The force first received reports of the item at about 1.10pm, and as a precaution the station and many of the surrounding buildings were evacuated and closed…reports Asian Lite News
Three men have been arrested and a controlled explosion was carried out after a bus station was closed for several hours after reports of a “potential suspicious item” found in the area. Police Scotland said at about 9.40pm on Wednesday that nothing suspicious was found, despite the controlled explosion at Buchanan bus station.
The force first received reports of the item at about 1.10pm, and as a precaution the station and many of the surrounding buildings were evacuated and closed. Police said that three men had been arrested in connection with possession of offensive weapons and inquiries remain ongoing.
A spokesperson said: “Around 1.10pm this afternoon, police received a report of a potential suspicious item at the bus station. “Officers contacted the EOD and a controlled explosion was carried out. Nothing suspicious was found.
“As a precaution the bus station and surrounding buildings were evacuated.” “Three men were arrested in connection with possession of offensive weapons and inquiries are ongoing. Officers are working to return the area back to normal.”
Large cordons were put in place with streets around the bus station closed. Police advised the public to avoid the area.
A number of transport services also experienced disruption as a result of the incident, including Stagecoach’s X77 service, as well as all of ScotRail’s Queen Street high street level services. The city’s subway service was also closed down, but later re-opened at around 9pm.
Glasgow Caledonian university (GCU) was evacuated and closed as a precaution on Wednesday evening. But in an email later sent to all staff and students at about 10.50pm, the university said: “We are pleased to inform you the police have advised that our Glasgow campus is now safe to reopen, and it will be fully operational from 7am.”
A number of businesses in the area have also been affected. The Royal Concert Hall’s planned An Audience With Celtic Legends event was cancelled. At about 10.10pm, Glasgow city council’s Traffcom service said Killermont Street between West Nile Street and North Hanover Street is closed, as is Cowcaddens Road. All of the roads surround the bus station at their points of closure. The service said drivers should follow police guidance for diversions.
A spokesperson for Traffcom added: “Due to an ongoing police incident, Buchanan bus station has been closed. Police Scotland are in attendance.”
Storm Shadow missile attack comes day after Kyiv used US-supplied long-range weapons to strike within Russia…reports Asian Lite News
Ukraine has fired UK-made Storm Shadow missiles into Russia for the first time since the beginning of the conflict. The decision to approve the strikes was made in response to the deployment of more than 10,000 North Korean troops on Russia’s border with Ukraine, which UK and US officials warned was a significant escalation of the near three-year conflict.
It was reported earlier this week that the UK would soon approve Storm Shadow missiles for use inside Russia after the US president, Joe Biden, agreed to do the same for the similar American Atacms weapons.
Videos uploaded to social media and circulated by pro-Russian war bloggers indicated that up to 12 missiles struck a target believed to be a command headquarters in the village of Maryno, the first confirmed use of British weapons on Russian soil during the war. Ukrainian media reported that the site may have been used by North Korean and Russian officers.
Unconfirmed images distributed via the Telegram messaging app appeared to show fragments of the missile at a location in the Kursk region. One weapons expert, Trevor Ball, formerly of the US army, said the images circulating did show Storm Shadow fragments, though he could not verify if they were current or old pictures.
There was no official confirmation from the UK, though the defence secretary, John Healey, appeared to hint at developments as he spoke to the Commons as reports of the attack in Kursk began to circulate.
Healey said he had spoken with his Ukrainian counterpart, Rustem Umerov, on Tuesday. “We’ve seen over recent weeks significant change in the action and in the rhetoric on Ukraine, and Ukraine’s action on the battlefield speaks for itself,” he said.
It marks a rapid turnaround in the UK-Ukraine relationship, following complaints that Kyiv was frustrated by a refusal by London to supply a fresh batch of Storm Shadow. The UK was said to be stung by the criticism and the complaints are partly believed to have contributed to a change of heart.
A second element was a change in policy by the outgoing Biden administration. The Storm Shadow strikes came a day after Ukraine used Atacms missiles to hit targets in the Bryansk region.
Western officials have indicated they are specifically targeting the North Korean buildup in the Kursk region, as well as infrastructure that may be used for a 50,000-strong offensive against a Ukrainian incursion there.
Storm Shadow missiles are an Anglo-French cruise missile with a maximum range of about 155 miles (250km), which so far have been used to strike Russian targets in occupied Crimea, including the naval headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea fleet. They are useful for precision targeting of bunkers and ammunition stores.
Vladimir Putin has warned that the use of US and UK-made missiles inside Russia’s borders would be tantamount to Nato entering into a direct conflict with Moscow, though western politicians have dismissed his comments as empty threats.
Western officials have warned that Russia could escalate strikes on critical infrastructure in Ukraine or use other hybrid warfare tactics against targets in Europe and other US allies around the world. British spy chiefs have accused Russia of trying to “generate mayhem” on the streets of the UK with arson and sabotage campaigns, including the secreting of incendiary devices in parcels sent via DHL, one of which caught light in a Birmingham warehouse in July, starting a small fire.
The Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, said Moscow would respond “appropriately” a day after Ukraine fired six of the newly approved Atacms missiles into an ammunition warehouse in the south-western Bryansk region.
Hours earlier, Putin signed a revised nuclear doctrine lowering the threshold for using nuclear weapons amid warnings from Russian MPs that the US action was bringing “world war three” closer.
Overnight, the Pentagon said it had seen no sign that Russia was planning to use a nuclear weapon in Ukraine, and accused Russian politicians of engaging in irresponsible rhetoric.
“We’re going to continue to monitor, but we don’t have any indications that Russia is preparing to use a nuclear weapon within Ukraine,” said the Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh.
Earlier on Wednesday, the US announced it had temporarily closed its embassy in Kyiv after receiving warning of a “potential significant air attack”, advising American citizens to be prepared to move immediately to a shelter in the event of an air raid warning.
Such warnings are rare and likely to be based on specific intelligence, prompting a nervous day in Kyiv, where the mayor, Vitali Klitschko, told the public not to ignore the air raid warning that came shortly before 2pm.
City residents gathered in Kyiv’s metro stations and other locations to take shelter, and there was a heightened concern among officials, though one member of the government told the Guardian they were not aware of any particular threat.
“We don’t know exactly what could happen – it could be another major attack like Sunday, when they fired over 200 missiles and drones,” one security official said. “The Americans had some signal intelligence and were acting according to their protocol.”
UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer made the announcement following a bilateral meeting with his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines on the G20 summit in Brazil…reports Asian Lite News
The UK India Business Council welcomed the announcement to resume the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) talks between India and UK in early 2025, an official statement said.
UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer made the announcement following a bilateral meeting with his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines on the G20 summit in Brazil.
Highlighting the importance of the new FTA with India, the UK PM said, ‘A new trade deal with India will support jobs and prosperity in the UK and represent a step forward in our mission to deliver growth and opportunity across our country.” He also added that boosting economic growth is key to improving living standards for working people.
UKIBC has engaged with ministers and senior officials across departments in both governments during the 13 rounds of negotiations to date and have witnessed a strong commitment from both sides to make this deal a reality.
Kevin McCole, Managing Director, UK-India Business Council, said, “We are delighted that the FTA negotiations will re-start early next year. This is an exciting chapter of the UK-India partnership. Negotiations are complex – it is, after all, the world’s 5th and 6th largest economies preparing for a comprehensive FTA – and it is important to secure a fair and ambitious deal. By concluding the FTA, smoothing the two-way flow of students and workers, and deepening R&D collaboration, the UK and Indian Governments will deliver stronger economic growth in both countries. This will create jobs and prosperity in India and the UK as well as being a force for global good.”
There have been 13 rounds of negotiations on Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between India and the UK, 14th was pushed for keeping in mind the elections in both the countries earlier this year. The negotiations started in 2022, and a substantial number of chapters have been discussed. Both the countries are aimed at enhancing bilateral trade, evident in the political will to close the deal.
Currently, the bilateral trade between the two countries is valued at £42 billion (USD 53.2 billion) in the 12 months to June 2024.
UKIBC is a policy advocacy and strategic consulting not-for-profit, with a mission to grow the UK-India trade and investment. To do that, we provide strategic and practical support to businesses and universities to explore, enter, and expand in both markets.
“We want to help more UK businesses to uncover opportunities and succeed in India. Business looking at the India opportunity need to develop a strategy based on factual market insights, and then implement that strategy. The UK India Business Council has the knowledge, networks, and people to help do this.” the UKIBC said.
“UK-India collaboration creates prosperity and jobs in both countries, and UK and Indian business have ideas, technology, services and products which improve lives. We work closely with the UK and Indian governments, the devolved administrations, England’s city regions, and State governments across India. We believe a strong UK-India economic partnership is a force for positive change globally,” it added. (ANI)
Earlier, there had been warnings for northern England and the Midlands, while snow also fell in areas not covered by the alerts, including central London….reports Asian Lite News
Large parts of the UK were blanketed with snow as the country got its “first taste of winter”, which brought school closures, train delays, difficult driving conditions and an appeal to check in on vulnerable people.
Met Office yellow severe weather alerts for snow and ice were in place across northern Scotland, Northern Ireland, central and southern Wales, and eastern counties from the Scottish Borders to Norfolk, with forecasters warning of potential hazards through this week.
Earlier, there had been warnings for northern England and the Midlands, while snow also fell in areas not covered by the alerts, including central London.
The cause is an Arctic maritime air mass, meteorologists said, which means it will be extremely cold all week.
More than 220 schools were closed across the UK, including about 140 in Wales. The University of Derby also closed its campuses in Chesterfield, Buxton and Leek because of the weather.
There were delays and cancellations across the rail network causing disruption for thousands of passengers.
By 1pm on Tuesday, 44 of 196 train services (56%) planned by East Midlands Railway were cancelled or delayed by at least 30 minutes, according to the trains.im punctuality and reliability website. Figures for other operators include LNER (57%), CrossCountry (19%), Transport for Wales (11%) and West Midlands Trains (15%).
South Western Railway was running trains at a reduced speed on all lines on Tuesday because of conditions. Local authority gritters were out across the UK but a number of roads were deemed impassable and closed on Tuesday morning because of the conditions.
In Scotland, two people were taken to hospital in Dundee after a multi-vehicle crash in Ballinluig, Perthshire, at about 8am. An investigation is under way and Police Scotland has asked people to avoid the area if possible.
Darren Clark, the severe weather resilience manager for National Highways, urged drivers to keep their distance and reduce their speed. “Even in conditions that seem normal, and where the snow is not settling, it can be slippery if ice patches have formed, or where fresh grit has not been worked into the carriageway,” he said.
“Drivers should plan their journeys, monitor weather reports and pack a snow kit of blankets, food, water and a shovel.” The Met Office said 12cm of lying snow was reported at Watnall, Nottinghamshire, while Scotland recorded its coldest early winter temperatures since 1998 with a reading of -11.2C in Braemar, Aberdeenshire.
The Met Office chief meteorologist Neil Armstrong said the cold Arctic air over the UK meant “continued winter hazards are likely through much of this week” with new warnings likely.
“The current focus for upcoming snow and ice risk is from later on Tuesday and overnight into Wednesday, with snow showers likely moving in off windward coasts in the north and east, as well as drifting into parts of Northern Ireland and Wales.”
The Met Office had warned people that the “first taste of winter” was on its way, advising people to get their woolly jumpers ready.
The warning came after the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) issued the first amber cold weather health alert of the season this week. The amber warning covers the east and north of England, the Midlands, and Yorkshire and the Humber, with yellow alerts coming into place for the south-east, south-west and London at 8am on Tuesday, lasting until 6pm on Saturday.
The charity Age UK warned that the conditions could be dangerous for vulnerable people, including elderly people. The Age UK director, Caroline Abrahams, said the charity was worried that the loss of the winter fuel payment had caused many older people to be “extra fearful” about turning on their heating this winter.
“With high energy bills and food prices it is understandable that some may think they have to cut back on food and turn their heating off, but prolonged exposure to cold temperatures can have a serious impact on an older person’s health, especially if they are already trying to manage existing illnesses,” she said.
Amid the difficulties and warnings there were, of course, snowball fights, sledging and the chance to enjoy the incredible beauty of a snowy day.
In total, more than 16 million people are defined as living in poverty, or 24% of the UK population – the highest since comparable records began in 2000….reports Asian Lite News
More than one in three children and a quarter of adults are living in poverty in the UK as deprivation levels rise to the highest in the 21st century, according to a landmark report.
The study by the Social Metrics Commission (SMC), which uses measures recently adopted by the UK government, found the cost of living crisis had plunged 2 million more people into severe hardship since 2019.
In total, more than 16 million people are defined as living in poverty, or 24% of the UK population – the highest since comparable records began in 2000.
Children accounted for the biggest rise of any social group falling into poverty, the report found, with an extra 260,000 on the breadline since before the Covid pandemic, meaning a record 36%, or 5.2 million children, were in deprivation.
It is likely to reignite calls for Labour to scrap the two-child benefit cap as, of those 5.2 million children, more than half (55%) lived in families with three or more children. About one in four of the children in poverty lived in a single-child household, with the same proportion in a two-child family.
Keir Starmer has resisted calls to abandon the policy – introduced by George Osborne when he was chancellor – saying the government would not take on the “unfunded pledge” without identifying a source for the £3bn annual cost. The prime minister launched a child poverty taskforce in July.
The SMC report, seen by the Guardian, is significant as it measures a family’s resources, not just their income, and is widely accepted to be the most accurate definition of poverty in the UK. In June, the then Conservative government announced plans to adopt this broader definition of deprivation, called “below average resources”. It includes inescapable costs, such as childcare, the extra costs of being disabled, plus rent, mortgages and a family’s liquid assets, such as stocks and shares, that can easily be exchanged into cash.
Under the government’s current definition, which measures only average income and housing costs, 18% of the UK population was defined as being in absolute poverty in the year to March 2023, including 3.6 million children. With the new model, which is set to be adopted by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), 1.6 million more children are in poverty than under the current definition.
The findings cover a period when living standards suffered their biggest fall since modern records began in the mid-1950s, as the Covid pandemic followed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine pushed the cost of goods to their highest level in four decades.
The SMC is a non-partisan body set up in 2016 to develop a new measure of deprivation in the UK. Its commissioners include experts from the Sutton Trust, Institute for Fiscal Studies, Centre for Social Policy Studies, Trussell Trust and a range of respected academics.
Philippa Stroud, the chair of the commission, said: “Whilst this report shows that poverty rates are now higher than at any point this century, they have never fallen below 21% over that same timeframe.
“This shows the real challenge facing us all in ensuring that we move the dial on poverty in the UK and ensure that as many people as possible can enjoy a life free of poverty. My hope is that people and organisations across society can come together to work with governments of all levels to develop a strategy that can be successful in delivering a significant and sustained reduction in poverty.”
The analysis was published in a letter from Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, on Tuesday, just as temperatures plunged and parts of the UK experienced their first snowfall of the year….reports Asian Lite News
Cuts to the winter fuel allowance could force 100,000 pensioners in England and Wales into relative fuel poverty, government analysis has shown, as ministers come under mounting pressure over measures in last month’s budget.
Internal government modelling shows the decision to remove the benefit from millions of pensioners will push about 50,000 more people into relative poverty next year, and another 50,000 by the end of the decade.
The figures, which are rounded to the nearest 50,000, take into account the impact of housing costs, but not of thousands more people claiming pension credit since a government campaign earlier this year.
The analysis was published in a letter from Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, on Tuesday, just as temperatures plunged and parts of the UK experienced their first snowfall of the year. The letter also coincided with a large-scale protest by farmers in Westminster, with thousands turning up to demonstrate against a rise in inheritance tax for agricultural properties.
Kendall said in her letter to Debbie Abrahams, the Labour chair of the work and pensions select committee: “Means-testing winter fuel payments was not a decision this government wanted or expected to take. However, we were forced to take difficult decisions to balance the books in light of the £22bn black hole we inherited.”
She added: “Given the dire state of the public finances, it’s right that we target support to those who need it most while we continue our work to fix the foundations and stabilise the economy.”
Keir Starmer, speaking to reporters at the G20 in Rio, said: “We’ve had a campaign to drive up pension credit, to get more pensioners on to pension credit, which obviously is not only a guarantee of the winter fuel allowance, but also gives the credit itself. So there’s an additional benefit there.”
He also claimed the tax rises and spending cuts in the budget had allowed Labour to raise the state pension by about £470, even though the party promised to do so in its election manifesto. He said: “Pensioners will be better off because we’ve stabilised the economy.”
Abrahams said: “We remain concerned by the impact that restricting winter fuel payments might have on poorer pensioners. We’ll be watching the issue closely.”
Ministers have been under pressure for months to explain the full impact of the winter fuel cuts, which the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, announced in July after identifying what she said was a £22bn hole in the public finances.
Reeves said at the time that the allowance would go only to those on pension credit, reducing the number of eligible people from 11.4 million to 1.5 million. Those who have lost the benefit will be feeling the impact from this month, when the first winter payments are made.
Downing Street admitted in September it had not done an impact assessment before making the change, although Labour said in opposition that such a move would lead to the deaths of 4,000 people. Kendall’s letter on Tuesday marks the government’s first attempt to quantify how many pensioners will be seriously affected.
The analysis shows that by 2030, 1% of those who have lost their allowance are likely to be pushed into relative poverty – defined as households with less than 60% of that year’s median income. This will have the effect of putting up the relative pensioner poverty rate by 0.6 percentage points.
Only half that number will be force into absolute poverty, however, defined as households with less than 60% of the median income of 2010/11.
The cuts to winter fuel allowance are unpopular with Labour MPs and supporters. One MP defied Labour whips to vote against the cut in September, while another 12 missed the vote without permission. Later that month, party members voted for a motion calling on ministers to reverse it.
The Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, pledged to reinstate payments in Scotland should his party win the 2026 Holyrood election, saying it would mean a “fairer system” for Scotland and show the public that “we have listened”.
The pledge comes days before another set of council byelections in Glasgow and after polling suggesting the unpopularity of UK government policies is harming Scottish Labour’s vote. At the general election Scottish Labour was well ahead of the SNP, but that lead has collapsed.
Sarwar said he had been “clear from the outset” that he thought Reeve’s pension credit threshold was too low and that he planned to reintroduce a universal payment for all pensioners, but tapered like child benefit is so that wealthier people receive less.
Increase in national insurance contributions and national living wage will add to costs, says BRC
Large UK retailers including Tesco, Boots, Marks & Spencer and Next have written to Rachel Reeves to say that a £7bn increase in annual costs after last month’s budget would lead to job cuts and higher prices.
The letter, with 79 signatories sent by the industry body the British Retail Consortium (BRC), warns the chancellor of the financial impact of the impending increase in the national living wage and employer national insurance contributions (NICs).
The BRC has said absorbing the impact of the higher costs will mean higher prices for consumers, smaller pay rises, job cuts and store closures.
Bank of England governor says budget measures could cost jobs, and argues for ‘gradual’ interest rate cuts – as it happened
“For any retailer, large or small, it will not be possible to absorb such significant cost increases over such a short timescale,” the letter says. “The effect will be to increase inflation, slow pay growth, cause shop closures and reduce jobs, especially at the entry level. This will impact high streets and customers right across the country.”
The letter says retailers are already starting to make “difficult decisions” and “the sheer scale of new costs and the speed with which they occur create a cumulative burden that will make job losses inevitable, and higher prices a certainty”.
Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, told the Treasury committee on Tuesday that retailers were right to warn on the risk of job cuts due to the change in NICs.
He added that job losses could turn out to be more than the 50,000 forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) after the budget.
“I think they are right to say… there is a risk [that] the reduction in employment could be more,” he said. “Yes, that is a risk”
The bank’s broad position is that the impact of the changes to NICs will feed through in several ways – higher prices, lower profit margins, lower wages, job cuts, or “increased productivity”.
However, the GMB union has said that big retailers warning of job cuts due to the tax changes is “utterly pathetic”. Nadine Houghton, a national officer at the GMB, said: “Multibillion-pound businesses pleading poverty because they’re being made to pay more to support public services is utterly pathetic.
“Most of these companies’ fortunes are already subsidised by the taxpayer, they pay very low wages which then have to be topped up by in work benefits. It’s only right that they should now contribute a bit more to rebuilding our country.”
Nick Stowe, the chief executive of Monsoon and Accessorize, said retailers had been left with the choice of protecting staff numbers or cancelling their investment plans.
The fashion retailers’ boss told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We’re trying to protect that staff number and it’s about choices in how we protect it.”
“For us it means passing on some of those cost increases in terms of increased prices. It also means we’re probably going to have to divert investment that we would have made in growing our store base into protecting the stores that we have and the employees that we have.”
He added that the decisions businesses were being forced to make seemed “entirely counter” to the government’s proclaimed growth agenda.
On Tuesday, the beleaguered luxury handbag maker Mulberry said the UK market had been hit particularly badly from low consumer confidence, as it announced that it intended to cut jobs.
The signatories to the BRC letter also include the B&Q owner Kingfisher and the supermarket chains Morrisons and Sainsbury’s.
The BRC estimates that retailers will face a £2.3bn bill from April after the implementation of the increase in employer NICs from 13.8% to 15%, as well as the reduction in the earnings threshold that they must start paying it from £9,100 to £5,000.
Retailers said these changes would be felt in particular by retailers because they employed “large numbers of people in entry-level and part-time roles”.
In addition, retailers estimated that there would be a £2.73bn increase in wage costs from April, and about £2bn relating to an extension of producer responsibility for packaging from October.
The letter calls for a discussion with the Treasury to address some of the companies’ concerns, and offered solutions including a phased introduction of the new lower earnings threshold on national insurance (NICs), and a delay on the start of the levy on packaging.
Earlier this month, the bosses of more than 200 of the UK’s largest restaurant, pub and hotel businesses – including the Premier Inn owner Whitbread and Mitchells & Butlers – wrote a letter to the chancellor warning of closures and job cuts as a result of the rise in NICs.
The demonstration, estimated by police to have drawn 13,000 participants, saw protesters holding signs such as “Stand with a farmer, not Starmer”…reports Asian Lite News
With banners, bullhorns, and toy tractors, thousands of British farmers gathered outside Parliament on Tuesday to protest against a tax hike they claim will deal a “hammer blow” to struggling family farms.
British farmers, typically less militant than their European counterparts, have refrained from staging large-scale demonstrations like those seen in France and elsewhere in Europe. However, they now warn they will escalate their actions if the government fails to respond.
At the centre of the discontent is the government’s decision to abolish a longstanding tax break from the 1990s that exempts agricultural property from inheritance tax. Under the new rules, farms valued at over £1 million will face a 20% tax when transferred to the next generation upon the owner’s death, effective from April 2026.
“Everyone’s furious,” said Olly Harrison, co-organiser of the protest, which saw demonstrators flood the streets near Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Downing Street office. Harrison said many farmers are ready “to block roads and go full French.”
Protest organisers urged participants not to bring heavy machinery into central London, but a few tractors adorned with banners reading “the final straw” and “no farmers, no food” rolled past Downing Street.
The demonstration, estimated by police to have drawn 13,000 participants, saw protesters holding signs such as “Stand with a farmer, not Starmer.” Children on toy tractors circled Parliament Square following speeches, including one by former Top Gear presenter and celebrity farmer Jeremy Clarkson. Inside Parliament, 1,800 farmers joined a “mass lobby” organised by the National Farmers’ Union (NFU).
NFU President Tom Bradshaw criticised the policy as “simply unacceptable,” saying, “It undermines British food security at a time when we need it most.”
The tax change adds to mounting challenges for farmers, including volatile weather worsened by climate change, global instability, and the impact of Brexit. Many view the tax hike as the final straw in a series of setbacks.
Starmer’s Labour government argues that the majority of farms—around 75%—will remain unaffected by the tax, with various exemptions allowing farming couples to pass estates worth up to £3 million tax-free. The 20% levy is half the 40% inheritance tax applied to other property.
Camilla Marshall, a spokesperson for Starmer, acknowledged the decision was “difficult” but confirmed it would not be reconsidered.
Proponents of the tax argue it will target wealthy individuals who have purchased farmland as an investment, driving up costs and pricing out younger farmers. “High land prices are robbing young farmers of the dream of owning their own farm,” wrote Environment Secretary Steve Reed.
However, the NFU contends that more than 60% of working farms could be affected, noting that while farms may appear valuable on paper, profits are often modest. Government data shows that average farm incomes declined last year, with grazing livestock farms earning around £17,000 and specialist poultry farms generating £143,000.
British farmers have endured a turbulent decade. Many supported Brexit, seeing it as an opportunity to escape the EU’s complex Common Agricultural Policy. While some welcomed subsequent reforms, such as payments for promoting biodiversity and restoring nature, others say these benefits have been overshadowed by inflation, mismanagement, and trade deals allowing cheap imports from countries like Australia and New Zealand.
Meanwhile, Keir Starmer has denied that he is mounting a class war by targeting wealthy landowners and private schools, after the head of the National Farmers’ Union accused the government of an extraordinary “betrayal” over inheritance tax changes.
In an escalating war of words between food producers and ministers, the NFU president, Tom Bradshaw, called the government’s budget measures a “stab in the back”, after the sector had been previously told that taxes such as agricultural property relief (APR) would not be changed. He was addressing hundreds of farmers who had travelled to London to lobby their local MPs.
Starmer told reporters at the G20 in Rio de Janeiro that the government was taking a “balanced approach” to fund public services and called on farmers to think about the money needed for schools and hospitals in rural communities.
Asked if he was mounting a class war on the wealthiest, Starmer told Sky: “It isn’t at all what we’re doing. It’s a balanced approach. We have to fill a black hole which was left by the last government.”
In London, Bradshaw told a room of about 600 farmers: “I don’t think I have ever seen the industry this angry, this disillusioned, this upset.”
He described the budget measures as a “shocking policy, built on bad data, and launched with no consultation with anybody that understands”. Bradshaw was applauded by farmers as he commented on the “human impact of this policy” and warned that government measures including changes to national insurance contributions, coupled with a competitive retail environment, would push up food prices.
Separately, thousands of food producers gathered close to Downing Street on Tuesday morning for a rally flanked by tractors. Previously, farming businesses qualified for 100% relief on inheritance tax on agricultural and business property. But now the tax is being imposed on farms worth more than £1m, with an effective rate of 20% on assets above that threshold, rather than the normal 40% rate for inheritance tax.
Ministers have said the threshold for farmers paying inheritance tax could be £3m for a couple, once various exemptions were taken into account.
The NFU has rejected the government’s claims that most farms will not be affected by the change, and believes that it will apply to 75% of what it calls “commercial farm businesses”.
A group of farmers from Wales and Wiltshire attending the NFU lobby said they believed all of their farms would fall into the remit of inheritance tax under the budget measures.
This MoU with IOD India represents an important step forward in building stronger, more resilient business networks between the UK and India, as well as with broader international markets like the EU, Africa and the CIS…reports Asian Lite News
In a significant step towards strengthening global business ties, the UK Asian Business Council (UKABC) and the Institute of Directors (IOD) India have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).
The agreement was formalised by Mr. Taha Coburn-Kutay, Chairman of UKABC, and Mr. Manoj Raut, CEO of IOD India, underscoring a shared commitment to promoting corporate governance, professional development, and leadership training.
This partnership aims to create stronger, more resilient business networks between the UK and India while extending reach to international markets such as the EU, Africa, and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). The collaboration reflects both organisations’ dedication to enabling businesses to navigate the complexities of cross-border trade and investment while fostering growth and development among their members.
“This MoU represents a pivotal moment in building stronger business networks between the UK and India and connecting with broader international markets,” said Mr. Taha Coburn-Kutay. “We are excited to partner with IOD India to create opportunities for our members, enhancing their ability to succeed in today’s globalized economy.”
Mr. Manoj Raut added, “This partnership aligns with our mission to foster excellence in corporate governance and leadership. Together, we will empower businesses to achieve their full potential through innovation, education, and collaboration.”
Key Initiatives Under the MoU:
1. Events, Conferences, and Webinars
The two organisations will co-host events, conferences, and webinars, providing platforms for knowledge sharing, networking, and fostering meaningful connections across diverse regions.
2. Executive Training Programs
Specialised training programs for business leaders in the UK, India, Africa, and Asia will be developed to enhance leadership skills and encourage collaboration in international business.
3. Industry Research and Policy Advisory
Joint research projects and policy advisory services will focus on emerging industries and markets, integrating insights from the UK, India, Asia, and Africa to drive impactful outcomes.
4. Business Delegations
Coordinated delegations will promote trade, investment, and cultural exchanges between Asia, Africa, and the UK, strengthening economic and social ties.
5. Certification Programs
New certification programs will empower Asian and African business leaders by equipping them with skills and credentials in global business management.
As part of the discussions during the MoU signing, the idea of establishing an office for IOD India in the UK was proposed, demonstrating the commitment to expanding collaboration. This initiative will be actioned in the coming months, further enhancing the strategic partnership.
Thames Valley Police said the intruders stole two vehicles from a farm building on the estate west of London on October 13 and that no arrests had been made. ..reports Asian Lite News
Police said on Monday officers were investigating a break-in last month on the grounds of the royal Windsor Estate, reportedly while Prince William and his family were at home.
Thames Valley Police said the intruders stole two vehicles from a farm building on the estate west of London on October 13 and that no arrests had been made.
“At around 11:45 p.m. on Sunday 13 October, we received a report of burglary at a property on Crown Estate land near to the A308 in Windsor,” the force said in a statement, referring to the castle grounds.
“Offenders entered a farm building and made off with a black Isuzu pickup and a red quad bike.
“They then made off toward the Old Windsor/Datchet area. No arrests have been made at this stage and an investigation is ongoing.”
The Sun tabloid, which first reported the incident, said the “masked raiders” struck while William, his wife Catherine, Princess of Wales, and their children slept in their nearby home on the estate.
The newspaper reported last month that armed police officers from the Metropolitan Police’s diplomatic protection unit had been removed from the two main gates of the Windsor Estate.
It comes as the force faces a shortage of firearms officers, with far fewer candidates joining up, the tabloid said.
The Metropolitan Police, which is responsible for royal security, said it does “not comment on any security arrangements for protected individuals or sites.”
But in a statement, a spokesperson said the arrangements were “kept under constant review to ensure we take into account the latest threat and risk information and assessments that are available to us.”
The burglary is the latest security breach at Windsor, where William and his family live year-round and was the favored residence of the late Queen Elizabeth II.
On Christmas Day, December 25, 2021 a man armed with a loaded crossbow was found on the grounds, telling an armed officer at the scene that he was there “to kill the queen.”
The man, Jaswant Singh Chail, was last year jailed for nine years, with the sentence to be served in the high-security Broadmoor psychiatric hospital.
The former supermarket worker had “lost touch with reality so that he had become psychotic,” judge Nicholas Hilliard had concluded.