Monday, June 1

Author: Sumon Admin

No 10 rubbishes claim PM will quit in 6 months
Featured, United Kingdom

No 10 rubbishes claim PM will quit in 6 months

    Downing Street has dismissed as “utter nonsense” claims that Boris Johnson is set to quit within six months due to continued ill-health from Covid-19. No.10 sources ridiculed a report by The Times diary column that quoted Dominic Cummings’ father-in-law as suggesting that the prime minister was ready to step down because of the lingering effects of contracting the virus earlier this year. The paper cited journalist Anna Silverman, who had last week visited Chillingham Castle in Northumberland, which is home to Sir Humphry Wakefield, father of Cummings’ wife Mary. Sir Humphry is said to have “merrily informed her that Boris Johnson is still struggling badly with having had Covid-19 (as if being a new father and needing to babysit Gavin Williamson isn’t tiring enough...
Global tourism lost £245bn in five months due to pandemic
Featured, United Nation

Global tourism lost £245bn in five months due to pandemic

    The tourism global industry has been devastated by the coronavirus pandemic, with $320 billion lost in exports in the first five months of the year and more than 120 million jobs at risk, the U.N. chief said Tuesday. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a policy briefing and video address that tourism is the third-largest export sector of the global economy, behind fuels and chemicals, and in 2019 it accounted for 7% of global trade. It employs one in every 10 people on Earth and provides livelihoods to hundreds of millions more, he said. In addition to boosting economies, it allows people to experience some of the world’s cultural and natural riches and brings people closer to each other, highlighting our common humanity, he said. But the U.N. chief said th...
Seventeen teachers at school contract COVID-19
Featured, United Kingdom

Seventeen teachers at school contract COVID-19

    A school in Scotland remains closed after 22 people tested positive for coronavirus. Kingspark School in Dundee was closed last Wednesday and pupils and staff were asked to self-isolate for 14 days. NHS Tayside said 17 staff and two pupils at the special needs school had tested positive for COVID-19, as well as three community contacts. Restrictions have been placed on care homes in Tayside to stop the spread of coronavirus in the area. The Kingspark outbreak has spread to two other schools in Dundee. A primary two class at St Peter and Paul’s School must self-isolate until 2 September after a positive test. And children who went to the Happy Times out-of-school club at Downfield Primary School have also been asked to quarantine after someone tested positive. Dr ...
How aviation industry’s crisis is hitting towns across UK
Featured, United Kingdom

How aviation industry’s crisis is hitting towns across UK

    Masked-up and carrying placards and banners, 40 or so demonstrators walk out of a pedestrianised shopping street and make their way to the office of a newly elected Conservative MP, above a Chinese restaurant. Once there, they join in sporadic chants of No justice, no peace. It’s a drizzly, near-silent lunchtime in the Welsh town of Bridgend, a place that has played its own small role in Britain’s recent political convulsions, voting for Brexit and, in 2019, returning its first Tory to Westminster since 1983. Thanks to plans that were announced in April 2019, Ford will shut its local car-engine works next month, with the loss of nearly 1,700 jobs. Now, the sudden effects of Covid-19 on the local aerospace industry are only adding to the pain. The recession and the p...
Plans for 2nd wave and no-deal
Featured, United Kingdom

Plans for 2nd wave and no-deal

    The government have drawn up battle plans for the possibility of being hit with a second wave of coronavirus and a No-Deal Brexit simultaneously, it has been claimed. Leaked documents warn of a potential social care crisis from councils going bankrupt and the army being drafted in to prevent public disorder. The revelation puts mounting pressure on ministers to negotiate a deal with Brussels to avoid a double-header in December, when it is predicted the country could be hit by a second spike. The classified file, seen by The Sun, appears to be in the form of powerpoint slides and is titled 'Preliminary set of Reasonable Worst Case Scenario Planning Assumptions to support civil contingencies planning for the end of the Transition Period'. It was created by the Cabi...
‘Chaos’ as Tower Bridge stuck open
Featured, London

‘Chaos’ as Tower Bridge stuck open

    Tower Bridge was stuck open for over an hour because of a mechanical fault, causing central London traffic to be gridlocked. The historic bridge’s two arms were stuck at different angles after opening to allow ships to pass underneath on the River Thames on Saturday evening, with witnesses saying they failed to come down at the same time. One Twitter user said: So have been stood under a raised tower bridge for 15 mins now, hearing rumours it’s stuck. Another Twitter user posted a video of the incident, describing the electro-hydraulic system’s failure of the combined bascule and suspension bridge as a once in a lifetime moment. Shortly after 5pm, City of London police tweeted to say the bridge was closed to pedestrians and traffic due a mechanical fault. Mechanic...
Second national lockdown warning as R rate rises
Featured, United Kingdom

Second national lockdown warning as R rate rises

    A second national lockdown could be imposed, senior Government advisers have warned, as the upper limit of the R rate pushed over one for the first time since restrictions were lifted. The Prime Minister effectively ruled out another nationwide shutdown, stating that the option was now akin to a nuclear deterrent, in an interview with The Telegraph last month. However, on Friday the Sage advisory group said Britain’s reproduction number was now between 0.9 and 1.1, with senior sources warning “more nationwide measures” may be needed. Manchester, the country’s third largest city, has already faced a local lockdown, while Birmingham, the second biggest, is on the brink of restrictions after cases rose, leading to fears it could be only a matter of time before further...
UK faces largest budget black hole since 1960s
Featured, United Kingdom

UK faces largest budget black hole since 1960s

    Britain’s public debt has burst through the £2tn ($2.65tn) mark for the first time, according to official figures. New data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on Friday shows public debt at the end of July was bigger than the size of the entire UK economy for the first time in more than half a century. Analysts said UK government borrowing this year was on track to hit its highest share of GDP since the Second World War, despite coming in lower than expected in recent months. The government has ramped up spending on support for firms, workers, and public services to alleviate the devastating economic damage of the coronavirus and lockdown measures this year. Several business loan programmes, the furlough scheme, grants for the self-employed, a temporary...
Surge in GCSE top grades
Featured, United Kingdom

Surge in GCSE top grades

    The proportion of GCSE entries awarded top grades has surged to a record high after a U-turn meant results could be based on teachers’ estimated grades . Hundreds of thousands of youngsters received their GCSE results on Thursday following major changes but around 200,000 Btec pupils will not get their final results following a last-minute review of grades. More than one in four (25.9 per cent) GCSE entries in England scored one of the three top grades this year, up from just over a fifth (20.7 per cent) last summer, figures from exams regulator Ofqual show. The percentage of exams graded level 9 the top mark has increased by 40 per cent from 4.5 per cent last year to 6.3 per cent this year. It comes after GCSE and A-level students in England, Wales and Northern I...
High street job losses hit 100,000 during the pandemic
Featured, United Kingdom

High street job losses hit 100,000 during the pandemic

    Pressure is mounting on the Government to step in to save the retail sector after 7,000 redundancies at Marks & Spencer took the toll of high street jobs lost since the pandemic to more than 100,000. Pizza Express also announced 1,100 job losses tonight, with plans to permanently close 73 restaurants. And The Centre for Retail Research has warned that job losses across the sector could hit 235,704 this year, with more than 20,600 store closures. Centre director Prof Joshua Bamfield said: There are going to be a lot more job losses full stop, and many of them will be in the retail sector. Writing in the Mirror, Paddy Lillis, General Secretary of shopworkers’ union USDAW, said: Retail is an important feature of our towns and cities, it employs three million peop...