Tag: Sadiq Khan

  • London Mayor congratulates Nigerian Bus Aunty on UK TikTok award win

    London Mayor congratulates Nigerian Bus Aunty on UK TikTok award win

    The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has congratulated London-based Nigerian content creator Bemi Orojogun, aka London Bus Aunty, after she won Video of the Year at the TikTok UK Awards 2025.

    Khan, on X, praised her passion for London’s iconic red buses, saying it’s captured hearts nationwide.

    “Congratulations to London’s very own Bus Aunty for winning Video of the Year at the TikTok Awards. Her love of our iconic red buses has captured hearts across the country.

    “And did you know? She’s a proud fan of the Bakerloop – London’s newest express bus route”, he wrote.

    Orojogun was nominated with Friends of Elmtree, Sam Morris, Gardiner Brothers, Joseph Machines, and Brad Ben for the prestigious award, which celebrates standout creators on the platform.

    Read Also: Edna Francis bags TikTok awards nomination for entertainment creator of the year

    Orojogun, who went viral in 2024 with a creative forced-perspective clip, has become a digital influencer, collaborating with big brands like Burberry, H&M, and MAC Cosmetics. She’s also worked with Khan on promoting London’s zero-emission buses.

    In her acceptance speech, Orojogun encouraged others to pursue their passions, saying, “Don’t allow your age to stop you. Don’t allow your family to say don’t do that, it’s embarrassing. If you love it, do it.”

    Her winning video has racked up almost 50 million views on TikTok.

    Fans are thrilled, and Nigerians are jokingly challenging her to recreate her stunts in busy areas like Oshodi or CMS.

  • London mayor hits Trump’s UNGA attack, calls him racist

    London mayor hits Trump’s UNGA attack, calls him racist

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan has reacted to United States (U.S.) President Donald Trump’s attack against the UK capital at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) by branding him “racist, sexist and Islamophobic”.

    Khan, who was at the receiving end of Trump’s barbs even during the President’s UK State Visit last week, was reacting to the UNGA speech in New York on Tuesday, when Trump singled out London as having a “terrible, terrible mayor”, who was moving towards “Sharia law”.

    “I think President Trump has shown he is racist, he is sexist, he is misogynistic, and he is Islamophobic,” Khan told reporters when asked to respond during a London bus tour.

    Read Also: Direct flights to Nigeria will boost trade, says Air Tanzania

    “I think people are wondering what it is about this Muslim mayor who leads a liberal, multicultural, progressive, successful city that means I appear to be living rent-free in Donald Trump’s head,” he said.

    “I’m just thankful that we have record numbers of Americans coming to London since records began. There’s never been a period when more Americans have come to London. There must be a reason for that,” he added.

    With reference to the city that he governs, the Mayor reiterated that London is “the greatest city in the world and long may that continue”.

    Trump’s latest clash with Khan followed comments on Air Force One on his way back to Washington from the UK at the conclusion of a State Visit hosted by King Charles III Wednesday.

    “I didn’t want him there. I asked that he not be there. I think the Mayor of London, Khan, is among the worst mayors in the world and we have some bad ones. I think he’s done a terrible job,” the US President told reporters, with reference to Khan’s absence at the State Banquet at Windsor Castle.

  • London target fourth Olympic Games’ hosting

    London target fourth Olympic Games’ hosting

     London mayor Sadiq Khan wants the city to “become the first to host the Games four times” and would like to bid for them with the 2040 edition the likeliest possibility, he told The Times.

    The 54-year-old Labour mayor believes a successful bid for the 2029 World Athletics Championships can be a launching pad for such a bid.

    London last hosted the Summer Olympics in 2012, which was deemed hugely successful.

    Los Angeles and Brisbane are hosting the 2028 and 2032 renewals, while there are hints that Saudi Arabia may go for 2036.

    London, Los Angeles (including 2028) and Paris have hosted the Games three times.

     “I would like to see London become the first city to host the Games four times,” Khan said.

    Read Also: NFF threatens match manipulators with lengthy ban

     “And if we have the World Championships in 2029, it means in the lead-up there’s energy, enthusiasm and investment in track and field, which means you will have the future Mo Farahs, the future Paula Radcliffes.”

    Khan, who has been mayor since 2016 and is in his third mandate, said he was impressed by the show put on by Paris last year but claimed there would be no contest between who was the better host.

    He highlighted how the eastern part of London has retained several of the stadia used in 2012, including the main stadium which is now home to Premier League side West Ham.

    “I was in Paris last summer and I saw the transformation of their city,” he said. “But we could knock it out of the park in relation to the Olympics, using the assets we already have in the aquatics centre, the stadium, the Velodrome.

     “We could have some events outside of London too. London could be a hub.

     “The greenest Games ever.”

    However, to even launch a bid for the world athletics championships – which London last hosted in 2017 – Khan would require Britain’s Labour government to contribute £45 million ($60 million, 53 million euros).

    The funds are necessary to submit a formal expression of interest to World Athletics in September.

    Nevertheless he is confident he can obtain that, not least because he can cite the financial benefits sports events bring.

    Khan says he has had some “positive talks” with the government over it.

     “We’re working with the government in relation to making the case to bring back the World Athletics Championships,” he said.

     “The problem has been, actually, the previous government basically had no interest in the importance of bringing sport to our country.”

    Khan pointed to the 2024 Major Sports Events Impact Report for London which he commissioned and hopes will convince the government to back the athletics bid.

     “The fact is this report confirms that sport can bring huge dividends to our country,” he said.

     “The soft power of London on a global stage. And it also brings joy and inspires the next generation.”

  • London mayor warns on Brexit

    British businesses will pay a heavy price if Theresa May’s government fails to protect access to a European workforce, London mayor Sadiq Khan said yesterday.

    Khan gave his warning in response to a report released by the Immigration Advisory Committee.

    “The report recommends free movement from the EU should end after Britain leaves the European Union.

    “Workers from EU member states coming to Britain after Brexit would no longer be given preferential access to Britain over no-EU immigrants, if the government accepts the recommendations.

    “Instead Britain should consider embracing a Canada-style system in which there is no preferential access to the labour market for citizens of any other country,’’ says the committee.

    Report says the committee also recommends that it should be easier for higher-skilled workers to migrate to Britain.

    The committee also wants the government to scrap a limit on highly-skilled workers altogether which is currently set at 20,700 each year from non-EU countries

    Khan described the report as a missed opportunity to protect jobs and economic growth that are at grave risk.

    “May’s appallingly mishandled approach to Brexit, and from a government that is only motivated by its ideological and economically illiterate migration target, regardless of the cost to real people.

    “London’s entrepreneurialism and economic growth is partly down to the flow of ideas and people from Europe and around the world.

    “British businesses will pay a heavy price if the government fails to protect their access to a European workforce at all skill levels in the future,’’ he noted.

    The mayor said more must be done to give local workforces the skills needed for the jobs of the future, adding that responsibility lies squarely with the government.

    “Any decision by this Government to prioritize reducing immigration at the expense of economic growth will damage our country for years to come,’’ Khan said.

    The advisory committee was set up by Member of Parliament Amber Rudd when she was home secretary to inform Britain’s migration policy after Brexit.

    The Russell Group, which represents Britain’s most prestigious universities, said the report’s recommendations are “unimaginative and unworkable”.

    The group’s CEO Tim Bradshaw said: “This was a real opportunity to steer the UK towards a more modern and intelligent immigration system, but the recommendations are unimaginative and, we believe, unworkable.’’

    For the past 45 years, EU citizens have been able to enter Britain freely as part of the bloc’s free-movement rules.

    The Guardian newspaper commented that the new report is likely to strengthen the hand of those who want Britain to take a tough stance in the Brexit negotiations.

    Political commentators say high level of immigration into Britain was one of the key reasons for the decision in the 2016 referendum to leave the EU.

     

  • 15 facts about London mosque attack

    15 facts about London mosque attack

    • A van had been driven into a crowd of worshippers after they left a mosque in north London.
    • The van,white in colour, had been hired in Wales and driven to the Muslim Welfare House on Seven Sisters Road.
    • The van driver a supposed 48-year-old man, was apprehended by members of the public before he was handed over to the Police.
    • He will be possibly charged to court, after interrogation and investigation,based on suspicion of attempted murder.
    • All the injured were members of the Muslim community, as the attack took place outside the Muslim Welfare House, which was a few hundred metres away from Finsbury Park mosque.
    • The streets had being crowded and filled with people because prayers had just ended at the nearby Finsbury Park mosque.
    • A man died on the scene while receiving first aid from members of the public when the attack took place.
    • Eight people were injured and are in hospital, two with very serious injuries, and two others were treated at the scene.
    • Some witnesses reported seeing three people leave the van.
    • British PM Theresa May said police were treating the incident “as a potential terrorist attack” and would be chairing a meeting of the Cobra emergency committee today.
    • Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, and is the MP representing the area, said he was “shocked by this horrific and cruel attack”.
    • He visited the scene of the attack and will attend prayers at Finsbury Park mosque today.
    •  Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan,has condemned the incident, calling it a “horrific terrorist attack” on “innocent Londoners”.
    • Metropolitan Police commissioner, Cressida Dick, said that extra officers were being deployed to the area, as a means of reassuring the local community, especially places of worship.
    • The Muslim Council of Great Britain called it a attack ‘motivated by Islamophobia’.
  • British PM May faces mounting criticism over London tower block blaze

    British PM May faces mounting criticism over London tower block blaze

    British Prime Minister Theresa May faced mounting criticism on Friday for not meeting the survivors of a deadly London tower block blaze.

    May promised to hold a public inquiry into a fire that killed 17 people when it engulfed a 24-storey social housing block in West London, expressing her sorrow in a televised statement after meeting with the emergency services.

    Unlike opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who was confronted by a young boy asking “How many children died?”, May did not meet with residents, prompting criticism from locals, media and within her Conservative party.

    “She wanted an entirely controlled situation in which she didn’t use her humanity,” former cabinet minister Michael Portillo told the BBC.

    “She should have been there with the residents. You have to be prepared to receive people’s emotions, and not be so frightened about people,” he said.

    When asked on Thursday about why she did not meet residents or visit a local community center, May said she wanted to visit the scene of the incident to be briefed by the emergency services.

    The Sun newspaper said 65 people are now feared dead or missing in the fire.

    London police expect the death toll to rise further but said it could take months to search the burned-out building and identify the victims.

    On Friday, British newspapers heightened their criticism of the government, saying there were a series of unanswered issues including as to whether the cladding used on the building helped the blaze spread.

    “Three lethal questions,” headlined the right-wing Daily Mail newspaper, which backed May’s Conservatives in last week’s national election, saying ministers faced disturbing questions over the disaster.

    Local government minister Sajid Javid, responsible for housing policy, defended May for not meeting with those affected by the disaster:

    “What she wanted to do was to speak to the people working on the ground on the recovery operation, the rescue operation to make sure that they’ve got everything they want and see how she could help,” he told Sky news.

    After May failed to win an outright majority in a snap election on June 8, she is battling to strike a deal with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party to support her government.

  • Attackers plow van into London crowd and stab revelers, kill seven

    Attackers plow van into London crowd and stab revelers, kill seven

    Assailants drove a van into pedestrians at high speed on London Bridge on Saturday night before stabbing revellers on nearby streets, killing at least seven people and wounding dozens.

    Police suspect it was a terrorist attack.

    Armed police rushed to the scene and within eight minutes of receiving the first emergency call shortly after 10 pm local time had shot dead the three male attackers in the Borough Market area near the bridge.

    At least 48 people were injured in the attack – the third to hit Britain in less than three months – which came days ahead of a parliamentary election on Thursday.

    The ruling Conservative Party, opposition Labour Party and the Scottish National Party all suspended national campaigning on Sunday.

    “I can confirm that the terrible incident in London is being treated as a potential act of terrorism,” Prime Minister Theresa May said in a statement as events unfolded.

    Flags were flying at half-mast over her Downing Street residence on Sunday morning.

    London Bridge is a major transport hub and nearby Borough Market is a fashionable warren of alleyways packed with bars and restaurants which is always bustling on a Saturday night.

    The area remained cordoned off on Sunday, with train stations closed while forensic investigators could be seen working on the bridge, where buses and taxis stood abandoned.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the latest attack to hit Britain and Europe.

    Less than two weeks ago, a suicide bomber killed 22 people, including children, at a pop concert by U.S. singer Ariana Grande in Manchester in northern England.

    In March, in a similar attack to Saturday’s, a man killed five people after driving into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge in central London.

    Grande and other acts were due to give a benefit concert at Manchester’s Old Trafford cricket ground on Sunday evening to raise funds for victims of the concert bombing and their families. The event was being prepared amid tight security.

    The three attackers had been wearing what looked like explosive vests that were later found to have been hoaxes.

    The BBC showed a photograph of two possible attackers shot by police, one of whom had canisters strapped to his body.

    Hours after the attack the area remained sealed off and patrolled by armed police and counter-terrorism officers.

    The London Ambulance Service said 48 people had been taken to five hospitals across the city and a number of others had been treated at the scene for minor injuries.

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan said some of those who had been injured were in a critical condition.

    Khan said the official threat level in Britain remained at severe, meaning an attack is highly likely. It had been raised to critical after the Manchester attack, then lowered again days later.

    The mayor also said he did not think Thursday’s election should be postponed because of events in London.

    “One of the things that we can do is show that we aren’t going to be cowed, is by voting on Thursday and making sure that we understand the importance of our democracy, our civil liberties and our human rights,” Khan said.

    Roy Smith, a police officer, who was at the scene during the unfolding emergency, expressed his shock on Twitter.

    “Started shift taking photos with children playing on the South Bank. Ended it giving CPR to innocent victims attacked at London Bridge,” he wrote, adding a broken heart emoji.

    Witnesses described a white van careering into pedestrians on the bridge.

    “It looked like he was aiming for groups of people,” Mark Roberts, 53, a management consultant, told Reuters.

    He saw at least six people on the ground after the van veered on and off the pavement. “It was horrendous,” he said.

    A taxi driver told the BBC that three men got out of the van with long knives and “went randomly along Borough High Street stabbing people.”

    Witnesses described people running into a bar to seek shelter.

    “People started running and screaming, and the van crashes into the railing behind. We went towards Borough Market and everyone went inside (the bar),” one witness, who gave his name as Brian, 32, told Reuters.

    Another witness, who declined to be named, his white top covered in blood, described a scene of panic in the bar.

    “They hit the emergency alarm. There was a line of people going down to the emergency exit. And then people started screaming coming back up,” the 31-year-old said.

    “Around the corner there was a guy with a stab wound on his neck … There was a doctor in the pub and she helped him. They put pressure on the stab wound.”

    BBC radio said witnesses saw people throwing tables and chairs at the attackers to protect themselves.

    The BBC showed dozens of people being escorted to safety through a police cordon with their hands on their heads. Islamic State, losing territory in Syria and Iraq to an advance backed by a U.S-led coalition, sent out a call on instant messaging service Telegram early on Saturday urging its followers to launch attacks with trucks, knives and guns against “Crusaders” during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

    British Prime Minister May was due to chair a meeting of the government’s Cobra security committee later on Sunday.

    U.S. President Donald Trump took to Twitter to offer U.S. help to Britain.

    The White House said he had been briefed on the incidents by his national security team. German Chancellor Angela Merkel issued a statement expressing her sympathy.

    “Today, we are united across all borders in horror and sadness, but equally in determination. I stress for Germany: in the fight against all forms of terrorism, we stand firmly and decisively at the side of Great Britain,” she said.

    French president Emmanuel Macron said on Twitter that “France is standing more than ever side by side with the UK”.

    Two French nationals were among those injured in the London attack, Macron’s office said in a statement.

    Australia also said two of its citizens were caught up in the attack and that one was in hospital.

    The Manchester bombing on May 22 was the deadliest attack in Britain since July 2005, when four British Muslim suicide bombers killed 52 people in coordinated attacks on London’s transport network.