Tuesday, June 2

Author: Sumon Admin

March budget may be delayed after Javid resignation
Featured, United Kingdom

March budget may be delayed after Javid resignation

    The government is likely to delay next month’s budget in the wake of Sajid Javid’s resignation, according to the transport secretary. Richmond (Yorkshire) MP Rishi Sunak was promoted to chancellor in Thursday’s cabinet reshuffle, after Javid refused to sack all of his special advisers as demanded by Boris Johnson. Sunak will now handle the country’s finances, but Downing Street staffing arrangements have been altered so there is now a combined staff between Number 10 and Number 11. Transport secretary Grant Shapps told Sky News this morning that the 11 March budget would likely be delayed for Sunak to get better acquainted with the new role. “I know the budget plans are well advanced but I also know that Rishi Sunak, the new chancellor, may want time,” he said. “...
Schools told to keep doors open
Featured, United Kingdom

Schools told to keep doors open

    Schools and nurseries do not need to close or send pupils home in the event of contact with someone suspected of having the coronavirus, according to new guidelines to be issued to schools across the UK this week. In the face of confusion over what the correct response should be, Public Health England and the Department for Education are to issue headteachers and childcare providers with fresh guidance on Monday . Some schools in Brighton and Hove have told parents they can choose to keep their children off school as authorised absences, after five people from the area were diagnosed with the virus, also known as Covid-19. But a department spokeswoman said: We are aware that some schools have said that parents can keep their children at home this is not the advice....
China is using 3,000-year-old medicine on patients
Asia, Featured

China is using 3,000-year-old medicine on patients

    China is administering its centuries-old traditional medicine on patients affected by the coronavirus disease, a top health official said. Treatment in Wuhan hospitals combine Traditional Chinese Medicine, popularly known as TCM, and western medicines, said Wang Hesheng, the new health commission head in Hubei, the province at the center of the virus outbreak. He said TCM was applied on more than half of confirmed cases in Hubei. “Our efforts have shown some good result,” Wang said at a press conference on Saturday, without elaborating. Top TCM experts have been sent to Hubei for “research and treatment,” he said. No drugs or preventives have yet been approved against the virus, which has already claimed the lives of 1,523 people in China and affected about 66,500 ...
Harry and Meghan decline invitation to Duke’s birthday
Canada, Featured, United Kingdom

Harry and Meghan decline invitation to Duke’s birthday

    Prince Harry and the Duchess of Sussex don't appear to be planning a visit to the UK any time soon. The couple, who announced they were stepping down as senior members of the Royal Family in January, have reportedly let go 15 members of their UK staff and closed their Buckingham Palace office. Now an expert has claimed Harry and Meghan also won’t be attending Prince Andrew’s 60th birthday celebrations later this month. UK media correspondent Neil Sean told Fox News the Queen has planned “a small family dinner” for her son. Plans for the Duke of York’s birthday have reportedly been scaled down since he stepped back from public duties late last year following the scandal surrounding his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. “A mole [told] me, ‘It’s an open secret they...
UK holding highly secret trade talks
Featured, United Kingdom

UK holding highly secret trade talks

    UK negotiators have held trade talks with at least one unknown country in total secrecy, it has been claimed. The news emerged during a tribunal in central London, where campaign group Global Justice now is challenging the information watchdog to order ministers to publish data about government trade operations. During the hearing, government lawyers disclosed that some preliminary trade talks have not been made public as they were deemed too sensitive for public consumption, director Nick Dearden and Global Justice Now’s legal team have said. It comes amid widespread concern that public services, such as the NHS and the BBC, and consumer standards could be on the table. Dearden told HuffPost UK: The reason transparency is important is that trade deals today go mu...
PM cancels US trip after Trump spat
Featured, United Kingdom

PM cancels US trip after Trump spat

    A British man left sleeping on foreign streets after being locked out of the UK by the Home Office has finally been allowed to return but been charged £100 to replace the passport they confiscated. Fatush Lala, 33, has been living rough in Brussels for more than three weeks after UK authorities voided his citizenship and blocked his passport while he was abroad on holiday with his family. But hours after The Independent reported on Mr Lala's plight he received a phonecall from officials saying he could come back. I went to the British embassy and they printed out the passport for me. But first I had to pay a fee of £100 for it, said Mr Lala, who has lived in Britain since he was 14 and naturalised. The British national had previously gone to the UK embassy in the ...
Coronavirus could spread quickly on tube
Featured, London

Coronavirus could spread quickly on tube

    Doctors have warned the London Underground could be a hotbed for the spread of the highly-contagious coronavirus. There have been nine confirmed coronavirus cases in the UK confirmed so far, as British hospitals brace themselves for more. The Tube is used by an estimated 2 million people a day, and many more also use rail networks and buses in and around the bustling capital. An estimated 9 million people live in London, but the city's population swells to more than 10 million on an average day - taking into account commuters into the capital for work, tourists and visitors. The extensive transport network and huge population means tracking down potentially infected people is next to impossible to do with any urgency. The warning for Tube riders comes after a Lon...
Sunak in, Javid out in reshuffle shock
Featured, United Kingdom

Sunak in, Javid out in reshuffle shock

    Rishi Sunak has been appointed as Chancellor after Sajid Javid resigned over rows with Boris Johnson's team - including top aide Dominic Cummings. He was set to keep his job - but he quit as Chancellor when Number 10 ordered him to sack his team of advisors, a source close to the former minister said. In a shock move just 27 days before the Budget, Mr Javid announced "no self-respecting minister" could accept the condition being imposed. It is thought to be the first time a Chancellor has resigned in protest for 31 years after Nigel Lawson quit under Margaret Thatcher in 1989. His resignation makes Mr Javid the shortest-serving Chancellor for 50 years - and the last one only left the job because he died. Sunak is a relative newcomer to politics having been electe...
Harry and Meghan cosying up to banks makes me queasy
Featured, United Kingdom

Harry and Meghan cosying up to banks makes me queasy

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have every right to earn their keep if they are going to become financially independent. They can't be expected to live on air. In fact, if the past is any guide, they are going to need an awful lot more than air to get by, since they are both used to the good things in life though Meghan's enjoyment of them is obviously more recent. But if they intend to go it alone, how can they earn the sizeable sums of money they will need to sustain what is, by anyone's measure, a highly enviable standard of living? Is it even possible for them to enrich themselves without causing embarrassment, and even damage, to the Royal Family, to which they will inevitably remain connected in people's minds whatever separate furrow they plough? Although it...
UK falls foul of EU days after Brexit
Featured, United Kingdom

UK falls foul of EU days after Brexit

    Less than two weeks after leaving the European Union, the U.K. is already back in trouble with the bloc. While Brexit day was meant to enable Britain to finally throw off the shackles of the Brussels bureaucracy, the U.K. government now finds itself having to answer questions over an obscure transport tax that the EU doesn’t like. It’s a dispute that has the potential to end up in court. It’s a stark reminder that although the country technically ended its 47-year membership of the EU on Jan. 31, a transition period that extends throughout 2020 means it’s still bound by the bloc’s rules and jurisdiction. While Britain doesn’t get a say in any decisions or policy making, EU law applies in full. A levy that the U.K. introduced for heavy goods vehicles in 2014 discrim...