation was an option on the table, telling BBC News the “clock has been ticking ever downwards.”

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2024-04-29 06:36:07Z
CBMiNGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL2xpdmUvdWstc2NvdGxhbmQtNjg5MTgzNDjSAQA

Murder probe LIVE as police uncover more human remains - Manchester Evening News

Police have given a huge update on a major murder probe launched after human remains were uncovered earlier this month.

Four different police cordons were put in place this weekend as part of the investigation, after body parts wrapped in cellophane were found at Kersal Dale by a passer-by.

A police cordon has been put in place at Blackleach Country Park in Walkden. Three other police scenes are in place in relation to the investigation today as the probe ramps up. These are Worsley Road, Winton, Linnyshaw Colliery Wood also in Salford and Mitchell Street in Bury.

READ MORE: Man in hospital with serious injuries in hospital after 'traumatic' incident in Whitefield

Greater Manchester Police have now revealed the victim is thought to be a Salford man, aged in his 60s, who was residing with the two suspects. It is thought he died in late March.

More body parts were found by divers in the the reservoir at the Blackleach Country Park, with further remains also uncovered by a horrified dog walker 'in a package' at Linnyshaw Colliery Wood. It is believed they both belong to the same victim.

Although formal ID has not yet taken place, his family have been informed of the discovery and are currently being supported by specialist officers. It is expected identification will take place within the next week.

Two men, aged 42 and 68, were arrested earlier this week following the discovery of the human remains at the nature reserve in Salford on April 4. It came after a passer-by found the lower back, buttocks, and a thigh of a man wrapped in cellophane, near a footpath.

Follow our live blog below for the latest updates as we get them.

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2024-04-29 06:30:31Z
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Minggu, 28 April 2024

Depressed and anxious face losing sickness benefits - The Times

Mel Stride, the work and pensions secretary, said that he did not have “preconceived opinion” about which conditions would be affected
Mel Stride, the work and pensions secretary, said that he did not have “preconceived opinion” about which conditions would be affected
RACHEL ADAMS FOR THE TIMES

Millions of people on disability benefits face “the biggest welfare reforms in a generation” under which those with depression and anxiety could lose cash payments.

Sickness benefit payments should cease for “many, many people” with the conditions, ministers will argue, instead proposing “meaningful support” such as talking therapies and social care packages.

Mel Stride, the work and pensions secretary, said the welfare system should not be paying people to deal with the ordinary difficulties of life. He is preparing to publish plans that would overhaul benefits paid to millions of people and are likely to stop regular payments for a variety of mental health problems and other conditions.

Long-term illness puts economic inactivity at highest since 1990s

Welfare reform will be used as a

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2024-04-28 21:15:24Z
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Diplomatic row erupts as Britain rejects bid by Ireland to return migrants to UK - The Independent

A diplomatic row has erupted between the UK government and Ireland after Rishi Sunak’s administration warned any bid by the Republic to return asylum seekers to Britain would be rejected.

Mr Sunak on Saturday said that claims the Rwanda plan is responsible for an influx of migrants into Ireland show its deterrent effect is working.

Irish premier Simon Harris hit back on Sunday, saying Ireland would not “provide a loophole for anybody else’s migration challenges” and asking his justice minister to bring forward emergency legislation to allow asylum seekers to be sent back to the UK.

A government source has now said any attempts to return the asylum seekers to Britain would amount to a grave double standard given that the UK is not allowed to send migrants who cross the English Channel back to France.

“We won’t accept any asylum returns from the European Union via Ireland until the EU accepts that we can send them back to France,” the source said. “We are fully focused on operationalising our Rwanda scheme and will continue working with the French to stop the boats from crossing the Channel.”

Irish premier Simon Harris says Ireland won’t ‘provide a loophole for anybody else’s migration challenges’ (Brian Lawless/PA)

The taoiseach said earlier this week that Mr Sunak’s plan to deport some asylum seekers to Rwanda has caused an uptick in the number of asylum seekers crossing from Northern Ireland into the Republic.

In response, a spokesperson for Mr Harris said the Irish PM asked his justice minister, Helen McEntee, “to bring proposals to cabinet next week to amend existing law regarding the designation of safe ‘third countries’ and allowing the return of inadmissible international protection applicants to the UK”.

Ms McEntee said she would be meeting with British home secretary James Cleverly on Monday to raise these issues.

The Conservatives’ plan to send asylum seekers to the east African nation received a fresh boost on Thursday after the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act was signed into law, which ensures the practice of sending migrants to Rwanda is legally sound.

Mr Sunak later claimed the first flights to Rwanda would take off within 10 to 12 weeks, more than two years after the bill was originally proposed by former prime minister Boris Johnson in April 2022.

Deputy Irish premier Micheal Martin subsequently claimed there had been an influx of asylum seekers crossing into Ireland across the land border with Northern Ireland because people were “fearful” of being deported to Rwanda.

He said asylum seekers were seeking “to get sanctuary here and within the European Union as opposed to the potential of being deported to Rwanda”.

A Downing Street spokesperson disputed these claims, saying it was “too early to jump to specific conclusions about the act”, referring to the Safety of Rwanda Act.

But Mr Sunak later claimed the alleged influx of migrants into Ireland was evidence that the Rwanda plan was working as a deterrent to migrants.

“What it shows, I think, is that the deterrent is already having an impact because people are worried about coming here and that demonstrates exactly what I’m saying,” he told Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips.

“If people come to our country illegally, but know that they won’t be able to stay, they’re much less likely to come, and that’s why the Rwanda scheme is so important.”

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2024-04-28 21:44:15Z
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Minister Chris Philp on Laura Kuenssberg as MP Dan Poulter defects to Labour - BBC

"OMG." That's what one SNP politician said to me when they realised First Minister Humza Yousaf had binned a planned public event on Friday morning, fuelling the guessing game about whether or not he'll quit.

In fact, when he popped up in his home city of Dundee in the "busy politician" outfit of hard hat and high-vis vest, he said he wouldn't quit - while also seeming to admit, rather astonishingly, that he had made a horlicks of his breakup with coalition partners the Greens.

"I've heard they're upset, I've heard their anger," he said. "And I can honestly say that was not the intention."

As our Scotland editor James Cook writes, Yousaf, who was cruelly tagged Humza "Useless" by the tabloids even before he became first minister, is in serious danger of being kicked out of office in a few days' time.

His old SNP leadership rival, Ash Regan, member of Alex Salmond's Alba Party, is likely to hold the casting vote when MSPs decide his future. It's not impossible that she backs him - for a political price. Yousaf might keep his job if he gets her vote, but a deal with Alba might mean he loses control of certain policies.

Copyright: PA MEDIA

There are no guarantees - and the chances of him being able to get the Greens back on side seem, right now, slim to none.

"It's hard to see him making it to next Thursday," one SNP insider said. "And if he did, it would all fall apart in a few weeks when on every vote, he is stuck between paying a high price to the Greens or selling his soul to Alex Salmond."

Click here to read more of Laura’s analysis.

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2024-04-28 10:42:53Z
CBMiNGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL2xpdmUvdWstcG9saXRpY3MtNjg5MDg2OTPSAQA

Second man dies after taking 'unusually strong batch' of heroin in North Devon - with two people still in hospital - Sky News

A second man has died after taking an "unusually strong batch" of heroin in North Devon, police have said.

The first man died as a result of taking the Class A drug on Friday and a second man, who had been admitted to hospital earlier, died on Saturday night.

Devon and Cornwall Police said his death is believed to be as a result of taking the same batch, which is thought to be a "form of heroin combined with another substance" which causes "more serious effects" than regular supplies.

A total of 10 people, including the man who died, have been treated in hospital. Two are still being treated.

Two men and two women arrested on suspicion of being involved in the supply of a controlled substance have been released on police bail pending further inquiries.

What was "locally thought to be an unusual batch of heroin" circulating in Westward Ho!, Bideford and Barnstaple became known to officers and partner agencies at 5pm on Friday, police said.

A major incident was declared, before being stood down on Saturday morning.

More from UK

"We believe the substance found on Friday has been contained," said Detective Superintendent Ben Davies.

He added: "While we believe there is no threat to the wider community, we continue to investigate the circumstances of the now two deaths as a result of taking this substance.

"We are continuing to carry out tests in order to ascertain what the substance is, but suspect it is a form of heroin combined with another substance which users will find causes more serious effects than heroin which they might usually use."

Health workers are working with local drug users to "safeguard them as much as possible", he said.

Users are urged to "exercise extreme caution", he added.

"Advice remains that if you feel you are suffering an adverse reaction or are in the company of someone in need of urgent medical attention, call 999 for appropriate care and help."

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2024-04-28 11:03:45Z
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