Monday, June 1

Author: Sumon Admin

Virgin Atlantic to cut 1,150 jobs
Featured, United Kingdom

Virgin Atlantic to cut 1,150 jobs

    Virgin Atlantic warned it was still fighting for survival on Friday as it announced plans to cut more than 1,000 jobs following the successful completion of its £1.2bn private sector rescue deal. Shai Weiss, chief executive, told the Financial Times that the airline was absolutely still in a battle to secure its future as the entire aviation industry reels from the impact of Covid-19. Anyone operating in aviation and tourism around the world is still fighting for survival, Mr Weiss said as he urged the UK and US to work together to reopen the transatlantic market for passenger flights. The airline said it would shed 1,150 jobs across all parts of its business on top of the 3,150 job cuts announced in May, leaving it with a little over half of the 10,000 staff it ha...
Costa reveals 1,650 jobs at risk
Featured, United Kingdom

Costa reveals 1,650 jobs at risk

    Cafe chain Costa has said 1,650 staff are at risk of redundancy as it looks to cut costs amid continued uncertainty over when trade will fully recover following the pandemic. It told staff on Thursday that it has started consultations which could impact more than a 10th of roles. The move comes a week after rival Pret A Manger revealed it was slashing 2,800 roles as part of a restructure of its UK business. Costa closed nearly all of its 2,700 UK stores for six weeks during the pandemic but had now reopened around 2,400 sites. The Coca Cola-owned chain said trade is returning after being boosted by the Government's VAT reduction on food and non-alcoholic drinks and the recent Eat Out to Help Out scheme. However, it said the proposed job cuts had been driven by hig...
Another U-turn over easing local lockdowns in England
Featured, United Kingdom

Another U-turn over easing local lockdowns in England

    COVID-19 restrictions will stay in force in Bolton and Trafford - after another U-turn by the government which was due to lift local lockdowns but faced demands from councils to keep them in place. Both local councils cited increases in coronavirus infections, with the controlling Labour group on Trafford Council asking for restrictions to remain in place for another week or two in the interests of public safety. Bolton Council said "a sudden and unforeseeable rise" in COVID-19 cases needed to be taken seriously. Announcing that the existing lockdowns would continue, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said infection rates had increased by "more than three times in Bolton in under a week, and double in Trafford since the last review". It means residents in Bolton and Tr...
Thousands return to school
Featured, United Kingdom

Thousands return to school

    Portugal is set to be added back on to the UK's quarantine list amid a rise in coronavirus cases. Brits considering jetting off to the holiday destination have been urged to check Foreign Office travel advice and consider that the rules could change while they are on holiday. There were 21.1 coronavirus cases per 100,000 people in Portugal in the seven days to August 30. A seven-day rate of 20 is a threshold above which the UK Government considers triggering quarantine conditions. It comes as forty per cent of schools are expected to welcome back students for the start of the autumn term today, despite concerns being raised about their ability to reopen safely. It will be the first time many pupils in England have stepped into a classroom since March. Meanwhile, B...
PM under fire over U-turns
Featured, United Kingdom

PM under fire over U-turns

    The Government is being urged to push back next year's A-Level and GCSE exams in order to cope with the impact of the coronavirus crisis on pupils. Labour's shadow education secretary Kate Green said pupils entering Year 11 and 13 who have lost up to six months of teaching time face "a mountain to climb" unless the timetable is changed. It comes as diners across England make the most of the Eat Out to Help Out scheme, on the final day that the Government is funding the initiative. Chancellor Rishi Sunak urged people to "maintain the momentum" and continue supporting local restaurants, pubs and cafes. Meanwhile, police have vowed to "do everything within our power" to prosecute the organisers of illegal raves, after the bank holiday weekend saw thousands descend on ...
Tories urge PM to avoid tax rises
Featured, United Kingdom

Tories urge PM to avoid tax rises

    Boris Johnson has been urged by Tory MPs to resist attempts by the Treasury to raise taxes, after a minister refused to rule out hikes in the next Budget. Reports emerged on Sunday that Rishi Sunak, the Chancellor, was considering a £20 billion tax increase in the autumn to deal with the cost of the coronavirus crisis. Tax rises could include corporation tax and capital gains tax, while pension tax relief could be cut, according to newspaper reports. Marcus Fysh, a Tory backbencher, said tax increases would be the wrong response to the coronavirus crisis. Boris Johnson is right to resist them if the Sunday papers have the story right, he said. We need to help the economy not strangle it. These mixed messages are in themselves damaging and must stop. John Redwood,...
UK winter could see 85,000 deaths
Featured, United Kingdom

UK winter could see 85,000 deaths

    As many as 85,000 people could die in the UK in a second wave of coronavirus this winter, a leaked scientific paper prepared for the government has suggested. The paper by the prime minister’s Scientific Advisory Group on Emergencies (Sage), seen by BBC2’s Newsnight, said that some lockdown restrictions may have to be reintroduced and kept in place until March 2021, though it added that schools are likely to remain open. The document stressed that it was setting out a worst-case scenario and not a prediction of what is likely to happen and said that there was “a wide range of uncertainty” about the actual outcome. It was prepared to help the NHS and local authorities plan services such as mortuaries and burials to ensure they are not overwhelmed in the months ahead...
Japan’s PM resigns due to ill health
Asia, Featured

Japan’s PM resigns due to ill health

    Mr Abe has had ulcerative colitis for years - a long-term condition where the bowel becomes inflamed - and said his health had declined around the middle of last month. Two recent hospital visits within a week fanned questions on whether he could stay in the job until the end of his term as ruling party leader, and hence, premier, in September 2021. In a news conference the 65-year-old PM said: I cannot be prime minister if I cannot make the best decisions for the people. I have decided to step down from my post. It is gut-wrenching to have to leave my job before accomplishing my goals. His departure marks the end of an unusual era of stability that saw the Japanese leader strike up strong ties with President Donald Trump even as Mr Abe's ultra-nationalism riled th...
Matt Hancock defends £13-a-day plan
Featured, United Kingdom

Matt Hancock defends £13-a-day plan

    Matt Hancock today launched a furious defence of his plan to pay people on low incomes £13 a day to self-isolate as critics said the payments would not be enough to stop people going to work. From September 1 people who receive Universal Credit or Working Tax Credit who are required to self-isolate, who are unable to work from home and who are in Covid-19 hotspots will benefit from the new payment scheme. Eligible people who test positive for the virus will receive £130 for their 10-day period of self-isolation while other members of their household, who under current rules must isolate for 14 days, will get £182. The scheme will initially be trialled in Blackburn with Darwen, Pendle and Oldham - areas which are currently subject to local lockdown measures. The Go...
New Zealand mosque gunman will not speak in his defence
ENGLISH, Featured

New Zealand mosque gunman will not speak in his defence

    New Zealand mosque gunman Brenton Harrison Tarrant has told a judge he will not speak in his defence at his sentencing hearing for the mass shooting of worshippers in Christchurch. Tarrant had the opportunity to speak on the final day of a hearing which has seen 90 survivors and family members talk about the pain of the March 2019 attacks at two mosques in the city, which left 51 people dead. The killer had earlier sacked his legal team but was appointed a standby lawyer at the high court in Christchurch. Philip Hall, the standby counsel, told judge Justice Cameron Mander that he would make a brief statement on Tarrant’s behalf. Tarrant confirmed to Justice Mander that he did not wish to speak. The 29-year-old Australian has pleaded guilty to murder, attempted mur...