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      MoD accused of ‘go-slow’ with half of £900m Ukraine fund unused

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 21:00


    Delays mean just £404m of the money donated by nine countries has been committed or spent

    More than half of a £900m military fund for Ukraine run by the British Ministry of Defence has not been used because of bureaucratic delays in handing out contracts.

    The UK-led International Fund for Ukraine counts nine countries among its donors. Critics claim its provision of weapons to the frontline has been slow.

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      Met apologises for calling antisemitism campaigner ‘openly Jewish’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 19:05

    Police officer had stopped Gideon Falter from walking near pro-Palestinian march while wearing kippah skull cap

    The Metropolitan police has apologised after an officer used the term “openly Jewish” to an antisemitism campaigner who was threatened with arrest near a pro-Palestine march.

    Gideon Falter, chief executive of the Campaign Against Antisemitism, was wearing a kippah skull cap when he was stopped from crossing the road near the demonstration in the Aldwych area of London last Saturday afternoon.

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      Train driver who upskirted female passenger avoids jail sentence

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 18:10


    Paolo Barone found guilty of voyeurism after taking photos of sleeping woman on train to St Albans in 2022

    A Thameslink train driver who took photos up a woman’s skirt while she was asleep on a train has avoided jail, despite being found guilty of voyeurism.

    The driver, Paolo Barone, was on his way home from a shift in September 2022 when he saw that the woman, 51, had fallen asleep on a train travelling from London Blackfriars to St Albans in Hertfordshire.

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      Lancashire police ‘reviewing’ letter relating to allegations against Mark Menzies

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 17:40

    MP lost the Conservative whip after claims he used political donations to pay off ‘bad people’

    Lancashire police have said they are “reviewing” a letter in relation to allegations against the Fylde MP, Mark Menzies, who is accused of misusing campaign funds.

    Menzies lost the Conservative whip and was suspended as one of Rishi Sunak’s trade envoys this week after the Times published claims he had used political donations to cover medical expenses and pay off “bad people” who had locked him in a flat and demanded thousands of pounds for his release.

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      Sunak accused of making mental illness ‘another front in the culture wars’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 17:35 · 1 minute

    Charities say high rates of people signed off work are caused by crumbling public services after years of underinvestment

    Rishi Sunak has been accused of making mental ill health “another front in the culture wars”, as critics warned his plan to curb benefits for some with anxiety and depression was an assault on disabled people.

    In a speech on welfare , the prime minister said he wanted to explore withdrawing a major cash benefit claimed by people living with mental health problems and replacing it with treatment.

    Shifting responsibility for issuing fit notes, formerly known as sicknotes, away from GPs to other “work and health professionals” in order to encourage more people to return to work.

    Confirming plans to legislate “in the next parliament” to close benefit claims for anyone who has been claiming for 12 months but is not complying with conditions on accepting available work.

    Asking more people on universal credit working part-time to look for more work by increasing the earnings threshold from £743 a month to £892 a month, so people paid below this amount have to seek extra hours.

    Confirming plans to tighten the work capability assessment to require more people with “less severe conditions” to seek some form of employment.

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      Professionals know that mental health is complex – and that MDMA won’t help | Letters

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 17:29

    The suggestion that the drug may be more helpful than regulated care for mental ill health is dangerous, writes Dr Rachel McNulty

    Rose Cartwright’s article ( I was the poster girl for OCD. Then I began to question everything I’d been told about mental illness, 13 April ) claims to expose “the fallacy at the heart of mental healthcare”, arguing that the sector – including but not limited to psychiatrists, occupational therapists, social workers, employment advisers, psychologists, dementia nurses, experts by experience, care home staff, art therapists, carers and support workers – fails to grasp the multifaceted nature of mental health and, instead, reduces it to an illness/treatment model.

    I was part of a recent multi-disciplinary team meeting. A psychiatrist shared their concern about patients facing homelessness and asked what might be done. To which a support worker replied that funding for the local homelessness organisation – a key resource for such patients – had just been cut. Everyone, including the psychiatrist, slumped in their chair, knowing that homelessness is a potent risk factor for addiction, mental health crises and suicide. Without such organisations, these risks often become a reality.

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      The Guardian view on the Royal Academy: reframing a bloody past | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 17:25

    The Royal Academy is examining the part it has played in Britain’s history of slavery and empire – and the usual carping suspects will not be pleased

    Very recent visitors from Mars may not know of the regular attacks on the National Trust for being “woke ”, but the rest of us have heard plenty. The trust’s latest onslaught on British values has something to do with the lack of butter in the scones . Never mind that they have been made like this for years; Tory MPs and other critics perceive the keen threat to British values posed by margarine .

    Such stories never stop coming. This week, Kemi Badenoch , the trade secretary, opined that the UK did not grow rich through “colonialism or imperialism or white privilege or whatever”, but owed its success to the Glorious Revolution of 1688. This is the kind of half-digested, badly regurgitated history that leads to a forlorn Tony Hancock asking if Magna Carta died in vain.

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      Hoopla around Truss and Rayner shows Michael Ashcroft still steering the debate

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 17:17

    Former Tory chair turned political biographer and publisher is behind books that have put former PM and Labour’s deputy in the spotlights

    If this week’s tetchy exchanges between Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak at prime minister’s questions proved one thing, it was the ability of the veteran businessman, donor and publisher Michael Ashcroft to set the political agenda.

    While Starmer revelled in the publication of 10 Years to Save the West, which was written by the former prime minister Liz Truss and published this week by Ashcroft’s Biteback Publishing, Sunak wanted to focus on another Biteback book – Ashcroft’s own Red Queen?, a biography of Labour’s deputy leader, Angela Rayner.

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      Sunak rejects offer of mobility scheme for young people between EU and UK

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 16:49

    Labour has also rejected European Commission’s proposal which would have allowed young people to live, work or study in the bloc

    Rishi Sunak has rejected an EU offer to strike a post-Brexit deal to allow young Britons to live, study or work in the bloc for up to four years.

    The prime minister declined the European Commission’s surprise proposal of a youth mobility scheme for those aged between 18 and 30 on Friday, after Labour had already knocked back the suggestion back on Thursday night – while noting it would “seek to improve the UK’s working relationship with the EU within our red lines”.

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