Category: Press Releases

  • PRESS RELEASE : Landmark review calls on employers to boost support for autistic people [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Landmark review calls on employers to boost support for autistic people [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 28 February 2024.

    A bold new government-backed review has set out a vision for workplace culture changes to support autistic people to start and stay in work.

    • Review sets out 19 recommendations to support more autistic people to start, stay and succeed in work.
    • Despite most autistic people wanting to work, just 3 in 10 are currently in employment due to stigma and lack of understanding of their needs.
    • More neuro-inclusivity in the workplace can help fill vacancies and grow the economy by unlocking the potential of thousands more people.

    A bold new government-backed review has set out a vision for workplace culture changes to support autistic people to start and stay in work.

    DWP figures show only around 30 percent of working age autistic people are in employment, compared with half of all disabled people and 8 in 10 non-disabled people, despite the majority saying they would like to be employed.

    Commissioned by Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Mel Stride and led by Sir Robert Buckland KC, the Review’s 19 recommendations for businesses and government include:

    • signing up for the Autistica Neurodiversity Employers Index to access guidance on designing inclusive processes and procedures
    • encouraging career progression by developing packages of training focused on autistic staff
    • improving recruitment by ensuring careers advisers can provide appropriate advice to autistic jobseekers
    • supporting autistic people who are already in the workplace by producing “autism design guides” to create appropriate premises, furnishings and equipment
    • working with software suppliers to develop IT systems that meet autistic people’s needs.

    The Buckland Review of Autism Employment was supported by charity Autistica and includes the views of hundreds of employers and autistic people.

    It sets out how businesses and government can work together over the next five years – whether that is showcasing the successes of autism employment, developing pilot programmes in national and multinational companies, or providing tailored support for autistic staff at work.

    Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Mel Stride MP, said:

    I want autistic people to have every opportunity to benefit from work, and recognise that businesses and government must come together if we are to create the cultural change needed to move the dial.

    Backed by the extra employment support provided through our £2.5 billion Back to Work Plan, this report provides employers with practical and inexpensive steps to open up workplaces to autistic people, boost employment rates and, above all, change autistic people’s lives.

    Sir Robert Buckland KC MP said:

    It has been a tremendous privilege to compile this report, and to hear from hundreds of autistic people about their experiences. This is all about them, and we couldn’t have done it without their help.

    The review can make a truly radical difference to the lives of autistic people and their families. I call on employers and government to lead this change and make these recommendations a reality.

    It is all part of the Government’s long-term plan to build a stronger economy – which has seen unemployment compared to 2010 decline, with four million additional people in work.

    The Government has already succeeded in getting one million more disabled people into employment by 2027, five years ahead of schedule, with tailored support helping claimants realise their potential.

    Access to Work grants worth up to £66,000 made working easier for nearly 50,000 people last year. The Government’s flagship Universal Support programme is set to provide up to 25,000 people with highly personalised employment support, working closely with employers to navigate any workplace adjustments required to accommodate individual needs.

    Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work, Mims Davies MP, said:

    There are so many benefits and positives autistic people can bring to the workplace, and this is matched by what employment can bring to them. We must make sure they get the work opportunities they want and deserve.

    This welcome and important review will help ensure autistic people can thrive and progress in the labour market. I am keen employers get behind these recommendations, and partner with us to truly make our workforce more inclusive and welcoming.

    Minister for Social Care, Helen Whately MP, said:

    We want autistic people to have equal opportunities to flourish in society and contribute to the economy.

    For too long there have been too many barriers for them in the workplace; this review is a major step to changing that.

    This builds on our five-year autism strategy and shows our continued commitment to ensuring autistic people are able to lead happier, healthier and more fulfilling lives.

    The review is the latest milestone in the Government’s mission to make the UK the most accessible place in the world, following the publication of the Disability Action Plan earlier this month, the launch of the Lilac Review, which will investigate the barriers disabled entrepreneurs face, and the longer-term National Disability Strategy, which will transform disabled people’s everyday lives for the better.

    It also builds on the Government’s employment and welfare reforms – including the new £2.5 billion Back to Work Plan which will help thousands more disabled people and people with health conditions to start and thrive in work.

    Additional information

    • The Buckland Review of Autism Employment is available online.
    • The latest figures for employment of autistic people are available on GOV.UK.
    • The review is intended to complement, rather than duplicate, the Government’s national strategy for autistic children, young people and adults. Details of this strategy, which also recognises employment as a priority, are available on GOV.UK.
    • Autism charity Autistica, which supported the review, has now launched the Neurodiversity Employers Index, NDEI®, an evidence-based framework to help organisations recruit and support neurodivergent employees and become leading neurodiversity-friendly employers. More information can be found on the Autistica website.
    • A dedicated taskforce will be set up to further the work of the review.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Hong Kong national security proposals – UK statement [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Hong Kong national security proposals – UK statement [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 February 2024.

    Foreign Secretary David Cameron gave a statement on Hong Kong’s Article 23 national security proposals.

    Foreign Secretary David Cameron said:

    The Sino-British Joint Declaration on Hong Kong confirmed that for 50 years, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) would maintain a high degree of autonomy and that the rights and freedoms, as provided for by the laws previously in force in Hong Kong, would continue. Hong Kong’s Basic Law sets out those rights and freedoms.

    As a co-signatory to the Joint Declaration, the UK has a responsibility to ensure that those rights and freedoms are maintained.

    The UK government recognises the right of all jurisdictions to implement legislation to address national security concerns.  We also acknowledge that Hong Kong has a constitutional obligation to introduce such legislation under Article 23 of the Basic Law.

    Hong Kong is also required to ensure that national security legislation aligns with international standards and upholds rights and freedoms, as set out in the Joint Declaration, the Basic Law, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

    Legislative proposals announced on 30 January by the Hong Kong government do not uphold these obligations. They will have a negative impact on the people of Hong Kong in the exercise of their rights and freedoms.

    My officials have raised our concerns privately with the Hong Kong authorities and through the public consultation process. Those concerns include, but are not limited to:

    • the toughening of penalties for speech crimes and the use of the broadly defined term ‘state secrets’ will inhibit freedom of speech, of expression and of the press
    • the risk that the work of international organisations in Hong Kong could be labelled as ‘foreign interference’
    • vague references to ‘external forces’ and the new offence of ‘external interference’ threaten the legitimate and lawful diplomatic and consular activity as protected in the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
    • the absence of any reference to independent oversight, or the mechanisms that would support it
    • lack of clarity on the procedures that will govern detention without charge, and the absence of a judicial oversight mechanism
    • the absence of any provision for independent and robust mechanisms to safeguard against arbitrary action by the executive on national security grounds

    The UK has noted the references to UK national security legislation throughout the consultation document. UK national security legislation is informed by public consultation and was subject to full scrutiny by both Houses of Parliament, including the democratically elected House of Commons. This ensures that our national security legislation is fully representative of the views of the UK public and has democratic legitimacy.

    I strongly urge the Hong Kong SAR government to re-consider their proposals and engage in genuine and meaningful consultation with the people of Hong Kong.

    We will monitor development of this legislation closely.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Suspected members of Albanian people smuggling ring arrested [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Suspected members of Albanian people smuggling ring arrested [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 28 February 2024.

    Several members of a suspected people smuggling ring have been arrested in a series of raids after allegedly attempting to traffic migrants through UK airports.

    Two suspects, both Albanian nationals, were arrested yesterday morning (27 February) as Immigration Enforcement teams carried out a series of raids in Finsbury Park, London.

    They are believed to be part of a network using fake travel documents and airline tickets to book 27 Albanian migrants onto UK-bound flights, instructing them to claim asylum using their passports on arrival. The arrests led to the discovery of Class A drugs, and one of the men was later arrested on suspicion of drugs supply.

    Seven suspected members of the same criminal network were arrested last month after warrants were executed at 3 addresses in Finsbury Park.

    It follows a complex, rapid investigation carried out by the Home Office Criminal and Financial Investigations team with support from Border Force and local police forces.

    Officers found evidence of fake UK biometric residence permit documents and airline tickets issued by the suspects to migrants attempting to reach the UK illegally.

    The group are believed to have booked migrants onto 11 flights arriving into UK airports.

    The men arrested yesterday morning were identified after investigating officers connected their booking details with migrants arriving on flights illegally between July 2022 and January 2023.

    Minister for Countering Illegal Migration, Michael Tomlinson, said:

    People smuggling networks will stop at nothing in their efforts to abuse our borders and our laws. They are putting lives at risk.

    It is vital we stay ahead of the criminal gangs behind these crimes, and I thank our officers whose hard work led to the success of this operation.

    Criminal and Financial Investigator at the Home Office, Richard Darwesh, said:

    Today’s arrests are an important step towards bringing down this people smuggling network and ensuring its members are detained, brought to justice and swiftly removed from the UK.

    Our message is clear – if you put lives at risk, we will ensure you face the full weight of the law.

    All of the arrested suspects have been bailed pending further investigation.

    The activity comes as the UK steps up cooperation with Albania to speed up the removal of those with no right to be here.

    A new joint taskforce has been established to strengthen cooperation, including exchanges of law enforcement personnel between the UK and Albania.

    Since 1 July 2021, more than 8,000 Albanian nationals who have committed criminal and immigration offences have been returned, and small boat arrivals from Albania were down 90% in 2023.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government re-appoints Pubs Code Adjudicator [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government re-appoints Pubs Code Adjudicator [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 28 February 2024.

    Fiona Dickie has been re-appointed as the Pubs Code Adjudicator.

    The Government has re-appointed Fiona Dickie as Pubs Code Adjudicator (PCA) for a further 3-year period. On her re-appointment, Fiona said:

    I am delighted to be reappointed as the Pubs Code Adjudicator which affords the unique opportunity to continue to contribute to the Code’s positive impact.

    Much progress has been made in restoring balance in the relationship between tied pub tenants and pub-owning businesses through embedding cultural change in the tied sector so that tenants’ businesses can thrive. I am proud of the PCA’s success in reducing arbitration cases and successfully completing the first investigation under the Code.

    I will continue the important work to promote transparency and responsible compliance behaviours and, through improved communication and early engagement with the sector, help to avoid formal disputes while ensuring tenants’ Code rights are protected.

    The PCA is responsible for enforcing the statutory Pubs Code (the Code), which regulates the relationship between large pub-owning businesses and their tied pub tenants in England and Wales.

    The PCA has powers to arbitrate individual disputes about the Code, investigate suspected breaches by pub-owning businesses and impose sanctions, including financial penalties, when there is non-compliance.

    The PCA provides advice and guidance about the Code and leads a team based in Birmingham.

    About Fiona Dickie

    Fiona Dickie was appointed as the PCA in May 2020 for a 4-year term, ending on 2 May 2024. Prior to that, she was the Deputy Pubs Code Adjudicator from November 2017 until May 2020. Fiona was called to the Bar in 1993. She has been a Vice President of the Valuation Tribunal for England from 2009 until 2020 and was appointed Judge of First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) in 2013 (after serving as a Lawyer Chair of its predecessor tribunal from 2006). She was also appointed as a Road User Charging Adjudicator in 2004. Fiona has been a mediator in civil disputes since 2005 and a member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators since 2018.

    Additional information

    The Small Business, Enterprise and Employment (SBEE) Act 2015 required the introduction of a statutory Pubs Code and the appointment of a Pubs Code Adjudicator. The Code governs the relationship between large pub-owning businesses, which own 500 or more tied pubs in England and Wales, and their tied tenants.

    The Government must review the operation of the Code and the performance of the PCA every three years. A report on the second statutory review, for the period from April 2019 – March 2022, was published in October 2023. This concluded the PCA to have been effective in enforcing the Code over the review period, particularly in reducing arbitration cases and successfully completing the first investigation under the Code.

    Fiona Dickie will continue as the PCA for a further 3-year term following on from her current term which ends on 2 May 2024. This appointment is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments and has been made in line with the Governance Code for Public Appointments.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Widespread reforms to transform delivery of kit to UK’s armed forces [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Widespread reforms to transform delivery of kit to UK’s armed forces [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 28 February 2024.

    A new procurement system will see earlier expert assurance of future military programmes, ensuring they deliver for UK forces on the frontline.

    • Integration, early industry engagement, and exportability at the heart of Spring 2024 reforms.
    • Introducing new checks and balances to avoid procurement challenges, speed up frontline delivery and bring down costs.
    • New approach to test and improve advanced new capabilities on the battlefield.

    A new procurement system will see earlier expert assurance of future military programmes, ensuring they deliver for UK forces on the frontline, under a raft of reforms announced by the Defence Procurement Minister, James Cartlidge today (Wednesday 28 February).

    To avoid previous challenges where programmes have been over-complex, over-budget, and over time, a new Integrated Procurement Model will be brought in from April, which will see:

    • The Integration Design Authority (IDA) introducing new checks and balances to avoid some of the challenges faced in previous procurements.
    • Greater empowerment of subject matter experts across the defence enterprise including defence scientists, government export leads, finance experts and industry partners to challenge and shape proposals before they receive the go-ahead.
    • Increased focus on exportability of a capability at the start of a procurement, to prioritise developing kit that can be sold to and used by other nations.
    • Earlier engagement with the UK defence industry to ensure quicker delivery of kit into the hands of the armed forces.

    The new model will expose and resolve potential issues in any major programme at the start of the process, aiming to avoid unexpected complications that could cause in-service delays or additional costs.

    Minister for Defence Procurement, James Cartlidge said:

    There is no question that we are living in an increasingly dangerous world, and so our approach to major military procurement programmes cannot go on as it has before.

    Pace, challenge, and integration are vital to setting ourselves up for success and replacing the siloed nature of major programmes that hamper timely delivery and squander global export opportunities.

    All parts of UK defence must embrace these reforms as a positive shift in our approach that will deliver a military fit for the future.

    Delivering new equipment and technology more quickly is key to the overall reforms, and the concept of ‘spiral’ development will be at the forefront as new programmes are initiated. This will avoid capabilities that are not adaptable to the changing environment or are overly complex and too bespoke to export.

    Rather than striving for perfection before delivering to the frontline, capabilities at 60-80% of their full potential will be provided to the user, allowing early application, and subsequent improvements to reach their full potential.

    Chief Executive of Defence Equipment & Support, Andy Start said:

    This reform is a key turning point for defence procurement and change is already underway in DE&S to help defence realise the ambitions set out today.

    We aim to help bring greater insight from industry and allies into the development of capability at an earlier stage, and we go live with the first part of our new operating model in March to set up major programmes up for success from the start.

    The Archer capability for the British Army is just one example where we have shown we can bring new systems and platforms into service faster. We look forward to helping defence make this kind of pace the norm.

    DE&S, the MOD’s procurement arm, has recently redesigned the way it operates so it can get equipment into the hands of our armed forces faster. Its new operating model features a single-entry point which will engage with the military earlier in the process, to help set up projects for success.

    It will encourage collaboration across MOD, industry and with our allies to plan projects coherently and efficiently, injecting the appropriate pace and innovation and making sure work is deliverable, with spiral development built into the plan.

    Yet the new reforms aim to go further, avoiding competition between the military Services for programmes to be approved and encouraging people to speak up in the face of emerging challenges for delivery – a key recommendation of Clive Sheldon KC’s report into the AJAX programme.

    Today’s announcement follows last week’s launch of the Uncrewed Systems Strategy, backed by £4.5 billion in funding, outlining how the UK is embracing technological change and implementing the lessons from Ukraine, to deliver integrated procurement that is agile and maintains our military competitiveness.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The UK calls for an immediate pause in fighting, then progress towards a sustainable ceasefire [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : The UK calls for an immediate pause in fighting, then progress towards a sustainable ceasefire [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 27 February 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the UN Security Council meeting on food security risks in Gaza.

    Thank you, President, and I thank OCHA for the White Note and I thank too our briefers from OCHA, the FAO and the World Food Programme.

    Colleagues, we are witnesses to a desperate situation in Gaza which is worsening day by day. In Rafah and the South, people are crammed into tents if they’re lucky, but without sufficient food, water or hygiene. In North Gaza, as we’ve heard from the World Food Programme, humanitarian organisations cannot get aid to people who desperately need it. Hunger is at catastrophic levels. As ever, the most devastating impact falls on the most vulnerable: women and children.

    To address this, three things need to happen:

    First, we call on all parties to stop fighting immediately. This is crucial to get aid in and hostages out, and then progress towards a sustainable and permanent ceasefire. This is the only way to alleviate catastrophic hunger and suffering in Gaza.

    Second, we urge Israel to allow more aid into Gaza, and to facilitate distribution throughout the strip. Thousands of trucks are stuck in Egypt and Jordan, containing food, shelter and other essentials. We need more crossings opened for longer, including Kerem-Shalom. We need unencumbered access for aid coming from Jordan; we need the full opening of Ashdod Port. Key to this too is increasing the speed and capacity of aid screening operations, including at Kerem-Shalom and Nitzana to allow this life-saving aid to reach those who need it as soon as possible.

    We are particularly concerned that the World Food Programme has had to suspend aid deliveries into Northern Gaza, due to the breakdown of law and order. Airdrops cannot substitute for land-based delivery; humanitarians need safe and unhindered access to the North through the Erez Crossings now.

    We urge Israel to resume water and electricity supplies, which is critical for food production and safe drinking water. Commercial activity also needs to restart.

    Third, the UN and humanitarian partners need greater protection and access to the tools needed to accomplish their mission. This includes armoured vehicles, communications equipment, personal protective equipment and visas. They need functioning deconfliction mechanisms and safety guarantees for locations and convoys.

    President, colleagues, conflict in Gaza is driving hunger. Hunger is driving a breakdown in law and order, making it impossible for aid agencies to deliver aid safely.

    This White Note makes clear that we need to act now. The UK calls for an immediate pause in fighting, then progress towards a sustainable ceasefire. This is the only way to avert famine and alleviate suffering.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Chatham House Security and Defence Conference 2024 keynote speech [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Chatham House Security and Defence Conference 2024 keynote speech [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 27 February 2024.

    Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Sir Tony Radakin gave a keynote speech at Chatham House Security and Defence Conference on 27 February 2024.

    In my annual lecture last December, I spoke of an extraordinarily dangerous security outlook, and the opening weeks of 2024 have sadly served to reinforce that view.

    This is also a year of big elections: in the US, the UK, the EU and elsewhere.  And it’s very welcome that matters of defence and security are subject to public scrutiny and debate.

    There is certainly a strategic shift underway. As highlighted in both the Integrated Reviews in 2021 and 2023, a traditional era of state-on-state competition and geopolitical volatility has resurfaced.

    That has already warranted careful re-consideration of many of the assumptions of the past thirty years.  And we have been honest in acknowledging that whilst the themes and direction are as expected, the pace and intensity is greater than forecast.  We have a war in Europe that shows no signs of abating in the short term.  And we have a war in the Middle East with attendant risks to implode across the region and impact on the globe.

    But I worry that the public debate that has played out over recent weeks risks becoming confused and some remarks are alarmist.

    The starting point for any discussion must be an intellectually honest assessment of the threats our country faces and our options to respond.

    This needs to be done in a way that is measured and responsible.

    This speech is my attempt to inject a sense of perspective back into this debate – both on the nature of the threats we face, and the fundamentals of Britain’s strength and security in the world.

    I want to do that by offering four viewpoints as Head of the Armed Forces.

    First, to reassure those who may have been alarmed by some of the recent commentary – Britain is secure.  And to remind people of the extraordinary security we have through both our being in NATO and our being a nuclear power.

    Secondly, some reflections and observations about Russia.  How it has struggled in Ukraine.  How we have been surprised at its military weakness.  The predicament that it now has and how that has worsened by a strengthened NATO.

    Third, what the UK is doing to buttress against these longer-term threats and how we are focusing on a strategy that emphasises nuclear, maritime and air, and a British Army that is rooted in NATO.  And all this is underscored with extraordinary men and women who serve in uniform, supported by phenomenal intelligence agencies, and great civil servants.

    Fourth, is just to be plain about the responsibility of the Chiefs and to reflect on how government works.  My obligation as CDS, and the obligation of all the Chiefs, is to focus on delivering the most from the Armed Forces today.  We can always do better and we advise ministers on what more might be needed for the future. But it is for politicians to decide how much resource is allocated and where and how this is balanced with wider demands of government.  Those are sensitive conversations.  They are best done in private.

    First, let me scotch some of the more sensationalist headlines of late.

    We are not on the cusp of war with Russia.

    We are not about to be invaded.

    No one in the Ministry of Defence is talking about conscription in any traditional sense of the term.

    Britain is safe.

    We are safe because we are part of NATO, the world’s largest and strongest alliance and also because we are a responsible nuclear power.

    That doesn’t mean that we couldn’t face attacks.  We already do every day in the cyber domain.  We could have random attacks in space, on underwater cables, and attempted violations of our air and maritime sovereignty.  The most likely protagonist is Russia.  We have been clear about that.

    But the dilemma for Russia is huge.

    The inescapable fact is that any Russian assault or incursion against NATO would prompt an overwhelming response.

    The thousands of Allied troops currently stationed in Poland and the Baltic states could draw on the 3.5 million uniformed personnel across the Alliance for reinforcement.

    NATO’s combat air forces – which outnumber Russia’s 3 to 1 – would quickly establish air superiority.

    NATO’s maritime forces would bottle up the Russian Navy in the Barents and the Baltic, just as Ukraine pushed the Black Sea Fleet from Crimea.  NATO has four times as many ships and three times as many submarines as Russia.

    Britain would be at the heart of this response, contributing 25% of Alliance strength at sea, and 10% of land and air, plus our cyber and space capabilities, and our Special Forces.

    This is an Alliance that is becoming stronger all the time. Growing from 30 to 32 nations. With a collective GDP twenty times greater than Russia.  And a total defence budget three-and-a-half times more than Russia and China combined.

    Plus NATO has the additional strategic depth of a population of over 1 billion.  And sitting above all of this is NATO as a nuclear alliance.

    The biggest reason that Putin doesn’t want a conflict with NATO is because Russia will lose.  And lose quickly.

    Secondly, can we take some time to pause and reflect on Russia’s so-called ‘Special Military Operation’ in Ukraine?  It was supposed to take between 3 days and 3 weeks.  It was supposed to subjugate Ukraine’s population.  It was supposed to take about two thirds of Ukraine’s territory.  It was supposed to stop Ukraine joining NATO and the EU.

    Putin has failed in all of these strategic objectives.  At the operational level, Russia has demonstrated its continued inability to fight in a joint way.  Its Air Force has failed to gain control of the air.  Its Navy has seen 25% of its vessels in the Black Sea sunk or damaged by a country without a Navy and Ukraine’s maritime trade is reaching back to pre-war levels.  Russia’s Army has lost nearly 3,000 tanks, nearly 1500 artillery pieces and over 5,000 armoured fighting vehicles.

    At the tactical level, Russia gained Bahkmut – an area just over 40 square kilometres – after 9 months of fighting.  Avdiivka is about 29 square kilometres.  That has taken 5 months and some 17 thousand Russian lives and over 30 thousand injured.

    To pose a realistic threat to NATO’s Eastern flank within the next 2-5 years, Russia will need to reconstitute her tanks and armoured vehicles, rebuild her stocks of long-range missiles and artillery munitions and extract itself from a protracted and difficult war in Ukraine.

    I am not saying that Russia is not dangerous.  It has demonstrated that with the aggression it employs both domestically and internationally.

    But at the same time it is also significantly less capable than we anticipated following its disastrous illegal invasion into Ukraine.  And it faces an even stronger straitjacket with the introduction of Finland and Sweden into NATO.  Both theses are true and can exist at the same time: a Russia that is more dangerous and less capable than we thought. And it is the more dangerous Russia that we and NATO are responding to.

    Consequently, my third point is that recent talk of a Britain that is undefended, and an Armed Forces chronically imperilled, is way off the mark.

    Look at all we have contributed over the past two-and-a-half years.  Strengthening our commitment to NATO.  Bolstering the Baltic states. A presence in the Arctic circle.  The campaign against Daesh in Iraq and Syria.  Leading and galvanising the response in Ukraine.  The evacuation from Sudan. Reassuring Guyana.  Protecting trade in the Red Sea.  Combatting the Houthi threat.  Time-and-again the British Armed Forces have stepped up to do our bit.  And that’s without even considering our domestic roles.

    The Middle East is a case in point.  We are the second largest coalition partner in Iraq.  We have a base in Bahrain, where we provide mine hunters, a support ship and a frigate.  Second again to America.

    We are in the Combined Air Operations Centre in Qatar overseeing air operations across the whole region.  Again, second only to America.

    Then we can add in an extra frigate and destroyer in the region, our operations in the Red Sea are getting seriously up threat to protect our merchant ships.

    Staying in the region, we have access to an enormous land training area in Oman – twice the size of our one in Canada – where we are training alongside our Omani friends and many others in the region, usually with a battalion at a time.  Plus we have access to a port in Duqm that can take all our ships.

    Venture further and we have more bases in Diego Garcia and Cyprus.  In Cyprus we have extraordinary facilities, as well as a further two battalions and our fast jets and support aircraft.

    And at sea we have Royal Fleet Auxiliary ships ready to provide humanitarian aid.  This is an extraordinary lay down that no other nation other than America can match.

    And our people are doing what they are trained to do. With equipment like the Type 45 destroyer that was designed for precisely this purpose.  Defending Britain’s interests.  Keeping the trade flowing and the lights on.

    Our Typhoon force is in action once again. This follows ten years of operations against Daesh in Iraq and Syria which has seen more than 10,000 sorties, 4,000 precision weapon releases, and 1,400 enemy combatants killed or wounded.

    All of this is backed by a Defence Equipment and Support organisation that is overseeing 2,600 contracts, and over 550 programmes. Those deliver 98% of key user requirements, and it achieves 90% of strategic milestones and, contrary to perception, delivers well to budget.

    Yes, we have issues and problems that we need to get after.  We need deeper stockpiles of ammunition. We currently spend over a billion pounds a year on munitions procurement and repair, and plans are in train to increase this substantially.

    There are always challenges in running a large organisation that conducts worldwide operations and is as sophisticated as our modern military. Things will go wrong and they will also go right.  We are always looking to do better. These kinds of challenges apply to militaries everywhere.  But we have the finest people and some of the best equipment.

    When we were unable to sail one aircraft carrier, our people worked around the clock to deploy the second in a matter of days.  That’s the real story. And it was a phenomenal achievement.

    We know we need to look after our people better.  That is why we gained a nearly 10% pay rise for our most junior people last year.  That is why we are modernising our accommodation offer to provide more choice, again particularly to our more junior people.

    The same applies with recruitment and diversity.  We did well during Covid and people clung to the security we offered at a stressful time.  Some of those are now leaving and at higher numbers than normal, but that has already stabilised and applications for the Army and Navy are up 8 -fold and 6-fold.

    We need to appeal to young people from every background or either gender or whatever their sexual orientation because we need to attract the best people.  That’s like any large organisation: I know of no big employer that seeks to not be attractive to all these people and then choose the best.  That’s all we are trying to do, as well as applying a simple code that every individual should be able to bring the best of themselves to work in their ambition to serve their country.

    And if we step back, what we see is an Armed Forces that is undergoing an extraordinary transformation throughout this decade. This follows the toughness of the previous decade – where we were understandably focused on Iraq and Afghanistan, and we slowed investment in nuclear and took temporary capability cuts in carriers and maritime patrol aircraft.

    We are now adjusting to an Army that will be at the heart of NATO as one of SACEUR’s two Strategic Reserves, and is the beneficiary of £41 billion of new investment. More than the £38 billion in capital we will spend on the non-nuclear parts of the Navy or the £36 billion we will spend on Air.

    We have a Royal Air Force transforming from a fourth generation to fifth generation aircraft, with a sixth-generation fighter now in development.

    A Royal Navy that is a carrier Navy once again. At the heart of an extraordinary nuclear enterprise. And with an astonishing 22 major ships and submarines under construction or on order.

    And we have Strategic Command leading and supporting defence as we move from three domains to five, and from forces that are joint to ones that are properly integrated.

    And all this is alongside our biggest capital investment: nuclear.  The continuing relevance of nuclear is one of the biggest lessons of Russia’s war against Ukraine.

    I’ve spoken previously about the decaying global architecture of nuclear security, the lapsing and disintegrating arms control treaties, and the total absence of equivalent structures in the Indo-Pacific.

    For established and responsible nuclear powers like the United Kingdom, this is driving us to modernise our nuclear enterprise as a priority.  New warheads.  New deterrent submarines.  New infrastructure and thousands of new jobs.

    You will have seen the recent coverage of the Trident missile test firing. Unfortunately, I cannot go into the details.  But I can assure you this was an anomaly of the testing regime.  HMS VANGUARD passed her examination to a very high standard.  And our confidence in the missile system is borne from the nearly 200 tests as part of a shared pool of UK and US missiles.

    Looking further afield, there are also non-military threats to our domestic stability and to international cohesion, particularly as Russia seeks to compete for influence with middle ground countries.

    In response, we must recognise our “defence” constitutes more than just military capability.

    Earlier this month I was in Georgetown, Guyana, for a meeting of the Caribbean Chiefs of Defence.  The President of Guyana was trained at Sandhurst.  The Chief of Defence attended the UK’s Advanced Command and Staff Course.  The Jamaican Chief – the only female Armed Forces head in the world – was trained at Dartmouth.  Our country is fortunate to draw on these kinds of relationships across the world.

    Relationships that allow us to leverage our network of partners and allies in defence of the rules-based system.

    And they afford us the strategic patience required to execute and maintain a long-term approach to our security – exemplified by AUKUS and GCAP, which binds Britain and its allies in a partnership for decades to come.

    None of this means that we do not review and debate our approach.

    There are lessons we must learn from Ukraine and the Red Sea in terms of future investment choices.  Integrated Air and Missile Defence for the UK.  Long range missiles for the Army.  Land attack for our surface fleet.  Strengthening nuclear deterrence.  Hundreds of thousands more drones across all three Services.  I’ve spoken about all these things before.

    And there are also big conversations that need to happen: on the size and shape of the Armed Forces, on readiness and resilience, on faster and better procurement, on our ability to appeal to young people.

    This leads to my fourth and final point: I can assure you these conversations are going on privately within Government all the time.

    These discussions happen in private because they need to be grounded in a candid and sensitive examination of the threats we face, and because they are ultimately political decisions.

    And they sit above our day-to-day focus as Chiefs.

    Our most immediate responsibility is to ensure the Armed Forces deliver the maximum return for the £50 billion we currently have each year.

    So before we start talking about a bigger Army, can we first concentrate on meeting our current recruitment targets?

    Before we talk about more ships for the Navy or aircraft for the RAF, can we ensure we are getting the most from the ones we have?

    And most importantly: can we check that we are still looking after our people properly?  Do we still offer good pay, excellent benefits and decent food and accommodation?

    The vast majority of our people, including service women, recommend the Armed Forces as a career to friends and family. That must remain one of the litmus tests of whether we’re getting this right.

    In all this, our aim should not be to recreate the Armed Forces of the Cold War.  We should be looking to the future.  Modern, lethal, agile Armed Forces that harness and drive our nation’s strengths and support the country in every way possible.

    These are dangerous and uncertain times.  But Britain has what it needs to succeed.  A G7 economy.  An extensive science and technological base.  Our island geography.  Our membership of the world’s strongest military alliance.  Our status as a nuclear power, and our seat on the UN Security Council.  And most of all the commitment of our servicemen and women and our civil servants.

    Our task is to meld and align these strengths in a way that is faster and bolder than our competitors.  That is how we will continue to stay safe.  That is how we will win in the future.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Syrians deserve sustainable peace and stability and a solution to this long running conflict: UK statement at the UN Security Council [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Syrians deserve sustainable peace and stability and a solution to this long running conflict: UK statement at the UN Security Council [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 27 February 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the UN Security Council meeting on Syria.

    Thank you, President and I thank Special Envoy Pedersen and Under-Secretary Griffiths for their briefings today.

    Like others, we recall the devastating effects of the earthquakes one year ago and offer our condolences to those affected.

    For 13 years, this conflict has ground on. To make meaningful progress on Syria we need to see three changes.

    First, we want Syria to stop its destabilising activity. Syria’s readmission to the League of Arab States last year was an opportunity for the regime to play a more constructive role in the region. But we have not seen that change.

    In particular the regime continues to generate vast profits producing and selling captagon. With the support of Iranian-affiliated groups, its trade is becoming ever more organised, violent and destabilising. That dangerous activity – which puts our partners in the region at risk – has to stop.

    Second, we need to act to address the humanitarian crisis in Syria. 72% of the population is in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. In the north-east, more than a million people have been cut off from electricity. We continue to call for sustained, rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access for people in need across Syria, including in the north-west. And we call on all parties to stop escalating activities.

    For our part, the UK is investing in early recovery interventions so that ordinary Syrians have a means to build a better future. In 2023 we dedicated $19 million to early recovery and livelihoods projects – for example, rather than handing out food parcels, we are fixing irrigation and drainage systems so Syrian farmers can produce more food themselves.

    Third, we call on all authorities in Syria to protect fundamental human rights. We are concerned at reports of the de facto authorities in Idlib’s proposed ‘public morality law’. If implemented, this law could significantly affect women’s rights and freedom of expression.  We are monitoring the situation closely and urge partners to use their influence to uphold human rights.

    President, in conclusion, we underline our continued support for the efforts of UN Special Envoy Pedersen and welcome his extensive efforts to organise a meeting of the Constitutional Committee, and it is welcome news that he is today issuing invitations for a meeting in Geneva in April. We call on the Assad regime to engage in this process.

    Syrians deserve sustainable peace and stability and a solution to this long running conflict. Resolution 2254 is the only route out of this conflict.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Attorney General marks two-year anniversary of Ukraine conflict [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Attorney General marks two-year anniversary of Ukraine conflict [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General’s Office on 27 February 2024.

    Victoria Prentis KC MP has reflected on her involvement in supporting Ukraine as it pursues justice for the victims of Russian atrocities and on her ongoing personal connection to the country.

    She said:

    This week marks a horrific chapter in Ukraine’s history as the country faces the two-year anniversary of Russia’s unlawful invasion.

    Ukraine holds a special place in my heart. My daughter worked in Kyiv a few years ago and I remember when I visited her at the end of 2021. Rarely has a place looked more beautiful than Kyiv, with its cathedral lit up by the bright November sun.

    I knew that things would be different when I returned last year, but seeing the sandbags around Mykhailivs’ka square was heart-breaking.

    Even though Kyiv looked different, its people were the same. Weathered by war, but vibrant. Battered by conflict, but even more resilient.

    That is why, alongside international partners, we are determined to support Ukraine for as long as it takes.

    The Government appointed Sir Howard Morrison – a former Judge at the International Criminal Court. – as independent advisor to Andriy Kostin – the Prosecutor General of Ukraine. This package of support has included training more than 100 judges to hold domestic war crimes trials.

    In December 2022, the Attorney joined G7 justice ministers in signing the Berlin Declaration, coordinating international investigations and prosecutions and pledging solidarity with Ukraine.

    Last March, on a visit to Ukraine, she witnessed the impact of the conflict first hand in Kyiv, Bucha and Borodiankia. In Lviv, the Attorney represented the UK at the United for Justice Conference.

    This experience was reflected in her submission to the International Court of Justice where, alongside 32 other intervening states, the Attorney intervened in the case brought by Ukraine against Russia under the Genocide Convention.

    The Attorney added:

    Most significantly for my family – we welcomed a Ukrainian woman into our home at the start of the war. Vika is an integral part of our family. We recently celebrated her birthday.  I know she will be part of our lives for ever.

    Putin has tried to convince us all that Ukraine is part of a Russian world. That there is no Ukrainian culture. That there is no Ukraine.

    But Ukraine’s soldiers and its people continue to defy the odds. They display the utmost bravery.  Here in the UK, we know that Ukraine is fighting not just for its own security, but our security too.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK to take new approach in tackling overseas and domestic security threats [February 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK to take new approach in tackling overseas and domestic security threats [February 2024]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 26 February 2024.

    The Government will take a new integrated approach that combines how it tackles overseas and domestic security threats, Cabinet Office Minister Baroness Neville-Rolfe said in a speech at the Royal United Services Institute today [26 February].

    This shift will be underpinned by the transition of the UK Government’s Conflict, Stability & Security Fund (CSSF) into a new Integrated Security Fund (ISF) in April.

    The CSSF was a cross-government fund that tackled security challenges overseas that threatened UK national security. Its successor the ISF will continue its important work helping to deliver the government’s national security objectives.

    The transformation of the CSSF into the ISF is a natural evolution that recognises that many global challenges – cyber security, terrorism and people smuggling – also threaten us here in the UK.

    The new ISF will build on the success of the CSSF to combine our overseas and domestic security response to tackle transnational challenges threatening the UK and its partners. This integrated approach will help to address key challenges such as causes of instability and conflict, serious and organised crime, smuggling, illicit finance, cyber-attacks and illegal migration.

    Minister Neville-Rolfe told delegates at RUSI on Monday:

    “The security challenges we face do not respect borders, they can happen anywhere and come from any place, at any time.

    “For example, Serious Organised Crime Groups operate in multiple countries inside and outside the UK.

    “We need to be able to work across borders and that is what the ISF is designed to do.”

    She highlighted serious and organised crime groups operating both in the UK and overseas as an example of a priority national security challenge that the ISF has set its sights on.

    In her speech at RUSI, the Minister will also set out six focus areas for the ISF’s work:

    1. Combating state threats to the UK and its interests from state-level actors, such as Russia.
    2. Combating non-state threats to the UK and its interests from terrorist groups, violent extremists, and criminal gangs.
    3. Defending against malicious cyber activity
    4. Improving understanding of the maritime domain and combating maritime threats to the UK, its allies and partners.
    5. Deploying effective economic deterrents to counter hostile acts.
    6. Addressing the causes of instability in conflict and helping those worst affected by it, including women and girls.

    The Minister also outlined the work that the new ISF will do to counter disinformation, including the threat of AI and emerging technology. She will stress the importance of this in a year with more than 70 elections scheduled to take place globally:

    “Work to guard against disinformation has never been more important than in 2024; a year that sees elections in over 70 countries with a combined population of half of the world’s total.”

    Support for Ukraine remains a key priority for the Government and the Fund as they defend their country against Russia’s illegal and unprovoked attack. Last year Ukraine was the biggest single-state recipient of Official Development Assistance. It received £41 million from the ISF’s predecessor, the CSSF.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak first announced the creation of the ISF as part of the March 2023 Integrated Review Refresh.