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Eight new cities named as part of Platinum Jubilee celebrations

The award of city status to Stanley on the Falklands Islands is of particular significance for the Royal Family…reports Asian Lite News

Eight new cities have been created as part of the celebrations for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee taking place in two weeks.

The Cabinet Office announced the capital of the Falkland Islands is among the eight places to win coveted city status, alongside Bangor in Northern Ireland, Douglas on the Crown Dependency of the Isle of Man, Colchester, Doncaster, and Milton Keynes.

Dunfermline in Scotland and Wrexham in Wales have also won the honour.

These are some of the places that “make Britain great”, Steve Barclay, chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster said.

The new cities are expected to boost local communities and open new opportunities for people that live there, according to Barclay.

He added: “What was clear to me during the process of assessing each application was the pride that people felt for their communities, local heritage and the Royal family.

“As we celebrate Her Majesty The Queen’s colossal contribution to society, I am thrilled that we are able to recognise some of the many places that make Britain great.”

The award of city status to Stanley on the Falklands Islands is of particular significance for the Royal Family. Prince Andrew served as a helicopter pilot on HMS invincible during the Falklands war 40 years ago. More recently, the Duke of Cambridge was deployed there for a six-week tour as a search-and-rescue helicopter pilot in 2016.

Douglas is a cultural hub for The Royal Hall, home to the annual flagship concerts by the Isle of Man Symphony Orchestra. Her Majesty is also a patron of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution which operates from there.

Doncaster has showcased community spirit and resilience after the 2019 floods, Wrexham has become the home to the new National Football Museum of Wales while Dunfermline attracted 30,000 local people to their firework display and 10,000 to their Christmas light event.

Bangor became a key site for allied forces during the Second World War, Colchester is Britain’s first recorded settlement and its first capital, while Milton Keynes’ new town has 84,500 citizens who are volunteers. They claim to have the highest number of volunteers per head of population in the UK.

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Sri and Gopi Hinduja named UK’s richest people

She added: “As the Bank of England warns of apocalyptic food price rises, 2 million people are skipping meals, and a third of people can’t afford the essentials…reports Asian Lite News

Sri and Gopi Hinduja have been named the UK’s richest folks, with an estimated £28.5bn fortune – the biggest recorded within the 34 years of publication of the Sunday Times rich list.

The brothers who run a property-to-industrial conglomerate from London noticed their wealth swell by £11.5bn over the previous yr to place them on the prime of the annual wealth rating forward of the inventor Sir James Dyson, who is in second place with £23bn.

Sri, 86, and Gopi, 82, Hinduja and their prolonged household personal a variety of commercial and monetary companies and investments primarily based primarily within the UK, India and Switzerland. They are are at the moment remodeling the Old War Office constructing in Whitehall right into a Raffles resort with 120 rooms, 11 eating places and 85 serviced flats.

As Britons face the most important price of dwelling disaster in many years, the variety of billionaires within the UK hit a file 177, up six on 2021. The mixed wealth of UK billionaires hit £653bn, up £59bn or 9.4%.

“While many of us are experiencing the greatest cost of living squeeze we can remember, the super-rich have had another record year,” mentioned Robert Watts, the compiler of the record. “This year’s Sunday Times rich list again uncovers record wealth and more billionaires than ever before.”

Julia Davies, a founding member of Patriotic Millionaires UK, a bunch of super-rich folks calling for the introduction of a wealth tax, mentioned the record confirmed an “obscene concentration of wealth while millions struggle with simply living”.

She added: “As the Bank of England warns of apocalyptic food price rises, 2 million people are skipping meals, and a third of people can’t afford the essentials. Meanwhile, the rich, as always, are sitting pretty. This disparity has to be fixed. It is political and economic negligence that our politicians are not focused on dealing with the extreme wealth gap at a time of national economic emergency.”

Luke Hildyard, an govt director of the High Pay Centre, a thinktank that focuses on extreme pay, mentioned: “It’s not really efficient or sensible or necessary to run the economy in a way that enables people who are already incredibly wealthy to accumulate even more while much of the population is crushed by a cost of living crisis.

“With stagnating wages and miserable economic growth, it’s clear that sharing existing wealth more evenly is the most important political challenge of our time. That means taxing the super-rich more effectively and getting the companies they own and invest in to pay their workers more.”

Hildyard calculated that if whole family wealth in Great Britain had elevated on the identical price because the wealth of the highest 20 entrants on the wealthy record over the previous decade, the typical family would now have £205,000 greater than they at the moment do.

The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, and his spouse, Akshata Murty, had been named because the 222nd richest folks within the UK, with a mixed fortune of £730m. Their entry into the annual wealth rating follows the revelation final month that Murty had claimed non-dom status to legally not pay tax on annual dividends she receives from a £690m stake within the Indian IT firm Infosys, based by her billionaire father.

After mounting public outrage, Murty bowed to strain to pay UK taxes, saying she realised many individuals felt her tax preparations weren’t “compatible with my husband’s job as chancellor”.

Several Russian oligarchs are nonetheless featured on the record regardless of being hit by sanctions after Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. The estimated fortune of the Chelsea soccer membership proprietor, Roman Abramovich, shrank essentially the most on the record, from £12bn final yr to £6bn at this time, largely due to a steep drop within the worth of his shares within the London-listed Russian metals firm Evraz. However, he’s nonetheless the twenty eighth richest particular person within the UK.

“We think our readers will be surprised more of those who have been sanctioned after the invasion of Ukraine haven’t seen a greater hit to their fortunes,” Watt mentioned. “But the reality is there is a world of difference between freezing assets and seizing assets.

“Even before the war began, many of these billionaires had shifted their wealth beyond the reach of western authorities.”

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Anger as Boris escapes Partygate with 1 fine

While the force does not reveal the identity of those issued with fines, Downing Street has previously confirmed that Boris Johnson, his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were among those fined for a birthday party in the Cabinet Room for the British Prime Minister in June 2020..reports Asian Lite News

Scotland Yard said on Thursday that the police investigation into alleged breaches of COVID-19 lockdown regulations at the UK government offices in Downing Street and Whitehall under Operation Hillman has been completed.

The Metropolitan Police said the total number of referrals for fixed penalty notices (FPNs), or fines, in the so-called partygate scandal, stands at 126 and they relate to events between May 2020 and April 2021.

While the force does not reveal the identity of those issued with fines, Downing Street has previously confirmed that Boris Johnson, his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were among those fined for a birthday party in the Cabinet Room for the British Prime Minister in June 2020.

“When COVID regulations were introduced, the Met was clear that whilst we would not routinely investigate breaches of regulations retrospectively, there may be occasions when it would be appropriate to do so,” said Helen Ball, Acting Deputy Commissioner for the Met Police.

“The information that we received with regard to the alleged breaches in Downing Street and Whitehall was sufficient to reach our criteria to begin such an investigation. Our investigation was thorough and impartial and was completed as quickly as we could, given the amount of information that needed to be reviewed and the importance of ensuring that we had strong evidence for each FPN referral. This investigation is now complete,” she said.

The criteria used by the force to consider such a “retrospective investigation” was that: there was evidence that those involved knew or ought to have known that what they were doing was an offence; where not investigating would significantly undermine the legitimacy of the law; and where there was little ambiguity around the absence of any reasonable defence.

“We will not be releasing or confirming the identity of anyone involved in this investigation or providing further details of our findings, in line with the approach we’ve taken throughout the pandemic,” the Met Police said.

The breakdown of those sanctioned was revealed as 53 men and 73 women, with some receiving more than one fines – which are set on a gradation scale, starting at GBP 100 and rising to GBP 300.

Such fines or fixed penalty notices are a sanction for breaking the law and mean a fine needs to be paid within 28 days unless contested. If someone chooses to contest the fine, the police will then review the case and decide whether to withdraw the fine or take the matter to court. The amount of the fine gets halved if paid early without a legal challenge, as done by Johnson and Sunak.

“We took great care to ensure that for each referral we had the necessary evidence to prosecute the FPN at court, were it not paid,” the Met said

The force said it deployed a team of 12 detectives working through 345 documents, including emails, door logs, diary entries and witness statements, 510 photographs and CCTV images and 204 questionnaires as part of a careful and thorough enquiry.

Each line of enquiry looked at the date, the circumstances behind each event, and the actions of the individual, benchmarked against the legislation at that time, to establish whether their behaviour met the criminal threshold for an FPN referral to be made.

There were a string of gatherings under the police scanner to determine whether there was a breach of the law, which at the time imposed a strict ban on social gatherings with anyone outside your own household to control the spread of coronavirus.

The conclusion of the police investigation clears the way for top civil servant Sue Gray’s report into the partygate scandal, which posed a major challenge to Johnson’s leadership earlier this year, to be published in full.

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Rahul leaves for UK to address ‘India@75’ at Cambridge

Gandhi will be speaking on May 23, holding a conversation with Dr Shruti Kapila of Corpus Christi College….reports Asian Lite News

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Thursday flew to the UK to attend a Cambridge University programme where he will be speaking “India@75”, the challenges and way ahead for a resilient-modern India.

Gandhi will be speaking on May 23, holding a conversation with Dr Shruti Kapila of Corpus Christi College.

Congress General Secretary Randeep Surjewala, in a tweet, said that Gandhi will address and interact at Cambridge University on “India at 75”, and also speak on “Ideas for India” Conference at London and “interact with Indian diaspora on what the present and future holds”.

Gandhi participated from in the party’s three-day “Chintan Shivir” where the Congress derived a strategy to take on the BJP and decided to hit on streets from June 15, and begin a major programme, the Bharat Jodo Yatra, from Kaniyakumari, on October 2, the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi.

Recently, Rahul Gandhi’s remarks that the regional parties can’t fight the BJP politically as they don’t have an ideology has upset several opposition parties.

Jharkhand Mukti Morcha, CPI(M), Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and Janata Dal (Secular) have questioned Rahul Gandhi’s comment that only the Congress has the ideology “to take on the BJP”.

Rahul in his address at Congress’ ‘Chintan Shivir’ in Udaipur on Sunday had claimed that regional parties cannot fight the BJP and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) as they lack ideology, adding that only the Congress can fight the BJP.

Reacting to Rahul Gandhi’s statement, RJD spokesperson Manoj Kumar Jha said, “I find it a bit strange and contradictory.”

“If he (Rahul Gandhi) looks at the figures, he will withdraw his statement. The Congress manifesto says that the party is committed to establish dialogue with like-minded parties to protect the spirit of nationalism and democracy,” Jha added.

The RJD spokesperson said that had Rahul Gandhi known about the outcome of the electoral battle against the BJP, he would have realised the ideological and electoral commitment made by the regional parties, which the Congress leader claimed did not have the potential to fight the BJP.

On the other hand, CPI(M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury said at a party convention in Kochi, “Compared to the past, today the Congress has become weaker and many in the BJP and RSS do not see the Congress as a big threat because its leaders can leave the party to join the BJP at any point of time.”

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‘British billionaire Zahoor helps Ukraine buy two fighter jets’

Speaking to Arab News in March, Zahoor also called on the people of the world to support and side with Ukraine as it fights back against Russian aggression…reports Asian Lite News

Britain-based Pakistani billionaire Mohammad Zahoor, the former publisher of Kyiv Post, has reportedly given Ukraine fighter jets to aid in their battle as Russia’s invasion of the Eastern European country continues.

Citing Ukraine’s TSN, Newsweek reported that Mr Zahoor’s wife, Ukrainian singer Kamaliya Zahoor, said that her husband and other wealthy friends had been quietly helping Ukraine in its fight against Russia. She informed that her husband helped purchase two jets for Ukraine’s air force.

“(Mohammad) gave me the green light to tell this. Because they hid these [actions]. They gave two fighter jets to Ukraine and help Ukraine,” she said, as per the media outlet.

It is to mention that since the Russia-Ukraine war broke, Zahoor, who used to live in Ukraine and was the former owner of the Ukrainian newspaper Kyiv Post, has been pushing to ensure the safe evacuation of Ukrainian citizens. The Pakistan-born British businessman has been reportedly attempting to mobilise funds and help evacuate refugees to the UK and other parts of Europe. As per Newsweek, he had also continued to meet with heads of state and other influential people to ensure safe passage for Ukrainians.

Speaking to Arab News in March, Zahoor also called on the people of the world to support and side with Ukraine as it fights back against Russian aggression. “I am openly taking the side of Ukraine because after seeing [reports from] Western, Ukrainian and Russian media, I can see and decide who is telling the truth. This is the time actually for everyone to speak up for Ukraine otherwise every big country is going to swallow its next-door neighbour,” he said.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian resistance continues in Russian-occupied territories. While Moscow has stated it is engaged in a “special military operation” to demilitarise and “denazify” its neighbour, the West and Kyiv have called that a false pretext for invasion. But Russian forces continue to press their main offensive, trying to capture more territory in the eastern Donbas region which Moscow claims on behalf of separatists.

According to Reuters, Russian and Russian-backed forces are still in control of an area of Ukraine about the size of Greece along the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea, and in Ukraine’s east bordering Russia. But the Russian forces have been driven out of the area around the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv in the northeast in the past two weeks.

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Indian nurse number strength boosts workforce

The UK’s Royal College of Nursing (RCN) also called for radical action to boost the nursing workforce in a sustainable way…reports Asian Lite News

Indians are driving a rise in foreign nurses coming in to boost the workforce of the UK’s National Health Service, according to official figures released in London on Wednesday.

The Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) data for 2021-22 show 37,815 Indian nurses on the council’s register of those qualified to work in the UK, up from 28,192 the previous year and a jump from 17,730 four years ago. The Philippines remains the top-most source country with 41,090 nurses and Nigeria is third with 7,256 nurses on the register.

“Our register is at the highest level ever. This is good news considering all the pressures of the last two years. But a closer look at our data reveal some warning signs,” said Andrea Sutcliffe, chief executive and registrar at the NMC.

“The total number of people leaving the register has risen, after a steady and welcome fall over the previous four years. Those who left shared troubling stories about the pressure they’ve had to bear during the pandemic. A focus on retention as well as attracting new recruits need to be part of a sustainable workforce plan to meet rising demands for health and care services,” she said.

In total, there were 48,436 joiners, up from 34,517 the previous year and 38,317 in 2019-2020, which was seen as a welcome sign for the health service coping with nursing staff shortages.

The NMC found that of all the joiners almost half (48 per cent) had trained overseas and of those, 66 per cent had trained in India or the Philippines. This means growth of the UK nursing and midwifery workforce has become more reliant than ever on internationally trained professionals joining the register, the NMC notes.

“Another note of caution is that growth of the workforce has become more reliant on internationally trained professionals joining our register. These professionals make a welcome and vital contribution to our nation’s health and well-being. But we can’t take them for granted,” warns Sutcliffe.

The UK’s Royal College of Nursing (RCN) also called for radical action to boost the nursing workforce in a sustainable way.

“We again question how sustainable it is to recruit half of all new nurses from around the world. The UK’s health and care workforce is proudly diverse, but it must be done ethically and come at the same time as increased investment in education and domestic workers,” said Pat Cullen, RCN general secretary and chief executive.

“When we have tens of thousands of vacant nurse jobs, a sharp rise in leavers should not be overlooked while we welcome new recruits. Nursing staff tell us these shortages are biting more than ever,” she said.

The UK government says the NHS follows ethical recruitment practices by not recruiting from a red list of countries, which have declared shortages of healthcare staff. All parts of the UK have set out plans to increase the number of nurses and midwives in the NHS, with a target to boost numbers domestically and be less reliant on foreign staff.

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Inflation hits 9%, highest since 1982

The UK now has the highest inflation rate of Europe’s five biggest economies and almost certainly of the Group of Seven countries, with Canada and Japan yet to report figures for April. Neither is likely to match Britain’s inflation level…reports Asian Lite News

Inflation in the United Kingdom surged last month to its highest annual rate in 40 years, official data show, piling pressure on the government to step up assistance for households facing a worsening cost-of-living crisis.

Consumer price inflation hit 9 percent in April, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said on Wednesday, surpassing the peaks of the early 1990s recession that many Britons remember for sky-high interest rates and widespread mortgage defaults.

The UK now has the highest inflation rate of Europe’s five biggest economies and almost certainly of the Group of Seven countries, with Canada and Japan yet to report figures for April. Neither is likely to match Britain’s inflation level.

“Countries around the world are dealing with rising inflation,” said UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak, the finance minister.

“Today’s inflation numbers are driven by the energy price cap rise in April, which in turn is driven by higher global energy prices.

“We cannot protect people completely from these global challenges but are providing significant support where we can, and stand ready to take further action.”

The release of the data led to a drop in the value of sterling, which was down 0.6 percent against the United States dollar at 08:16 GMT.

Soaring energy bills were the biggest inflation driver, reflecting last month’s increase in regulated energy tariffs. Knock-on effects from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine mean those bills are likely to jump higher again in October.

An increase in prices charged by restaurants and cafes, as value-added tax rates went back to their pre-pandemic levels in April, also added to the inflation jump last month.

Food prices rose by nearly 7 percent in the 12 months to April, the ONS said.

While the government has said it now has a 22 billion pounds ($27.4bn) package of support for households, much of this is cancelled out by the effect of recent tax increases on workers.

Anti-poverty campaigners called on Sunak to act now, starting with an immediate increase in the value of welfare benefits to match inflation.

“As the price of essentials like food and energy continue to soar, the chancellor’s inaction will make an already desperate situation for many even worse,” said Rebecca McDonald, senior economist at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, which campaigns on behalf of lower-income households.

A survey published on Tuesday showed two in three people in the UK had kept their heating off when they would normally have turned it on, almost half were driving less or changing supermarkets and just more than a quarter say they have skipped meals.

On Monday, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, speaking to legislators, said food price rises were a major worry as he apologised for “being apocalyptic for a moment”.

The central bank this month forecast inflation would top 10 percent later this year and investors expect it will add to the four interest rate increases it has implemented since December.

“Things are going to get worse before they get better,” Paul Dales, chief UK economist at the Capital Economics consultancy, said of Wednesday’s data.

Retail price inflation – an older measure that the ONS says is now inaccurate, but which is widely used in commercial contracts and to set interest payments on inflation-linked government bonds – jumped to 11.1 percent last month, also the highest since 1982.

There were signs of further inflation pressure ahead as manufacturers suffered the joint biggest increase on record in the prices they pay for their raw materials, which were up by an annual 18.6 percent, matching March’s high.

Factories increased their prices by 14 percent over the 12 months to April, the biggest jump since July 2008.

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Ajay Piramal receives honorary British award from Queen

Expressing his thoughts on the award, Piramal said, “I am humbled and honoured to receive this honorary award from Her Majesty The Queen…reports Asian Lite News

Ajay Piramal, Chairman of the Piramal Group, has received an honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) award from Queen Elizabeth II. He received the award for his services to the UK-India trade relationship as the Indian Co-Chair of the UK-India CEO Forum.

Piramal had contributed to the Joint Economic and Trade Committee (JETCO) meeting in London in 2019, the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in 2018, and the visit of the UK Prime Minister to India in 2016. “Piramal has also helped shape policy on labour mobility, setting up a fast-track mechanism for Indian investments in the UK, and the on corporate tax in India,” the British Deputy High Commission said in a statement.

Expressing his thoughts on the award, Piramal said, “I am humbled and honoured to receive this honorary award from Her Majesty The Queen. As cochair of India-UK CEO forum since 2016, the endeavor has been to help strengthen the strong bilateral relations between the two countries through greater economic co-operation.”

Alan Gemmell, Elizabeth’s Trade Commissioner for South Asia and British Deputy High Commissioner for Western India, said, “ I visited Piramal Pharma Solution’s world-leading antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) manufacturing facility near Edinburgh earlier this year, to see their investment to expand the facility and create around 50 new highly skilled jobs. It is an honour to see Ajay’s vast contribution over so many years marked in this way.”

The Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) is awarded for having a prominent role at national level.

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‘British govt monitoring Yasin Malik’s trial’

His life is in real danger,” Lord Hussain asserted, as he asked: “Will the government use its good offices to protect Mr Yasin Malik’s life?”…reports Asian Lite News

The British government of the Conservative party told the House of Lords on Tuesday that it is monitoring the trial of Indian Kashmiri leader Yasin Malik.

Responding to a question, Minister of State in the Foreign Office, Lord Tariq Ahmed, said: “On the specific issue of the trial of Mr Yasin Malik… we are monitoring it very closely. We do note he has been charged under the Indian law… and therefore we cannot intervene in the independent judicial process of India directly. However, in all our engagements we urge all countries to always respect their own international obligations regarding the treatment of any detainees.”

The matter put to him by Lord Qurban Hussain, a Liberal Democrat peer, was that Malik is on trial this week. Lord Hussain claimed the charges against him are “fake”. He alleged Kashmiris suspect the Indian government wants to “get rid of him”.

“His life is in real danger,” Lord Hussain asserted, as he asked: “Will the government use its good offices to protect Mr Yasin Malik’s life?”

Replying to an earlier query, Lord Ahmed had said: “The United Kingdom government encourages all states to ensure their domestic laws are in line with international standards. Indeed, any allegation of human rights is deeply concerning and must be investigated thoroughly, properly and transparently… We raise concerns with the governments of both India and Pakistan.”

Lord Hussain had asked what assessment the British government had made “of the human rights situation” in Jammu and Kashmir.

Subsequently, Lord Rami Ranger made a powerful intervention against Pakistan.

He said Hussain knows that “two Sikh traders in Peshawar were murdered last week because of their religion”.

“People in Pakistan like Ahmediyas, Sikhs, Christians and Hindus are persecuted, forcibly converted, Shia mosques are attacked… I would like to ask who is supplying arms to terrorists in Kashmir, who is training them, who is encouraging them to create disruption in paradise,” Lord Ranger asked.

Lord Ahmed tackled this by saying: “I am acutely aware of the challenges minority communities face in Pakistan and we again raise these in a constructive way… It’s important for both countries to move forward mutually together and agree that there is a bright future for both countries…”

Regarding the United Nations’ role on the Kashmir dispute, Lord Ahmed stated: “The best way to find a solution is to do so together.”

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Hundreds gather to protest against Assange’s extradition

The case is now at the hands of British Home Secretary Priti Patel, who will decide whether to approve the extradition…reports Asian Lite News

Hundreds of people gathered in front of the British Home Office to protest against the extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the US, denouncing it as “politically motivated” and a “grave threat to freedom of press”. The protestors assembled on Tuesday in London.

After Assange waged several rounds of appeal battle spanning months, Britain’s Westminster Magistrate’s Court issued a formal order in April to extradite him to the US to face espionage charges.

The case is now at the hands of British Home Secretary Priti Patel, who will decide whether to approve the extradition.

The Wikileaks founder’s legal team can make submissions before Wednesday to Patel explaining why the former shouldn’t be extradited.

On Tuesday, Assange’s wife Stella Assange said on Twitter that a representation had been filed to the Home Secretary to block his extradition to the US.

Assange, 50, is wanted in the US on allegations of disclosing national defence information following WikiLeaks’s publication of hundreds of thousands of leaked military documents relating to the Afghanistan and Iraq wars a decade ago, which included an Apache helicopter video footage documenting the US military gunning down Reuters journalists and children in Baghdad’s streets in 2007.

“It’s very clear that the case is politically motivated because the American authorities are using the espionage act to attempt extradition. And the espionage act has been historically used to suppress American dissidents,” Lano Nika, a protester, told Xinhua.

“This case is critical not only for media freedom, but also for institution accountability and personal freedoms,” she added.

“We know that media freedom has been eroding and in a precarious state. It is not in a good condition in our Western part of the world and that needs to be turned around. This case illustrates the fragility of media freedom,” Kristinn Hrafnsson, Editor-in-Chief of WikiLeaks, told Xinhua.

He said his team will keep on fighting if Patel signs the extradition, as there’re other legal avenues for appeal, including taking this case up to the European Court of Human Rights.

“There are legal avenues but it will take time and enough is enough. He has spent too much time deprived of his liberty and the opportunity to spend time with his wife and his children,” he said, noting that Assange’s health has been deteriorating after long incarceration.

The Wikileaks founder has been held at south London’s high-security Belmarsh Prison since 2019. He married his long-term partner Stella Moris, a lawyer, in the prison in March.

Lawyers for the US said earlier that Assange would be allowed to transfer to Australia, his home country, to serve any prison sentence he may be given.

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