Category: Press Releases

  • PRESS RELEASE : 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights commemoration event: UK pledge announcement [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights commemoration event: UK pledge announcement [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 18 December 2023.

    Statement delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley, at the UDHR commemoration event in Geneva.

    Thank you, Deputy High Commissioner.

    The United Kingdom is delighted to have submitted five pledges.

    First, to support the vital work of Human Rights Defenders, through funding their work, monitoring their cases and raising concerns with other governments.

    Second, to advance equality by increasing our support to LGBT organisations, to persons with disabilities, and to women and girls through bilateral aid.

    Third, to prioritise the right to freedom of religion or belief and to strengthen international coalitions seeking to uphold this right.

    Fourth, we will support survivor-led organisations and civil society working to end modern slavery in our funding to international programmes.

    And fifth, we will work towards raising the standards of public and private security organisations through greater adherence to voluntary standards.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Flora Page reappointed to the Legal Services Board [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Flora Page reappointed to the Legal Services Board [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 18 December 2023.

    Mike Freer MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, has approved the reappointment of Flora Page, as a non-lay member of the Legal Services Board, for 4 years from 1 August 2024.

    Biography

    Flora Page has been both a solicitor and a barrister. In 1996, she joined Clifford Chance and subsequently worked for the Law Commission and the University of Law. Flora than established her own firm, Old Bailey Solicitors. Having obtained, in 2002, higher rights of audience, she cross-qualified – in 2013 – as a barrister and joined 23 Essex Street Chambers. Her practice focusses on financial crime, and she prosecutes and defends in equal measure.

    She is a leading junior, a Grade 4 Prosecutor, and a facilitator for Advocacy and the Vulnerable training. Flora has also had a period at the Financial Conduct Authority, where she has worked in both enforcement and consumer redress policy development. She is also a part-time PhD student at University College London, researching corporate misconduct. She was a long-serving committee member of the Solicitors’ Association of Higher Court Advocates, and then a member of the Executive of the Criminal Bar Association. Flora has been a member of the 23 Essex Street Equality and Diversity Committee, and a Financial Conduct Authority Equality and Diversity Superuser.

    She is currently appearing in the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Spiking to be targeted in raft of new measures [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Spiking to be targeted in raft of new measures [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 18 December 2023.

    Language in legislation is set to be updated to reflect the modern day crime.

    Spiking will be targeted by police and door staff in a raft of new measures unveiled today (Monday 18 December) by the Home Secretary James Cleverly as the festive party-going season gets into full swing.

    The new package will see changes to the legislation, research into self-testing kits, more training for door staff and better education for young people, to raise awareness about the threat. There will also be coordinated police action to crackdown on spiking during key weeks of the year – an approach that has proved successful in tackling other crimes, such as knife crime.

    The step up to tackle spiking comes as the government prepares to clarify under the Criminal Justice Bill, that without any doubt, spiking is illegal. It will be backed with separate guidance, set in law, to provide a clear, unequivocal definition of what spiking is. This will give victims renewed confidence to come forward, increase public awareness of the crime and enforce that perpetrators will face up to 10 years behind bars.

    Alongside this, the government will set out practical measures aimed at improving understanding of the crime and delivering better support to victims.

    This includes:

    • training hundreds more door staff to spot potential perpetrators and signs patrons have been victimised
    • investing in research into spiking testing kits to help venues and police detect if someone’s drink has been spiked in real-time
    • intensive operations run by the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) to tackle spiking during key weeks across the 43 police forces in England and Wales
    • an online spiking tool to be rolled out to all police forces to make it easier to anonymously report it if people fear they have been a victim of the crime
    • updated statutory guidance to include spiking (s182 Licensing Act 2003)
    • a spiking guidance/advice toolkit for the public that contains a range of resources and signposting for anyone who is looking for information on spiking, what it is, who is affected, how to report it, how to support victims, and which criminal offences can be used to prosecute it
    • supporting the higher education regulator, the Office for Students, as they take action to make sure universities and other higher education institutions to prevent and address sexual misconduct – this will follow its consultation on the issue, expected to report back in early 2024

    Home Secretary, James Cleverly said:

    Tackling violence against women and girls is a personal priority for me and this government has shown time and again that we will do what is necessary to keep the public safe.

    Spiking is a perverse crime which can have a lasting impact on victims. Our comprehensive new measures are designed to help police and staff in bars, restaurants, pubs and other premises to protect victims and bring more offenders to justice.

    Minister for Victims and Safeguarding, Laura Farris said:

    Spiking is an insidious and predatory act which is already illegal under existing laws.

    We are amending legislation to make the offence explicit and capture the modern day nature of the threat.

    Taken alongside new measures to improve the way the police respond to incidents, and better equipping venue staff to identify, respond and protect their customers, we are sending a clear message that perpetrators of this crime should expect to be caught and face justice.

    ACC Samantha Millar, National Police Chiefs’ Council Strategic Programme Director, Violence Against Women and Girls, said:

    Spiking is a complex and challenging offence to investigate. Drugs pass through the system quickly and there is often limited evidence to identify offenders. The primary barriers to prosecution are the lack of an identifiable suspect and the ability to gather timely sufficient evidence to both charge and support a prosecution.

    People should be in no doubt that spiking is an abhorrent crime and the new clarity in the legislation should drive that message home.

    We still believe that there is underreporting of spiking and so our message remains to encourage victims to report to police. We have developed a new online reporting method so that victims are able to quickly tell us if they think they’ve been spiked, and we are also working up plans for all forces to heavily focus their efforts on spiking as part of their neighbourhood work. We also face challenges in identifying suspects promptly so we welcome focus in this area by partners including those who work in the night-time economy.

    Dawn Dines, CEO and Founder of Stand Out Spiking Global, said:

    This is a monumental announcement. I have been campaigning on behalf of the victims of Spiking for over 20 years now. I am so relieved that finally some sort of justice will be available to the survivors of this cowardly offence.

    Spiking being clearly recognised in law and the language being modernised will give a clear message to the perpetrators that giving someone any drug – including alcohol without that person’s knowledge or consent – can result in a criminal conviction and not be tolerated.

    Spiking will finally not be an invisible crime.

    Sharon Gaffka, Violence Against Women and Girls Activist and Drink Spiking Campaigner:

    As a campaigner for the past few years who has been dedicated to combating spiking, I applaud the government’s comprehensive approach unveiled today.

    While urging legislative updates has been my primary request for some time, the introduction and investment in preventive measures like venue staff training and drink testing kits is crucial. This commitment sends a clear message: spiking is an abhorrent crime that will be met with increased scrutiny and consequences.

    It’s a positive stride in the safeguarding of our communities during the festive season and beyond. I look forward to what further progress is made in 2024.

    Tackling spiking is just one way the government is prioritising protecting women and girls from violence and abuse.

    The Chancellor unveiled £12 million of new funding to tackle domestic abuse in the Autumn Statement last month including £2 million of funding for payments directly to victims to help them leave abusive relationships and rebuild their lives.

    All police forces across England and Wales are now following a new approach for the investigation of rape, funded by the Home Office, with police referrals to the Crown Prosecution Service for adult rape offences already up more than 200% since 2019. Under the new model, police and prosecutors can access better support and 2,000 police investigators will be specially trained in sexual offences by April 2024.

    Earlier this year, the government added violence against women and girls to the Strategic Policing Requirement – meaning it is now categorised as a national threat for forces to respond to, alongside other serious threats like terrorism.

    In November 2023, the third phase of the government’s innovative ‘Enough’ communications campaign that looks to change long-term behaviours and attitudes towards violence against women and girls, launched a third phase of activity, which included partnering with over 30 UK universities in a bid to protect women and girls on university campuses.

    The Home Office also funds “perpetrator intervention” projects which aim to stop domestic abusers and stalkers from repeatedly targeting victims and terrorising vulnerable people.

    The government has also created new offences to criminalise acts such as non-fatal strangulation, stalking, cyberflashing and the sharing of intimate images without consent.

  • PRESS RELEASE : WTO Trade Negotiations Committee – UK Statement [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : WTO Trade Negotiations Committee – UK Statement [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 18 December 2023.

    UK Ambassador to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley, spoke on a number of issues, including fisheries, at the Trade Negotiations Committee on 12 December 2023.

    Thank you very much Chair.

    Let me start, first of all, by offering a very warm welcome to our new Deputy Director General Johanna Hill. It is fantastic to have you here.

    Let me also just take a moment to thank you DG, GC Chair and the Chairs of our various negotiating committees.

    I think if we needed any confirmation of how tough all your jobs are it would be listening to today’s discussion, and to some of the discussions over previous weeks.

    You deserve our support. You certainly have our support for the tough job that you’ve got over the days and weeks to come.

    You said yourself, DG, that we’ve got a long way to go to ensure that MC13 is a success. We also have remarkably little time once we actually start looking at the calendar of the days and weeks ahead of us. So, this week is important.

    Let me just touch briefly on some of the issues that we have to sort out over the next few weeks.

    Dispute settlement – clearly an absolutely essential issue for this organisation if we are to prove our worth. Let me commend the work others have done. Our facilitator, Marco Molina, he’s doing a great job.

    As our colleagues meet at COP28, let me congratulate you again DG and your colleagues, not only from the WTO but also from the ITC, UNCTAD and the ICC on the very first COP Trade Day. The Trade House is so important in defining what this organisation and our partner organisations can do to enable us to make that transition to net zero.

    Let me stress the importance once again of doing what we can here on fisheries over the weeks to come to ensure that we can curb harmful subsidies to help restore global fish stocks and to help ensure that there is a sustainable future for our fishing communities. As you hinted Chair, tomorrow we bring you the instrument of ratification in the safe hands of my Minister of Development, the Rt Hon Andrew Mitchell MP.

    On agriculture, DG, you have asked us to be honest, and it is not looking good but we do have substantive proposals on the table for the first time in a long time including, I might say, one from the UK on export restrictions.

    So we very much welcome an effort to intensify our discussions over the next few weeks. We agree that we should have a Head of Delegation level discussions to try and push that forward.

    We offer our 101% support to the CoA-SS Chair and sorry to hear what he feels he has suffered over recent days and weeks.

    On development, I think we should be proud of what we have achieved over the last few weeks. Whether than be on LDG Graduation or IFD. There is important work that we have still got to do to make sure that we have a genuinely impressive development package for MC 13. We welcome the submission of further G90 papers and the process that our distinguished CTG Chair is leading on.

    At this Ministerial, which is so soon upon us, we do need to look to the future. We do need to ensure that this organisation is responding to the biggest trading challenges that we have today.

    We cannot hide from those challenges; we cannot pretend that they do not exist. We share your disappointment, DG, that we are not further ahead on Services, an area of such extraordinary potential for the global economy, for both developed and developing nations.

    It is also clear from our discussions from the SOM that there is appetite here in this organisation for a dedicated industrial policy forum. We think that will be a key outcome from the Ministerial and we support the efforts of the GC Chair to help us elucidate an outcome document that is going to set out what it is we are going to do post MC13.

    One thing we do not have to wait for MC13 to do is to renew the E-commerce moratorium. This is something we should be doing this very week, in the General Council.

    We want to welcome the ACP Group’s recent communication. We now have over 100 members of this organisation calling for an extension and we look forward to getting it done this week.

    Before MC12, DG, you may recall that we said Geneva needed to become the city that never sleeps. We do need to make sure that we are back here in January with determination and the spirit of collaboration and responsible consensus so as to ensure that MC 13 builds on the success of MC 12, and show this organisation, and the global trading system, that we are back in business and backing business.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government pledges never to repeat the injustices of Hillsborough [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government pledges never to repeat the injustices of Hillsborough [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 15 December 2023.

    The government has signed the Hillsborough Charter, pledging to learn the lessons and make sure no family suffers the same injustices.

    Bereaved families will be better supported in the aftermath of major incidents, as the government commits to making sure the experiences of the Hillsborough families are learnt from and not lost.

    In response to Bishop James Jones’ report, The Patronising Disposition of Unaccountable Power, published on Wednesday 6 December, the government set a series of expectations for how public bodies should act in the aftermath of a major incident.

    This comes as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has repeated the government’s apology to the victims of the Hillsborough disaster and their families, who have endured harrowing injustices for over thirty years.

    Committing to Bishop Jones’ first recommendation – a Charter for Families Bereaved through Public Tragedy, or as it will be known, the Hillsborough Charter – the Deputy Prime Minister has signed the pledge and written to all departments to make sure everyone in government is aware of what it this means for the way they work.

    By signing this Charter, the government has reaffirmed its commitment to a culture of honesty and transparency in public service and reminding all in government why these values are so important.

    A duty of candour for policing will also be required by law, holding policing to the highest standards. Chief Constables must ensure their officers act with openness, and speak up on behalf of victims. This builds on existing requirements for individual officers to cooperate with official investigations and inquiries.

    Anyone who fails to cooperate with a statutory inquiry could face criminal sanctions under the Inquiries Act and police officers found to have committed a serious breach of professional standards, including failing to cooperate with an inquiry, can face dismissal.   Last week’s announcement follows the commitment made  to create a permanent Independent Public Advocate.

    The testimony of the Hillsborough Families made clear how the difficulties following a major disaster can be compounded by having no single person to turn to for support and advice. The Independent Public Advocate will help victims and families navigate the justice system in the wake of a public disaster, ensure that they know their rights, and that their needs are supported.

    By making this a permanent position, the Public Advocate will be ready to be deployed immediately in the aftermath of any crisis.

    The government will also take action in response to concerns raised by Bishop James that families should have legal representation at inquests.

    A consultation will soon be launched to expand legal aid for families bereaved through public disaster where an Independent Public Advocate is engaged, or in the aftermath of a terrorist incident.

    New guidance will also lead to greater transparency around how much is spent on lawyers representing central government public bodies’ at inquests. This will set a clear expectation that they should not hire more lawyers than are necessary and spend on legal representation should be published.

    Speaking when the government published its response on Wednesday 6 December, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said:

    The Hillsborough families have suffered multiple injustices and more than thirty-four years later, there can never be too many apologies for what they have been through. And I want to repeat that apology today, and thank the Hillsborough families for their tenacity, patience and courage.

    Today, the government will publish its response to Bishop James Jones’ report on the experiences of these families, setting out how we will improve support for the bereaved in the aftermath of a public disaster and how we expect public bodies to act – which is with honesty, transparency and candour.

    Home Secretary James Cleverly said:

    The 97 lives taken by the Hillsborough disaster will never be forgotten. So many people were touched by this national tragedy and the Hillsborough families were badly let down.

    Police dishonesty, lack of accountability and obstruction were all prevalent. That is why we promised the Hillsborough families that we would honour the legacy of their campaigning and deliver lasting change.

    By signing the Hillsborough Charter and introducing a duty of candour for policing, this government will deliver that change and protect others from similar experiences in the future.

    Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary Alex Chalk KC MP said:

    For far too long, but with great dignity, the Hillsborough families battled to get justice. Too many others have faced similar obstructions and it must end.

    The Independent Public Advocate we are creating, as well as the free legal advice and representation we are offering will prevent other families facing these injustices and get them the help they deserve.

    Bishop James’ report was published in 2017 and made 25 recommendations for government, the police and the Chief Coroner.

    Since then, the need to avoid risk of prejudice to ongoing legal proceedings for much of that time regrettably delayed the government’s response from being published. The government has been in contact with the Hillsborough families throughout the preparation of this response, and some of the families were in Liverpool on Wednesday 6 December to read the response in advance of its publication.

    In their meeting with some of the Hillsborough families earlier in the year, the Lord Chancellor and former Home Secretary apologised for the time it had taken to publish the government’s full response.

    The National Police Chiefs’ Council and College of Policing published the police’s response to Bishop James’ report earlier this year.

    The Chief Coroner also published his own independent response on Wednesday 6 December.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rare drawing by 17th century miniaturist Samuel Cooper at risk of leaving the UK [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rare drawing by 17th century miniaturist Samuel Cooper at risk of leaving the UK [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 15 December 2023.

    A temporary export bar has been placed on a rare drawing by 17th century artist Samuel Cooper, valued at almost £115,000, to allow time for a UK gallery or institution to acquire the work.

    Arts and Heritage Minister Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay has placed an export bar on a rare drawing by prominent 17th-century artist Samuel Cooper.

    Widely regarded as the finest portrait miniaturist of the seventeenth century, with portraits of Oliver Cromwell and Charles II among his works, only a handful of Cooper’s drawings are understood to remain in existence.

    Titled ‘Portrait of a Dead Child’, the drawing depicts the infant grandson of Cooper’s uncle and tutor, John Hoskins the Elder. The work is minutely drawn in a technique characteristic of a miniaturist, with delicate cross-hatching in the face and the shadows cast on his forehead by the edge of his cap.

    The work is valued at £114,300 (plus VAT of £4,860), and at risk of leaving the UK unless a domestic buyer can be found to save it for the nation.

    Arts and Heritage Minister Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay said:

    This rare and intensely personal drawing by Samuel Cooper – one of the foremost English artists of the seventeenth century – is a deeply poignant work, as well as an important one.

    It is right that it should remain in the UK so that it can be studied and contribute to our understanding of Cooper and his period.

    The Minister’s decision follows the advice of the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA).

    Committee Member Pippa Shirley:

    There is something deeply touching about this tender portrait and made even more poignant by the family network which connects the artist and subject. The baby was the son of Samuel Cooper’s cousin, John Hoskins Junior – in whose father’s studio Cooper had trained as a miniaturist, and who is the subject of a lively drawing on the reverse of the same sheet. In depicting his small relative in what must have been a highly emotional moment, Cooper brought all his powers of observation and a scintillating technique to bear. The detailed focus on the fragility of the face and the stillness of the tiny curled fingers, contrasting with the creation of a sense of volume through body colour in the cap and clothes creates an image of immense impact.

    Cooper had an uncanny ability as an artist and miniature painter, admired in his own time, to get under the skin of his sitters, and his extraordinary sensitivity and perception is nowhere more clearly demonstrated than in this drawing. Arguably the greatest English-born artist of his time, patrons flocked to Cooper’s studio, and his work was praised by Samuel Pepys as ‘so extraordinary as I do never expect to see his like again’. Although many miniatures by Cooper survive, only seven drawings by him are recorded, making this one particularly precious. This, and the extreme rarity of drawings of a child’s deathbed at this period, the brilliance of execution and the light the drawing throws on artistic practice in the 1650s opens up a number of new lines of understanding and research, making it all the more desirable that it can be kept in this country. It also speaks to us all.

    The RCEWA made its recommendation on the grounds of the drawing meeting the second and third

    Waverley criteria for its outstanding aesthetic importance and its outstanding significance for the

    study of the representation of death and the work of Samuel Cooper.

    The decision on the export licence application for the drawing will be deferred for a period ending on 14 March 2024 (inclusive). At the end of the first deferral period owners will have a consideration period of 15 Business Days to consider any offer(s) to purchase the drawing at the recommended price of £114,300 (plus VAT of £4,860). The second deferral period will commence following the signing of an Option Agreement and will last for three months

    ENDS

    1. Lord Parkinson discussed the Waverley criteria in a speech to mark their 70th anniversary, and used the opportunity to invite thoughts on the way they work – for instance, whether the Committee should say more about how it has considered items’ connection to the history of other countries as well as to the UK’s, or whether the items it considers are destined for public display rather than private collection. His full speech can be found at: https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/lord-parkinson-speech-at-a-reception-to-mark-70-years-of-the-waverley-criteria
    2. Organisations or individuals interested in purchasing the drawing should contact the RCEWA on 02072680534 or rcewa@artscouncil.org.uk .
    3. Details of the object are as follows: Samuel Cooper (1609-1672), Portrait of a Dead Child, the Artist’s Cousin. Pencil and black chalk heightened with body colour on paper prepared with an orange-pink wash, 145 x 185 mm. Verso: Portrait of a Gentleman, traditionally identified as John Hoskins Junior (c. 1617-after 1703), the artist’s cousin. Pencil and red chalk. Verso inscribed Dead Child; and in another hand: Mr S.C. child done by him; and in the same hand lower right NB ye son of: Old Mr Hoskins’s Son.
    4. Provenance: possibly Mrs Samuel Cooper (1623-1693), the artist’s wife; possibly Mrs Richard Gibson, nee Anne Shepherd (d. 1707); possibly Susannah-Penelope Rosse (d. 1700), her daughter; possibly Michael Rosse (d. c. 1735), her husband; his sale, Cecil Street, London, 2 or 26 April 1723; possibly Christopher Tower (1657-1728) of Huntsmoor Park, Bucks; possibly Christopher Tower (1692-1771); possibly Christopher Tower (1747-1810); possibly the Revd William Tower (1789-1847), Weald Hall, Essex; certainly Ellen Tower, Mrs William Henry Harford (1832-1907); Hugh Wyndham Luttrell Harford (1862-1920); Arthur Hugh Harford (1905-1985); by descent.
    5. The Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest is an independent body, serviced by Arts Council England (ACE), which advises the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport on whether a cultural object, intended for export, is of national importance under specified criteria.
    6. Arts Council England is the national development agency for creativity and culture. Its strategic vision in Let’s Create is that, by 2030, England should be a country in which the creativity of everyone is valued and given the chance to flourish and where everyone has access to a remarkable range of high-quality cultural experiences. ACE invests public money from the Government and the National Lottery to support the sector and deliver the vision. Following the Covid-19 crisis, ACE developed a £160 million Emergency Response Package, with nearly 90 per cent coming from the National Lottery, for organisations and individuals needing support. It is also one of the bodies administering the Government’s unprecedented Culture Recovery Fund.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Lord Jonathan Caine – Downing Street Declaration set the template for peace [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Lord Jonathan Caine – Downing Street Declaration set the template for peace [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Northern Ireland Office on 15 December 2023.

    In an opinion piece, published in the Irish News, The Lord Caine reflects on the 30th anniversary of the Downing Street Declaration.

    For much of this year, events have taken place to mark the 25th anniversary of the historic Belfast Agreement, and rightly so. Its importance can never be stressed strongly enough and it remains the bedrock of all that has been achieved in Northern Ireland over the past quarter of a century.

    Yet, we should also never forget that the 1998 Agreement did not suddenly appear out of nowhere. It was the result of painstaking efforts, vision and courage over many years of discussions, and negotiations, as the great George Mitchell graciously pointed out at a conference I attended in Boston in September, and included many key moments.

    One of these took place 30 years ago this very week when the Prime Minister John Major and Taoiseach Albert Reynolds, signed the Downing Street Declaration. In charting what became known as the peace process, I would contend that next to the 1998 Agreement itself no single event was more ground breaking or important.

    It is worth recalling the background against which the Declaration was signed. Northern Ireland politics was in a state of paralysis. The Troubles still raged, with October 1993 seeing 27 people killed in Northern Ireland, including the Shankill bombing and the Greysteel massacre. It was the largest loss of life in a single month since 1976.

    John Hume’s discussions with Gerry Adams, facilitated by Fr Alec Reid, had become public, to the dismay of most unionists. In late November, Eamonn Mallie broke the story that a so-called ‘back channel’ had existed for many years between the UK government and the republican movement.

    Against this background, the prospect of an imminent political breakthrough seemed remote. Yet, undeterred, both Major and Reynolds persevered, determined to make progress. In so doing they were supported by the then Secretary of State Sir Patrick Mayhew and the Irish Foreign Minister Dick Spring, along with some brilliant officials on both sides.

    I had a small part in all of this, as the special adviser to Sir Patrick, a man for whom I had the utmost respect. Yet, I can claim very little credit for the final result, having only been brought into the loop in the very late stages. My own role was in helping to frame the subsequent narrative around the Declaration, not least to try and reassure some sceptics within my own party and within Jim Molyneaux’s Ulster Unionists, though Molyneaux and some close to him made contributions to the text.

    At its core, the 1993 Declaration sought to address the nationalist aspiration of self-determination for the people of Ireland as a whole, alongside the rock solid constitutional guarantee that there could be no change in the status of Northern Ireland as part of the United Kingdom without the consent of a majority of those who live here.

    The Declaration achieved this in language that was replicated in the 1998 Agreement. This is now commonly referred to as the principle of consent, and is widely accepted by all mainstream political opinion in these islands. Ultimately, the Declaration was a powerful statement that Northern Ireland’s future would only ever be determined by democracy and never by violence.

    I have little doubt that the Downing Street Declaration led directly to the IRA and loyalist ceasefires in August and September 1994 and was a key staging post on the road to 1998. Of course there was much hard pounding ahead, but the trajectory was set. For that, John Major and Albert Reynolds, and all those involved, deserve our recognition and gratitude for what they achieved on 15 December 1993.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK discusses border security and need to implement UNSCR 1701 [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK discusses border security and need to implement UNSCR 1701 [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 15 December 2023.

    Ambassador Cowell expressed his condolences for the death of a LAF soldier in Lebanon and called for restoring calm on the Blue Line.

    The British Ambassador to Lebanon, Hamish Cowell, the US Ambassador, Dorothy Shea, and the Canadian Ambassador Stefanie McCollum, met the Commander in Chief of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) General Joseph Aoun during the High Level Steering Committee (HLSC) to discuss security on the Lebanese-Syrian border.

    The HLSC oversees internationally funded efforts to support the four Land Border Regiments to continue to deliver external security and reinforce the authority of the Lebanese state along its land border with Syria.

    Following the meeting, Ambassador Cowell said:

    It was an honour to meet General Aoun to discuss positive progress on the border project.

    I was saddened to hear about the death of a LAF soldier in south Lebanon last week. I convey my deepest sympathies to his family and comrades.

    With General Aoun I stressed the need for a cessation of hostilities across the Blue Line and for a renewed commitment to implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

    Ongoing hostilities in South Lebanon only serve to delay any long-term solution for peace.

    I am, as ever, impressed by Lebanese Armed Forces’ outstanding work of its officers and soldiers during this challenging time.

    Since 2009, the UK has committed over £99 million to support optimisation of LAF capabilities, including through development and modernisation. We are proud of our contribution to building the LAF’s reputation as a respected, professional armed forces able to defend Lebanon and provide security along its border with Syria.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 15 December 2023.

    On behalf of the UK and other states Ambassador Anne-Kirsti Karlsen of Norway reaffirms our commitment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and recalls the impact of Russia’s invasion on human rights in Ukraine.

    Madam Chair.

    On behalf of the following countries: Albania, Andorra, Canada, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Norway, Switzerland and the United Kingdom we will all solemnly reflect and reaffirm our commitment on this 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    The past decades have witnessed the transformative power of human rights in improving lives across the globe. Members of civil society and others who stand up for human rights and democracy have played a pivotal role in advancing the respect and protection of human rights. However, today’s challenges remind us that our journey towards upholding human rights and fundamental freedoms is far from over. Respecting human rights of all people is key to our common future, peace, and stability.

    In Ukraine, civilians suffer from Russian hostilities. Evidence of atrocities is being collected for accountability and memorialisation purposes.

    In Iran, human rights defenders and particularly women continue to face arbitrary detention and lengthy prison sentences.

    In Afghanistan, women and girls are facing systemic and institutional discrimination. They have been excluded from public life and banned from secondary and higher education.

    In Belarus the practice of incommunicado and lengthy detentions – with a risk of enforced disappearances – continues to increase for members of the political opposition.

    In Russia, fear of repression has led protesters to use blank sheets of paper as a symbol of their silenced voices. The assault on LGBTQI+ rights has become a symbol of Russia’s rejection of universal human rights.

    Madam Chair.

    We face a complex web of conflicts, the lingering effects of the pandemic, climate crisis, disinformation, and attacks on democratic institutions, all stressing our human rights system.

    In the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, over 100,000 people had to flee to Armenia and had to leave everything behind.

    Recognizing Israel’s right to ensure its security, we also remind the belligerents of their obligations in the conduct of hostilities. In particular that of respecting the principles of international humanitarian law, including humanity, proportionality, distinction, and precaution in all circumstances.

    Madam Chair.

    Shrinking civic space is a fundamental challenge to the role of civil society in the promotion and protection of human rights. Human rights defenders need protection and support. In particular, we need to defend and promote the rights of all women and girls and to ensure their full, equal, meaningful, and safe participation in all spheres of public life.

    Without the liberty for media to operate freely, to report and analyse events without fear of censorship or reprisal, true security cannot be achieved.

    Nowhere in the OSCE region is media freedom under greater threat than in the Russian Federation and in the parts of Ukraine that Russia has illegally occupied.

    Protecting journalists and ending impunity is key to the OSCE’s vision of comprehensive security. And we applaud the OSCE’s Representative on the Freedom of the Media in upholding this fundamental pillar.

    Madam Chair.

    We acknowledge democratic governance and the rule of law as the cornerstones of stable, prosperous and peaceful societies safeguarding democracy is an important part of that.  We commend ODIHR for conducting an impressive number of 24 election observation missions in 23 OSCE participating States this year alone.

    The principle of universality and indivisibility of human rights needs to be upheld. Political shifts and economic progress cannot undermine fundamental freedoms; security should never be prioritized over the rights of individuals; the need for online privacy cannot conflict with our duty to protect children from sexual abuse. Just as managing migratory flows should never be more important than protecting people who need protection.

    Madam Chair.

    The promotion and protection of human rights is not just a moral imperative or a strategic necessity, it is based on legal obligations. It’s an integral part of a broader approach that recognizes the interdependence of human rights, economic development, and political stability in achieving lasting peace and security.

    Violations of human rights serve as early warning signs of greater instability or impending conflict. By monitoring and addressing these violations, the OSCE can take proactive measures to prevent the escalation of conflicts, thereby contributing to the security of the whole region.

    As we commemorate this anniversary, we confirm our dedication to these rights and principles, understanding that the path towards a world where every individual’s dignity and rights are respected is a continuous journey, one that we must undertake with unwavering commitment and collective effort.

    I thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : England’s first ever kinship care strategy launches [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : England’s first ever kinship care strategy launches [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 15 December 2023.

    Backed by £20 million, strategy shines spotlight on the incredible extended family members keeping children out of care.

    Thousands of kinship carers are set to be better supported as the government today (15 December) launches the first ever national kinship care strategy, ‘Championing Kinship Care’.

    The strategy shines a spotlight on the incredible kinship carers – grandparents, aunts, uncles, siblings and wider family networks – that provide loving homes to children who cannot live with their parents, and who will now receive greater financial stability and support from local authorities and schools.

    Backed by £20 million to deliver the strategy, the government has confirmed it will provide an allowance to many kinship carers to match that received by foster carers – currently between £154 and £270 per week, per child. This is being trialled in up to 8 areas of the country and will help ensure that people do not have to choose between becoming a carer and being able to afford to support their families.

    It will also expand the role of virtual school heads – education champions within local authorities – to cover kinship care. They will ensure that the education of children in kinship care is prioritised so they go on to have bright futures.

    Foster care has also been bolstered today with an additional £8.5 million. This takes the total government investment across this parliament to £36 million, which is the largest ever investment in fostering in England. The funding will ensure there are more foster carers available to step up and look after children by extending recruitment campaigns, simplifying recruitment processes, and providing better support for existing foster carers to even more local authorities.

    The new kinship strategy and extra foster care funding are part of a suite of initiatives launched today, which meet commitments set out in the ambitious children’s social care strategy, ‘Stable Homes, Built on Love’, published earlier this year.

    Children and Families Minister, David Johnston, said:

    Kinship carers do incredible work to support and nurture children who might otherwise go into care and I am very proud that the Government has published the first ever strategy for kinship care today.

    I have met kinship carers from so many different backgrounds and with different experiences, but in telling their stories they always stress that they were never expecting to look after a child but they did so out of love.

    Kinship carers are often hidden in plain sight and today’s strategy paves the way for them to be given the practical and financial support they deserve for the pivotal role they play in children’s lives.

    We are committed to reforming the whole children’s social care system to support families – right from the point they face challenges and need support, all the way to transforming the experience children have when in care.

    Minister for Social Mobility, Youth and Progression Mims Davies MP, said:

    No one should suffer because of their start in life, and the amazing people who open up their homes and their hearts to vulnerable children deserve all the support they need to ensure no child gets left behind.

    I’m thrilled this new strategy will give Kinship Carers the recognition and financial support they need, while ensuring as many children as possible can get on and get ahead in life and be able to take the opportunities to have a future they deserve.

    Dr Lucy Peake, CEO of leading kinship care charity, Kinship, said:

    The publication of the first ever National Kinship Care Strategy is significant recognition of the monumental role kinship carers play in transforming the experiences of hundreds of thousands of children, which has been overlooked and undervalued for too long.

    We celebrate that there will now be more support for kinship families than ever before. This is testament to all the kinship carers who have demonstrated, for decades, the value of raising children within their family network. At Kinship, we are proud to have campaigned alongside so many of them as they have battled for long overdue change.

    More than 130,000 children live in kinship care arrangements in England and kinship carers make up over a fifth of all foster carers. There are also a range of other formal and informal routes for extended family members to provide additional support to children in kinship care arrangements, including special guardianship.

    The strategy sets out a wide range of additional support for kinship carers, from new training and information so they have a better understanding of their rights, to high-quality peer support within local communities.

    A key commitment of the government’s wider children’s social care strategy is to improve partnership working across all relevant agencies, including the police, health and education.

    That’s why the government has also today updated the guidance, ‘Working Together to Safeguard Children’. This guidance clarifies the roles and responsibilities of safeguarding partners such as local authorities and the police, embeds new child protection standards and sets out the importance of having a multi-agency response to protect children from harm.

    The government has published a children’s social care national framework setting out the core principles and goals of children’s social care. This will ensure all the relevant organisations have a joint understanding of what children’s social care should deliver for the families and children it supports.

    The data collected about children and families and the information recorded about their lives and interactions with children’s social care is sensitive and needs to be treated with care. It’s also held in many places which can create challenges. That’s why the government is also embarking on ambitious data transformation across children’s social care. The data strategy published today sets this out, and also commits to improving existing data services and testing innovative and sensitive practice in this area.

    Today’s updates are another step towards wide-reaching reform – providing families with the right help, and ensuring children are safe and supported. This is all part of the government’s continued work to reform children’s social care, as set out in, ‘Stable Homes, Built on Love,’ published earlier this year. It set out how the government will help families overcome challenges, keep children safe, and make sure children in care have stable loving homes, long-term loving relationships, and opportunities for a good life.

    In another step towards delivering the strategy, the government has also started recruiting young people with experience of care, including those with disabilities and special educational needs, to a new youth advisory board to advise the government on the ongoing reforms.