Category: Speeches

  • Keir Starmer – 2024 Comments at COP29 in Baku

    Keir Starmer – 2024 Comments at COP29 in Baku

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, on 12 November 2024.

    I am here at COP this week…

    Because this government recognises that the world stands at a critical juncture in the climate crisis.

    And the United Kingdom not only has a critical role to play…

    But also, an opportunity to grasp…

    The chance to maximise opportunities for Britain…

    And make us more secure in the here and now.

    The way I see it, there are two paths ahead:

    One, the path of inaction and delay…

    Leading to further decline and vulnerability –

    Warming above 1.5 degrees will expose hundreds of thousands more people in the UK to flood risk…

    greater economic instability…

    And national insecurity.

    Or second, the path we walk, eyes wide open…

    not just to the challenges of today….

    But also fixed firmly on the opportunities of tomorrow.

    This is the path towards national security.

    Energy independence.

    And the economic stability necessary to boost living standards for working people.

    Let me be clear.

    There is no national security…

    There is no economic security…

    There is no global security…

    Without climate security.

    And this is a huge opportunity….

    For investment…

    For UK businesses…

    For British workers…

    If we act now – to lead the world in the economy of tomorrow.

    This is how we move towards better jobs…

    cheaper bills…

    higher growth…

    the industries and technologies of the future….

    And ensure the prosperity and security of our nation for decades to come.

    And the prosperity and security of our nation are the issues the British people care about.

    And that is why, from the beginning, this government has done things differently.

    Restoring our role as a climate leader on the world stage…

    As well as taking action at home.

    In the first 100 days of this government….

    We scrapped the ban on onshore wind.

    We committed to no new North Sea oil and gas licenses.

    Began to renew those North Sea communities…

    with a programme of investment in the jobs and industries of the future.

    We closed the UK’s final coal power plant at the end of September –

    Becoming the very first G7 economy to phase out coal power.

    And at the same time – we are on a mission to achieve clean power by 2030.

    We launched Great British Energy –

    A clean British Energy company…

    To improve our energy resilience

    Bring down people’s bills…

    And create the next generation of good, well-paid jobs.

    We set up the National Wealth Fund –

    To invest in tomorrow’s key industries.

    To build the infrastructure – the wind farms, solar farms, the grid infrastructure…

    To power and connect our country for decades to come.

    Because make no mistake – the race is on for the clean energy jobs of the future….

    The economy of tomorrow –

    And I don’t want to be in middle of the pack…

    I want to get ahead of the game.

    Whether that’s with carbon capture – in Teesside and Merseyside.

    Where last month, I announced funding for Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage projects…

    That will create 4,000 new jobs – using the skills of oil and gas communities …

    As we accelerate towards Net Zero.

    Or green hydrogen –

    With investment announced in last month’s Budget…

    For 11 green hydrogen projects across Britain…

    from Bridgend to Barrow in Furness.

    This is good news for the people of Britain.

    It’s good for our businesses.

    It’s good for our country.

    And it’s good for the planet.

    So at this COP I was pleased to announce that we are building on our reputation as a climate leader…

    With the UK’s 2035 NDC target –

    To reduce all greenhouse gas emissions by at least 81% on 1990 levels.

    Our goal of 1.5C…

    Is aligned with our goals for growth.

    But a global problem also requires global partnership.

    Responsible international co-operation.

    Which is why we took the opportunity at this COP to again urge all Parties –

    To come forward with ambitious targets of their own.

    As we all agreed at the last COP.

    And through the NDC partnership, we are supporting developing countries to develop their own commitments.

    We will also soon be launching the Global Clean Power Alliance.

    A political alliance of countries committed to accelerating the clean energy transition…

    Including unlocking the private finances that are needed.

    That is why I was pleased to announce Scottish Power has awarded a £1 billion windfarm turbine contract to Siemens Gamesa…

    Part of their £24 billion investment plan to support British pioneering energy projects…

    Which will inject growth into our industrial heartlands…

    And support 1,300 local jobs around Hull…

    And produce enough clean energy to power 1 million homes.

    As well as the Clean Industry Bonus Scheme –

    To support offshore wind developers…

    Invest in cutting-edge manufacturing and ports…

    boost green jobs…

    and strengthen supply chains.

    And the launch of the new CIF Capital Market Mechanism…

    On the London Stock Exchange.

    A joint effort announced today with our international partners and the City of London…

    With the potential to mobilise up to 75 billion dollars…

    in additional climate capital for developing countries over the next decade.

    And cementing London as the world’s leading green global financial centre…

    Showing that Britain is open for business…

    And back as a global leader.

    This COP, the UK has sent a clear message.

    We are delivering on our promise for good jobs, cheaper bills, and higher growth.

    We are backing UK energy and security on the world stage.

    We are a key partner for countries, for investors and for businesses…

    And we are renewing UK climate leadership….

    To deliver for Britain.

    My mission is to make sure our country…

    and our children…

    have the prosperity…

    the security and the stability…

    that they deserve for generations to come.

    With this government, the UK will lead the way…

    And lead Britain and the world…

    into a cleaner, safer, a more prosperous future for all.

    Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva [November 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 12 November 2024.

    The Prime Minister met with the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Kristalina Georgieva today during the COP29 summit.

    The Prime Minister said that growing the economy was his number one mission, and the recent Budget was about fixing the foundations to deliver on the promise of change after years of stagnation.

    They spoke about the climate challenge, and the Prime Minister reiterated that generating private finance was important to addressing the scale of the issue.

    They reflected on the strong and collaborative relationship between the UK and the IMF. The Prime Minister said he was committed to continued cooperation to support global growth, including in clean energy and renewable investment.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Bathing water reforms to consider water sports and water quality [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Bathing water reforms to consider water sports and water quality [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 12 November 2024.

    Defra invites the public, community and environmental groups, farmers, businesses and local authorities to share views on modernising bathing water regulations.

    • Consultation launched to modernise bathing waters in first shake up in over a decade
    • Reforms include removing fixed season dates from regulations and improved water quality measures
    • The public, environmental groups and businesses invited to contribute

    Changes to bathing water rules will prioritise public safety and water quality so more people can enjoy our rivers, lakes and seas throughout the seasons in the first shake up since 2013.

    Bathing waters are officially designated outdoor swimming sites. England and Wales have over 550 designated bathing waters, which are monitored by the Environment Agency and Natural Resources Wales. Annual ratings classify each site as ‘excellent’, ‘good’, ‘sufficient’ or ‘poor’ on the basis of water quality.

    In a consultation launched today (12 November), Defra and the Welsh Government are inviting the public, community groups, environmental groups, farmers, businesses and local authorities to share their views on modernising bathing water regulations to ensure a more flexible approach to designation and monitoring.

    The proposed changes, which will benefit cold water swimmers and other water sports enthusiasts, include:

    • Removal of fixed bathing water season dates (which currently runs from May to September) from the regulations to allow for a more flexible approach to monitoring, extending the dates of the bathing season to better reflect when people use bathing waters.
    • Expanding the legal definition of ‘bathers’ to include participants in water sports other than swimming, including paddle boarders and surfers.
    • Further considering water quality and public safety when applications for new bathing waters are assessed.
    • Introducing multiple testing points at bathing water sites.
    • Ending the automatic de-designation of bathing water status after 5 consecutive years of a site being rated ‘poor’, which can damage local tourism and businesses. Instead, underperforming sites will be individually reviewed by regulators, taking into account their unique circumstances.

    Water Minister Emma Hardy said:

    Bathing water sites are the pride of local communities across the country.

    But the current system is not working for all those who use and enjoy our bathing waters, and reform is long overdue.

    That is why this Government will give more people the opportunity to experience the benefits of our beautiful waters and connect with nature.

    Mark Lloyd, Chief Executive of The Rivers Trust said:

    We welcome these proposed reforms to the Bathing Water rules, several of which we and other NGOs have been requesting for some time.

    Our rivers, lakes and beaches are a fantastic natural resource which should be available for people to enjoy confidently for their mental and physical wellbeing as well as providing opportunities for economic growth.

    We are particularly pleased to see the ending of automatic de-designation for waters which failed to meet standards after 5 years – the focus must be on driving improvements in our natural environment and not giving up when it gets hard.

    We will be urging Ministers to make the new system more transparent and to include a wider range of pollutants that can cause risks to public health. We hope that applications for new designations can open again in the Spring without any further delay.

    Ben Seal, Head of Access and Environment at Paddle UK, on behalf of the Clean Water Sports Alliance said:

    Access to clean, healthy, nature-rich blue spaces is crucial to the health and wellbeing of millions of people around the UK.

    We are a water sports nation, however, as a result of the sewage scandal, the public have become increasingly fearful of getting sick, doing the activity they love.

    Paddle UK and the 10 other National Governing Bodies of watersports that make up the Clean Water Sports Alliance, welcome the announcement that bathing waters rules are to be consulted on and brought up to date with new reforms.

    The 6 week consultation will be an important opportunity for the voices of recreational users to be heard. We encourage as many people to feed into the process as possible”.

    Gail Davies-Walsh, CEO of Afonydd Cymru, said:

    Afonydd Cymru welcomes this consultation and support any resulting measures that improve the ecological health of rivers and the safety of recreational users.

    The review will need to give consideration to the extent that the current designation for Bathing Water, primarily designed for coastal waters, meets the different needs of our rivers including microbiological quality, levels of other potentially harmful pollutants, monitoring, public safety and damage or disturbance to flora and fauna, particularly for designated rivers.

    We look forward to engagement with the Consultation to ensure these matters are considered for Wales.

    Chris Coode, CEO of Thames21, said:

    We welcome the government’s announcement to reform the Bathing Water Regulations.  This is a crucial step towards improving water quality and the health of our rivers, especially in the areas we cover across London and the Thames Basin.

    Extending the dates of the bathing season and having a flexible approach to monitoring will generate valuable data, helping people to decide on whether they want to use their local river on any given day. We are also pleased with the government’s proposals to broaden the legal definition of ‘bathers’ to include other water lovers, not just swimmers.

    We look forward to playing our part in this consultation by contributing evidence alongside other key stakeholders. Additionally, we hope that the government will recognise the work of countless communities, groups and volunteers who have applied or plan to apply for bathing water designation and hope that the shortcomings of the bathing water application process are resolved.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with World Bank Group President Ajay Banga [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with World Bank Group President Ajay Banga [November 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 12 November 2024.

    The Prime Minister met with the President of the World Bank Ajay Banga at the COP29 summit in Baku today.

    They agreed on the importance of mobilising private finance to strengthen action to tackle the climate challenge, and the Prime Minister welcomed the World Bank’s ambition in this area.

    The Prime Minister said he was delighted to announce the launch of the new CIF Capital Market Mechanism which will list on the London Stock Exchange. He thanked the President for his support and engagement in this area, and welcomed the confidence this showed in the UK’s economy.

    The Prime Minister said that this demonstrated London as a green finance capital, and bolstered Britain as an attractive place to invest in the future.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Reappointment of His Honour Peter Rook KC as vice chair and member of the Parole Board [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Reappointment of His Honour Peter Rook KC as vice chair and member of the Parole Board [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 12 November 2024.

    HH Peter Rook KC has been reappointed for 1 year from 1 February 2025 until 31 January 2026.

    The Parole Board is an executive non-departmental public body sponsored by the Ministry of Justice (MOJ). It works with its criminal justice partners to protect the public by risk assessing prisoners to decide whether they can be safely released into the community. It was established by the Criminal Justice Act 1967.

    The Lord Chancellor has reappointed His Honour Peter Rook KC as a judicial member of the Parole Board. In addition, the Chair of the Parole Board, Caroline Corby, has designated His Honour Peter Rook KC as the board’s vice chair. The vice chair will be expected to share in the leadership and governance of the Parole Board.

    Appointments and reappointments to the Parole Board (with the exception of judicial members) are regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments.

    Biography

    HH Peter Rook KC was called to the Bar in 1973 and appointed Queen’s Counsel in 1991. In June 2005, he was appointed a senior circuit judge to sit at the Old Bailey retiring in 2017. He also sat as a judge in the Court of Appeal. He sat as a coroner between 2017 and 2019. He sat as a judge sitting in retirement until September 2024.

    HH Peter Rook KC was Chair of the Criminal Bar Association from 2002 until 2003. He was head of chambers, at 18 Red Lion Chambers, from 2002 until 2005. He is the co-author of a leading textbook now in its sixth edition “Sexual Offences: Law and Practice” – seventh edition to be published in 2025.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Mauritania – Guy Harrison [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Mauritania – Guy Harrison [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 12 November 2024.

    Mr Guy Harrison has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Mauritania in succession to Mr Colin Wells. Mr Harrison will take up his appointment during January 2025.

    Curriculum vitae

    Full name: Guy Andrew Harrison

    Year Role
    2023 to 2024 Yaoundé, Deputy High Commissioner (temporary duty)
    2022 to 2023 Conakry, Head of Mission
    2018 to 2022 Lagos, Economic Counsellor
    2015 to 2018 FCO, Team Leader, South Asia Department
    2010 to 2015 Kathmandu, Deputy Head of Mission and Head of Political Section
    2010 FCO, Team Leader Strategic Finance Directorate (Spending Review)
    2009 FCO, Head of Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) Unit
    2006 to 2009 FCO, Team Leader, later Deputy Head, Global Economy Group
    2002 to 2006 Brussels Embassy, Director of Trade and Investment
    1998 to 2002 Seoul, Second Secretary (Economic)
    1995 to 1998 FCO, Migration and Visa Directorate
    1993 to 1995 Hanoi, Vice-Consul
    1992 Munich, Attaché (G7 Summit)
    1987 to 1992 Seoul, Third Secretary Political (Full-time Korean Language Training 1987-89)
    1986 to 1987 FCO, West European Department
    1986 Joined FCO
  • PRESS RELEASE : Interim Chair appointed to the Judicial Pension Board [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Interim Chair appointed to the Judicial Pension Board [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 12 November 2024.

    The Lord Chancellor has approved the appointment of Josephine Magure as the interim Chair of the Judicial Pension Board.

    Ministers consulted the Commissioner for Public Appointments before making the appointment which will ensure that the Judicial Pension Board has an Interim Chair while a recruitment exercise is run.

    The Judicial Pension Board is responsible for helping the Lord Chancellor manage and govern the Judicial Pension Schemes by ensuring they comply with the requirements of the Pensions Regulator.

    Appointments and reappointments are made by the Lord Chancellor and are regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. The appointments has been made in line with the requirements of the Governance Code on Public Appointments.

    Biography

    Jo Maguire is a Trustee of the DH&S Retirement and Death Benefits Plan and the Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) Pension Fund. Previously, she was a Pensions Assurance director with PwC and an Executive Director of the Pensions Research Accountants Group.

  • David Lammy – 2024 Speech on Indigenous Peoples and Protecting Forests

    David Lammy – 2024 Speech on Indigenous Peoples and Protecting Forests

    The speech made by David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, on 12 November 2024.

    Can I just begin by saying what an absolute honour it is to be standing here as Labour’s first Foreign Secretary here at COP after 14 years out of power.

    And what a pleasure it is to be here as Foreign Secretary sharing the stage with wonderful Indigenous peoples, wonderful philanthropists, ministers – all dedicated to dealing with the climate emergency.

    It’s one of the privileges of my life to be back in power. Actually able to do something about this agenda.

    So let me just start by first saying:

    • why do I care about forest tenure rights in the first place?
    • second, why should the world care?
    • and third, working together, what we can do about it?

    The bottom line is I got into politics because I care about helping my community secure equity, equal opportunities and justice.

    I represent, in north London, the constituency of Tottenham. It’s where I’m from and it would be described traditionally as an inner-city neighbourhood in London.

    So let me just tell you a bit about my story. My parents arrived from Guyana, just on the northeast corner of South America. My father came to Britain in 1956. He was part of what we talk about in Britain as the Windrush generation. Windrush because that was the boat that people first arrived on in 1948, bringing people from the Caribbean.

    Many of them had contributed to the building of Britain after the second World War and fought during the second World War, and they arrived determined, with a gleam in their eye, for a new prospect in life.

    Over the course of that period then, I’m thinking about the community I represent because many of them faced poverty, and their families have faced poverty. Education was key. Social justice was hugely important to those communities. And, of course, coming from Guyana and the Caribbean I’m thinking about what they left behind.

    In a lecture I gave very recently in Kew, I was reminded that my father used to take me to Kew Gardens in London. I had no reason why as a child he was taking me to the other side of London to hang out in a very large park. And, of course, it was because he wanted to be close to nature. I know that now to be true. And I have committed in my own life to support the rights of Indigenous peoples.

    My wife and I are founders of a conservation centre, it’s called Sophia Point. We work on the Essequibo in the middle of the rainforest in Guyana. We work alongside Akawaio, groups of Amerindian people. Helping them preserve what is in their rainforest.

    Working with the University of Guyana. Helping them with their own rights. Assisting them – they are the custodians of the land. We have a long lease on the land. Working alongside them in a charitable effort. Understanding and wanting to be part of a community that I am originally from.

    But I guess that the other part to that story, of course, is recognising that I stand here as a Briton. We talk about Britain, the green and pleasant land. Think about Robin Hood. You’re thinking about Epping Forest and Sherwood Forest, and those wonderful forests that we have in Britain.

    The point is that all of us have a connection with nature. All of us have a history, and that, in a sense, grounds me as I come to this event. So that’s why I dedicated my first major speech as Foreign Secretary to tackling this crisis. And is why, I explained in that speech, my commitment not just to the issue and to Sophia Point but what more we could do.

    So how do we build an economic model that allows us to continue to live in harmony with nature. The most heartening aspect of what I’ve seen at Sophia Point is hearing how it works to give communities agency in their lives.

    And tenure security gives communities the right to object to environmentally damaging projects and it gives them alternative routes to sustainable livelihoods so that they can thrive as guardians of nature.

    So that’s why I care about this issue. Why should you all care sitting there?

    Well, here are just a few statistics:

    • Indigenous peoples and local communities manage and live in at least half of the world’s land
    • this land contains much of the world’s remaining biodiversity and over a third of intact forests
    • the world’s forests are declining at an alarming rate – every year, we lose an area that is just a bit larger than Azerbaijan itself
    • but the rights of Indigenous peoples and local communities are protected in just 10% per cent of the land in which they reside
    • and over 1 billion people worldwide feel insecure about their rights to property or land

    Funding for forest tenure and management is sadly very low – it received less than 1 per cent of all climate finance in the previous decade, much of which went to governments and NGOs. Almost 2,000 land and environmental defenders were killed between 2012 and 2022, and research shows that these were disproportionately likely to be in Indigenous peoples.

    So the money they get to defend their rights, to be custodians, of our wonderful forest and the danger that they face in much of the world is serious and extreme. That’s why it should alert us all.

    Now in recent years, we have seen some positive steps in the right direction.

    Extended rights, with Brazil acknowledging 10 new Indigenous Territories since President Lula took office.

    We are seeing new legislation, indeed in Guyana we saw new legislation, but also places like the Democratic Republic of Congo’s law on Indigenous peoples’ rights.

    We’re seeing greater implementation, such as Indonesia’s rollout of its social forestry programme,

    And more focus from donors, with increasing engagement at events like this one.

    Still, we are starting from such a low base that there is much, much more that we need to do.

    Today’s event is about what precisely we should be doing.

    There will be lots of ideas in this room, but I want to kickstart just some ideas about how we can play a role.

    If you are a donor – whether from a government like mine or a philanthropic foundation – this is about commitment, and it’s about the long haul. Sustained commitment.

    Committing to funding for nature, committing to funding for forests, and committing for forest communities, particularly their livelihoods and their rights to protect that nature on our behalf.

    I am pleased to confirm that the UK will ensure that of our £11.6 billion in climate finance, three billion will be for nature and within that 1.5 billion for forests.

    With us today are key partners in that, our wonderful friends from Norway who have got a longstanding commitment in this area and of course the Bezos Foundation who have done so much amongst the 25 donors who, with the UK, made the IPLC Forest Tenure Pledge at COP26 in Glasgow, which assigned 1.7 billion dollars by 2025.

    I am delighted we are on track to meet that commitment and to confirm the UK will play its part, keeping our promise to provide over 10% of that funding.

    And I hope today we can talk about how we develop the next phase of that historic Pledge, next year in Brazil. To show our commitment beyond 2025, I can also announce a new 10-year programme.

    Which will provide initial funding of £50 million over 2 years to reduce illegal logging and benefit forest people.

    This builds on partnerships the UK has been forming in these communities for decades and generations, going almost back to when I first started in politics 25 years ago.

    And we are complementing this with new initiatives that invest even further in forest communities.

    A £94 million programme to strengthen forest communities’ voices in governance processes particularly for the Amazon, and a project to train local scientists in the Congo Basin.

    Now if you are a partner government like Brazil, or many others who are here today, this is also about guaranteeing rights.

    As I have said, there are some really important examples of this happening around the world.

    And I hope countries like the UK can work with you to build on this.

    This year, for instance, we launched a Land Facility programme to partner with Global South governments to develop more effective and transparent land governance systems, that better protect rural and forest tenure rights and I hope this model is one that we can continue to build on.

    Last, but not least, for Indigenous peoples and local communities, I hope this can be about seizing an opportunity.

    I recognise you have been speaking up for decades. Fighting to be heard with your own heritage, and thanks to the many Indigenous communities that I have met over the last few years, I am all too aware that there can be a powerful sense that the system is rigged against you.

    But I hope that, as quickly as possible, we can turn things around. Ensure that your rights are protected under the law.

    And that you have the tools you need to make the right choices for you, for your communities and for your environment.

    This is our goal for the next IPLC Forest Tenure Pledge. Our goal for the new programmes I have announced. But I don’t want you to take my word for it.

    We need, more than anything else, to listen to you, to hear you, and to hear how we can continue to make further improvements.

    Let me just end with one story. The community that I work with on the Essequibo coast in the rainforest of Guyana. When we were building the conservation centre, because of some of these rights issues, too often what was happening on their land is illegal mining, some of it very dirty, very disruptive to the environment.

    But communities from the Indigenous Amerindian communities finding that they had to do that because it was all they could do. The conservation centre brings new people alongside them into the environment. It brings scientists, academics, not doing helicopter science, flying in and flying out with the knowledge, but actually working with local communities on the IP, working with local university students on the IP alongside them.

    Again, that brings livelihoods to those communities. It brings documentary filmmakers and others because Guyana is a region of the top of the Amazon base and is less well known.

    So that’s what I mean about coming alongside communities, able to give them livelihoods, livelihoods based on rights and purpose that helps us all in this global fight to make sure that our forests make that contribution to our desire to meet that 1.5 commitment.

    As I say, it’s a great, great privilege to be here for my first event as Foreign Secretary in the UK. Centring of course climate within broader foreign policy and I’m very pleased now that we’re able to watch a video about why Indigenous peoples and local communities really matter.

    Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Human rights must be protected – UK Statement at the UN Third Committee [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Human rights must be protected – UK Statement at the UN Third Committee [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 12 November 2024.

    Statement by Liz Page, First Secretary Cyber, Digital and Technology at the UN Third Committee on the United Nations Convention against Cybercrime.

    Chair, the UK’s EOP at the conclusion of negotiations explained our basis for joining consensus on this Convention. Building on this, I will focus today on addressing views and interpretations expressed by stakeholders and some delegations.

    Stakeholders are right to highlight the potential risks that this Convention could pose to human rights given its broad scope of international cooperation for the sharing of e-evidence and its intrusive procedural powers.

    These risks led the UK, and many others, to insist on effective human rights safeguards in the final text. If applied properly and in good faith, these safeguards mean that human rights will be protected as the Convention is implemented. This is a legal obligation applicable to all State Parties.

    Article 24, relating to the Convention’s procedural powers, is an example. Paragraph 1 of this Article says a Party’s domestic law shall provide for conditions and safeguards, which shall provide for the protection of human rights, in accordance with international human rights law.

    While those conditions and safeguards will be provided for in a Party’s domestic law, the obligation to establish them is not optional. Nor is the obligation subservient to domestic law.

    As is made clear by 24(4), these human rights obligations apply equally at the domestic level and when engaging in international cooperation.

    It is concerning that a few Member States have already tried to deny or dodge them.

    Chair, good faith adherence to safeguards is essential for building trust and unlocking the greater level of international cooperation most Member States aspire to. The UK will play close attention to the implementation of, and adherence to, the safeguards. The stakeholder community must also play an important role here.

    The UK stands ready to cooperate with States who respect the letter and the spirit of the Convention, and support their efforts through capacity building.

    To be clear – the UK will not cooperate with any country which does not comply with the safeguards required by this Convention.

    Ultimately, while the commitments in the Convention are critical, it is how State Parties implement them in the real world which will determine whether this Convention makes a practical difference to efforts towards our common aim to prevent and combat cybercrime.

    Finally, the UK appreciates Vietnam’s offer to host a signing ceremony – but expresses our strong concern at the unprecedented procedure by which this amendment has been introduced after the Ad Hoc Committee had concluded its work.

    We accept this amendment on the basis that there are no PBIs and, noting the commitment Vietnam has expressed to an open dialogue with stakeholders, encourage Vietnam to maintain the inclusive spirit of the Ad Hoc Committee by enabling participation of stakeholders at the signing ceremony.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The most effective way to protect civilians is the immediate cessation of hostilities – UK statement at the UN Security Council [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : The most effective way to protect civilians is the immediate cessation of hostilities – UK statement at the UN Security Council [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 12 November 2024.

    Statement by Lord Collins of Highbury, Minister for Africa and the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on Sudan.

    After eighteen months the conflict in Sudan has had a devastating impact on civilians.

    Almost 19,000 people have been killed and 33,000 injured. These numbers, and the suffering they mask, are unacceptably high.

    The UN reports that mass rape, torture, the destruction of livelihoods, ethnically-targeted killings have been perpetrated on a large scale.

    I thank the Secretary-General for his recommendations on the protection of civilians, as requested by resolution 2736. The overarching message is clear – the most effective way to protect civilians is an immediate cessation of hostilities.

    Efforts to secure this continue: we must offer our full support to the UN as they seek to mediate between the parties, and we call on the parties to engage in good faith with this process.

    But the last eighteen months have also shown that we cannot just wait for a ceasefire.

    We must act now, and these recommendations are a positive step towards more action to protect civilians. It is now for us as states, civil society and members of the UN family to consider how to use them.

    To be successful, we must confront the context we face, rather than the one we would want or like to see.

    I note the Secretary-General’s assessment that the conditions do not currently exist for the effective deployment of a UN force to protect civilians in Sudan.

    We must keep this under review but also remember that the deployment of UN forces is only one lever amongst many.

    We can all see that the warring parties have failed to uphold their commitments in the Jeddah Declaration to protect civilians and allow unfettered humanitarian access.

    I urge them to establish a robust and transparent compliance mechanism to ensure their commitments bear tangible results on the ground.

    They can achieve this, including with the support offered by the UN. Many civilians are suffering because of direct violence. But many more because they are starving, deliberately stopped by the warring parties from getting life-saving help.

    I strongly support the Secretary-General’s recommendation that the parties agree to humanitarian pauses to allow the safe passage of civilians and facilitate the unimpeded delivery of humanitarian aid.

    The potential closure of the Adré border crossing looms large. Its closure would mean millions more civilians would be at risk.

    The crisis demands adaptable approaches.

    Ordinary people have stepped up and taken unimaginable risk to protect their communities, through the Emergency Response Rooms and other mutual aid groups.

    The international community must listen to the Secretary-General’s call to consider how we can further support those local efforts. And this requires warring parties to back scalable, locally-negotiated ceasefires and violence reduction measures.

    I urge all member states, civil society organisations, and stakeholders to be motivated by the Secretary-General’s recommendations, to step up coordinated, international action to protect the people of Sudan.