Tag: Britain

  • Macron to address terrorism, climate at UN

    Macron to address terrorism, climate at UN

    French President Emmanuel Macron will give his first address to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, with terrorism and climate change as his top priorities.

    Elysee officials were tight-lipped about the likely contents of Macron’s speech ahead of his travel.

    But his agenda included a security-focused meeting on Monday evening with fellow heads of state from the Sahel region of West Africa, where French troops are supporting local forces against militants.

    Macron and British Prime Minister Theresa May, as well as Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni would host a meeting on preventing terrorist use of the internet.

    The French president, who took office in May, would also open a summit on a French-backed proposal for global pact on environment, aimed at creating binding international code of environmental law.

    French officials say Macron will also discuss the Syrian conflict with leaders of the other four permanent members of the UN Security Council – Britain, China, Russia and the U.S.

  • Buhari’s integrity is unimpeachable – Onyeama

    Buhari’s integrity is unimpeachable – Onyeama

    Mr Geoffrey Onyeama, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, has described the integrity of President Muhammadu Buhari as unimpeachable and remained intact in the fight against corruption.

    Onyeama told the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in New York that the amount of money siphoned out of the country was staggering.

    According to him, however, the Federal Government has been engaging countries where the money was stashed away for repatriation.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari is known as a crusader against corruption; his integrity in unimpeachable.

    “The high level of corruption has played a direct role in the development deficit in the country.

    “We know that corruption fights but it’s a fight this government intends to fight to the end.

    “We will require global cooperation to facilitate restitution and repatriation of those funds. Corruption is an impediment to development,” the Minister said.

    Onyeama said Switzerland had repatriated about $1 billion in looted funds to Nigeria while high-level discussions were ongoing with Britain, Qatar, the U.S. and a host of other countries.

    He explained that corruption was endemic and was not going to be won overnight, stressing that the Federal Government was determined to block financial leakages in the system.

    The minister added that Buhari had also made it clear that there would be no immunity for high-profile corrupt individuals, adding that the Whistle Blowers’ policy was working.

    According to him, the Federal Government has the records of all the money recovered from proceeds of corruption and that the money would be channelled to appropriate projects that impact on the people.

    He, however, said government was yet to ‘name and shame’ those from whom looted money was recovered so as not to discourage restitution.

    Onyeama said Africa was blessed with various human and natural resources but that the enabling environments needed to be created for the continent to realise its full potentials.

    The Minister also said that majority of Nigerians were hard working and honest people who were found in every country in the world.

    On the reported skirmishes on the Bakassi Peninsula, Onyeama said there were no fewer than four million Nigerians in Cameroon, adding that Nigeria-Cameroon relations was cordial.

    He also disclosed that Nigeria was calling for the reform of the UN Security Council to reflect the current realities.

    According to him, Nigeria is pushing for two permanent members’ seats for Africa on the Council, adding that Nigeria was ready to serve Africa in that capacity.

    The theme for the UN General Assembly is: ‘Focusing on People: Striving for Peace and a Decent Life for All on a Sustainable Planet’, holding from Sept. 19 to 25.

  • Britain will not pay ‘penny more’ to leave EU: Boris Johnson

    Britain will not pay ‘penny more’ to leave EU: Boris Johnson

    Britain will pay “not a penny more, not a penny less” than what the government thinks its legal obligations are to the European Union as the country leaves the bloc, foreign minister Boris Johnson said on Friday.

    Talking to BBC Radio Four, Johnson said his comment that the EU could “go whistle” on its demands for payment was in response to being asked whether Britain would pay “100 billion euros or pounds”, and not a suggestion that the government would not pay.

    A financial settlement is set to be one of the most difficult issues to resolve in negotiations to unravel more than 40 years of union.

    The EU has said it is one of three areas the two sides must make progress on before starting talks on a future relationship, including trading arrangements.

    Johnson said: “some of the sums that I’ve seen seem to be very high.

    Of course, we will meet our obligations.

    “We should pay not a penny more, not a penny less of what we think our legal obligations amount to.”

  • Britain deports EU citizens in ‘error’

    Britain deports EU citizens in ‘error’

    Britain on Wednesday said it had sent dozens of letters telling European Union nationals to leave the country in error, an embarrassing mistake as the issue of the rights of such citizens in the UK is being negotiated.

    Britain’s interior ministry said it was investigating after about 100 of the letters were sent to citizens from other European Union countries, saying they would be removed under immigration law.

    “A limited number of letters were issued in error and we have been urgently looking into why this happened. We are contacting everyone who received this letter to clarify that they can disregard it,” a spokeswoman for the Britain’s Home Office said in a statement.

    “We are absolutely clear that the rights of EU nationals living in the UK remain unchanged.”

    Eva Johanna Holmberg, a Finnish academic who is married to a Briton, told The Independent newspaper that she “couldn’t believe what she was seeing” when she received the letter.

    While Britain has promised a generous deal for EU citizens following Brexit, there is not yet agreement over how rights will be protected.

    The rights of EU citizens in Britain is one of three issues the bloc wants to settle before it begins discussing the future relationship between Britain and the EU.

    The EU says more progress on those core issues needs to be made before talks move on.

  • Britain to send warship to South China sea – Defence Minister

    Britain to send warship to South China sea – Defence Minister

    Britain plans to send a warship to the disputed South China Sea in 2018 to conduct freedom of navigation exercises, Defence Minister Michael Fallon said on Thursday, a move likely to anger Beijing.

    Fallon said that Britain would increase in presence in the waters after it had sent four British fighter planes for joint exercises with Japan in the region in 2016.

    China claims most of the energy-rich sea where neighbors Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims.

    “We hope to send a warship to region by 2018.

    “We have not finalised exactly where that deployment will take place but we won’t be constrained by China from sailing through the South China Sea.

    “We have the right of freedom of navigation and we will exercise it,” Fallon told Reuters.

    The presence of a British vessel threatens to stoke tensions, escalated by China’s naval build-up and its increasingly assertive stance.

    China’s construction of islands and military facilities in the South China Sea has stoked international condemnation, amid concern Beijing is seeking to restrict free movement and extend its strategic reach.

    Britain’s move could also upset ties between London and Beijing, undermining efforts to shore up what the two governments have called a “golden era” in their relationship as Britain heads towards a divorce with the European Union.

    “We flew RAF Typhoons through the South China Sea in October and we will exercise that right whenever we next have the opportunity to do so, whenever we have ships or planes in the region,” Fallon said.

    The U.S. estimates Beijing has added more than 1,300 hectares on seven features in the South China Sea over the past three years, building runways, ports, aircraft hangars and communications equipment.

    To counter the perceived Chinese aggression, the U.S. has conducted regular freedom of navigation exercises that have angered Beijing.

    The U.S. had sent two bombers over the region, coming just a few months after it sent a warship to carry out a maneuvering drill within 12 nautical miles of one of China’s artificial islands.

    China has repeatedly denounced efforts by countries from outside the region to get involved in the South China Sea dispute.

    The South China Sea is expected to dominate a regional security meeting in Manila next week, where Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will meet counterparts from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries.

    “Meeting ASEAN diplomats in Beijing on Wednesday, Wang told them both sides must “exclude disturbances on the South China Sea issue, and maintain positive momentum,” China’s Foreign Ministry said.

  • ISIS: Six people arrested in Europe-wide sweep

    ISIS: Six people arrested in Europe-wide sweep

    Six suspected followers of the Islamic State terrorist group have been arrested in Spain, Britain and Germany in a joint operation, Spanish Police said on Wednesday.

    Four people were arrested in Palma de Mallorca, while one each was arrested in the central English City of Birmingham and the western German City of Dortmund.

    The man arrested in Birmingham, which is considered a focal point for the Islamist scene in Britain, is 44 years old. Britain has been rocked by deadly terrorist attacks in London and Manchester this year.

    In Germany, the Office of Criminal Investigation for the state of North Rhine-Westphalia was involved in the operation that led to the Dortmund arrest.

    The group is believed to belong to the same cell, according to the investigators.

    They are suspected of glorifying holy war in radical video messages and of supporting suicide attacks in Europe.

  • Several other tower blocks have combustible cladding-British PM

    Several other tower blocks have combustible cladding-British PM

    British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Thursday that initial tests on other high-rise buildings after the London fire tragedy have shown that the cladding was combustible.

    May, made this known while citing the results of tests conducted after a fire killed at least 79 people in London.

    Flames spread rapidly up the 24-storey residential tower block on June 17, trapping people inside, in what was Britain’s worst blaze since World War Two.

    Exterior cladding added during a refurbishment may have played a part, residents have said.

    The disaster heaped pressure on Prime Minister May, already fighting for her political survival after a snap election saw her party lose its parliamentary majority.

    It has acted as a focal point for anger at government cuts to local authority funding and drawn accusations of criminal negligence.

    “We should, of course, be careful on speculating what caused this fire, but as a precaution, the government has arranged to test cladding on all relevant tower blocks,” May told parliament.

    “Shortly before I came to the chamber, I was informed that a number of these tests have come back as combustible.”

    She said local authorities and fire services had been informed and were taking steps to make affected buildings safe and to inform residents.

    May has launched a public inquiry into the fire and police have announced a criminal investigation.

    May said tests on the cladding of Grenfell Tower where the fire blazed would be made public in the next 48 hours.

    “This has been a wake-up call for the whole country,” said Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour Party.

    “Residents of tower blocks all over the country are concerned, worried and frightened for their own safety. What we need is a step change in our attitude toward housing in this country.”

    After apologising for a slow state response to the fire, May said it was right that the head of the local council had resigned.

    Nicholas Holgate, chief executive of Kensington and Chelsea council, said he was forced out by the government.

  • Prince Philip leaves hospital after treatment for infection

    Prince Philip leaves hospital after treatment for infection

    Prince Philip, 96, the husband of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, left hospital on Thursday after treatment for an infection, Buckingham Palace said.

    The palace said earlier that the prince, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, had been admitted to London’s King Edward VII Hospital on Tuesday night, “as a precautionary measure, for treatment of an infection arising from a pre-existing condition.”

    It said he was “in good spirits” and disappointed that he was forced to miss Wednesday’s state opening of parliament and horse-racing at Royal Ascot.

    The queen, 91, delivered her speech to the parliament and attended Royal Ascot as planned on Wednesday.

    Prince Philip announced in April that he had decided not to carry out any more public duties after August.

    He has been treated in hospital several times for bladder infections in recent years.

  • Pound pummeled by UK election upset, other currencies calm

    Pound pummeled by UK election upset, other currencies calm

    Britain’s pound took a battering on Friday after Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative Party lost its parliamentary majority in elections, potentially disrupting Brexit negotiations.

    Sterling fell two per cent to 1.2698 dollars after sliding as much as 2.5 per cent to 1.2636 dollars in early European trade “GBP=D4”, its weakest level since April 18.

    May faced calls to quit after her election gamble to win a stronger mandate backfired, leaving no single party with a clear claim to power just 10 days before the start of negotiations on Britain’s divorce from the European Union.

    She is due to make a speech at 0900 GMT.

    “The market wants more clarity now in terms of who is going to be Prime Minister, what form the government is going to take and ultimately how all that feeds through into upcoming Brexit negotiations,” said currency strategist Lee Hardman in London.

    “In the near term the increased political uncertainty and the risk of more disorderly Brexit negotiations should enforce pound weakness.”

    Reactions in other major currencies such as the dollar, euro and yen were limited.

    They had already largely shrugged off Thursday’s testimony by former FBI director James Comey, which had been seen as the week’s other big event.

    “Other currencies, like dollar/yen, are not reacting much as it is a more domestic affair this time, unlike in 2016’s Brexit vote,” said Koji Fukaya, president at FPG Securities in Tokyo.

    “The focus for the broader currency market will now shift toward the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting on Monday.”

    The Fed is widely expected to hike interest rates after it ends a two-day meeting on Wednesday, and the focus is on whether it would leave the door open for further monetary tightening in the months to come.

    It had retreated to a seven-month low of 96.511 midweek when caution ahead of Comey’s testimony and the British election drove U.S. yields to lowest levels since November.

  • May’s bid for stronger Brexit hand at stake in UK election

    May’s bid for stronger Brexit hand at stake in UK election

    British Prime Minister Theresa May faces the voters on Thursday in an election she called to strengthen her hand in looming Brexit talks, with her personal authority at stake after a campaign that saw her lead in opinion polls contract.

    Voting began at 0600 GMT amid tight security nationwide after two Islamist attacks killed 30 people in Manchester and London in less than two weeks, thrusting the issue of how to counter violent extremism to the top of the agenda in the closing stages of the campaign.

    A final flurry of opinion polls gave May’s Conservatives a lead ranging between five and 12 percentage points over the main opposition Labour Party, suggesting she would increase her majority, but not win the landslide foreseen when she called the election seven weeks ago.

    Voting ends at 2100 GMT.

    There will be an exit poll as soon as voting finishes.

    The first handful of seat results are expected to be announced by 2300 GMT, with the vast majority of the 650 constituencies due to announce results between 0200 GMT and 0500 GMT on Friday morning.

    Both main parties were on the defensive after Saturday’s van and knife attack in the heart of London.

    May faced questions over cuts in the number of police officers during her six years as interior minister and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn drew criticism for, among other things, voting against some counter-terrorism legislation.

    British police investigating the London attacks said they had arrested three more suspects late on Wednesday as footage of the dramatic moment officers shot dead the assailants appeared online.

    Two of the men, aged 27 and 29, were held on suspicion of preparing acts of terrorism while the third was detained over suspected drugs offences.

    In the final hours of campaigning, both leaders returned to their core campaign messages.

    “If we get Brexit right, we can build a Britain that is more prosperous and more secure, a Britain in which prosperity and opportunity is shared by all,” May said in a last appeal to voters to trust her to “knuckle down and get the job done”.

    After becoming prime minister without an election taking place in the turmoil that followed last year’s EU referendum, May wants a personal mandate and a parliamentary majority bigger than the one she inherited from predecessor David Cameron.

    Basing her campaign on the slogan of “strong and stable leadership”, she has said she alone could face the 27 other EU leaders and clinch a deal that would give Britain control over immigration policy while ensuring favorable trading terms.

    She has portrayed Corbyn as the weak and hapless leader of a spendthrift party that would hit voters with a “tax bombshell”, crash the economy and flounder in the Brexit negotiations.

    Corbyn has hit back that Conservative fiscal austerity imposed since 2010 has hurt the poor and widened social inequalities.

    May’s campaign has not gone to plan, and as the poll leads of 20 points or more she was enjoying when she called the early election in April have shrunk, talk of a landslide victory has faded and her personal standing has taken a hit.

    As a result, the extent of her control over her fractious party and of her margin for maneuver going into the Brexit talks will hinge on the size of her majority, and on whether it is perceived to be a significant improvement on Cameron’s.

    Provided she wins, she will have averted at least one risk: by pushing back the date of the following election to 2022 rather than 2020 as originally planned, she has ensured she will not face crunch time in the Brexit talks at the same time as an election.

    Some in the EU are hoping May does increase her majority, on the basis that the main risk for the bloc is a collapse in talks, and that is more easily avoided with a British government that is not vulnerable at home.

    “We need a government strong enough to negotiate,” a senior EU lawmaker told Reuters this week.

    But others have sought to downplay the impact of the election regardless of the outcome, suggesting that it was little more than a domestic political sideshow.

    Meanwhile, veteran left-winger Corbyn, who was written off as a no-hoper by most political analysts, surprised on the upside with a policy-rich campaign that drew large, fervent crowds to his events, although skeptics say his appeal in the broader electorate is limited.

    He proposes building a fairer society through policies such as raising taxes for the richest five per cent, scrapping university tuition fees and investing 250 billion pounds (315 billion dollars) in infrastructure,
    plans which the Conservatives say are fiscally irresponsible.

    “Labour’s campaign has already changed the face of British politics,” Corbyn said in a final campaign rally.

    “As we prepare for government, we have already changed the debate and given people hope. Hope that it doesn’t have to be like this, that inequality can be tackled, that austerity can be ended, that you can stand up to the elites and the cynics.”

    There was only one point of agreement between May and Corbyn, which was that the strongest signal that Britons could send to show they were not cowed by the recent spate of attacks would be to go out and vote.