Monday, July 6

Featured

UK doesn’t want long Brexit delay
Featured, United Kingdom

UK doesn’t want long Brexit delay

    A long delay to Brexit would be unacceptable to a majority of the British public, according to an exclusive poll days before critical votes in the House of Commons. Some 52 per cent of people do not want a delay to last more than six months, the survey by BMG Research for The Independent indicated. The data flies in the face of extensions advocated in Brussels, by Remainers and even some Brexiteers. They have talked about pushing back the date of the UK’s departure for a year or more something supported by fewer than one in five, according to the survey. The poll also showed that just 17 per cent actually want any extension if Theresa May’s Brexit plan is again rejected as expected this week, with the two most popular alternatives a quick new in or out referendum, ...
More IS brides lose UK citizenship
Featured, United Kingdom

More IS brides lose UK citizenship

    Two more jihadi brides being held with their children in Syrian refugee camps have been stripped of their British citizenship, it has been reported. It comes as the row over Islamic State runaway Shamima Begum continues following the death of her three-week-old son. According to The Sunday Times, two women, who between them have five boys under the age of eight, had their UK nationality removed after marrying into a terror cell linked to the murder of western hostages. The Home Office said it did not comment on individual cases. A spokesman added: Any decisions to deprive individuals of their citizenship are based on all available evidence and not taken lightly. The paper quoted legal sources, naming the women as Reema Iqbal, 30, and her sister Zara, 28, whose pa...
World’s oldest Japanese women Kane Tanaka
Asia, Featured

World’s oldest Japanese women Kane Tanaka

    A 116-year-old woman from Japan has been officially recognised as the world's oldest living person by Guinness World Records. Kane Tanaka was honoured by the organisation in a ceremony at the nursing home where she lives in Fukuoka, a city in southwest Japan. Her family and the city's mayor also attended the celebration. Ms Tanaka was born on 2 January 1903. She married Hideo Tanaka in 1922, and they had five children. The 116-year-old enjoys playing board games and studying maths. The previous oldest living person was another Japanese woman, Chiyo Miyako, who died in July at the age of 117. Japanese people tend to exhibit longevity and dominate the oldest-person list. Although changing dietary habits mean obesity has been rising in the country, it is still re...
Jabev criticised as Shamima’s baby dies
Featured, United Kingdom

Jabev criticised as Shamima’s baby dies

    The home secretary is facing criticism after the baby son of Islamic State (IS) bride Shamima Begum died in Syria just weeks after the teenager was stripped of her British citizenship. Syrian Democratic Forces confirmed on Friday night that the boy, named Jarrah, had passed away two days after being taken to hospital with breathing difficulties. He was born in mid-February at the refugee camp where his 19-year-old mother has been staying, and had already been unwell in the weeks leading up to his death. But Shamima who has previously lost two children told Sky News last month that she would not allow him to go to the UK alone as she pleaded to be allowed to return. The decision by Sajid Javid to strip her of her British citizenship sparked a national debate over w...
Labour may not back fresh Brexit referendum
Featured, United Kingdom

Labour may not back fresh Brexit referendum

    Labour has admitted it will not support a new referendum on Brexit in all circumstances, in a major blow to those in the party campaigning for one. Sources close to the Labour leadership confirmed that the party is not advocating a referendum on anything other than a damaging Tory Brexit and will not support one if Britain leaves the EU on terms that Labour backs. As it dawned on Labour Remainers today, a prominent MP who backs the People’s Vote campaign warned that a failure of the party to follow through on the pledge to back a new referendum would be seen as a betrayal. It comes as deputy leader Tom Watson is in the process of forming a new social democrat group within the party, while eight MPs have quit the party, in large part over Brexit policy, to form the ...
May asks EU for concessions to get MPs to back Brexit deal
Featured, United Kingdom

May asks EU for concessions to get MPs to back Brexit deal

    Theresa May will make a last-ditch attempt to persuade the EU to give her a better Brexit deal on Friday, as she struggles to hold her crumbling government together following a day of cabinet embarrassments in Westminster. The prime minister will plead with EU leaders to offer further concessions, as it became clear that talks in Brussels have stalled and hardline Eurosceptics in her party are likely to vote down the deal for a second time in parliament next week. Senior Tory critics of May expressed astonishment that her strategy was a refusal to change course in the face of defeat, with one cabinet source saying No 10 realised it was about to lose the meaningful vote but seemed unable to make a coherent case to MPs why they should vote for it. Instead, May will t...
Alarming levels of plastic in UK rivers
Featured, United Kingdom

Alarming levels of plastic in UK rivers

    An analysis of ten major lakes and rivers found high levels of tiny microplastics, which, once in the water, go on to permeate every level of the food chain and can even end up on the dinner plate. The study, conducted by Bangor University for Friends of the Earth, found varying degrees of microplastics in every stretch of water examined. The highest of which was in the River Tame, where more than 1,000 pieces were recorded per litre, while even the remote Loch Lomond had 2.4 tiny plastic fragments a litre. The Ullswater lake in the Lake District contained 29.5 pieces per litre. The key sources of plastic pollution are car tire dust, clothing fibres, paint, road markings and nurdles the tiny plastic pellets that are glued together to make products that have escaped...
EU: 48 hours to save Brexit deal
Featured, United Kingdom

EU: 48 hours to save Brexit deal

    Frustrated EU officials have urged UK Brexit negotiators to table a workable solution to the Irish backstop by Friday if they want a breakthrough in talks. The UK is currently seeking changes to the withdrawal agreement to make it more palatable to Brexiteer MPs ahead of a crunch vote next week. But speaking on Thursday morning French Europe minister Natalie Loiseau said there had been no precise proposals from the UK and that the EU side was still waiting. A European Commission spokesperson had gone on the record in Wednesday to say talks so far had been difficult and that no solution was in sight. I'm not working on ifs and when's, I'm working on the positions or the proposals of the British government. We are waiting for a proposal from the British government, ...
UK’s cash system on verge of collapse
Featured, United Kingdom

UK’s cash system on verge of collapse

    The UK's cash payments system could collapse in two years, the industry has warned, as the Treasury is being urged to step in to save it. Companies which circulate, sort and distribute coins and notes say the rapid trend towards digital payments will soon render their businesses unprofitable, sources told the Daily Telegraph. At present just over a third of payments made in the UK are cash but this is set to plunge in the coming years. It is understood that most businesses involved in the cash system have given it between two and five years before it will become commercially unviable in its current form. Link's Access to Cash review published today warned that the system was on "the verge of collapse with bank branch and ATM closures leaving entire communities wit...
Parcel bombs posted to Heahrow, London City apt and Waterloo station
Featured, United Kingdom

Parcel bombs posted to Heahrow, London City apt and Waterloo station

    Police are probing whether the New IRA could have sent the improvised parcel bombs which caused a terror alarm at three of London's major transport hubs yesterday. Irish security chiefs and counter terror police from Scotland Yard are examining links to dissident republicans after explosive devices were sent to Heathrow Airport, London City Airport and Waterloo station in A4 envelopes with Irish stamps. The three 'linked' packages which were discovered within hours of each other, prompted a terror scare, as one of them burst into flames at Heathrow when an airport worker tried to open it, and the others had to be defused by bomb squad officers. Last night Ireland's Gardai police force confirmed they were assisting the Metropolitan Police with their inquiries, as it...