Category: UK News

  • Smoking to be banned outside schools and hospitals

    Smoking to be banned outside schools and hospitals

    It aims to make the UK the first country in the world to eradicate smoking by raising the age at which people can buy cigarettes by one year every year until no one can legally do so…reports Asian Lite News

    Smoking is to be banned outside schools and hospitals in England as part of a crackdown on one of the UK’s biggest killers and the country’s most common cause of cancer.

    But the government has dropped plans to outlaw smoking outside pubs and restaurants, prompting health campaigners to complain about “vested interests” covertly influencing policy.

    The health secretary, Wes Streeting, said it was a “sensible package to tackle what is still one of Britain’s biggest killers … but also to clamp down on the scourge of use of vaping”.

    He said he had listened to the hospitality industry’s concerns about smoking outside venues. “To be fair to the hospitality industry, they’ve taken a real battering in recent years – I don’t think it’s in anyone’s interest for us to worsen that situation,” he said.

    “So we listened to what the hospitality industry said and therefore we’re not proposing to go ahead with an outdoor hospitality ban at this stage.” The extension of the existing ban on smoking indoors to some outdoor settings is contained in the delayed tobacco and vapes bill, which will finally be laid before parliament on Tuesday.

    It aims to make the UK the first country in the world to eradicate smoking by raising the age at which people can buy cigarettes by one year every year until no one can legally do so.

    The legislation will also ban the advertising of vapes, and sponsorship by vaping companies, amid alarm over a rise in the number of children and other young people taking up the habit. It will restrict the flavours, packaging and marketing of vapes, which critics say are used to lure under-18s into using them.

    The hospitality trade welcomed the government’s decision to drop plans to prohibit smoking outside pubs, cafes and restaurants and said it would help prevent pubs closing and jobs disappearing.

    “Had this restriction been introduced it would have led to many pubs shutting their doors and jobs being lost and so we welcome the government’s change of heart and proportionate approach,” said Emma McClarkin, the chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association.
    Kate Nicholls, the boss of UK Hospitality, said the mooted ban had caused “angst among hospitality businesses”, which worried that it would increase costs and drive away customers.

    Caroline Cerny, the deputy chief executive of Action on Smoking and Health, voiced frustration that the bill had been watered down after behind-the-scenes lobbying by commercial interests.

    Health organisations will keep pushing ministers, and also the devolved administrations, to forbid smoking outside hospitality venues, by stressing the harm secondhand smoke can do.

    “We welcome the government taking overarching powers to limit exposure to secondhand smoke outdoors and that they intend to move quickly in areas with the most consensus,” she said.

    “Given that people working [in] and visiting hospitality settings are exposed to secondhand smoke, we’re sure both the government and the hospitality sector will want to see smoking restrictions applied here too.
    “This is the start of an important ‘national debate’ which should be shaped out in the open by health evidence and public opinion, not behind closed doors by industry with vested interests.

    We will continue to push for ambitious legislation that will protect as many people as possible.”
    Streeting told Times Radio that he understood there would be criticism of the balance the government had struck. The health secretary himself is known to favour a wider ban.

    “There’ll be people who I suspect will say we’ve got the balance wrong and that we were wrong to listen to concerns of hospitality. That is a legitimate argument, it is a debate we’ve had inside government about where we draw the line, how you get the choices and the trade-offs right,” he said.
    Asked if people who go to a pub garden were choosing to take the risk, he replied: “Yes, and we could have gone further in terms of saying, ‘Well, in that case, we’re going to clamp down on outdoor hospitality spaces,’ but we had to also weigh up the current pressures on that sector.”
    The bill will give ministers the power to ban smoking in certain outdoor areas, subject to a public consultation, with places where children and vulnerable people gather the main focus. Playgrounds and locations outside schools and hospitals are likely to be the first settings in which it will be enforced.
    New York City and Melbourne already operate smoke-free outdoor settings. The authorities in Greater Manchester have previously shown interest in banning lighting up in key locations in the city centre, such as Piccadilly Gardens, St Peter’s Square and near the town hall.
    Prof Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer for England, who is thought to have argued for the widest possible outdoor smoking ban, said the UK finally becoming “smoke-free” would lead to fewer stillbirths and cases of asthma in children, as well as reductions in cancer, strokes, heart disease and dementia.
    “Secondhand smoke causes harm, including to children, pregnant women and medically vulnerable people, so reducing this is important. If vulnerable people can smell smoke, they are inhaling it,” he said.

    ALSO READ: Badenoch appoints Philp as shadow home secy

  • Badenoch appoints Philp as shadow home secy

    Badenoch appoints Philp as shadow home secy

    Philp was first elected as MP for Croydon South in 2015 and before joining Parliament set up businesses in finance and travel….reports Asian Lite News

    Chris Philp has been appointed shadow home secretary by new Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch. The former Home Office minister supported Badenoch’s leadership campaign.

    On Monday it emerged that Badenoch had offered three of her former leadership rivals senior roles. Robert Jenrick, who was beaten in the final round, will serve as shadow justice secretary, while Mel Stride will be shadow chancellor and Dame Priti Patel will be shadow foreign secretary. Badenoch has now named her full shadow cabinet team ahead of their first meeting on Tuesday morning.

    Ed Argar, a former justice and health minister, has been made shadow health and social care secretary, while Claire Coutinho keeps her job as shadow secretary of state for energy security and net zero, as well as taking on the shadow equalities brief.

    Philp was first elected as MP for Croydon South in 2015 and before joining Parliament set up businesses in finance and travel. As well as serving as a junior minister in the Home Office under Rishi Sunak, he has previously held a number of other government roles including briefly serving as chief secretary to the Treasury under Liz Truss.

    Badenoch’s shadow cabinet leans heavily on those who supported her leadership campaign. Of the line-up, 15 backed her, five did not declare for either of the final two, and just three backed Jenrick, including Jenrick himself.

    Some Conservatives are already noting that it is strikingly similar to a line-up Sunak could have selected. Nine of the new shadow cabinet have been at the real cabinet table – perhaps unsurprising for a party which has just been ejected from government but nevertheless a sign that Badenoch has not opted for a radically fresh team.

    One senior Conservative said, “For a party that just had a right vs right leadership contest the almost total absence of the right will not help.”
    They warned that right-wing Conservative MPs, who mostly backed Jenrick’s campaign, are now more likely to agitate against Badenoch’s leadership.
    Badenoch said her new shadow cabinet “draws on the talents of people from across the Conservative Party, based on meritocracy and with a breadth of experience and perspective”.
    She added: “We will now get to work holding Labour to account and rebuilding our party based on Conservative principles and values. The process of renewing our great party has now begun.”
    By giving jobs to some of her former rivals in the Tory leadership race, as well as figures from different wings of the party, Badenoch will be hoping to unite the Conservatives after they suffered their worst ever general election defeat in July. However, there was wrangling over which, if any, job Jenrick would take.

    Sunak visits Bengaluru for spiritual blessings

    Former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak along with his wife Akshata and family, visited the Sri Raghavendra Swami Mutt in Jayanagar, Bengaluru, to seek the blessings of Guru Raghavendra.
    Accompanied by renowned in-law and philanthropist Sudha Narayana Murthy, the visit underscored the cultural ties and spiritual heritage connecting India and the UK.

    The couple’s visit to the mutt, located in the fifth block of Jayanagar, was a moment of reverence and reflection, marking their connection to Indian traditions.

    Guru Raghavendra is widely revered in the Hindu community, and his teachings resonate with many who seek guidance and wisdom. During their darshan, Sunak and his family participated in the rituals, embracing the spiritual significance of the occasion.
    Rishi Sunak served as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from October 2022 until his resignation in July 2023, making history as the first British-Indian leader. He was succeeded by Keir Starmer in 2024, a former barrister who entered Parliament in 2015.

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  • UK, China locked in embassy dispute

    UK, China locked in embassy dispute


    Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister and housing secretary, faces a politically fraught decision over whether to approve plans for a new Chinese embassy at Royal Mint Court…reports Asian Lite News

    China is blocking requests to rebuild the British embassy in Beijing while the fate of its controversial mega-embassy in east London is being decided.

    Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister and housing secretary, faces a politically fraught decision over whether to approve plans for a new Chinese embassy at Royal Mint Court. The Chinese government has resisted UK requests to carry out a major reconstruction of the British embassy in Beijing for at least a year on the basis that its own proposals in east London had been blocked.

    Three UK sources with knowledge of the negotiations said the embassy had become a top issue for China in its relations with Britain, the Guardian reported.

    China wants to build a giant complex on 20,000 sq metres of land at Royal Mint Court, a historic site near the Tower of London that it bought six years ago. Tower Hamlets council refused planning permission for the embassy in 2022, citing security concerns and opposition from residents.
    By calling in the decision last month, Rayner took it out of the council’s hands, though she has ordered a local inquiry into the matter.

    “Until that one gets moving the British embassy in Beijing won’t move,” one source who was involved in the discussions under the Conservatives said. “The grounds for turning it down were pretty spurious … It came about more because they were so angry that [planning permission for the Chinese embassy in London] was just turned down without any support.”
    Another source said of the Chinese government’s thinking: “They see it as a reciprocal-type thing where both people want changes, but our system doesn’t really work quite as centrally as theirs does.”

    Half a dozen people who have visited or worked in the British embassy in Beijing in the past two years told the Guardian it was in a dire state and in need of major reconstruction. An official who visited the embassy for meetings in the past year said the issue would “come up at every single meeting”.
    In a sign that the UK government is hopeful of finding a resolution to the matter, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) submitted a procurement notice in August setting out plans to demolish the embassy in Beijing and rebuild it. The work is estimated to cost about £100m and is subject to local planning permission.

    The Chinese government bought the Royal Mint Court site for £255m in 2018 as part of a plan to relocate its embassy from Portland Place near Regent’s Park, where it is housed in a townhouse that has become a target for Uyghur and Tibetan protesters.

    After Tower Hamlets declined planning permission and the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, chose not to intervene, China refused to appeal and made it clear to Conservative ministers it wanted them to step in and give assurances they would back a resubmitted application.
    Relations between the UK and China were worsening, amid security and hacking concerns, Beijing’s crackdown on civil liberties in Hong Kong and reports of human rights abuses in Xinjiang.
    China’s decision to resubmit its application with no significant changes after Labour won the election marks a shift in relations. Rayner called in the proposal days after David Lammy, the foreign secretary, returned from a trip to China. If approved, the new embassy would be China’s biggest in Europe and almost twice the size of its embassy in Washington.
    A Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government spokesperson said: “Applications for a new Chinese embassy in Tower Hamlets have been called in for ministers to decide. A final decision will be made in due course.”

    A statement on the Chinese’s embassy website in August said: “Six years ago, the Chinese government purchased the Royal Mint Court, London, for the use as the new Chinese embassy premises. The UK government had given its consent to this. Now we are in the process of applying for planning permission.

    “Host countries have the international obligation to support and facilitate the building of the premises of diplomatic missions. Both China and the UK have the need to build a new embassy in each other’s capital, and the two sides should provide facilitation to each other.”

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  • Badenoch appoints Patel and Jenrick to shadow cabinet

    Badenoch appoints Patel and Jenrick to shadow cabinet

    The appointment of three MPs who ran against Badenoch in the leadership contest followed her decision to make Laura Trott, a leading supporter of her campaign, shadow education secretary….reports Asian Lite News

    Kemi Badenoch has appointed Robert Jenrick shadow justice secretary, with Mel Stride shadow chancellor and Priti Patel shadow foreign secretary, as she began to put together a frontbench team billed as uniting the Conservatives.
    There were, however, questions about whether Jenrick had initially sought another post, in a sign of potential tensions between the final two candidates to replace Rishi Sunak.

    The appointment of three MPs who ran against Badenoch in the leadership contest followed her decision to make Laura Trott, a leading supporter of her campaign, shadow education secretary.

    It remained unclear whether Jenrick’s move to what could be seen as a mid-range shadow cabinet job was his first choice, after reports that he and Badenoch had been wrangling over his role. An ally of Jenrick said: “Robert was always keen to serve.”

    Badenoch had already appointed two other supporters to jobs, with Rebecca Harris becoming chief whip, and Nigel Huddlestone being made Conservative party co-chair alongside Dominic Johnson, a Tory peer and former donor.
    Robert Jenrick congratulates Kemi Badenoch as she is announced the winner of the Conservative leadership election.
    Neil O’Brien, who had been widely tipped for a shadow cabinet job, was made number two in the education team, regarded by some observers as a slight snub for a supporter of Jenrick, who Badenoch defeated in a vote of Tory members, a result announced on Saturday.
    Allies of Badenoch said that no more appointments would be made on Monday, with the full list to be announced before a shadow cabinet meeting on Tuesday, to avoid a “running commentary” as jobs were finalised.
    With only 121 MPs on the Tory benches – the full government complement is 124 – Badenoch will be somewhat limited on who she picks. This is all the more so with some senior Tories saying they do not want jobs.
    These include Jeremy Hunt, the former chancellor and shadow chancellor, and James Cleverly, the shadow home secretary who was favourite to become the next leader until he was surprisingly removed in the final vote among Tory MPs.
    Jenrick trained as a solicitor and worked as a corporate lawyer, and so has a suitable background for the justice brief. His last government job was as immigration minister, and he made migration and his desire for the UK to withdraw from the European convention on human rights the key part of his leadership bid.
    The contest included coded if personal attacks between Jenrick and Badenoch. He promised to “end the drama”, a reference to Badenoch’s penchant for arguments, and was furious when she talked about Jenrick having to “resign in disgrace” as housing minister after a controversy about a planning-related conflict of interest.
    The appointment of Stride will be seen as a sign of Badenoch seeking to reach out to centrists in the party, particularly after Andrew Griffith, another one of her key supporters, had been closely linked to the job.
    Stride was one of six candidates to succeed Sunak as Tory leader, but was knocked out in the second round of voting by Conservative MPs. He then backed James Cleverly before Cleverly in turn was knocked out.
    Stride was work and pensions secretary under Rishi Sunak, having previously served as a Treasury minister and chaired the Treasury committee.
    Patel, who also stood to be leader but was knocked out in the first round, has had a chequered ministerial career, only surviving as home secretary when Boris Johnson refused to sack her despite a formal investigation finding evidence that she had bullied civil servants.
    The controversy, one of several to afflict Johnson’s government, saw the then PM’s adviser on ethics, Sir Alex Allan, resign after Johnson decided to keep Patel in her post despite an official report uncovering conduct that “amounted to behaviour that can be described as bullying”, including instances of shouting and swearing.
    In 2017, Patel was forced to resign as international development secretary under Theresa May after holding a series of unofficial meetings with Israeli ministers, business people and a senior lobbyist while in Israel on what was billed as a holiday.
    A source in Badenoch’s team said the decision to appoint the two former candidates from different wings of the party – Patel is from the right and Stride a centrist – was “demonstrating Kemi’s desire to unite the party”.
    Badenoch appointed Trott earlier on Monday, so she could speak at education questions and respond to a government statement on increased university tuition fees.

    Cleverly rules out frontbench role


    Shadow home secretary James Cleverly has said he will not accept a frontbench role from the next leader of the Conservative Party. The winning candidate – Kemi Badenoch or Robert Jenrick – is likely to carry out an immediate reshuffle of the Tory frontbench team.
    But Cleverly has told the Financial Times (FT) he will return to the backbenches rather than serve in either candidate’s shadow cabinet.
    Following the Tory conference, Cleverly briefly became the frontrunner in the race to replace Rishi Sunak, but was surprisingly knocked out in the final ballot of MPs.
    He told the FT he had been “liberated” from 16 years on the political front line and was now “not particularly in the mood to be boxed back into a narrow band again”.
    Cleverly shot to the front of the pack of leadership candidates after a well-received speech to the Conservative conference early last month, in which he called for the party to be “more normal” and sell its policies “with a smile”.
    However, his support unexpectedly fell away in the last round of MPs’ voting.
    Many theories were advanced on why that had happened, including that some of his supporters had tried to engineer the final line-up they wanted.
    The former home and foreign secretary was eliminated with 37 votes. Badenoch secured 42 and Jenrick 41. There were gasps in the Commons committee room where the result was announced.
    Cleverly admitted to the FT the result was a “bit of a punch to the gut”, saying he had repeatedly warned his backers that “Kremlinology is a fool’s game” – but that he “lost track” of the number of supporters who asked who he would prefer to go up against.
    “I’d worried that that might happen,” he said, adding: “I kept saying there aren’t many votes to play with… it doesn’t take very many people to really distort outcomes.”
    He declined to say who of the final two he had backed. When Badenoch and Jenrick topped the MPs’ poll, both signalled they would offer him a position in their shadow cabinet if they became leader.
    Badenoch said Cleverly’s campaign had been “full of energy, ideas and optimism”, and she looked forward to “continuing to work with him”. Jenrick told Cleverly the party “needs you in its top team in the years ahead”, adding that he would be “delighted for him to serve in the shadow cabinet should he want to do so”.
    Jenrick has made leaving the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) a key plank of his leadership offer, saying all Tory MPs would need to sign up to the policy – but Cleverly has rejected the idea.
    However, a stint on the backbenches appears unlikely to last forever and Cleverly has left the door open to a future bid to become leader of the Conservative Party, saying he would not “rule anything in or anything out”.
    Nor did he rule out the idea of a bid to become mayor of London in 2028, adding: “We do need to fight back in London. We need to fight back in big, big, big chunks of the country.”

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  • Investment of £150m to tackle Channel people smuggling

    Investment of £150m to tackle Channel people smuggling

    Starmer said the money would support “a new organised immigration crime intelligence unit – hundreds of new investigators and intelligence officers backed by state-of-the-art technology”….reports Asian Lite News

    People smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat “similar to terrorism”, Keir Starmer has said in an address to Interpol’s general assembly.

    The prime minister urged world leaders to “wake up to the severity of this challenge”, saying there is “nothing progressive about turning a blind eye” to people who die in the English Channel.

    The speech in Glasgow came after he pledged a further £75m for the UK government’s Border Security Command (BSC), doubling the total funding to £150m over the next two years.

    Starmer said the money would support “a new organised immigration crime intelligence unit – hundreds of new investigators and intelligence officers backed by state-of-the-art technology”.

    Money will also go towards the National Crime Agency, including strengthening its data analysis and intelligence capabilities, and the government will “legislate to give those fighting these gangs enhanced powers too”, Starmer said.
    The prime minister also announced a £6m increase in funding for Interpol and a further £24m for tackling serious international crime affecting the UK, including drugs, firearms and fraud, particularly in the Western Balkans. It is not clear where all the money is coming from.
    Labour’s initial £75m for the BSC came from scrapping the former Conservative government’s Rwanda scheme, while Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said on Monday morning that the other half is new funding from last week’s budget.
    Starmer told senior ministers and policing leads from Interpol’s 196 member states: “People smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat similar to terrorism. “We’ve got to combine resources, share intelligence and tactics, and tackle the problem upstream, working together to shut down the smuggling routes.”
    He added that tackling people-smuggling gangs is his “personal mission” and “that starts here in the UK”. “We’re going to treat people smugglers like terrorists. So, we’re taking our approach to counter terrorism, which we know works, and applying it to the gangs,” he said.
    “There is nothing progressive about turning a blind eye, as men, women and children die in the Channel. This is a vile trade that must be stamped out wherever it thrives.”
    The event on Monday kicks off a week-long blitz by Starmer on people smuggling, after he vowed in the election campaign to “smash the gangs” and set up the BSC to help him achieve that goal.
    However, the government has refused to be drawn on how soon their plans could result in a reduction of the dangerous journeys. Speaking to reporters after Starmer’s speech, a Downing Street spokesperson said ministers are “going to make progress as rapidly as is possible” on migrant crossings but would not reveal if there was a target in mind.
    A Conservative Party spokesperson said: “Keir Starmer’s announcement on tackling gangs will mean absolutely nothing without a deterrent to stop migrants wishing to make the dangerous journey across the Channel.
    “It is a shame that Starmer has not recognised the extent of the crisis in the Channel sooner, as he and the Labour Party voted against numerous measures to stop the gangs while they were in opposition.
    “If Starmer continues to ignore the need for a deterrent to stop migrants crossing the Channel, there will be more deaths in the Channel as more and more migrants continue to cross it. He needs to get a grip of the crisis in the Channel.”

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  • University fees to rise for first time in eight years

    University fees to rise for first time in eight years

    To help soften the blow, Bridget Phillipson also announced a parallel increase to student maintenance loans…reports Asian Lite News

    University tuition fees in England are to go up for the first time in eight years, taking annual payments up to a record £9,535 per student, the government has announced.

    The inflation-linked increase, which comes into force in the next academic year, was approved by ministers after warnings of a deepening financial crisis in the university sector, where the value of tuition fees has crumbled after being capped at £9,250 since 2017.

    To help soften the blow, Bridget Phillipson also announced a parallel increase to student maintenance loans, providing up to £414 extra per year to support students from the lowest-income families.

    The education secretary said: “This government’s mission is to break down barriers to opportunity, which is why we are doing more to support students struggling with the cost of living despite the fiscal challenges our country faces. The situation we have inherited means this government must take the tough decisions needed to put universities on a firmer financial footing so they can deliver more opportunity for students and growth for our economy.”
    Under the one-year deal, fees and maintenance loans will go up in line with the RPIX measure of inflation – forecast at 3.1% – but there could be further increases if the government decides to revisit tuition fees in the spending review next year. Estimates have suggested fees could go up to as much as £10,500 for students beginning university in 2029 if increases continue to be index-linked.
    Making the announcement in the Commons, Phillipson told MPs: “It is no use keeping tuition fees down for future students if the universities are not there for them to attend, nor if students can’t afford to support themselves while they study.”
    The increase to tuition fees will have been a particularly hard decision for Labour given that at one time the party’s policy, then supported by Keir Starmer, was to scrap tuition fees altogether.
    Phillipson, however, sought to reassure students their monthly student loan repayments would not increase after graduation as a result of the changes.
    In return for the additional funding from fees, universities are being asked to improve value for money for students and break down barriers to opportunity for those from disadvantaged groups, with details of the reforms due to be published next year.
    The announcement was welcomed by vice-chancellors who have vigorously lobbied the new government for additional financial support, arguing the value of domestic tuition fees has been eroded by a third. Privately, however, many are concerned the increase will not be enough to plug the gaps as they simultaneously grapple with a drop in income from international students whose recruitment is down as a result of a clampdown on student visas.
    The University and College Union condemned the fee hike as “economically and morally wrong”. Jo Grady, the UCU general secretary, said: “Taking more money from debt-ridden students and handing it to overpaid, underperforming vice-chancellors is ill-conceived and won’t come close to addressing the sector’s core issues.”
    Alex Stanley, vice-president for higher education at the National Union of Students, said students were being asked to “foot the bill to literally keep the lights and heating on in their uni buildings and prevent their courses from closing down”.
    Laura Trott, in her new role as shadow education secretary, said: “Last week, Labour declared war on businesses, private-sector workers and farmers with their budget. Now it seems they want to add students to the list.

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  • Prince William lands in South Africa

    Prince William lands in South Africa

    The Prince of Wales will have four days of engagements in Cape Town, during which he’ll see his annual Earthshot Prize award $1.2 million in grants to five organizations for innovative environmental ideas. …reports A sian Lite News

    Britain’s Prince William offered words of encouragement to a group of young environmentalists and later joined a rugby practice at a local school as he opened a visit to South Africa on Monday that will focus heavily on climate change and conservation.


    The Prince of Wales will have four days of engagements in Cape Town, during which he’ll see his annual Earthshot Prize award $1.2 million in grants to five organizations for innovative environmental ideas. The awards ceremony will take place in a 470-foot-long reusable dome that will be packed up and taken away after the event.


    The Earthshot awards on Wednesday night are the centerpiece of William’s trip to South Africa’s second-biggest city. But the 42-year-old heir to the throne will also attend a global wildlife summit, visit a botanical garden on the slopes of Cape Town’s landmark Table Mountain, spend time at a sea rescue base and meet with a local fishing community.


    The prince will use the visit to highlight other issues close to his heart, such as the work of rangers on the front line of conservation efforts, officials said.


    William’s first engagement was joining more than 100 young environmentalists aged between 18 and 35, who sat in small groups and discussed climate and conservation issues. William jumped from group to group and spent a few minutes talking with them.
    “I loved chatting to you today. What you are all doing is incredible,” William said at the end. “You are the leaders. You are the people that are going to make the difference going forward. Your solutions and your impact are so important and so needed right now.”
    William formed the Earthshot Prize through his Royal Foundation in 2020 to encourage new ideas to solve environmental problems, with a focus on young entrepreneurs and innovators. It launched in 2021 and the first three awards ceremonies were held in Britain, the United States and Singapore.
    William last visited Africa in 2018 but he has a strong connection to the continent. He traveled there as a boy after the death of his mother, Princess Diana, in a Paris car crash in 1997. He and his wife, Kate, got engaged at a wildlife conservancy in Kenya in 2010. And he said he came up with the idea for the Earthshot awards while in Namibia in 2018.
    “Africa has always held a special place in my heart as somewhere I found comfort as a teenager, where I proposed to my wife, and most recently, as the founding inspiration behind the Earthshot Prize,” William said in a statement ahead of his visit.
    Kate, Princess of Wales, and their children Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis are not traveling to South Africa. Kate, 42, only recently returned to some public duties after completing treatment for an undisclosed type of cancer.
    William’s visit follows soon after his brother Harry, the Duke of Sussex, visited South Africa and neighboring Lesotho last month for a youth charity he set up in southern Africa with a member of Lesotho’s royal family.
    The visit also comes as the finances of William and his father, King Charles III, come under scrutiny following an investigation by The Sunday Times newspaper and Britain’s Channel 4 television. The probe found their private estates made millions of pounds by renting properties to government entities, including the armed forces, the National Health Service and public schools.
    The two estates, the king’s Duchy of Lancaster and the prince’s Duchy of Cornwall, hold portfolios of commercial, residential and agricultural properties that provide personal income to the royals.
    The Duchy of Lancaster responded by saying that while the king takes an interest in the estate, day-to-day operations are overseen by an independent council and executives. The Duchy of Cornwall said the estate operates with a commercial imperative “alongside our commitment to restoring the natural environment and generating positive social impact for our communities.’’
    William briefly broke away from environmental issues to travel to a high school in the underprivileged Ocean View neighborhood on the fringes of Cape Town on Monday.

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  • British couple missing in Spain floods found dead

    British couple missing in Spain floods found dead

    The flooding, which has prompted the central government to deploy 10,000 troops and police officers, has killed 210 people in Valencia, three in Castilla-La Mancha and one in Málaga. …reports Asian Lite News

    A British couple missing in Valencia after floods hit the region have been found dead in their car, their daughter said. Don Turner, 78, and his wife Terry, 74, had not been seen since torrential downpours caused flash floods in eastern Spain.

    Their daughter, Ruth O’Loughlin, from Burntwood, Staffordshire, confirmed to the BBC that her parents’ bodies had been found in their car on Saturday. She had previously told that her parents had moved to Spain a decade ago because they had “always wanted to live in the sunshine”.

    She was told they were missing on Thursday after friends checked on them and found their pets at home but their vehicle gone. Terry had told friends they were popping out to get some gas, she said. O’Loughlin said she had found out about the death of her parents, who lived near Pedralba, in a message from one of their friends.
    O’Loughlin said: “He said ‘Ruth, get your husband’. I called my husband in and he just said ‘Martin, hold your wife’, and said that they’d been found and they’d been found in their car. We still don’t know exactly what happened to them. The only thing we’ve got from this is that they were together. It’s not the way you want your parents to go.”
    A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “We are supporting the family of a British man and woman who have died in Spain, and are in contact with the local authorities.”
    The flooding, which has prompted the central government to deploy 10,000 troops and police officers, has killed 210 people in Valencia, three in Castilla-La Mancha and one in Málaga. There are fears the death toll could rise as the relief efforts reach previously inaccessible areas.
    Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has described the floods as the worst natural disaster in the country’s recent history and said all necessary resources would be mobilised to deal with its aftermath.
    Yellow and amber weather warnings were in place for parts of Valencia and neighbouring Catalonia on Monday, with people in the affected areas advised to stay off the roads and keep away from the coast and rivers.
    Heavy rain had fallen in the Barcelona area, leading the regional government to issue civil protection alerts and cancel all local train services. Thousands of UK air passengers are experiencing disruption after Barcelona airport was hit by the storms.

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  • WTM contributes £200m to London economy

    WTM contributes £200m to London economy

    It’s estimated that in excess of £2.2 billion worth of business deals will be signed this year at the event…reports Asian Lite News


    World Travel Market London, the most influential travel and tourism event in the world, will contribute approximately £200 million to the London economy in just a week’s time. Held at Excel London (5th– 7th November) over 40,000 travel professionals are set to attend the 44th edition.

    On track to host the most exhibitors the show has ever seen, WTM London has reported a 7% growth in exhibitor numbers this year, with over 4,000 global tourism boards, hoteliers, transport services, technology brands, associations and experiences set to will take to the halls of Excel London for three days of business.

    It’s estimated that in excess of £2.2 billion worth of business deals will be signed this year at the event.
    According to VisitBritain data, international delegates visiting the UK for a trade show on average spend £352 per day, which estimates a total visitor spend of £71,215,218. In a recent report from Deloitte, they suggested that for every £1,000 spent, a further £1,800 is generated in direct tourism gross value, totalling an impressive £200m injection from WTM London into the economy.
    WTM London estimates that 82% of attendees are international visitors who are spending money on transport, accommodation, and entertainment during their time in the city. 40% of visitors are spending three days in London for the event, 33% are spending at least seven days in city and 9% of international visitors are staying in the capital for at least nine days.
    Juliette Losardo, Exhibitor Director, WTM London, comments: “While the travel trade are busy curating that £2.2billion worth of travel and tourism deals during World Travel Market, we’re proud that WTM also has such a significant impact on our host city of London. The range of accommodation, world-class dining and wealth of attractions the city has to offer, are a real draw for our attendees, many of whom use WTM London as an opportunity to tag on leisure days and, in doing so, boost spend for the economy.”

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  • 1000 workers to join first four-day week trial

    1000 workers to join first four-day week trial


    The British Society for Immunology and Crate Brewery in Hackney, east London, are among the businesses to have joined the latest trial…reports Asian Lite News

    One thousand workers in the UK will get extra time off with no loss of pay in the first official pilot by the four-day week campaign under the Labour government.


    The British Society for Immunology and Crate Brewery in Hackney, east London, are among the businesses to have joined the latest trial, which is being led by the 4 Day Week Campaign, as it launches on Monday.
    The campaign will aim to present the findings from the latest pilot to the Labour government in the summer, as momentum builds for a shorter working week.


    The trial will involve 17 businesses, who will mostly implement the four-day week, although some have opted to test a shorter working week or a nine-day fortnight, in which workers get an extra day off every two weeks. Four more businesses will join the trial later.
    Nearly 200 British businesses have switched to a four-day week permanently, according to the 4 Day Week Campaign, which is run by a non-profit organisation and launched in 2022.


    Winning over the government may be trickier. The Labour party has several senior politicians who have supported the four-day week, including the deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, who last year said: “If you can deliver within a four-day working week, then why not?” But since gaining power, the party has not embraced the policy, perhaps fearful of giving political ammunition to the Conservative opposition.
    When more than 500 civil servants represented by the PCS union at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government signed a petition recently calling for a four-day week, a spokesperson for the department said that a four-day week “is not government policy or something we are considering”.
    However, businesses do not need government approval to go ahead, and the work pattern is being tested by new types of business. Georgia Pearson, the people manager at Crate Brewery, which serves craft beer on the bank of Hackney’s Lee Navigation, said the trial “feels somewhat groundbreaking” for the hospitality industry.
    Restaurants, pubs and bars tend to be run on relatively thin margins with workers at or near the minimum wage. However, Crate is hoping that the new working pattern will improve recruitment.
    “For operational teams, physically demanding service shifts can mean that off days are spent recuperating, rather than enjoying personal time off,” Pearson said. “Although we’ve never struggled with retention, we recognise the competitive advantage that comes with being ahead of the curve with a four-day week, and we hope it will aid recruitment particularly in support office roles.”
    Joe Ryle, the director of the 4 Day Week Campaign, said: “We don’t have to just imagine a four-day week any more, because it’s already a reality for hundreds of businesses and tens of thousands of workers in the UK.
    “We look forward to presenting the results of this latest trial to the new Labour government next summer.”

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