Tag: Britain

  • Butchers give PM May the cold shoulder at campaign stop

    Butchers give PM May the cold shoulder at campaign stop

    British Prime Minister Theresa May was met with a chorus of boos and shouts of “vote Labour” as she visited London’s biggest meat market in the early hours of the final day of the election campaign.

    May, who is widely expected to win re-election in Thursday’s vote, was visiting the Smithfield Market in central London with her husband Philip when several butchers started booing, jeering and yelling “vote Labour”.

    Continuing to smile, the prime minister shook hands with other butchers who were dressed in white on one of the market’s many stands.

    May called the snap election in April in a bid to increase her majority and strengthen her hand for the Brexit talks but her campaign has struggled in recent weeks due to a series of policy missteps.

  • British PM resumes campaigning three days before national election

    British PM resumes campaigning three days before national election

    British Prime Minister Theresa May resumes campaigning on Monday after a deadly militant attack on London Bridge.

    May said Britain must be tougher in stamping out Islamist extremism after three knife-wielding assailants rammed a hired van into pedestrians on London Bridge and stabbed others nearby, killing seven people and injuring 48.

    After the third militant attack in Britain in less than three months, May said Thursday’s election would go ahead but said Britain had been far too tolerant of extremism.

    “Violence can never be allowed to disrupt the democratic process,” May, who served as interior minister from 2010 to 2016, said outside her Downing Street office.

    Islamic State, which is losing territory in Syria and Iraq to an offensive backed by a U.S.-led coalition, said its militants were responsible for the attack, according to the group’s media agency Amaq.

    Islamist militants have carried out scores of deadly attacks in Europe, Russia, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the United States over the past two years.

    In an early morning raids in east London, British counter-terrorism police detained more people on Monday.

    Police arrested 12 people in the Barking district of east London following the attack, though one was later released.

    Police have not released the names of the attackers and British newspapers refrained from identifying the men.

    It was not immediately clear how the attack would impact the election, though the issue of security has been thrust to the forefront of the campaign after the London Bridge and Manchester attacks.

    The campaign was suspended for several days last month when a suicide bomber killed 22 people at a concert by Ariana Grande in Manchester.

    Grande gave an emotional performance on Sunday at a benefit gig in the city for the victims of the attack, singing with a choir of local schoolchildren, including some who had been at her show.

    Before the London Bridge attack, May’s gamble on a June 8 snap election had been thrust into doubt after polls showed her Conservative Party’s lead had collapsed in recent weeks.

    While British pollsters all predict May will win the most seats in Thursday’s election, they have given an array of different numbers for how big her win will be, ranging from a landslide victory to a much more slender win without a majority.

    Some polls indicate the election could be close, possibly throwing Britain into political deadlock just days before formal Brexit talks with the European Union are due to begin on June 19.

    May called the snap election in a bid to strengthen her hand in negotiations on Britain’s exit from the European Union, to win more time to deal with the impact of the divorce and to strengthen her grip on the Conservative Party.

    If she fails to beat handsomely the 12-seat majority her predecessor David Cameron won in 2015, her electoral gamble will have failed and her authority will be undermined both inside the Conservative Party and at talks with 27 other EU leaders.

    May said the series of attacks were not connected in terms of planning and execution, but were inspired by what she called a “single, evil ideology of Islamist extremism” that represented a perversion of Islam and of the truth.

    As a former interior minister, May’s record on security is also under scrutiny, she reduced police numbers and oversaw the domestic intelligence agency, MI5.

    Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn criticised May, who was interior minister from 2010 to 2016, for cutting police numbers during her tenure in charge of the interior ministry.

    “The mass murderers who brought terror to our streets in London and Manchester want our election to be halted. They want democracy halted,” Corbyn said in Carlisle, northern England.

    “They want their violence to overwhelm our right to vote in a fair and peaceful election and to go about our lives freely.”

    “That is why it would be completely wrong to postpone Thursday’s vote, or to suspend our campaigning any longer.”

  • UK police arrest woman over alleged Liberian war torture

    UK police arrest woman over alleged Liberian war torture

    The British police on Thursday said that they had arrested a 51-year-old woman in London on suspicion of torture during the civil war in Liberia over 25 years ago.

    The police said that the woman was arrested in the east of the capital and searches were being carried out at two addresses in east London and central London.

    “Officers were liaising with Britain’s foreign ministry and the prosecution service.

    “The allegations relate to atrocities that occurred during the civil war in Liberia between 1989 and 1993,” police said.

    From 1989 to 2003, up to a quarter of a million people in the West African nation were killed in a civil war, while thousands more were mutilated and raped

  • British journalist charged with arms possession in Bangkok

    British journalist charged with arms possession in Bangkok

    A British journalist was charged with arms possession on Tuesday after he was arrested at a Thai airport for checking in flak jacket plates and gas masks, standard equipment for media heading into war zones and other hostile environments.

    Anthony Cheng, 46, was detained at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport on Monday along with Florian Witulski, a German freelance journalist, before he could board a flight to Iraq via Turkey for an assignment for China-based broadcaster CCTV English.

    Thailand’s Arms Control Act stipulates that gas masks and ballistic vests are war weapons and those carrying them need a license.

    Cheng was carrying three gas masks and four plates for safety vests, said Somchart Maneerat, a police investigator.

    “He faces charge of unlicensed possession of war weapons,” Somchart told Reuters.

    Cheng faces up to five years in prison if he is found guilty, Somchart added.

    A lawyer for Cheng said he had requested bail.

    Witulski, 31, was also detained on Monday night but released on Tuesday.

    Witulski told Reuters they were not aware that licenses were required for the safety gear.

    “The plates were loose and were taken as check-in baggage as we have done before many times,” Witulski told Reuters, adding that he and Cheng had traveled to Iraq and Afghanistan several times and taken plates with them without being stopped by Thai authorities.

    In August 2015, a Hong Kong photojournalist was arrested at the same airport for carrying body armour and a helmet.

    Charges were later dropped.

  • Britain dismisses report of worsening relations between May, Hammond

    Britain’s Defence Minister on Thursday dismissed a Times newspaper report suggesting that relations between Prime Minister Theresa May and her finance minister, Philip Hammond, had deteriorated.

    The Times newspaper said relations between the teams of the two most senior members of government had deteriorated following a series of disagreements over policy and presentation ahead of a June 8 election.

    Fallon was however asked about the front page report and he said he would have thought John you would be the last person to fall for such tittle-tattle.

    “Philip Hammond, (interior minister) Amber Rudd, Theresa May, (foreign minister) Boris Johnson and I in the cabinet are working together,’’ he said.

  • Nastase to be denied accreditation for French Open

    Nastase to be denied accreditation for French Open

    Former Romanian tennis player Ilie Nastase will not be given accreditation for this year’s French Open, organisers said on Saturday.

    The 70-year-old is provisionally banned from all International Tennis Federation (ITF) events, after making allegedly racist and sexist comments during Romania’s Fed Cup tie against Britain last month.

    “Following the decision of his suspension by the @ITFTennis, Mr Ilie Nastase won’t be accredited for #RG17,’’ French Open organisers said on Twitter.

    Nastase, who courted controversy throughout his career during which he won the U.S. and French Opens, is also not welcome at this year’s Wimbledon championships.

    Romania’s Fed Cup captain was booted out of the tie against Britain last month for “unsportsmanlike’’ behaviour.

    The singles rubber between Britain’s Johanna Konta and Sorana Cirstea was briefly suspended after remarks made by Nastase, to Konta and British team captain Anne Keothavong.

    Nastase had already run into trouble during the World Group playoff tie in Constanta after making a derogatory comment about the unborn child of American Serena Williams, the 23-times grand slam singles champion.

  • Britain will not pay 100bn euros for Brexit, minister says

    Britain will not pay 100bn euros for Brexit, minister says

    Britain will not pay the 100 billion euros (110 billion dollars) that the European Union is reportedly demanding as a final settlement for Brexit, a senior minister said on Wednesday.

    The British government will meet its legal obligations for payment, “not just what the EU wants,” Brexit Secretary David Davis told broadcaster ITV after the Financial Times and other media reported the new demand.

    Davis said Britain had “not seen any number” for the final Brexit bill, but he accused the European Union of playing “rough and tough.”

    “We have said we will meet our international obligations, but there will be our international obligations including assets and liabilities and there will be the ones that are correct in law, not just the ones the [European] Commission want,” he told the broadcaster.

    Previous reports had estimated the EU’s final bill for Brexit at some 60 billion euros.

    Prime Minister Theresa May triggered Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which allows a nation to leave the EU after up to two years of negotiations, on March 29.

    In mid-April, she announced plans for a general election, asking voters to back her leadership and her Brexit plan, which involves withdrawing Britain from the EU single market.

  • U.S. allies rule out military solution in Syria

    U.S. allies rule out military solution in Syria

    Germany and Italy stressed Tuesday the need for a political solution in Syria, where the U.S. has intervened with missile strikes in response to a chemical weapons attack on civilians.

    Foreign ministers from the Group of Seven (G7), which comprises the U.S., Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Japan and Canada, discussed the crisis with representatives from the European Union and several Middle Eastern countries.

    “We do not believe that the military solution is the right one,” said Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano, who hosted the talks also involving ministers from Saudi Arabia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Jordan.

    The ministers, meeting in the Tuscan town of Lucca, agreed that “Russia must not be isolated and, on the contrary, must insofar as possible be involved in the political transition process in Syria,” Alfano added.

    While the White House said Monday the U.S. was ready to repeat strikes against Syrian targets to prevent the use of chemical weapons, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson focused on diplomacy in talks with partners, Germany said.

    “Tillerson explicitly said they are seeking a non-violent, non-military way,” German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel told reporters, praising his U.S. counterpart for taking “a very realistic and clear stance.”

    The U.S. bombing of Syrian airfield on April 7 in response to the attack in the city of Khan Sheikhoun has confounded expectations that Donald Trump would be an isolationist president, and soured his relations with Russia.

    Russia, a staunch ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has condemned US actions as reckless and counterproductive.

    Iran, another main backer of the regime in Damascus, has expressed similar concerns.

    The G7 was attempting to put up a united front on Syria ahead of Tillerson’s Wednesday visit to Moscow.

    Calls Britain made on Monday to threaten Syria and Russia with further sanctions did not seem to make headway.

    Nevertheless, Gabriel urged Moscow to reconsider its support for al-Assad.

    “I believe that it is almost inconceivable that Russia wants to stand on the side of such a murderous regime as that of Bashar al-Assad for the long haul,” he said.

    North Korea’s illegal nuclear programme and the US decision to send warships to the Korean peninsula, ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and Libya, the threat from terrorism and migration were also on the agenda.

    The Lucca talks were also laying the ground for next month’s G7 summit in Taormina, Sicily, the first to be attended by Trump.

     

  • Basketball player Sturgess is Britain’s tallest man

    Basketball player Sturgess is Britain’s tallest man

     

    A British athlete who measures at 7 foot 7 inches has been named Britain’s tallest man.

    Paul Sturgess, 29, already held the title for the world’s tallest basketball player and eats a staggering 7,000 calories a day to keep himself healthy.

    Mr Sturgess, from Loughborough, Leicestershire, assumes the title following the death of Game of Thrones actor Neil Fingleton, who died in February from heart failure.

    The professional sportsman, who plays for Harlem Globetrotters in the United States, is 231.8cm tall and enjoys free first class upgrades on flights because of his height.

    Weighing 24 and a half stone, Mr Sturgess is also too big for a king sized bed and is famed for his ‘standing dunk’ on the basketball court.

    He wears sized 19 shoes and said: ‘I was always the tallest in my class, but never by much.

    ‘I was a pretty average sized baby, weighing 9lbs, so I wasn’t massive but my mum did say I had really long legs.

    ‘I hit 6ft when I was 15, and that’s when I had my really big growth spurt and mum took me to the doctors.

    ‘By the time I was 17 I was 7ft, and I just got taller and taller.’

    Doctors confirmed Mr Sturgess’ unusual height is genetic, although his mum is a titch by comparison at just 5ft 6ins.

    His dad is 6ft 7ins and the other men in his family are all over 6ft, although Paul is the first one to go over 7ft.

    For Mr Sturgess, his height always made him popular in school and he was rarely criticised.

    He started playing basketball at school before bagging a lucrative scholarship in the United States at Mountain State University in West Virginia.

    Mr Sturgess – who is nicknamed Tiny – said: ‘A couple of friends in college suggested I try basketball, and I got the bug for it straight away.

    ‘I knew I had an immediate advantage and a lot of opportunities came my way, like being scouted.

    ‘I can grab the basketball net from the floor and I do a standing dunk which has sort of become my trademark move.

  • Babies cry more in UK, Canada, Italy, less in Germany: Study

    Babies cry more in UK, Canada, Italy, less in Germany: Study

    Babies cry more in Britain, Canada, Italy and Netherlands than in other countries, while newborns in Denmark, Germany and Japan cry and fuss the least, researchers said on Monday.

    In research looking at how much babies around the world cry in their first three months, psychologists from Britain have created the first universal charts for normal amounts of crying during that period.

    Dieter Wolker, who led the study at Warwick University, said: “babies are already very different in how much they cry in the first weeks of life.

    “We may learn more from looking at cultures where there is less crying, (including) whether this may be due to parenting or other factors relating to pregnancy experiences or genetics.”

    The highest levels of colic, defined as crying more than three hours a day for at least three days a week, were found in babies in Britain, Canada and Italy, while the lowest colic rates were found in Denmark and Germany.

    On average, the study found, babies cry for around two hours a day in the first two weeks.

    They then cry a little more in the following few weeks until they peak at around two hours 15 minutes a day at six weeks.

    This then reduces to an average of one hour 10 minutes by the time they are 12 weeks old.

    But there are wide variations, with some babies crying as little as 30 minutes a day, and others more than five hours.

    The research, published in the Journal of Pediatrics, was a meta-analysis of studies covering some 8,700 babies in countries including Germany, Denmark, Japan, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands and Britain.

    Wolker said the new crying chart would help health workers reassure parents whether their baby is crying within a normal range in the first three months, or may need extra support