Tag: 2022

  • Peterborough United Football Club – 2022 Statement on Their Supporters Mocking a Dead Fan

    Peterborough United Football Club – 2022 Statement on Their Supporters Mocking a Dead Fan

    The statement made by Peterborough United Football Club on 31 October 2022.

    On Saturday, the Weston Homes Stadium hosted the first league local derby between Peterborough United and Cambridge United for 21 years.

    While the majority of the 12,766 crowd helped create a wonderful atmosphere and behaved themselves, a small minority of both sets of supporters let themselves down both inside and outside of the stadium.

    The club are extremely disappointed that a small section of home supporters sang wholly inappropriate and disgusting chants about a Cambridge United supporter who sadly passed away in October 2020.

    We would like to unreservedly apologise to the family of Simon Dobbin and we will be working with the authorities to try and identify the culprits because those people are not ‘supporters’ of this football club. We condemn these actions in the strongest possible terms.

    The club would also like to condemn those who threw pyrotechnics during the game. There is no place for pyrotechnics inside the Weston Homes Stadium and those involved will be identified and action will be taken.

    The club would also like to report extensive criminal damage within the away end (Deskgo Stand) on Saturday. The damage caused in the toilets, offices and the concourse area of that stand was on a level not seen before and the cost to repair this will be significant. The club are working with Cambridge United and the Police to review CCTV footage to identify those involved.

    Unfortunately following the final whistle there was disorder outside of the stadium involving both sets of supporters. The club is reviewing CCTV footage to identify those involved and an investigation is set to be undertaken by the Police.

    Interim Chief Executive Leighton Mitchell said: “It is important to note that the majority of supporters in attendance behaved well, but as seen too often at football matches, it is the minority that let themselves down and unfortunately that was the case on Saturday.

    “The Football Club offer our sincere apologies to the family of Simon Dobbin. There is no place in society for what was chanted by a small section of so-called supporters and we will be working extremely hard to identify those involved.

    “We are in conversations with Cambridge United about the substantial damage caused within the away end. Unfortunately, this damage is severe and will impact on the opening of that stand in the near future.

    “We are disappointed that the actions of a small section of fans from both sides have overshadowed what should have been a wonderful occasion.”

  • Lindsay Hoyle – 2022 Statement on the Attack on Paul Pelosi

    Lindsay Hoyle – 2022 Statement on the Attack on Paul Pelosi

    The statement made by Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, in the House on 31 October 2022.

    Before we come to today’s business, I am sure that the whole House will want to join me in expressing our horror at the attack on Paul Pelosi, the husband of Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Paul is a stalwart support for Speaker Pelosi and I enjoyed getting to know him at the G7 Speakers’ conference in Chorley. All our thoughts and prayers are with Speaker Pelosi, Paul and their family. The incident demonstrates once again that we can never rest in our mission to keep parliamentarians, their families and their staff safe.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Ending the grain initiative would unleash an “unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution” [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Ending the grain initiative would unleash an “unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution” [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 31 October 2022.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the Security Council briefing on the Black Sea Grain Initiative.

    Thank you, President, and I thank Under-Secretary Griffiths and Secretary-General Grynspan for their briefings today.

    The Black Sea Grain initiative is vital to global food security. The UN estimates that it has indirectly prevented 100 million people from falling into extreme poverty.

    Over 60% of the wheat exported under the deal has gone to low and middle-income countries, including via the World Food Programme to Ethiopia, Yemen, and Afghanistan.

    Russia’s suspension of this initiative over the weekend has meant over 100 ships blocked from seeking permission to enter Ukrainian ports to load grain.

    An average of 100,000 tons of grain is exported each day under the initiative. This is enough to feed 5 million people for a month. The severe impact, should Russia’s suspension of the agreement continue, is clear.

    Recognising the global food crisis, the UK has not placed sanctions on food or fertiliser exports from Russia to third countries. We have worked hard, and continue to do so, to ensure there are mitigations in place to avoid indirect impacts of sanctions.

    And we note that there has been no decrease in Russian grain exports since the start of Russia’s war on Ukraine.
    President, Russia claims it suspended participation in the grain initiative due to an attack on its Black Sea Fleet, falsely claiming those vessels were involved in implementation of the deal.

    As we heard from Under-Secretary-General Griffiths, no military vessels or assets are involved in supporting this initiative.

    And what Russia neglects to mention is that Russia’s Black Sea fleet is illegally occupying Ukrainian waters and bombing Ukrainian towns.

    The global impact of Russia’s war on Ukraine has already been profound. Ending the grain initiative would unleash the “unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution”, of which the Secretary-General’s Global Crisis Response Group warned in June. We therefore urge Russia to renew its cooperation under the agreement so that shipments of grain can continue as before.

    We call on Russia to work with all parties to renew the Black Sea Grain Initiative this month.

    Thank you.

  • James Cleverly – 2022 Statement on the Situation in Ukraine

    James Cleverly – 2022 Statement on the Situation in Ukraine

    The statement made by James Cleverly, the Foreign Secretary, in the House of Commons on 31 October 2022.

    Mr Speaker, with permission I will update the House about the situation in Ukraine.

    This morning Russian missiles again struck Kyiv and other cities, destroying critical national infrastructure and depriving Ukrainians of water and electricity.

    Earlier today I spoke to our Ambassador in Kyiv and I heard again of the extraordinary resilience of Ukraine’s people in the face of Russian aggression.

    At the weekend, Russia suspended its participation in the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which has allowed the export of 100,000 tonnes of food every day, including to some of the least developed countries in the world.

    Putin is exacting vengeance for his military failures on the civilians of Ukraine by cutting off their power and their water supply, and on the poorest people in the world by threatening their food supplies.

    Over 60 percent of the wheat exported under the Black Sea Grain Initiative has gone to low and middle income countries, including Ethiopia, Yemen, and Afghanistan.

    It would be unconscionable for those lands to be made to suffer because of Putin’s setbacks on the battlefield in Ukraine.

    I urge Russia to stop impeding this vital initiative that is helping feed the hungry across the world and agree to its extension.

    Meanwhile, Russia’s suicide drones and cruise missiles are killing Ukrainian civilians, obliterating their homes, and even destroying a children’s playground.

    A third of the country’s power stations were put out of operation in a single week.

    None of this achieves any military purpose.

    Putin’s only aim is to spread terror and to deprive Ukrainian families of shelter, light, and heat as harsh winter approaches.

    I’m sure the House will join me in condemning his breaches of international humanitarian law.

    I’m sure every Honourable and Right Honourable member will share my conviction that Putin will never break the spirit of the Ukrainian people.

    And the House will share my incredulity over the glaring contradictions in Putin’s thinking.

    He claims that Ukraine is part of Russia and Ukrainians are Russians but at the same time he calls them Nazis who must be bombed without mercy.

    When he launched his invasion, he convinced himself that Russian forces would be welcomed into Kyiv and they would either support him or be too craven to stand in his way.

    He could not have been more wrong.

    The last eight months have shown the scale of his miscalculation.

    They have shown the barbarity of his onslaught, including the mass rape committed by Russian soldiers in Ukraine.

    The UK’s campaign to prevent sexual violence in conflict is more urgent than ever and I will host a conference on this vital subject next month.

    And now the Kremlin is resorting to peddling false claims, churning out invented stories that say more about the fractures within the Russian government than they do about us.

    It is also reprehensible that Iran should have supplied Russia with the Shahed drones that are bringing destruction to Ukraine, in violation of UN Resolution 2231.

    On 20 October, the Government imposed sanctions on three Iranian commanders involved in supplying weaponry to Russia, along with the company that manufactures Shahed drones.

    Earlier, Putin announced on 30 September that Russia had annexed four regions of Ukraine spanning 40,000 square miles – the biggest land grab in Europe since the Second World War.

    Once again, this exposes his self-delusion.

    Putin has declared the annexation of territory he has not captured – and what he had managed to seize he is in the process of losing.

    On 12 October, 143 countries – three quarters of the entire membership of the United Nations – voted in the General Assembly to condemn the annexation.

    Russia had just four supporters – Syria, Belarus, Nicaragua, North Korea – and when those regimes are your only friends, you know you really are isolated.

    When 141 countries denounced Putin’s invasion back in March, some speculated if that was the ceiling of the international support for Ukraine.

    The latest vote showed even more nations are now ready to condemn Russia.

    But Putin still thinks that by forcing up food and energy prices, we will lose our resolve.

    Our task is to prove him wrong.

    We will not waver in our support for Ukraine’s right to self-defence.

    I delivered that emphatic message when I spoke to my Ukrainian counterpart on Tuesday and my Right Honourable Friend the Prime Minister said the same to President Zelenskyy, when they spoke on the phone, the first foreign leader he called upon his appointment as Prime Minister.

    On Thursday I will attend a meeting of G7 Foreign Ministers in Germany, where I will send a unified signal of our shared determination.

    This year Britain has given Ukraine £2.3 billion of military support – more than any country in the world apart from the United States of America.

    We will provide Ukraine with more support to repair its energy infrastructure and we have committed £220 million of humanitarian aid.

    The House will have noted Putin’s irresponsible talk about nuclear weapons, and an absurd claim that Ukraine plans to detonate a radiological “dirty bomb” on its own territory.

    No other country is talking about nuclear use. No country is threatening Russia or threatening President Putin. He should be clear that for the UK and our Allies, any use at all of nuclear weapons would fundamentally change the nature of this conflict. There would be severe consequences for Russia.

    And how counter-productive would it be for Russia to break a norm against nuclear use that has held since 1945 and has underpinned global security.

    Nothing will alter our conviction that the Ukrainians have a right to live in peace and freedom in their own lands.

    If Putin were to succeed, every expansionist tyrant would be emboldened to do their worst and no country would be safe.

    That is why we stand and will continue to stand alongside our Ukrainian friends until the day comes – as it inevitably will – that they prevail.

    Mr Speaker I commend this statement to the House.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Over 19 million households have received their council tax rebate [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Over 19 million households have received their council tax rebate [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 31 October 2022.

    99% of eligible households have received £150 council tax rebate
    The government is extending the deadline for councils to ensure as many eligible households as possible receive the payment
    Council tax rebate forms part of £37 billion package rolled out across the year to help people with cost of living
    Over 99% of eligible households have received the government’s £150 core council tax rebate to help with the cost of living.

    Figures published today show more than 19 million households in England were handed payments by the end of September with many councils reporting that 100% of eligible households in their area have now received their payment.

    Today’s figures show a total of £2.87 billion of the core council tax rebate has gone to households under the scheme, an increase of £217 million from the previous month.

    To ensure as many eligible households as possible receive the payment, the government is today extending the deadline for claims, helping councils support the most hard to reach households such as those that moved and did not provide any payment information.

    Eligible households have until 30 November to claim the £150 payment, which does not have to be paid back. Anyone who is yet to receive their rebate is urged to check their local council for more information and make a claim.

    Councils are being urged to do everything they can to encourage the remaining households to claim their rebate and ensure as many eligible households as possible get the money that they are owed.

    Levelling Up Minister Dehenna Davison said:

    Thanks to the tireless work of councils, more than 99% of eligible households up and down the country have received their council tax rebate.

    We are now extending the deadline to claim the £150 payment to ensure as many eligible households as possible receive this payment – I urge everyone to check their eligibility and contact their local council if they have not already.

    The rebate is part of £37 billion of government support being targeted at those most in need to help with the cost of living. This includes at least £1,200 of extra support for millions of the most vulnerable households this year, with all domestic electricity customers receiving at least £400 towards their bills.

    The rebate is available to most households living in council tax bands A to D on 1 April. This includes those who receive Local Council Tax Support, even if their council tax bill for the year is less than £150.

    Since announcing the rebate in April, the government has provided £28 million for councils to set up software and recruit staff and will top this up as necessary to cover all reasonable delivery costs. Councils have been given a host of options to make payments quickly and securely including bank account transfers, council tax account credits or a voucher-based system.

    Local authorities must also make arrangements for those who cannot access the internet.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The actions of the Belarusian state endangered the safety and security of a commercial passenger aircraft and the lives of all those onboard [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : The actions of the Belarusian state endangered the safety and security of a commercial passenger aircraft and the lives of all those onboard [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 31 October 2022.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the Security Council briefing by the President of the ICAO Council on the event involving Ryanair flight FR4978 in Belarus Airspace on 23 May 2021.

    Thank you, President.

    When we discussed this issue immediately after the incident, many Council members emphasised the importance of an international independent investigation. We therefore thank Mr Sciacchitano, the President of the Council of ICAO, for attending the Security Council today to relate the findings of the Fact-Finding Investigation Team, and the subsequent decisions of the ICAO Council and Assembly.

    President, it is clear from the investigation that on 23 May 2021, the Belarus authorities deliberately communicated a false bomb threat to Ryanair flight FR4978, before manipulating circumstances to influence the aircraft to land at Minsk airport. That the threat was communicated to the aircraft before the so-called bomb threat email was even sent to Minsk airport, leaves little room for doubt.

    It appears the purpose of this brazen and dangerous operation was to arrest and detain a journalist, Mr Roman Protasevich, and his partner Sofia Sapega, who with their fellow passengers happened to be flying over Belarus on their way from Athens to Vilnius.

    As the ICAO Council and the Assembly made clear, the actions of the Belarusian state endangered the safety and security of a commercial passenger aircraft and the lives of all those on board. And they were a flagrant violation of the Chicago and Montreal Conventions.
    But not only this. As we said last year, the use of a spurious terrorist threat to divert an airliner also served to undermine measures put in place by the international community to counter real aviation terror threats, including those this Council addressed in resolution 2309 in 2016.

    So the Lukashenko regime has broken international law, created a major risk to the safety of innocent passengers, and undermined aviation safety more broadly – proving itself to be entirely irresponsible on the issue of international peace and security. And for what? All to silence an opposition journalist, further stifling any semblance of free speech left in Belarus.

    This has only been compounded further by its role as a staging-ground and facilitator of Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, through which it continues to show reckless contempt for international law and the UN Charter.
    We call on Belarus to hold accountable those responsible for this incident, desist from any further such unlawful actions, and end its support for Russia’s illegal war on Ukraine.

    Thank you.

  • Darren Jones – 2022 Comments About Suella Braverman

    Darren Jones – 2022 Comments About Suella Braverman

    The comments made by Darren Jones, the Labour MP for Bristol North West, on Twitter on 31 October 2022.

    How can the Prime Minister *not* sack the Home Secretary? Have the Tories denigrated the Ministerial Code so much that no one in office actually cares anymore?

  • Richard Burgon – 2022 Comments Over BBC Interviewing Nigel Farage

    Richard Burgon – 2022 Comments Over BBC Interviewing Nigel Farage

    The comments made by Richard Burgon, the Labour MP for East Leeds, on Twitter on 31 October 2022.

    What a terrible decision by the BBC to interview Nigel Farage over the Manston migrant centre.

    What the hell does he have to offer in this debate?

    This is the time for a serious discussion on the impact of the Tory’s cruel immigration policies. Not more myths and scapegoating.

  • Ian Byrne – 2022 Letter to Premier League Over Offensive Hillsborough Chants

    Ian Byrne – 2022 Letter to Premier League Over Offensive Hillsborough Chants

    The letter sent by Ian Byrne, the Labour MP for Liverpool West Derby, on 31 October 2022.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Six arrests after paint sprayed on buildings in central London [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Six arrests after paint sprayed on buildings in central London [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Metropolitan Police on 31 October 2022.

    Six people have been arrested on suspicion of criminal damage following protest activity on Monday, 31 October.

    At around 08:20hrs, Thames House in Millbank was sprayed with paint. Officers responded and made one arrest for criminal damage at 08:45hrs.

    At around 08:29hrs, the News UK building in London Bridge Street was sprayed with paint. Officers responded and made one arrest for criminal damage at 08:46hrs.

    At around 08:39hrs, two people sprayed the Home Office in Marsham Street with paint. They were arrested on suspicion of criminal damage by Met officers at 08:41hrs.

    All those arrested have been taken into custody at a central London police station.

    City of London Police officers have arrested a further two people who sprayed the Bank of England in Threadneedle Street at around 08:30hrs.