Tag Archives: Britain

Russia trying to get ballistic missiles from Iran, says Britain

UNITED NATIONS, Dec 9 (Reuters) – Russia is attempting to obtain more weapons from Iran, including hundreds of ballistic missiles, and offering Tehran an unprecedented level of military and technical support in return, Britain’s U.N. Ambassador Barbara Woodward said on Friday.

Since August Iran has transferred hundreds of drones – also known as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) – to Russia, which had used them to “kill civilians and illegally target civilian infrastructure” in Ukraine, Woodward said.

“Russia is now attempting to obtain more weapons, including hundreds of ballistic missiles,” Woodward told reporters.

“In return, Russia is offering Iran an unprecedented level of military and technical support. We’re concerned that Russia intends to provide Iran with more advanced military components, which will allow Iran to strengthen their weapons capability,” she said.

She also said that Britain was “almost certain that Russia is seeking to source weaponry from North Korea (and) other heavily sanctioned states, as their own stocks palpably dwindle.”

The Iranian, North Korean and Russian missions to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Iran last month acknowledged that it had supplied Moscow with drones, but said they were sent before the war in Ukraine. Russia has denied its forces used Iranian drones to attack Ukraine.

Iran has promised to provide Russia with surface-to-surface missiles, in addition to more drones, two senior Iranian officials and two Iranian diplomats told Reuters in October.

The United States said on Wednesday that it has seen the continued provision of Iranian drones to Russia, but that Washington had not seen evidence that Iran has transferred ballistic missiles to Russia for use against Ukraine.

Woodward spoke ahead of a Security Council meeting later on Friday, requested by Russia, on weapons from the Ukraine conflict that Russia says are “falling into the hands of bandits and terrorists” elsewhere in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

The United Nations is examining “available information” about accusations that Iran supplied Russia with drones, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the Security Council in a report earlier this week in the face of Western pressure to send experts to Ukraine to inspect downed drones.

Britain, France, Germany, the United States and Ukraine say the supply of Iranian-made drones to Russia violates a 2015 U.N. Security Council resolution enshrining the Iran nuclear deal.

Russia argues that there is no mandate for Guterres to send U.N. experts to Ukraine to investigate the origin of the drones.

Guterres said in the latest report that the transfer of drones or ballistic missiles – with a range of more than 186 miles (300 km) – from Iran to another country would require prior approval from the Security Council.

Reporting by Michelle Nichols and Doina Chiacu; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Howard Goller

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Japan, Britain and Italy to build joint jet fighter

TOKYO/LONDON, Dec 9 (Reuters) – Japan, Britain and Italy are merging their next-generation jet fighter projects in a ground-breaking partnership spanning Europe and Asia that is Japan’s first major industrial defence collaboration beyond the United States since World War Two.

The deal, which Reuters reported in July, aims to put an advanced front-line fighter into operation by 2035 by combining the British-led Future Combat Air System project, also known as Tempest, with Japan’s F-X programme in a venture called the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), the three countries said in a statement on Friday.

Against the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and intensifying Chinese military activity around Japan and Taiwan, the agreement may help Japan counter the growing military might of its bigger neighbour and give Britain a bigger security role in a region that is a key driver of global economic growth.

“We are committed to upholding the rules-based, free and open international order, which is more important than ever at a time when these principles are contested, and threats and aggression are increasing,” the three countries said in a joint leaders’ statement.

Amid what it sees as deteriorating regional security, Japan this month will announce a military build up plan that is expected to double defence spending to about 2% of gross domestic product over five years.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak separately said that his country needed to stay at the cutting edge of defence technology and that the deal would deliver new jobs.

Britain’s BAE Systems PLC (BAES.L), Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (7011.T) and Italy’s Leonardo (LDOF.MI) will lead design of the aircraft, which will have advanced digital capabilities in AI and cyber warfare, according to Japan’s Ministry of Defence.

NATO COMPATIBLE

European missile maker MBDA will also join the project, along with avionics manufacturer Mitsubishi Electric Corp (6503.T). Rolls-Royce PLC (RROYC.UL), IHI Corp (7013.T) and Avio Aero will work on the engine, the ministry added.

The three countries, however, have yet to work out some details of how the project will proceed, including work shares and where the development will take place.

Britain also want Japan to improve how it provides security clearances to contractors who will work on the aircraft, sources with knowledge of the discussion told Reuters.

Other countries could join the project, Britain said, adding that the fighter, which will replace its Typhoon fighters and complement its F-35 Lightning fleet, will be compatible with fighters flown by other North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) partners.

Confirmation of the plan comes days after companies in France, Germany and Spain secured the next phase of a rival initiative to build a next-generation fighter that could be in operation from 2040.

The United States, which has pledged to defend all three countries through its membership of NATO and a separate security pact with Japan, also welcomed the joint Europe-Japan agreement.

“The United States supports Japan’s security and defence cooperation with likeminded allies and partners, including with the United Kingdom and Italy,” the U.S. Department of Defense said in a joint statement with Japan’s Ministry of Defense.

Japan had initially considered building its next fighter with help from U.S. defence contractor Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N), which had proposed an aircraft that combined the F-22 airframe with the flight systems from the F-35 fighter.

Reporting by Tim Kelly, Nobuhiro Kubo in TOKYO and Paul Sandle in LONDON; Editing by Robert Birsel

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Britain has frozen 18 billion pounds worth of Russian assets

  • Russia passes Libya and Iran as top target of UK sanctions
  • UK says sanctions are hurting Russia’s military
  • Russia ‘using chips in kitchen appliances for tanks’
  • UK government has reported 236 sanction breaches

LONDON, Nov 10 (Reuters) – The British government said on Thursday it had frozen assets worth more than 18 billion pounds ($20.5 billion) held by Russian oligarchs, other individuals and businesses sanctioned over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russia has overtaken Libya and Iran to become Britain’s most-sanctioned nation, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI), part of the finance ministry, said in its annual report.

The frozen Russian assets were 6 billion pounds more than the amount reported across all other British sanctions regimes.

Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich and businessman Mikhail Fridman are among those sanctioned this year, along with President Vladimir Putin, his family and military commanders.

The frozen assets are a combination of shareholdings in companies and cash held in bank accounts. It does not include physical assets such as real estate or assets held in Crown Dependencies such as Guernsey and Jersey.

The government has sanctioned 95% of Russian exports to Britain and all imports of Russian oil and gas will stop by the end of 2022.

“We have imposed the most severe sanctions ever on Russia and it is crippling their war machine,” said Andrew Griffith, a junior government minister in the Treasury in a statement.

“Our message is clear: we will not allow Putin to succeed in this brutal war.”

Britain has so far sanctioned more than 1,200 individuals including high-profile businessmen and prominent politicians and more than 120 entities in Russia.

SANCTIONS HURTING

Britain was the destination for much of the Russian money that flowed into the West in the decades following the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991.

The European Union, a 27-nation bloc with an economy five times larger, said in July it had frozen 13.8 billion euros ($13.83 billion) of Russian assets over the war in Ukraine.

Western sanctions on Russia mean a depletion of stockpiled parts for the automotive industry, with new cars such as the latest Lada model being produced without airbags or anti-lock brakes, officials said.

Russian aerospace companies are stripping airliners for spare parts and using semiconductors in kitchen appliances in Soviet-era tanks, the officials said, adding that a shortage of ammunition had contributed to Ukraine’s recent battlefield successes.

Longer-term, Russia is suffering a brain drain and a lack of access to critical technologies, with 75% of companies reducing operations and 25% leaving the country entirely, officials said.

While Russian assets are currently only frozen, there are discussions on what options are available to seize them. Western officials say there is a need for large-scale financial help to rebuild Ukraine and a moral case for those responsible for the invasion to contribute to this.

“I think what we would like to do is look at what all the options are, what’s possible, and then take a decision with allies on that,” one official said.

Since Britain began imposing travel bans and asset freezes after Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, the government has received 236 reports of sanction breaches.

In the first test of Britain’s approach to enforcing sanctions, Russian billionaire Petr Aven is challenging in a London court allegations that he evaded sanctions. He is accused of using money parked in British accounts to fund his lifestyle.

Reporting by Andrew MacAskill and Michael Holden
Editing by Gareth Jones

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Museum climate protests spark debate on activism tactics

Over the past few weeks, activists across Europe served celebrated artworks from Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” to Claude Monet’s “Haystacks” with dollops of tomato soup and mashed potatoes in a bid to cut through complacency on the climate crisis. “How do you feel when you see something beautiful and priceless apparently being destroyed before your eyes?” asked one of the protesters from Just Stop Oil after gluing themselves to the glass protecting a Vermeer painting in the Netherlands. “Do you feel outraged? Good. Where is that feeling when you see the planet being destroyed?”

In each case, the protesters were arrested for their actions, and the Last Generation activists who threw mashed potatoes at the Monet in a museum in Potsdam, Germany, are reportedly being investigated for property damage and trespassing.

On the Last Generation website, the group says it accepts “criminal charges and deprivation of liberty undaunted” for its protests.

While some of the historical frames were damaged, the paintings themselves were protected by glass. But the tactic of lobbing food at celebrated artworks to protest climate inaction sparked an international outcry. Many wondered whether it harmed support for the cause.

(Also Read | Opinion: Why it’s OK to throw mashed potatoes on a painting)

Backlash: Disapproval of disruptive protests

In an unrepresentative poll, DW asked Twitter followers how they felt about acts of civil disobedience like the Monet mashed potato incident.

Of the 491 people who answered, 22% said they raised awareness and helped. But 56% said such acts hurt the climate movement.

“This kind of climate activism is nothing short of hooliganism and a publicity stunt,” wrote one follower. “We should fight for good causes in a responsible manner within the limits of respectability.”

Though non-violent but disruptive forms of protest appear to be unpopular, they may still be effective, partly because they gain attention, said Oscar Berglund, a social policy lecturer at Bristol University in the UK.

“If you don’t disrupt anybody or anything, if you just try to make your voices heard, then those voices often don’t get heard and you don’t achieve any change through your protest,” said Berglund, who researches climate change activism and the use of civil disobedience.

Radical protests gain more media attention

The stunts certainly garnered lots of attention, making headlines across the world and creating waves on social media. The video of protesters throwing soup at the Van Gogh in London, for instance, has been viewed almost 50 million times on Twitter alone.

“This disruptive action really brought the climate issue to the forefront of mainstream society again,” said James Ozden, who runs Social Change Lab, an organization that conducts social science research to better understand how movements can drive positive change.

“People from all across the world were talking about it in a way that hasn’t happened since the student climate strikes in 2019,” said Ozden, who was also part of the strategy team for climate protest group Extinction Rebellion UK (XR), which uses civil disobedience tactics.

Raising the profile of climate change was exactly the motivation behind the Van Gogh soup protest in London, said Phoebe Plummer from Just Stop Oil in a video posted to social media.

“What we’re doing is getting the conversation going so we can ask the questions that matter. Questions like is it okay that fossil fuels are subsidized 30 times more than renewables when offshore wind is currently nine times cheaper than fossil fuels? This is the conversation we need to be having now because we don’t have time to waste,” she said.

Of course if all that’s being discussed is the disruptive tactic itself rather than the reason behind the protest and the activists’ demands, then their goal was missed.

“Even though maybe half of the overall discussion is about the tactics, half of it is about the climate, which is still more than if the radical protest didn’t happen,” Ozden said.

For Berglund, the attention and resulting conversation sparked by such protests opens up enough space for some discussion of the issue itself.

“The unpopularity doesn’t matter in that sense and I don’t think that it can hurt the climate cause as such, because it also gives room for more sensible and less extreme voices to talk about these issues,” he said.

Do protester tactics affect public support for climate demands?

But Robb Willer, a sociology and social psychology professor at Stanford University in the US, says that his previous work, which looks at social movements more broadly, suggested some extreme protest actions may undermine popular support for a cause.

The public generally reacts negatively to protests involving property destruction, said Willer. And while they may be effective in gaining attention, that attention may not be helpful if perceptions are negative.

“These art desecration tactics are exactly the sort of protest behaviors that lead observers to view the activists as extreme and unreasonable, alienating observers and potentially reducing support for their cause,” he told DW.

It’s hard to apply research on past protests to current events but polling by Ozden’s Social Change Lab found no negative effects on support for climate policies during and after disruptive protests by Just Stop Oil in 2020.

Similarly, experiments carried out by cognitive psychologists with the University of Bristol found reduced support for protesters had no impact on support for their demands.

And another small representative survey conducted by Cambridge and Oxford Brookes Universities indicated a slight increase in people’s willingness to take part in non-disruptive activism like marches after XR’s 2019 disruptive protests.

“It’s simply not the case that people turn against climate action just because some activists annoy you,” said sociologist Berglund. “It doesn’t mean that you then say, ‘oh, well, that’s okay, then let’s burn the planet. Let’s burn more oil, let’s not use renewables.’ We don’t see that kind of shift at all in opinions.”

Ozden says there is a strategy behind disruptive protests called the radical flank effect. It posits that the existence of a radical flank in a social movement can increase support for moderate factions by making them seem more reasonable.

“It’s kind of a good cop, bad cop situation — but on a big social movement level. And this tactic has worked really well in the past,” he said.

So even though XR, for instance, had some of the lowest public support in the UK, their actions still boosted concern for the environment and climate, believes Ozden.

Do radical protests increase criminalization of protesters?

Ozden and Berglund are concerned that one negative impact resulting from radical tactics could be a general criminalization of climate action and other protest movements.

The UK has already passed bills imposing restrictions on protests, including stricter sentencing and noise limits.

“That’s remarkably draconian because protests are meant to be noisy and disruptive. And now anyone who disagrees with you can say it’s too noisy and make your protest illegal,” Ozden said.

Following protests that saw activists glue themselves to pieces of art and block roads, the UK government is looking to pass a public order bill that creates a new offence called “locking-on,” for protesters who attach themselves to objects or cause disruption by interfering with transport works or key infrastructure.

The bill would see some protesters banned from associating with certain people, attending protests, using the internet or having to wear an electronic target that monitors their whereabouts.

Support for such laws could increase if public perception of protester tactics worsens, according to Berglund.

“The risk is that if these protesters are really unpopular and hated, then that could fuel support for these authoritarian laws that otherwise are not very popular,” he said.

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Museum climate protests spark debate on activism tactics

Over the past few weeks, activists across Europe served celebrated artworks from Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” to Claude Monet’s “Haystacks” with dollops of tomato soup and mashed potatoes in a bid to cut through complacency on the climate crisis. “How do you feel when you see something beautiful and priceless apparently being destroyed before your eyes?” asked one of the protesters from Just Stop Oil after gluing themselves to the glass protecting a Vermeer painting in the Netherlands. “Do you feel outraged? Good. Where is that feeling when you see the planet being destroyed?”

In each case, the protesters were arrested for their actions, and the Last Generation activists who threw mashed potatoes at the Monet in a museum in Potsdam, Germany, are reportedly being investigated for property damage and trespassing.

On the Last Generation website, the group says it accepts “criminal charges and deprivation of liberty undaunted” for its protests.

While some of the historical frames were damaged, the paintings themselves were protected by glass. But the tactic of lobbing food at celebrated artworks to protest climate inaction sparked an international outcry. Many wondered whether it harmed support for the cause.

(Also Read | Opinion: Why it’s OK to throw mashed potatoes on a painting)

Backlash: Disapproval of disruptive protests

In an unrepresentative poll, DW asked Twitter followers how they felt about acts of civil disobedience like the Monet mashed potato incident.

Of the 491 people who answered, 22% said they raised awareness and helped. But 56% said such acts hurt the climate movement.

“This kind of climate activism is nothing short of hooliganism and a publicity stunt,” wrote one follower. “We should fight for good causes in a responsible manner within the limits of respectability.”

Though non-violent but disruptive forms of protest appear to be unpopular, they may still be effective, partly because they gain attention, said Oscar Berglund, a social policy lecturer at Bristol University in the UK.

“If you don’t disrupt anybody or anything, if you just try to make your voices heard, then those voices often don’t get heard and you don’t achieve any change through your protest,” said Berglund, who researches climate change activism and the use of civil disobedience.

Radical protests gain more media attention

The stunts certainly garnered lots of attention, making headlines across the world and creating waves on social media. The video of protesters throwing soup at the Van Gogh in London, for instance, has been viewed almost 50 million times on Twitter alone.

“This disruptive action really brought the climate issue to the forefront of mainstream society again,” said James Ozden, who runs Social Change Lab, an organization that conducts social science research to better understand how movements can drive positive change.

“People from all across the world were talking about it in a way that hasn’t happened since the student climate strikes in 2019,” said Ozden, who was also part of the strategy team for climate protest group Extinction Rebellion UK (XR), which uses civil disobedience tactics.

Raising the profile of climate change was exactly the motivation behind the Van Gogh soup protest in London, said Phoebe Plummer from Just Stop Oil in a video posted to social media.

“What we’re doing is getting the conversation going so we can ask the questions that matter. Questions like is it okay that fossil fuels are subsidized 30 times more than renewables when offshore wind is currently nine times cheaper than fossil fuels? This is the conversation we need to be having now because we don’t have time to waste,” she said.

Of course if all that’s being discussed is the disruptive tactic itself rather than the reason behind the protest and the activists’ demands, then their goal was missed.

“Even though maybe half of the overall discussion is about the tactics, half of it is about the climate, which is still more than if the radical protest didn’t happen,” Ozden said.

For Berglund, the attention and resulting conversation sparked by such protests opens up enough space for some discussion of the issue itself.

“The unpopularity doesn’t matter in that sense and I don’t think that it can hurt the climate cause as such, because it also gives room for more sensible and less extreme voices to talk about these issues,” he said.

Do protester tactics affect public support for climate demands?

But Robb Willer, a sociology and social psychology professor at Stanford University in the US, says that his previous work, which looks at social movements more broadly, suggested some extreme protest actions may undermine popular support for a cause.

The public generally reacts negatively to protests involving property destruction, said Willer. And while they may be effective in gaining attention, that attention may not be helpful if perceptions are negative.

“These art desecration tactics are exactly the sort of protest behaviors that lead observers to view the activists as extreme and unreasonable, alienating observers and potentially reducing support for their cause,” he told DW.

It’s hard to apply research on past protests to current events but polling by Ozden’s Social Change Lab found no negative effects on support for climate policies during and after disruptive protests by Just Stop Oil in 2020.

Similarly, experiments carried out by cognitive psychologists with the University of Bristol found reduced support for protesters had no impact on support for their demands.

And another small representative survey conducted by Cambridge and Oxford Brookes Universities indicated a slight increase in people’s willingness to take part in non-disruptive activism like marches after XR’s 2019 disruptive protests.

“It’s simply not the case that people turn against climate action just because some activists annoy you,” said sociologist Berglund. “It doesn’t mean that you then say, ‘oh, well, that’s okay, then let’s burn the planet. Let’s burn more oil, let’s not use renewables.’ We don’t see that kind of shift at all in opinions.”

Ozden says there is a strategy behind disruptive protests called the radical flank effect. It posits that the existence of a radical flank in a social movement can increase support for moderate factions by making them seem more reasonable.

“It’s kind of a good cop, bad cop situation — but on a big social movement level. And this tactic has worked really well in the past,” he said.

So even though XR, for instance, had some of the lowest public support in the UK, their actions still boosted concern for the environment and climate, believes Ozden.

Do radical protests increase criminalization of protesters?

Ozden and Berglund are concerned that one negative impact resulting from radical tactics could be a general criminalization of climate action and other protest movements.

The UK has already passed bills imposing restrictions on protests, including stricter sentencing and noise limits.

“That’s remarkably draconian because protests are meant to be noisy and disruptive. And now anyone who disagrees with you can say it’s too noisy and make your protest illegal,” Ozden said.

Following protests that saw activists glue themselves to pieces of art and block roads, the UK government is looking to pass a public order bill that creates a new offence called “locking-on,” for protesters who attach themselves to objects or cause disruption by interfering with transport works or key infrastructure.

The bill would see some protesters banned from associating with certain people, attending protests, using the internet or having to wear an electronic target that monitors their whereabouts.

Support for such laws could increase if public perception of protester tactics worsens, according to Berglund.

“The risk is that if these protesters are really unpopular and hated, then that could fuel support for these authoritarian laws that otherwise are not very popular,” he said.

Read original article here

New PM Rishi Sunak pledges to lead Britain out of economic crisis

  • Sunak meets King Charles on Tuesday morning
  • Vows to rebuild trust in the country
  • Expected to start forming a cabinet
  • Sunak faces huge challenge to rebuild stability

LONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) – Rishi Sunak became Britain’s third prime minister in two months on Tuesday and pledged to lead the country out of a profound economic crisis and rebuild trust in politics.

Sunak quickly reappointed Jeremy Hunt as his finance minister in a move designed to calm markets that had balked at his predecessor’s debt-fuelled economic plans.

The former hedge fund boss said he would unite the country and was expected to name a cabinet drawn from all wings of the party to end infighting and abrupt policy changes that have horrified investors and alarmed international allies.

Speaking outside his official Downing Street residence, Sunak praised the ambition of his predecessor Liz Truss to reignite economic growth but acknowledged mistakes had been made.

“I have been elected as leader of my party and your prime minister, in part to fix them,” said Sunak, who broke with the tradition of standing beside his family and cheering political supporters.

“I understand, too, that I have work to do to restore trust, after all that has happened. All I can say is that I am not daunted. I know the high office I have accepted and I hope to live up to its demands.”

Sunak said difficult decisions lay ahead as he looks to cut public spending. Hunt, who Truss appointed to calm markets roiled by her dash for growth, has been preparing a new budget alongside borrowing and growth forecasts due out on Monday, and repeated his warning on Tuesday that “it is going to be tough”.

The new prime minister also restored Dominic Raab to the post of deputy prime minister, a role he lost in Truss’s 44 days in office, but reappointed James Cleverly as foreign minister and Ben Wallace at defence.

Penny Mordaunt, who ended her bid to win a leadership contest against Sunak on Monday, also retained her position as leader of the House of Commons, a role that organises the government’s business in the lower house of parliament.

Sources had said she wanted to become foreign minister.

With his new appointments, Sunak was seen to be drawing ministers from across the Conservative Party while leaving others in post – a move that should ease concerns that Sunak might appoint loyalists rather than try to unify the party.

TOUGH DECISIONS

Sunak, one of the richest men in parliament, is expected to slash spending to plug an estimated 40 billion pound ($45 billion) hole in the public finances created by an economic slowdown, higher borrowing costs and an energy support scheme.

He will now need to review all spending, including on politically sensitive areas such as health, education, defence, welfare and pensions. But with his party’s popularity in freefall, he will face growing calls for an election if he ditches too many of the promises that the Conservatives win election in 2019.

Economists and investors have welcomed Sunak’s appointment – Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary said the adults had taken charge again – but they warn he has few options to fix the country’s finances when millions are battling a cost of living crunch.

Sunak, who ran the Treasury during the COVID-19 pandemic, promised to put economic stability and confidence at the heart of the agenda. “This will mean difficult decisions to come,” he said, shortly after he accepted King Charles’s request to form a government.

Sunak also vowed to put the public’s need above politics, in recognition of the growing anger at Britain’s political class and the ideological battles that have raged ever since the historic 2016 vote to leave the European Union.

Workers heading towards London’s financial district said Sunak, at 42 Britain’s youngest prime minister for more than 200 years and its first leader of colour, appeared to be the best of a bad bunch.

“I think he was competent, and that’s really what we should hope for at the moment,” said management consultant, James Eastbook, 43.

With two prime ministers appointed in two months without a popular vote, some called for a general election now but others hoped Sunak would stay until the next scheduled election, due by January 2025.

POLITICAL MACHINATIONS

Sunak, a Goldman Sachs analyst who only entered parliament in 2015, faces a challenge ending the factional infighting that has brought his party low. Many Conservatives remain angry with him for quitting as finance minister in July and triggering a wider rebellion that ended Boris Johnson’s premiership.

Others question how a multi millionaire can lead the country when millions of people are struggling with surging food and energy bills.

“I think this decision sinks us as a party for the next election,” one Conservative lawmaker told Reuters.

Historian and political biographer Anthony Seldon said Sunak would also be constrained by the mistakes of his immediate predecessor.

“There is no leeway on him being anything other than extraordinarily conservative and cautious,” he told Reuters.

Many politicians and officials abroad, having watched as a country once seen as a pillar of economic and political stability descended into brutal infighting, welcomed Sunak’s appointment.

Sunak, a Hindu, also becomes Britain’s first prime minister of Indian origin.

U.S. President Joe Biden described it as a “groundbreaking milestone”, while leaders from India and elsewhere welcomed the news. Sunak’s billionaire father-in-law, N.R. Narayana Murthy, said he would serve the United Kingdom well.

“We are proud of him and we wish him success,” the founder of software giant Infosys said in a statement.

($1 = 0.8864 pounds)

Writing by by Kate Holton and Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Jon Boyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Early DNA reveals two distinct populations in Britain after the last ice age

An artist’s redesign of the double helix of DNA. Researchers in Britain have discovered two distinct groups of humans living in post-ice age Britain. File Photo by Miroslaw Miras/Pixabay

Oct. 25 (UPI) — Scientists have sequenced the oldest human DNA discovered in Britain and discovered two unique population groups that lived in Britain after the last ice age.

A sample discovered in Gough’s Cave in Somerset, England, from approximately 14,000 years ago, was compared to a sample from approximately 1,000 years later, which was discovered in Kendrick’s Cave, Wales.

“We knew from our previous work, including the study of Cheddar Man, that western hunter-gatherers were in Britain by around 10,500 years ago, but we didn’t know when they arrived in Britain, and whether this was the only population that was present,” said Selina Brace, a principal researcher at the Natural History Museum in Britain, who studies ancient DNA.

By studying the remains found in Gough’s Cave, researchers were able to determine that humans were present in Britain 300 years earlier than scientists had previously thought, meaning they were present before Britain began to warm after the last ice age.

Genetic studies of the two samples revealed that they came from two distinct genetic groups, meaning that at least two completely different populations of humans were living in Britain within a relatively short timeframe.

The artifacts discovered among the two populations suggest vastly different cultural practices.

“The evidence from the human remains found at Kendrick’s Cave suggests that the cave was used as a burial site by its occupiers,” said Silvia Bello, a researcher at the Natural History Museum who specializes in the evolution of human behavior.

In contrast, Bello said, “the evidence at Gough’s Cave points to a sophisticate culture of butchering and carving human remains.”

It was also revealed that these early inhabitants were using parts of animals believed to have already been extinct in Britain at the time including a spear tip made out of mammoth ivory and a baton made of reindeer antlers.

According to Chris Stringer, a research leader on human evolution at the Natural History Museum, “this raises several interesting questions: Did they bring these artifacts from somewhere colder? Or was Britain even more complicated and still had mammoth and reindeer surviving in the highlands?”

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Boris Johnson arrives back in Britain to attempt rapid political comeback

  • Johnson was forced out of office earlier this year
  • Candidates for PM need 100 lawmaker nominations
  • Sunak is the bookmakers’ favourite
  • Winner would be fifth British PM in six years

LONDON, Oct 22 (Reuters) – Boris Johnson arrived back in Britain on Saturday as he considers an audacious attempt to win a second term as prime minister only weeks after he was forced to step down, with some colleagues warning his comeback could create more political chaos.

The potential candidates to replace Prime Minister Liz Truss, who dramatically quit on Thursday after only six weeks in power, were embarking on a frantic weekend of lobbying to secure enough nominations to enter the leadership contest before Monday’s deadline.

Johnson, who was on holiday in the Caribbean when Truss resigned, has not commented publicly about a bid for his old job. He has received the support of dozens of Conservative lawmakers, but needs to secure 100 nominations to be considered.

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The trade minister James Duddridge said on Friday Johnson had told him he was “up for it”.

Johnson was booed by some passengers on the plane to Britain, according to a Sky News reporter on the flight which arrived in London on Saturday morning.

Wearing a dark jacket and backpack, Johnson waved to photographers at the capital’s Gatwick Airport before driving away.

It would be an extraordinary political resurrection for the former journalist and ex-Mayor of London, who left Downing Street shrouded in scandal but grumbling that his colleagues “changed the rules halfway through” a race – a swipe at the Conservative lawmakers who did not allow him to serve a full term.

Former defence minister Penny Mordaunt became the first candidate to officially declare an intention to run to be the next leader of the Conservative Party, but Johnson and Rishi Sunak, once his finance minister, led potential contenders ahead of voting next week.

Sunak, who was runner-up to Truss in the previous leadership contest and has yet to formally declare his candidacy this time, did not speak to reporters when leaving his London home on Saturday.

The prospect of the return of Johnson to government is a polarising issue for many in the Conservative Party, which is deeply divided after seeing off four prime ministers in six years.

For some Conservative lawmakers, Johnson is a vote-winner, able to appeal across the country not only with his celebrity but also with his brand of energetic optimism.

For others he is a toxic figure and the question is whether he can convince the dozens of lawmakers who abandoned him that he is now the person who can unite the party and turn around its flagging fortunes.

“DEATH SPIRAL”

Ex-interior minister Priti Patel announced her support for her former boss on Saturday, saying he had “the mandate to deliver our elected manifesto and a proven track record getting the big decisions right.”

But her colleague Andrew Bridgen said he would consider resigning from the parliamentary group if Johnson returns and warned the Conservatives against developing a “personality cult” around the former prime minister. Dominic Raab, a foreign minister under Johnson, said the party risked going “backwards” if he returned.

The former Conservative leader William Hague said on Friday Johnson’s return was possibly the worst idea he had heard in almost half a century as a party member. He said it would lead to a “death spiral” for the Conservatives.

If Johnson can secure the required number of nominations, he is likely to go head-to-head with Sunak, who quit as his finance minister in July, claiming that his former boss was unable to take tough decisions.

Sunak is the first leadership candidate to hit the threshold of 100 nominations to enter the contest before Monday’s deadline, according to media reports.

Johnson, who currently has about half the support needed, is currently under investigation by parliament’s Privileges Committee to establish whether he lied to the House of Commons over lockdown-breaking parties. If ministers are found to have knowingly misled parliament, they are expected to resign.

The contest to become Britain’s fourth prime minister in four years has been accelerated to take only a week. Under the rules, only three candidates will be able to reach the first ballot of lawmakers on Monday afternoon, with the final two put to a vote of party members for a result by next Friday.

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Reporting by Andrew MacAskill; Additional reporting by Henry Nicholls; Editing by Toby Chopra, Mike Harrison and Christina Fincher

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ALL of Britain is declared a bird flu ‘prevention zone’

The whole of Great Britain has been declared ‘a prevention zone’ to stop the spread of a deadly strain of flu in wild and domestic birds.

From today all bird keepers in Britain must follow strict measures by law to protect flocks from bird flu, including keeping free range birds in fenced areas and stringent biosecurity for staff on farms.

The UK has faced its largest ever outbreak of the disease in the past year with more than 200 cases confirmed across the country since late October 2021 – 30 of which were confirmed since the beginning of this month.

Around 3.5million domestic birds have been slaughtered during the outbreak so far to attempt to stem the ‘unprecedented and devastating’ outbreak, according to officials.

Across Europe more than 47million birds have been slaughtered to stop the outbreak.

For the first time the H5N1 bird flu virus did not die off in the summer in wild bird populations, but carried on being infectious, leading to mass die offs of birds ranging from red kites to puffins and skuas, government officials said.

Scientists think the virus has mutated in a way that makes it tougher — and survive longer in the environment on surfaces or in water — although further research is needed.

From today all bird keepers in Britain must follow strict measures by law to protect flocks from bird flu , including keeping free range birds in fenced areas and stringent biosecurity for staff on farms. The map shows the prevention zone (red), where mandatory housing is in place (purple) and the areas under a 10km surveillance zone (yellow)

The UK has faced its largest ever outbreak of bird flu in the past year with more than 200 cases confirmed across the country since late October 2021 – 30 of which were confirmed since the beginning of this month

The Animal and Plant Health Agency map shows the spread H5N1 cases in wild birds between October 2021 and September 2022 (with highest prevalence shown in dark red) 

The maps show the number of bird flu cases (yellow dots) confirmed between October 2020 and September 2021 (left) and between October 2021 and September 2022 (right)

The map shows that parts of the country that have been deemed high risk areas (pink) for the H5N1 strain of bird flu. The darker areas of the map highlight where has the highest density of poultry livestock

The official graph shows the number of positive H5N1 cases detected across Britain per week in 2020/21 (blue lines) and 2021/2022 (orange lines)

The map shows the number of bird flu outbreaks in domestic poultry and captive birds across the UK (red triangles) between October 1 and 10

What the Avian Influenza Protection Zone means 

Bird keepers across Great Britain must:

  • Keep free ranging birds within fenced areas, and that ponds, watercourses and permanent standing water must be fenced off (except in specific circumstances e.g. zoo birds);
  • Clean and disinfect footwear and keep areas where birds live clean and tidy;
  • Minimise movement in and out of bird enclosures;
  • Reduce any existing contamination by cleansing and disinfecting concrete areas, and fencing off wet or boggy areas;
  • Keep domestic ducks and geese separate from other poultry;
  • Ensure the areas where birds are kept are unattractive to wild birds, for example by netting ponds, and by removing wild bird food sources;
  • Feed and water your birds in enclosed areas to discourage wild birds.
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However, officials said the risk to public health from the virus was very low and properly cooked poultry and eggs are safe to eat.

The Chief Veterinary Officer, Christine Middlemiss told journalists the northern hemisphere was in the grip of an ‘unprecedented highly pathogenic avian flu outbreak’

She said: ‘It’s been devastating for bird keepers whether you are a backyard flock owner or a commercial farmer, whether you have conserved birds like the Wildlife and Wetland Trust or whoever you are.

‘And devastating for ourselves who work as vets and technical people within government.’

She said the virus — known as A(H5N1) — had infected wild birds migrating back to the UK, but for the first time the virus came to ‘oversummer’ in our native wild bird population.

And as we have moved into colder weather new infections have broken out as wild birds come into contact with kept poultry, she said.

Previously there were just two prevention zones — in the south-west, and East Anglia — but the rapid spread of the disease in wild and domestic poultry has led to the zones being expanded to take in England, Scotland and Wales.

Under the prevention zone rules, producers with more than 500 birds must restrict access for non-essential people on their sites, staff must change clothing and footwear before entering enclosures and vehicles will need regular cleaning and disinfecting.

Backyard owners of smaller numbers of chickens, ducks and geese must also take steps to limit the risk of the disease spreading to their flocks, they are being warned.

If birds show signs of going off their food or water, or show ‘respiratory or neurological’ signs of infection, owners should contact the Animal and Plant Health Agency or their own private vet, who would then alert the authorities.

Farmers raised fears last month that many Christmas dinners ‘have already gone’ — as tens of thousands of turkeys were culled by September.  

But Dr Middlemiss said she did not think that the supply of turkeys for Christmas or the supply of chicken for the domestic market would be affected by the outbreak.

Dr Andy Paterson, Head of the Animal and Plant Health Agency National Emergency Epidemiology Group said that extreme weather, particularly winter storms last year, had led to damage to chicken sheds and other poultry buildings.

This allowed wild birds to get into buildings which could infect domesticated birds.

In addition, faecal matter could get washed in during heavy rain — and just one dropping could ‘set off an infection in a whole shed’.

Dr Paterson said small flocks of chickens in backyards have acted as an early warning or ‘sentinel’, as they were more likely to catch the disease from wild birds, alerting the authorities before the disease could reach bigger flocks in commercial premises.

Bird flu outbreak: Everything you need to know 

What is it? 

Bird flu is an infectious type of influenza that spreads among birds.

In rare cases, it can be transmitted to humans through close contact with a dead or alive infected bird.

This includes touching infected birds, their droppings or bedding. People can also catch bird flu if they kill or prepare infected poultry for eating. 

Wild birds are carriers, especially through migration.

As they cluster together to breed, the virus spreads rapidly and is then carried to other parts of the globe.

New strains tend to appear first in Asia, from where more than 60 species of shore birds, waders and waterfowl, including plovers, godwits and ducks, head off to Alaska to breed and mix with various migratory birds from the Americas. Others go west and infect European species.

What strain is currently spreading? 

H5N1.

So far the new virus has been detected in some 80million birds and poultry globally since September 2021 — double the previous record the year before.

Not only is the virus spreading at speed, it is also killing at an unprecedented level, leading some experts to say this is the deadliest variant so far.

Millions of chickens in the UK have been culled and last November the poultry industry was put into lockdown, heavily affecting the availability of free-range eggs.

Can it infect people? 

Yes, but just 864 people have been infected with H5N1 globally since 2003 from 20 countries.

The risk to people has been deemed ‘low’.

But people are strongly urged not to touch sick or dead birds because the virus is lethal, killing 53 per cent of people it does manage to infect.

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Britain bets all on historic tax cuts and borrowing, investors take fright

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  • Kwarteng cuts top rate of income tax in dash for growth
  • Huge increase in UK government debt issuance planned
  • Gilts suffer biggest slump in decades
  • Pound falls to new 37-year low against dollar

LONDON, Sept 23 (Reuters) – Britain’s new finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng unleashed historic tax cuts and huge increases in borrowing on Friday in an economic agenda that floored financial markets, with sterling and British government bonds in freefall.

Kwarteng scrapped the country’s top rate of income tax, cancelled a planned rise in corporate taxes and for the first time put a price tag on the spending plans of Prime Minister Liz Truss, who wants to double Britain’s rate of economic growth.

Investors unloaded short-dated British government bonds as fast as they could, with the cost of borrowing over 5 years seeing its biggest one-day rise since 1991, as Britain raised its debt issuance plans for the current financial year by 72.4 billion pounds ($81 billion). The pound slid below $1.11 for the first time in 37 years.

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Kwarteng’s announcement marked a step change in British economic policy, harking back to the Thatcherite and Reaganomics doctrines of the 1980s that critics have derided as a return to “trickle down” economics.

“Our plan is to expand the supply side of the economy through tax incentives and reform,” Kwarteng said.

“That is how we will compete successfully with dynamic economies around the world. That is how we will turn the vicious cycle of stagnation into a virtuous cycle of growth.”

A plan to subsidise energy bills will cost 60 billion pounds just for the next six months, Kwarteng said. The government has promised households support for two years as Europe wrestles with an energy crisis.

Tax cuts – including an immediate reduction in the Stamp Duty property purchase tax plus a reversal of a planned rise in corporation tax – would cost a further 45 billion pounds by 2026/27, he said.

The government said raising Britain’s annual economic growth rate by 1 percentage point over five years – a feat most economists think unlikely – would increase tax receipts by around the same amount.

Britain also will accelerate moves to bolster the City of London’s competitiveness as a global financial centre by scrapping the cap on banker bonuses ahead of an “ambitious deregulatory” package later in the year, Kwarteng said. read more

The opposition Labour Party said the plans were a “desperate gamble”.

“Never has a government borrowed so much and explained so little… this is no way to build confidence, this is no way to build economic growth,” said Labour’s finance spokeswoman Rachel Reeves. read more

HISTORY REPEATS?

The Institute for Fiscal Studies said the tax cuts were the largest since the budget of 1972 – which is widely remembered as ending in disaster because of its inflationary effect.

The market backdrop could barely be more hostile for Kwarteng, with the pound performing worse against the dollar than almost any other major currency.

Much of the decline reflects the U.S. Federal Reserve’s rapid interest rate rises to tame inflation – which have sent markets into a tailspin – but some investors have taken fright at Truss’s willingness to borrow big to fund growth.

“In 25 years of analysing budgets this must be the most dramatic, risky and unfounded mini-budget,” said Caroline Le Jeune, head of tax at accountants Blick Rothenberg.

“Truss and her new government are taking a huge gamble.”

A Reuters poll this week showed 55% of the international banks and economic consultancies that were polled judged British assets were at a high risk of a sharp loss of confidence. read more

On Thursday the Bank of England said Truss’s energy price cap would limit inflation in the short term but that government stimulus was likely to boost inflation pressures further out, at a time when it is battling inflation near a 40-year high.

Financial markets ramped up their expectations for BoE interest rates to hit a peak of more than 5% midway through next year.

“We are likely to see a policy tug of war reminiscent of the stop-go 1970s. Investors should be prepared for a bumpy ride,” said Trevor Greetham, head of multi-asset at Royal London Asset Management.

Despite the extensive tax and spending measures, the government had decided against publishing alongside its statement new growth and borrowing forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility, a government watchdog.

Kwarteng confirmed the OBR would publish its full forecasts later this year.

“Fiscal responsibility is essential for economic confidence, and it is a path we remain committed to,” he said.

($1 = 0.8872 pounds)

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Writing by Andy Bruce; Additional reporting by Kylie MacLellan, Kate Holton, Paul Sandle, Sachin Ravikumar, Alistair Smout, William James, James Davey, Andrew MacAskill, Farouq Suleiman, Huw Jones and Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Catherine Evans and Toby Chopra

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