Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Will Protesters Have To Pay To March?

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 07 Maret 2015 | 23.17

By Katie Spencer, Sky News Reporter

Protests are in danger of becoming privatised, campaigners have told Sky News.

Thousands of people will gather later to join the Campaign Against Climate Change's march through central London, but its organisers have told Sky News they were shocked to be told by the Met Police that they would have to pay thousands towards road closures and for private security.

"We were very surprised to be told that we need to hire a private traffic management firm to close the roads for us," organiser Claire James told Sky News.

"The costs to organisations like ourselves is really significant. It's an important democratic right to protest and it should be something the state facilitates.

"We're really worried it could create a situation where the right to protest ends up being limited to those that can afford to pay those costs."

The Met Police has traditionally always taken the lead when it comes to helping organisers prepare for protest marches.

But it recently said campaign groups must be prepared to contribute more towards the costs, like producing a traffic plan which can be more than £10,000 and hiring certified road stewards, which can be around £120 a day per steward.

Two marches planned for this weekend - the Campaign Against Climate Change and the Million Women Rise march - were expected to be among the first to have to pay.

However, the Met has now agreed to help with resources.

In a statement, it said: "We have been discussing this issue for some years with our partners, including Transport for London and local authorities.

"We will continue to engage with our partners and protest groups to ensure everyone is clear where responsibilities lie.

"Many protest events take place throughout the year without the need for any policing presence, leaving police officers in local communities where people want to see them."

Campaigners insist few groups could afford to pay the costs.

However, with drastic cuts to policing budgets, it is an area where many forces are keen to make savings.

Chris Armitt, the national police lead for protests, told Sky News forces they are having to "weigh up" where resources are most needed.

"We will facilitate lawful and peaceful protests as it's a fundamental right of democracy, but if that starts to be prohibitively expensive for the police service, for the local authority and for anyone else, then you've got to ask the question, is it proportional?

"I think it's quite realistic to say to organisers 'we need you to do things in different ways, we need you to consider whether you can provide some of the supervision and stewarding for the event'."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Missing Commonwealth Games Sprinter Arrested

A top sprinter from Sierra Leone, who disappeared after competing in last year's Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, has been arrested after he was found sleeping rough in London.

Jimmy Thoronka raced in the 4x100 metres relay but vanished at the end of the competition in August, along with several other athletes.

The Guardian newspaper said Thoronko was arrested on Friday night for overstaying his visa and is being held at police station in south London.

Before he was taken into custody, the 20-year-old claimed he was too afraid to return to Sierra Leone because of the Ebola virus.

"I was hoping to win a medal for my country. But during the games I got the terrible news that my uncle had died, probably from Ebola," he told The Guardian.

"I couldn't stop crying. It was difficult to continue with competing but I tried to carry on.

"I wanted to go to London for a while after the games but my bag with my money and passport in it was stolen at Glasgow station.

"I was scared to go to the police in case they arrested me and put me in a cell so I begged someone at the station to pay my fare to London and they agreed to do that."

While watching an African TV channel, Thoronka said he discovered that his mother had also died of Ebola and later found out that his entire immediate family had been killed by the virus.

He claimed he was sleeping in parks and on night buses while begging for money to buy food.

"We have a cold season in Sierra Leone but it is not cold like England," he said.

"Some days I don't think I'm going to make it and just feel like killing myself.

"My dream is to become one of the best sprinters in the world but I don't see how that can happen now.

"I'm very frightened of what will happen to me. Life here is very bad for me but if I return to Sierra Leone I don't think I will make it."

Ebola has killed nearly 10,000 people in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea during a year-long epidemic.

A Home Office spokesperson said: "We cannot comment on individual cases, but there is assistance available for people to return home when they are not entitled to remain in the UK."

A Met Police spokesman said: "A 20-year-old man was stopped on Thurlow Street at 1900 hours. He was arrested for immigration offenses and is currently in custody."

A page set up on the Gofundme website to "Help Jimmy Thoronka" had raised £8,000 by Saturday morning.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Camerons To Send Daughter To Top State School

David and Samantha Cameron are sending their daughter Nancy to a state secondary school in Westminster from September.

The Prime Minister attended Eton and his wife Samantha went to Marlborough College, but Mr Cameron follows his former education secretary Michael Gove in sending his daughter to Grey Coat Hospital, a Church of England academy.

The move means Mr Cameron becomes the first Conservative prime minister to send a child to a state secondary school.

The decision to accept a place at the school which is close to Downing Street is likely to be seen as an indication of his confidence that he will remain in Number 10 after the election.

Nancy was among hundreds of thousands of children who found out from their local authority this week whether they had got into their choice of school.

Grey Coat Hospital admits girls aged 11 to 18, with 151 places allocated for this year's intake. Boys are only admitted to the school's sixth form.

In a welcome message on Grey Coat Hospital's website, headteacher Sian Maddrell describes the school as being "committed to ensuring that each student is known as an individual, develops the knowledge, skills and personal qualities to lead successful and fulfilling lives, and is empowered to do so".

She said: "The aim of The Grey Coat Hospital is 'to enable students to take charge of their learning, make decisions based on Christian values, live in the world as independent women and men and meet the challenges of the 21st century'.

"We aim for excellence both in and out of the classroom, seeking to develop the qualities of inquisitiveness, resilience, independence, humility and kindness."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Tory-Labour Grand Coalition To 'Keep Union'

A coalition pact between the Conservatives and Labour after the election may be the only way to keep the UK together if the Scottish Nationalist Party holds the balance of power at Westminster, a former Tory chairman has suggested.

Lord Baker of Dorking said such an agreement could avoid the "nightmare" of a minority Labour administration depending on SNP votes to get English legislation on to the statute book, which would "stretch the constitution of our country to breaking point".

Writing in The Independent, the former education secretary accepted that a deal between David Cameron and Ed Miliband was "quite unthinkable" at the moment, but pointed out that in Germany Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats governed with the Social Democrats.

Lord Baker argued: "What is at risk is the continuing unity of the United Kingdom. In order to preserve that unity another way should be found.

"This could be a joint government of the Labour and Conservative parties: quite unthinkable at the moment, and at this time likely to be rejected by both of them - but this is what has happened in Germany."

Lord Baker's intervention follows a warning from former prime minister Sir John Major that the SNP would enter any deal with Labour with the "overriding aim" of "prising apart" the union.

In a sign of the influence the SNP hopes to wield after the 7 May poll, former first minister Alex Salmond has claimed Scotland will be able to "call the tune" at Westminster.

Mr Salmond, who is standing for the Gordon constituency in May, believes a large group of SNP MPs will lead to "progress for Scotland".

SNP Westminster Leader Angus Robertson said: "Labour spent two and a half years working hand-in-glove with the Tories in the No campaign, so it's no surprise that so many Tories feel so at home with Ed Miliband's party.

"This follows Labour Lords and MPs backing working with the Tories, which only adds to the reasons why far more people in Scotland trust the SNP rather than Labour to keep the Tories out of government."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

UK Soldiers Hurled 'Abuse' At Female Footballers

The Defence Ministry is investigating claims British troops shouted sexist abuse at female football players during an England match.

Members of the British Army based in Cyprus watched the England women's team beat Australia 3-0 in the Cyprus Cup tournament in Nicosia on Friday.

Two England supporters at the match, Rachel O'Sullivan and Sophie Downey, said of the roughly 50 troops at the game, a group of 10 hurled abuse at the players - mainly targeting the Australians - throughout the match.

Ms Downey said: "We've been to lots of games before and we can engage in banter, but this wasn't banter - it was constant, gender-specific abuse.

"There were around 50 troops watching the game and a group of around 10 of them were directing constant insults - they were on the side of the Australian dugout so it was more focused on their players.

"We weren't sure whether to tweet about it because it's the Army and we didn't want to offend people - I'm a very proud English person and I'm very proud of what the Army do - but I was ashamed of them today."

Ms O'Sullivan and Ms Downey, who both cover football for the Girls on the Ball website, claimed the soldiers abused the Australian substitutes as they took off their tracksuits before going on the pitch.

They also said they targeted one Australian defender in particular.

Ms O'Sullivan said: "One Australian player, number six ( Uzunlar), they were harassing her over and over and over again, throughout the game.

"They were making horrible comments, shouting at her, whistling - it was uncomfortable to hear.

"These are teenage girls and they were sexually objectifying them."

Ms Downey and Ms O'Sullivan said they complained to the commander in charge of the contingent after the match.

They said he apologised, saying he had not heard the abuse.

An Australian supporter at the game, who wished to remain anonymous, also complained about the alleged abuse.

"This was a stunning one-off that I've never heard before in women's football," the football fan said.

"They were calling the girls t****, telling the referee 'I'd like to blow you'. I said something to the Army sergeant, 'This isn't a complaint as an Australian supporter, it's a complaint as a woman'. It was beyond the pale.

"He was apologetic after the game and offered to apologise to the players."

An MoD spokeswoman said: "Behaviour of the kind described is totally unacceptable and is not tolerated in the Armed Forces where abuse, bullying and discrimination have no place.

"We are investigating these claims and if it is found that any UK personnel have fallen below the high standards we expect then appropriate action will be taken."

An FA spokesperson told Press Association Sport: "We've spoken to the (England) players, manager and assistant manager after the game and none of them have said they heard anything during the game worthy of reporting or complaining about.

"They appreciated the British Army's support and were happy to have photographs taken with the Army boys at the end of the game."

But the spokesperson added: "The FA will investigate all allegations of discriminatory abuse. If anyone did experience any form of discriminatory behaviour we would urge people to report it by calling 0800 085 0508, emailing reportdiscrimination@thefa.com or downloading the Kick It Out app from the App store of Google Play."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Family Demands Names Of New Child Abuse Files

By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent

The Government's refusal to reveal the titles of four files related to child abuse has been branded "disgusting" by the family of a boy missing since 1979.

It is now over a month since the Cabinet Office confirmed it had found four more files relevant to the ongoing child abuse inquiries centred on VIPs in Westminster.

Officials have promised the files will be handed over to the police and various inquiries but they are still refusing to allow the titles of the files to be made public, let alone the contents.

At the start of February Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude said: "Officials have identified four additional relevant files, one of which was marked for destruction."

Despite repeated requests from Sky News over the course of the last month officials at the Government department say their position remains unchanged.

It has angered many survivors and campaigners, not least the family of Martin Allen who was 15 years old when he vanished in London nearly 35 years ago.

The teenager was last seen on the London Underground with an unidentified man at Gloucester Road station on 5 November 1979.

His brother Kevin Allen told Sky News he was "pretty definite" there is a link between the establishment abuse networks in Westminster and his brother's disappearance.

He said he could not accept that the names of the files are still being withheld.

"It makes me very angry, because these people have got a hold over us.

"It is our information, these people are our employees taking our money which is more than 'Mr Average' earns probably in the course of a month. It is disgusting.

"It is our lives they are playing with. I hope they can sleep at night."

Mr Allen is in regular contact with Met police detectives leading abuse inquiries which include allegations boys were killed.

While the content of the files may be sensitive, refusing to reveal the names means the public has no way of tracking them or knowing how they are being dealt with.

Labour MP John Mann told Sky News the Cabinet Office's actions amounted to a "national disgrace".

He said: "We need this information coming out, there are people there who know things from the past that they are not revealing, including to the police investigation teams, and that is wholly unacceptable.

"It is time the Prime Minister forced them to do so."

It follows a Sky News investigation which unearthed another classified file in January that the Cabinet Office had kept closed on grounds of national security.

After MPs raised the issue in the House of Commons, government officials were forced to release it to the National Archives.

The documents revealed former British diplomat, the late Sir Peter Hayman, was the subject of the secret file. The papers documented his "unnatural" sexual behaviour and his activities within the Paedophile Information Exchange group.

Neither the Hayman file nor the four new files were found during an earlier Home Office-commissioned search for documents relevant to ongoing abuse inquiries.

The Cabinet Office declined to make Mr Maude available for interview.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Big Firms Forced To Reveal Gender Pay Gap

Thousands of large companies will be forced to share details of the difference between what they pay their male and female workers.

The Government has agreed to implement the Liberal Democrat measure despite years of Tory opposition to it.

The move will mean companies employing more than 250 people will be required to publish the gap between average pay for their male and female workers.

More than 10 million people across the UK are currently working at firms covered by the legislation.

The current approach, which is voluntary, has seen only five out of around 7,000 large companies publish their gender pay gap.

The new measure, which will come into force within 12 months, could result in fines of up to £5,000 for firms that do not reveal the details.

Equalities Minister Jo Swinson said she was "delighted" her party won the "argument in Government".

She said the move "will force companies to ask themselves difficult questions about how they are valuing the contribution of women in their workforce and act to address problems".

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said: "These measures will shine a light on a company's policy so that women can rightly challenge their employer where they are not being properly valued and rewarded."

The legislation will be debated in the Lords on Wednesday, with the Government tabling an amendment to the Small Business Bill.

A Government spokesman said: "Under this Government the gender pay gap is the lowest ever and has virtually been eliminated for those working full time under 40.

"However the pay gap persists, so we think it's time to move forward, so we can create the conditions to ensure that there is equality in workplaces across the country."

Shadow equalities minister Gloria De Piero said: "This is fantastic news for women but why have they waited so long?

"The reality is that it's only when the Government realised they would be defeated on this issue by Labour in the House of Lords that they saw the need to act."

The move comes as the head of the UN agency promoting equality for women said not a single country has reached gender parity.

UN Women executive director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka made the comments 20 years after a groundbreaking conference in Beijing where 189 nations adopted a blueprint to achieve equality for women.

Ms Mlambo-Ngcuka said that although progress had been made since Beijing, there are still fewer than 20 female heads of state and government.

She said the number of female politicians increased from 11% to just 22% in the past 20 years.

Ms Mlambo-Ngcuka also said "the sheer scale of the use of rape that we've seen post-Beijing", especially in conflict situations, "tells us that the women's bodies are viewed not as something to respect, but as something that men have the right to control and to abuse."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Missing Girls' Families Slam Police Over Letter

The families of three London schoolgirls feared to have fled to Syria to become jihadi brides have accused the Metropolitan Police of failing to pass on a crucial letter.

They say a letter from the force requesting to interview the girls in relation to a classmate who ran away to Syria last year should have been handed directly to the families.

However, the letters were hidden by the girls in their school textbooks and their families never saw them.

Shamima Begum, 15, Kadiza Sultana, 16, and 15-year-old Amira Abase, who attended Bethnal Green Academy in east London, sparked a police hunt after they flew to Istanbul from Gatwick Airport last month. They are now believed to be in Syria.

Abase Hussein, the father of Amira, insisted that if he had seen the police letter he would have talked his daughter out of leaving and taken away her passport.

Halima Khanom, sister of Kadiza Sultana, said: "We wouldn't have been here today doing this if we'd got that letter and known what was going on."

Scotland Yard confirmed that it sent letters out to the three girls after their friend disappeared in December and that they were also spoken to by officers as part of a "routine inquiry".

A Metropolitan Police statement said: "The Metropolitan Police Service has been engaged with staff at the girls' school since December 2014 as part of the routine inquiry by officers investigating the disappearance of their friend.

"There was nothing to suggest at the time that the girls themselves were at risk and indeed their disappearance has come as a great surprise, not least to their own families.

"The girls were spoken to in December 2014 as part of the routine inquiry by officers investigating the disappearance of their friend.

"We continue to liaise with the school and local education authority in connection with this ongoing investigation."


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Miliband Brands PM 'Chicken' Over TV Debates

Ed Miliband has told broadcasters he will take part in all three televised debates ahead of the election - as he accused David Cameron of "chickening out".

In a speech to the Scottish Labour conference, the party leader said the Prime Minister was "running scared" after only agreeing to appear in one of three of the debates.

Mr Miliband told delegates: "You can refuse to face the public, but you can't deny your record.

"You can try to chicken out of the debates, but don't ever again claim to provide strong leadership for your country."

Mr Miliband said "with or without Mr Cameron" he will be at the debates.

Campaign chairman Douglas Alexander confirmed in a letter to broadcasters that Mr Miliband was prepared to appear, even though David Cameron appears unlikely to take part.

The four broadcasters - the BBC, ITV, Sky and Channel 4 - announced they will stick to their previously-announced plans for three debates during the election campaign, and urged the Prime Minister to "reconsider" his refusal to take part in these shows, including a head-to-head showdown with Mr Miliband.

But Mr Cameron's chief spin doctor Craig Oliver said their response was "disappointing" and restated the Prime Minister's "final position" was for a single debate to take place in the week starting 23 March.

Earlier Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said it was "arrogant" for the Tories to think they can dictate the terms of the debates.

"These aren't the debates run by the Conservative Party, they belong to the British people," he said.

"To suggest, as the Conservatives have, that they will only deign to participate in one debate, before they've even published their manifesto, suggests that not only do they not want to defend their record in Government, they don't even want to promote their own manifesto in competition with other party leaders."

Broadcasters are planning a seven-way debate involving Mr Cameron, Mr Miliband, Mr Clegg and the leaders of the Greens, Ukip, Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru on ITV on 2 April, followed by a second show on BBC featuring the same line-up on 16 April.

A final one-on-one clash between the Tory and Labour leaders would be broadcast on Sky News and Channel 4 on 30 April - exactly a week before the 7 May election.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Appears In Court Over Teen Cyclist Murder

A man has appeared in court charged with murdering a 15-year-old boy who was fatally stabbed while riding his bike.

Joshua Williams, 18, of Davenant Road, Holloway, north London, was remanded in custody over the death of Alan Cartwright.

The youngster had been cycling along Caledonian Road in Islington, north London, when he was attacked on 27 February.

Williams appeared at Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court and will appear next at the Old Bailey on Tuesday. He is charged with murder and conspiracy to rob.

An 18-year-old man arrested on Thursday has been released on police bail to return on a date in late April, pending further inquiries.

A 17-year-old boy and a 21-year-old man who were both arrested in relation to the incident have been bailed.

The schoolboy managed to continue riding a short distance after he was stabbed, but collapsed and was later pronounced dead at the scene.

A post-mortem examination found that he died from a single stab wound to the chest.


23.17 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger