Tag: 2022

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 51 – UK Statement for the Interactive dialogue on the report of the OHCHR on Myanmar [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 51 – UK Statement for the Interactive dialogue on the report of the OHCHR on Myanmar [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 October 2022.

    The UK Human Rights Ambassador, Rita French, delivered a statement on the Myanmar regime’s access to weapons and arms.

    Thank you, Mr President.

    Thank you Acting High Commissioner for your report.

    The United Kingdom supported the council’s Fact Finding Mission on Myanmar and its’ important work to shine a light on the military’s economic interests. We call on all States to engage with its recommendations, which remain all the more important amid today’s calamitous situation in the country.

    We are committed to working with partners to target the regime’s access to finance and arms, which facilitate the most egregious human rights violations. These violations must stop.

    The UK has a comprehensive arms embargo on Myanmar and we are clear that no Member State should sell arms to Myanmar; doing so exasperates conflict and instability and directly contributes to violations in the country.

    Since the coup, we have announced targeted sanctions on the military leadership, and its access to revenue, arms and military equipment.

    While responsible businesses have a role to play in Myanmar in job creation, poverty alleviation and standard setting, we must ensure that their work does not inadvertently support the military regime. For this reason, the UK has also strengthened its advice to UK business, encouraging enhanced due diligence to avoid inadvertent support for the military.

    Madam Acting High Commissioner,

    What more can the international community to do to pressure those who sell arms to the military?

    Thank you.

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 51 – Enhanced Interactive Dialogue on the Democratic Republic of Congo [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 51 – Enhanced Interactive Dialogue on the Democratic Republic of Congo [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 October 2022.

    The UK delivered a statement on the on-going human rights situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Thank you, Madam Vice President,

    The United Kingdom thanks the speakers for their presentations and we welcome the reports of the high commissioner, and the team of experts.

    The UK remains deeply concerned about the human rights situation in the DRC. Recent violence by armed groups, especially the Allied Democratic Forces and M23, has led to human rights abuses, which jeopardises efforts to pursue peace and prosperity, and exacerbates the already severe humanitarian situation. All of this raises dire concerns about the protection of civilians in the conflict-affected regions.

    We urge all actors to address the humanitarian impacts of the violence, ensuring the affected people, including the 5.9 million internally displaced civilians, receive the assistance they need. We welcome ongoing diplomatic efforts to pursue dialogue and de-escalation, and we reiterate our call on all armed groups to immediately cease violence and participate unconditionally in the political process.

    We are deeply concerned about the recent violent protests against the UN peacekeeping mission, which resulted in the deaths of civilians and peacekeepers. We continue to offer our full support for MONUSCO’s vital work, and call on the government of DRC to help ensure the safety of MONUSCO’s personnel and hold all perpetrators of violations and abuses to account.

    We will continue to support regional engagement to find a diplomatic solution to conflict in the east, and DRC’s efforts to launch a community-based Disarmament, Demobilization and Re-integration programme.

    Madam Vice President,

    Our question to the panel is how will the UN work with the East African Community to ensure the protection of civilians remains a priority, with any deployment of a regional force?

    Thank you.

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 51 – Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with the OHCHR on technical assistance and capacity-building for South Sudan [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 51 – Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with the OHCHR on technical assistance and capacity-building for South Sudan [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 October 2022.

    The UK delivered a statement on for the Interactive Dialogue with the OHCHR regarding the providing of technical assistance amid ongoing human rights issues in the country.

    Thank you Madam Vice President,

    The United Kingdom thanks the Director for his presentation and the continued work of the Office of the High Commissioner in South Sudan.

    The UK is deeply concerned by the continuing and dire human rights situation in South Sudan. This year, hundreds of civilians have been killed or been victims of Conflict Related Sexual Violence at the hands of government and opposition forces. Horrific attacks in southern Unity State and ongoing violence in Upper Nile State are prime examples of this. There needs to be urgent action by the South Sudanese Government to protect civilians and hold perpetrators to account.

    The UK commends the OHCHR and UNMISS for their continuing technical assistance, but it is clear that technical assistance alone will not lead to sustainable peace and justice without clear mechanisms for scrutiny and accountability. The Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan therefore plays a vital role in helping to hold those responsible for human rights violations and abuses to account, including through their monitoring and reporting.

    The UK acknowledges the Government of South Sudan’s extension of the 2018 peace agreement and accompanying Roadmap. We call on the South Sudanese Government to implement the peace agreement, including all of Chapter V, in full and to the timelines set by their new Roadmap.

    Mr Director,

    What prospects do you see for the establishment as soon as possible of the truth and justice mechanisms under Chapter V, including the Hybrid Court? How can this be most effectively supported?

    Thank you.

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : 2022 is a critical year for biodiversity and our planet – UK statement to the OSCE [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : 2022 is a critical year for biodiversity and our planet – UK statement to the OSCE [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 October 2022.

    Justin Addison (UK delegation to the OSCE) says sustainable management of natural resources is essential to mitigate impacts of climate and biodiversity crises.

    The protection, restoration and sustainable management of natural resources are essential to mitigate the impacts of the climate and biodiversity crises, which pose a threat to international peace and stability. This is no truer than in the case of water, which is increasingly a threat multiplier.

    In 2013, there were 27 events in which water was a trigger for conflict. Four years later, this had risen to 71.

    This upward trend is caused by the growing global water crisis. With only 3 percent of the earth’s water freshwater – and most of this inaccessible, degraded or unevenly distributed – scarcity is compounded by population growth, food and energy demands, and climate change. Estimates suggest that four billion people now live in areas with severe water scarcity; and that by 2030 there could be around 700 million people displaced because of water scarcity, affecting national and regional security.

    We see these trends play out in our region regularly, particularly in Central Asia where tensions over scarce water resources, and unilateral water infrastructure developments, have aggravated existing disputes and contributed to new conflicts.

    Accessing water continues to be a grave issue for those living in conflict zones. Russia’s deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure has led to extensive power and water shortages, causing further suffering for the Ukrainian people. Just two weeks ago, parts of the Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih were flooded after Russia attacked a nearby dam.

    The OECD has said that as a result of damage to water supply infrastructure in Ukraine, an estimated 1.4 million people currently have no access to safe water, and a further 4.6 million people have only limited access. To help relive Ukraine from these effects of Russia’s brutal aggression, the UK has donated 856 generators to Ukraine to power essential services, including water pumping stations.

    However, there is potential for water to play a role in reducing conflict. Water historically has more often led to cooperation than conflict between countries. For example, in the period 1948-2000, co-operative events over international waters outweighed conflictual ones by two to one.

    Cooperation over water can also benefit other areas, such as peace, security and prosperity through positive impacts on food security, economic stability, improved regional integration, and better trade relations.

    Promoting this cooperation, states need to apply diplomatic tools such as negotiations, fact-finding missions, and the establishment of consultation platforms for existing or emerging disagreements. This is where the OSCE is well placed to play a role. We celebrate the work the OCEEA does to enhance co-operation over transboundary water resource management, and to integrate women’s voices.

    Mr Chair,

    2022 is a critical year for biodiversity and our planet. The UK is committed to working with the OSCE and other international partners to secure an ambitious post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework to halt and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030. We will continue to champion protection of at least 30% of land and ocean globally.

    In collaboration with others, the UK has developed a 10 Point Plan for Financing Biodiversity, launched at UNGA last month. The plan defines a clear pathway for bridging the global nature finance gap, and I invite all colleagues here to endorse the 10 point plan ahead of the biodiversity COP later this year. Further, I hope states will join the UK in taking steps to ensure all Overseas Development Assistance becomes ‘nature positive’; and supporting the full and effective implementation of the Multilateral Development Banks’ COP26 Joint Statement on Nature, People and Planet.

  • Liz Truss – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Liz Truss – 2022 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Liz Truss, the Prime Minister, in Birmingham on 5 October 2022.

    My friends, it’s great to be here with you in Birmingham.

    It’s fantastic to see the cranes across the skyline building new buildings…

    …the busy trams coursing down the streets…

    …and the bull standing proudly at the heart of Birmingham.

    My friends, this is what a city with a Tory Mayor looks like – it’s positive, it’s enterprising, it’s successful.

    And Andy Street is a human dynamo, delivering for the people of Birmingham.

    And our Teesside Mayor Ben Houchen is also delivering new jobs and investment.

    This is what modern Conservatism looks like.

    Let’s get Tory mayors elected in London, in Manchester, in West Yorkshire and right across the country.

    We gather at a vital time for the United Kingdom.

    These are stormy days.

    Together, we have mourned the death of Queen Elizabeth II, the rock on which modern Britain was built.

    We are now in a new era under King Charles III.

    We are dealing with the global economic crisis caused by Covid and by Putin’s appalling war in Ukraine.

    In these tough times, we need to step up.

    I am determined to get Britain moving, to get us through the tempest and put us on a stronger footing as a nation.

    I am driven in this mission by my firm belief in the British people.

    I believe that you know best how to spend your own money, to get on in life and realise your own ambitions.

    My friends that is what Conservatism is about.

    It is a belief in freedom, in fair play and the great potential of the British people.

    So, I’m not going to tell you what to do, or what to think or how to live your life.

    I’m not interested in how many two-for-one offers you buy at the supermarket, how you spend your spare time, or in virtue signalling.

    I’m not interested in just talking about things, but actually in doing things.

    What I’m interested in is your hopes and fears that you feel every day.

    Can you get a good job locally?

    Is it safe to walk down the high street late at night?

    Can you get a doctor’s appointment?

    I know how you feel because I have the same hopes and fears.

    I want what you want.

    I have fought to get where I am today.

    I have fought to get jobs, to get pay rises and get on the housing ladder.

    I have juggled my career with raising two wonderful daughters.

    I know how it feels to have your potential dismissed by those who think they know better.

    I remember as a young girl being presented on a plane with a “Junior Air Hostess” badge.

    Meanwhile, my brothers were given “Junior Pilot” badges.

    It wasn’t the only time in my life that I have been treated differently for being female or for not fitting in.

    It made me angry and it made me determined.

    Determined to change things so other people didn’t feel the same way.

    I remember growing up in Leeds, where I saw too many children being let down.

    Let down by low expectations.

    Let down by a Labour council who were more interested in political correctness than they were in school standards.

    But I was lucky to have been brought up in a family that cared about education.

    They taught me the value of hard work and enterprise.

    And I stand here today as the first Prime Minister of our country to have gone to a comprehensive school.

    That taught me two things.

    One is that we have huge talent across the country.

    And two, that we’re not making enough of it.

    This is a great country.

    I’m so proud of who we are and what we stand for.

    But I know that we can do better and I know that we must do better.

    And that’s why I entered politics.

    I want to live in a country where hard work is rewarded…

    …Where women can walk home safely at night.…

    …And where our children have a better future.

    To deliver this, we need to get Britain moving.

    We cannot have any more drift and delay at this vital time.

    Let’s remember where we were when I entered Downing Street.

    Average energy bills were predicted to soar above £6,000 a year.

    We faced the highest tax burden that our country had had for 70 years.

    And we were told that we could do nothing about it.

    I did not accept that things had to be this way.

    I knew that inaction would be unconscionable.

    Families would have been unable to heat their homes.

    Businesses would have gone bust.

    Jobs would have been lost.

    And we would have had worse public services, including the NHS.

    I could not allow this to happen.

    I refused to consign our great country to decline.

    That is why I promised on entering Downing Street to act.

    Now later on in my speech my friends I am going to talk about the anti-growth coalition.

    But I think they arrived in the hall a bit too early, they were meant to come later on.

    We will get onto them in a few minutes.

    But what we did is we acted.

    We made sure that the typical household energy bill shouldn’t be more than around £2,500 a year this winter and next.

    We followed up with immediate action to support businesses over the winter.

    We are determined to shield people from astronomically high bills.

    So much so, that we are doing more in this country to protect people from the energy crisis than any other country in Europe.

    Our response to the energy crisis was the biggest part of the mini-Budget.

    It was the biggest part for a good reason – because we had to do it.

    But it’s not the only challenge that we face.

    For too long, our economy has not grown as strongly as it should have done.

    I know what it is like to live somewhere that isn’t feeling the benefits of economic growth.

    I grew up in Paisley and in Leeds in the 80s and 90s.

    I have seen the boarded-up shops.

    I have seen people left with no hope turning to drugs.

    I have seen families struggling to put food on the table.

    Low growth isn’t just numbers on a spreadsheet.

    Low growth means lower wages, fewer opportunities and less money to spend on the things that make life better.

    It means our country falling behind other countries, including those who threaten our way of life.

    And it means the parts of our country that I really care about falling even further behind.

    That is why we must level up our country in a Conservative way, ensuring that everywhere everyone can get on.

    Conference it is wrong to invest only in places which are thriving, as economic models often have it.

    We need to fund the furthest behind first.

    And for too long, the political debate has been dominated by the argument about how we distribute a limited economic pie.

    Instead, we need to grow the pie so that everyone gets a bigger slice.

    That is why I am determined to take a new approach and break us out of this high-tax, low-growth cycle.

    And that is what our plan is about: it is about getting the economy growing and rebuilding Britain through reform.

    The scale of this challenge is immense:

    War in Europe for the first time in a generation…

    …A more uncertain world in the aftermath of Covid…

    …And a global economic crisis.

    That is why in Britain we need to do things differently.

    We need to step up.

    As the last few weeks have shown, it will be difficult.

    Whenever there is change, there is disruption.

    And not everyone will be in favour of change.

    But everyone will benefit from the result – a growing economy and a better future.

    That is what we have a clear plan to deliver.

    I have three priorities for our economy: growth, growth and growth.

    Growth means more money in people’s pockets it means businesses creating jobs.

    Growth means people can feel secure and they can plan for their future.

    Fundamentally, growth helps people fulfil their hopes and their dreams.

    That is why our dynamic new Chancellor and I will be taking action in three areas.

    First of all, we will lower our tax burden.

    Over the summer, we had a robust debate.

    The Conservative party will always be the party of low taxes.

    Cutting taxes is the right thing to do morally and economically.

    Morally, because the state does not spend its own money. It spends the people’s money.

    Economically, because if people keep more of their own money, they are inspired to do more of what they do best.

    This is what grows the economy.

    When the government plays too big a role, people feel smaller.

    High taxes mean you feel it’s less worthwhile working that extra hour, going for a better job or setting up your own business.

    That, my friends, is why we are cutting taxes.

    We have already cut Stamp Duty, helping people on the housing ladder – especially first-time buyers.

    We are reversing the increase in National Insurance from next month.

    We are keeping corporation tax at 19%, the lowest in the G20.

    We are helping 31 million working people by cutting the basic rate of income tax.

    We need to be internationally competitive, with all our tax rates attracting the best talent.

    Cutting taxes helps us face this global economic crisis, putting up a sign that Britain is open for business.

    The fact is that the abolition of the 45p tax rate became a distraction from the major parts of our growth plan.

    That is why we are no longer proceeding with it.

    I get it and I have listened.

    Secondly, we will keep an iron grip on the nation’s finances.

    I believe in fiscal responsibility.

    I believe in getting value for the taxpayer.

    I believe in sound money and the lean state.

    I remember my shock opening my first paycheque to see how much money the taxman had taken out.

    I know this feeling is replicated across the country.

    And that’s why we must always be careful with taxpayers’ money.

    It is why this Government will always be fiscally responsible.

    We are in extraordinary times.

    It would have been wrong not to have proceeded rapidly with our energy and tax plan.

    I am clear we cannot pave the way to sustainable economic growth without fiscal responsibility.

    So we will bring down debt as a proportion of our national income.

    We are seeing rising interest rates worldwide in the wake of Putin’s war and Covid.

    The Federal Reserve has been hiking rates in America and has signalled more rises to come.

    Inflation is high across the world’s major economies.

    We will do what we can as a government to support home-owners, such as cutting stamp duty.

    But it is right that interest rates are independently set by the Bank of England and that politicians do not decide on this.

    The Chancellor and the Governor will keep closely co-ordinating our monetary and fiscal policy.

    The Chancellor and I are in lockstep on this.

    Thirdly, we will drive economic reforms to build our country for a new era.

    We are taking a new approach based on what has worked before.

    Previously, we faced barriers to growth like militant unions, nationalised industries and outdated City regulation.

    Now, we must breakdown the barriers to growth built up in our system over decades.

    Decisions take too long.

    Burdens on businesses are too high.

    Infrastructure projects get delayed for years, and years and years.

    As a result, we have seen economic growth choked off.

    Houses have not been built where they are needed and wanted.

    We have become averse as a nation to doing things differently.

    I love business.

    I love enterprise.

    I love people who take responsibility, start their own businesses and invest.

    They generate profits, they create new jobs and they power our success.

    I want to see more of that.

    That is why we will back businesses to the hilt.

    We are cutting taxes and simplifying red tape to help businesses realise their ambitions.

    This is what our new investment zones will do, helping us level up across the country.

    We will be inspired by the great hubs of industry like Bournville, here in the West Midlands.

    That is what zones in places like here and around the country will deliver.

    We want to create the zones in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Now is the time to harness the power of free enterprise to transform our country and ensure our greatest days lie ahead.

    This is the United Kingdom at its best, working together and getting our economy growing.

    And we will face down the separatists who threaten to pull apart our precious union our family.

    Next year, we will host the Global Investment Summit.

    This will show the world’s top investors there is nowhere better to invest than the UK.

    And we are seizing the new-found freedoms outside the European Union.

    We are the party who got Brexit done and we will realise on the promise of Brexit.

    We are building an economy which makes the most of the huge opportunities Brexit offers.

    By the end of next year, all EU-inspired red tape will be history.

    Instead, we will ensure regulation is pro-business and pro-growth.

    Leaving the EU gives us the chance to do things differently.

    And we need more of that.

    That is why over the coming weeks, my team of ministers will set out more about what we are going to do to get Britain moving.

    We will make it easier to build homes, to afford childcare and to get superfast broadband.

    We will help you set up your own businesses and get a mobile phone signal wherever you are in the country.

    We are in tough times.

    But I want you to know that day in, day out, I’m thinking about how we get this country moving.

    I’m working flat out to make sure people can get through this crisis.

    So let me be clear, we have your back.

    That is why the Government took decisive action to tackle the energy crisis.

    It is why we are pushing ahead with our plan for growth.

    Economic growth makes life better and easier for everyone – and it will level up our country.

    I know that is what people want to see.

    Economic growth will mean we can afford great public services such as schools, the police and the NHS.

    Our fantastic Deputy Prime Minister and Health Secretary will deliver for patients so they can expect a GP appointment within two weeks.

    She will ensure that those who need urgent care will be seen on the same day.

    And she will get ambulances out there faster and she will improve A&E.

    And she will bust the Covid backlog.

    That is not all and she will bolster social care so that everyone gets the care they need.

    We are working to put this country on the path to long-term success.

    That means ensuring we are safe and secure.

    One of the reasons we are facing this global crisis is because collectively the West did not do enough.

    We became complacent.

    We did not spend enough on defence.

    We became too dependent on authoritarian regimes for cheap goods and energy.

    And we did not stand up to Russia early enough.

    We will make sure this never happens again.

    So we are taking decisive action to reinforce our energy security.

    We are opening more gas fields in the North Sea and delivering more renewables and nuclear energy.

    That is how we will protect the great British environment, deliver on our commitment to net zero and tackle climate change.

    We are also taking decisive action by strengthening our borders by beefing up our Border Force and expanding the Rwanda scheme.

    Our brilliant new Home Secretary will be bringing forward legislation to make sure that no European judge can overrule us.

    And while she is acting meanwhile, the Labour Party has absolutely no plan to tackle illegal migration.

    But my friends we cannot have security at home without security abroad.

    That is why our tough Foreign and Defence Secretaries are updating the Integrated Review to make sure we can face down these threats.

    It is why we are increasing defence spending to 3% of GDP by the end of the decade.

    This will ensure that our Armed Forces are ready to tackle new and emerging threats.

    We are working with our friends and allies to support Ukraine in the face of Putin’s brutal war.

    The brave Ukrainian people aren’t just fighting for their security but for all our security.

    This is a fight for freedom and democracy around the world.

    Putin’s illegal annexation of Ukrainian territory is just the latest act in his campaign to subvert democracy and violate international law.

    We should not give in to those who want a deal which trades away Ukrainian land.

    They are proposing to pay in Ukrainian lives for the illusion of peace.

    We will stand with our Ukrainian friends however long it takes.

    Ukraine can win, Ukraine must win, and Ukraine will win.

    I know that President Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine will welcome our solidarity with them at this very very difficult time.

    To take on Russia and other authoritarian regimes, free democracies need strong economies.

    Economic growth makes us strong at home and strong abroad.

    We need an economically sound and secure United Kingdom.

    And that will mean challenging those who try to stop growth.

    I will not allow the anti-growth coalition to hold us back.

    Labour, the Lib Dems and the SNP…

    …The militant unions, the vested interests dressed up as think-tanks…

    …The talking heads, the Brexit deniers and Extinction Rebellion and some of the people we had in the hall earlier.

    The fact is they prefer protesting to doing.

    They prefer talking on Twitter to taking tough decisions.

    They taxi from North London townhouses to the BBC studio to dismiss anyone challenging the status quo.

    From broadcast to podcast, they peddle the same old answers.

    It’s always more taxes, more regulation and more meddling.

    Wrong, wrong, wrong.

    We see the anti-growth coalition at work across the country.

    Keir Starmer wants to put extra taxes on the companies we need to invest in our energy security.

    And his sticking plaster solution will only last six months.

    He has no long-term plan and no vision for Britain.

    Mark Drakeford in Wales is cancelling road-building projects and refusing to build the M4 relief road.

    Nicola Sturgeon won’t build new nuclear power stations in Scotland to solve the energy crisis in Scotland.

    Have these people ever seen a tax rise they don’t like?

    Or an industry they don’t want to control?

    They don’t understand the British people.

    They don’t understand aspiration.

    They are prepared to leave our towns and cities facing decline.

    My friends, does this anti-growth coalition have any idea who pays their wages?

    It’s the people who make things in factories across our country.

    It’s the people who get up at the crack of dawn to go to work.

    It’s the commuters who get trains into towns and cities across our country.

    I’m thinking of the white van drivers, the hairdressers, the plumbers, the accountants, the IT workers and millions of others up and down the UK.

    The anti-growth coalition just doesn’t get it.

    This is because they don’t face the same challenges as normal working people.

    These enemies of enterprise don’t know the frustration you feel to see your road blocked by protesters, or the trains off due to a strike.

    In fact, their friends on the hard Left tend to be the ones behind the disruption.

    The anti-growth coalition think the people who stick themselves to trains, roads and buildings are heroes.

    I say the real heroes are those who go to work, take responsibility and aspire to a better life for themselves and their family.

    And I am on their side.

    We will build roads, rail, energy and broadband quicker.

    We will be proudly pro-growth, pro-aspiration and pro-enterprise.

    That is how we will forge ahead on our long-term path to national success.

    In this new era, we are taking a new approach.

    My friends, we are focused on boosting growth and opportunity across our country.

    This mission will be difficult but it is necessary.

    We have no alternative if we want to get our economy moving again.

    I am ready to make hard choices.

    You can trust me to do what it takes.

    The status quo is not an option.

    That is why we cannot give in to the voices of decline.

    We cannot give in to those who say Britain can’t grow faster.

    We cannot give in to those who say we can’t do better.

    We must stay the course.

    We are the only party with a clear plan to get Britain moving.

    We are the only party with the determination to deliver.

    Together, we can unleash the full potential of our great country.

    That is how we will build a new Britain for a new era.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Teenagers could be missing out on a stash of cash [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Teenagers could be missing out on a stash of cash [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Treasury on 5 October 2022.

    Tens of thousands of teenagers in the UK who have not yet claimed their matured Child Trust Funds savings could have thousands of pounds waiting for them, reminds HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).

    Child Trust Funds are long-term savings accounts set up for every child born between 1 September 2002 and 2 January 2011. To encourage future saving and start the account, the government provided an initial deposit of at least £250.

    The savings accounts mature when the child turns 18 years old. Eligible teenagers, who are aged 18 or over and have yet to access their Child Trust Fund account, could have savings waiting for them worth an average of £2,100.

    If teenagers or their parents and guardians already know who their Child Trust Fund provider is, they can contact them directly. This might be a bank, building society or other savings provider.

    Many eligible teenagers who have yet to claim their savings might be starting university, apprenticeships or their first job. The lump-sum amount could offer a financial boost at a time when they need it most.

    Angela MacDonald, HMRC’s Second Permanent Secretary and Deputy Chief Executive, said:

    Teenagers could have a pot of money waiting for them worth thousands of pounds and not even realise it. We want to help you access your savings and the money you’re entitled to.

    To find out more search ‘Child Trust Fund’ on GOV.UK.

    An estimated 6.3 million Child Trust Fund accounts were set up throughout the duration of the scheme, containing about £9 billion. If a parent or guardian was not able to set up an account for their child, HMRC opened a savings account on the child’s behalf.

    Teenagers aged 16 or over can take control of their own Child Trust Fund if they wish, although the funds can only be withdrawn once they turn 18 years old.

    Where children have a Child Trust Fund, families can still pay in up to £9,000 a year tax-free. The account matures once the child turns 18 years old and no further money can be deposited. They can either withdraw the funds from the matured Child Trust Fund account or reinvest it into another savings account.

    Until the child withdraws or transfers the money, it stays in an account that no-one else has access to.

    The Child Trust Fund scheme closed in January 2011 and was replaced with Junior Individual Savings Accounts (ISA).

  • Kay Andrews – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II (Baroness Andrews)

    Kay Andrews – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II (Baroness Andrews)

    The tribute made by Kay Andrews, Baroness Andrews, in the House of Lords on 10 September 2022.

    My Lords, it has never been a greater privilege to be a part of this House and listen to some extraordinary speeches; they will last as long as this House does, I think. With humility, I want to share some of my own experiences.

    Last night, when we heard that extraordinarily magisterial and immensely moving speech from the new King, King Charles III, he made us remember some different aspects of our late Queen. He spoke of

    “a promise of destiny kept”

    and renewed that same promise of lifelong service. Of course, one of those promises that the Queen made was the one she made to the people of Aberfan, after the disaster in 1966 when 116 children and 28 adults died, that she would return. It was one of the defining moments of her reign and was not without controversy. For those of us who come from those valleys, it marked an extraordinary relationship. At that terrible time, the people of Aberfan were immensely and uniquely comforted by her. She was deeply affected; she sat quietly with them, sometimes quite silently.

    One of the bereaved families said, “She was with us from the beginning”, and she more than kept her promise to return. She went back four times, once to open the new school. She understood and paid tribute to the dignity and the indomitable spirit that characterises the people of that village and the surrounding valleys, and that rare gift exemplified so much of what made her so special to everyone she met. She understood grief. She had been brought up never to show her emotions, but she knew what people felt, and people knew that she knew. She knew that silence is more eloquent than words and she taught us that there is a unique value in silence.

    She also had a terrific zest for life. I experienced that because I am a member of the trade union of previous Baronesses in Waiting. She treated us with enormous respect and helped us understand the role. The humility in being present to greet a distinguished overseas Head of State who is expecting to meet the Queen and finds himself instead meeting an overenthusiastic and completely unknown Baroness is something you never quite forget. It teaches you a life lesson about expectations.

    Her Majesty honoured her promises and the sweep of history in so many other ways. One of the charities with which she had the longest association was the Charterhouse, the great medieval charity in the City so well known to Members of this House—there are many of its previous governors in this House. The Charterhouse has stood for 400 years as a symbol of philanthropy, one of the four buildings in London that Elizabeth I would recognise. There have been royal governors for 400 years. Elizabeth I made her base there after the death of Mary. For 400 years, Thomas Sutton’s will has been honoured in the community of elderly men and women who live out their final days there. I am privileged to be a governor and to have that duty of care now.

    The late Queen’s first visit was in 1958, after the restoration following the Blitz. Her final visit, some 60 years later in 2017, was to open our new museum, which revealed the Charterhouse in its full 700-year history. Like every governor, she would have had three brothers in her care. She caused some confusion occasionally by referring to them. Yesterday, our brothers honoured her and the love they feel for her when they tolled the Charterhouse bell 96 times for their royal governor, who joined hands over the centuries with that other great Elizabeth, 400 years ago. I have an image of those two Elizabeths sitting in the great chamber at the Charterhouse, conspiring together about how to get the best from their councillors.

    She also honoured her people in other ways. During her 60th Jubilee, in 2012, the first excursion that she made was to Burnley, on a freezing day. She travelled up the canal on the “Pride of Sefton”, with Prince Philip and the then Prince Charles, to see the transformation of Burnley mill into a new centre of technical education. It was one of many such projects to which our present King was committed for so long and with such success, and it enabled us at the Prince’s Regeneration Trust and English Heritage to bring back to life and to repurpose significant historic buildings which could bring new life to communities such as Burnley. The mill was put to work again, for another generation to learn how to master the future.

    That day, in that mill, on the threshold of its new life, the Queen spoke of her immense pride in all that her son had achieved, not just in the restoration of our physical heritage but in empowering so many young people, through the Prince’s Trust, to find the confidence and success to make their own place in history.

    It is no wonder that we have all felt so completely overwhelmed by hearing the accounts of people we have met, or those people I saw at Victoria Station this morning armed with bunches of flowers and on their way to Buckingham Palace. We are unmoored by the death of a Queen for whom duty was her signature on a page of history, as well as her love. We now have a new King who shares her values and who will, as he said last night, bring loyalty and love, warmth and empathy in connection. We are extremely lucky to have lived in her reign, and we will be lucky to live in his.

    God save the King.

  • PRESS RELEASE : When we challenge discrimination and progress gender equality, everybody benefits – UK statement at UN Third Committee [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : When we challenge discrimination and progress gender equality, everybody benefits – UK statement at UN Third Committee [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 4 October 2022.

    Statement by Richard Croker, UK Ambassador to the General Assembly, at the Third Committee meeting on advancement of women.

    Thank you Mr Chair,

    Multiple and interconnected barriers are preventing women and girls from reaching their full potential. Where women and girls are unable to reach their potential, whole countries suffer. We know that when we challenge discrimination and progress gender equality, everybody benefits.

    The UK is committed to protecting and promoting women and girls’ rights and freedoms at home and abroad so that they can have their voice, choice and control over all aspects of their lives.

    Women’s rights are human rights, as enshrined by numerous conventions that the UK supports. Our ambition remains higher than ever, and we cannot be complacent when reviewing our progress.

    That is why we have committed to placing women and girls at the heart of our foreign and development policy, prioritising action on 3 areas: Educating girls; Empowering women and girls; and Ending violence.

    We know that achieving gender equality is fundamental to building democracies and accelerating progress on securing freedoms, prosperity and trade, as well as strengthening global security and resilience. Women’s knowledge and leadership strengthens decision-making, driving better, more sustainable, and fairer policies that benefit whole communities.

    Together, over many years, we have made real, hard-won progress on this agenda. There are more girls in school; fewer girls forced into early marriage; more women serving in high political offices and private sector leadership positions; and there have been encouraging legal reforms in many countries to address inequalities.

    However, progress has stalled. At the current rate, it will take 135 years to close the gender gap worldwide. Women and girls are, and continue to be, disproportionately impacted by crises, be it the COVID pandemic, conflict, or climate change.

    Take COVID as an example. At a global level, we have witnessed women shouldering the unpaid care burden and being hardest hit economically, deepening poverty for women and girls. There has been a global surge in gender-based violence, reduced access to sexual and reproductive health and rights; and increases in child marriage and adolescent pregnancy. An estimated 20 million girls will never return to school because of COVID.

    Recent months have also shown the deep resilience of the human spirit and of free societies, with women and girls on the frontline of and being affected by multiple brutal conflicts, including most recently due to Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.

    Increasing authoritarianism is undermining democratic values, human rights and effective institutions and placing these hard-won gains under threat. Systematic attempts by several actors to roll back and reverse women’s and girls’ rights have gained momentum at the international and community level.

    In Afghanistan, twenty years of progress on women’s rights have been reversed. Afghan girls have been largely banned from secondary school for over a year, the only country in the world where this is the case.
    In Iran, the death of Mahsa Amini is a shocking reminder of the repression faced by women. No one should face violence because of what they wear, how they practice their beliefs or any expression of fundamental rights.

    The UK stands steadfast in its commitment to protect and promote women’s and girls’ rights. In particular, we must respect the bodily autonomy of women and girls throughout their lives by supporting them in exercising their sexual and reproductive rights, preventing all forms of gender-based violence and eliminating harmful practices including female genital mutilation and child, early and forced marriage.

    The UK has a long record of leading the charge against gender-based violence, including conflict-related sexual violence. This November, the UK will host a major international conference to promote prevention, justice and support for survivors, and strengthening the global response.

    Mr Chair,

    We are prepared to do things differently, to think differently, and to work differently to achieve true gender equality. We must act across multiple sectors and disciplines simultaneously and tackle the many forms of disadvantage that women and girls face, spanning age, race, disability, economic status, gender identity, religion/belief and geographical location.

    And we cannot do this alone. We will continue to work with our partners, including women’s rights organisations who are at the frontlines of this work, to deliver for women and girls everywhere.

    I thank you.

  • John Alderdice – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II (Baron Alderdice)

    John Alderdice – 2022 Tribute to HM Queen Elizabeth II (Baron Alderdice)

    The tribute made by John Alderdice, Baron Alderdice, in the House of Lords on 10 September 2022.

    My Lords, it is a truism of politics generally—and, no doubt, of your Lordships’ House—that it is easier to make a long speech than a short one. In respect of Her late Majesty, all of us could speak at length with enthusiasm, passion and not a little sadness about our experiences of her, both closely and at a distance. I will restrict myself to two comments about not the personal relationship with her but what she achieved and represented. One is about international relations, which are an important matter for me. The other is about the Irish peace process, to which the noble Baroness, Lady Coussins, just referred.

    When Her Majesty came to the Throne, after two World Wars, there was a huge focus on creating an international rules-based order. There was a particular focus on the United Nations. For a long time, that was and continued to be an inspiring hope—perhaps until relatively recent times—because the United Nations Security Council is and was to be the pinnacle of international law. Now we find that two of its permanent members are, by any account, guilty of crimes against humanity. Were that to be the case of any of the members of our Supreme Court, we would lose faith in that jurisdiction.

    Others of Her Majesty’s Ministers focused a great deal on getting us into the European project or, more latterly, getting us out of it. But she had a different focus during all those years. She was supportive of what her Governments were doing, of course, but it was the Commonwealth that was her particular passion, as the noble Lords, Lord Boateng and Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, and the noble Baroness, Lady Coussins, rightly said. It is my conviction that, had it not been for her passionate commitment and that of the rest of the Royal Family, we probably would not have a Commonwealth today. Instead, we have an important network of relationships that some countries that were not even members of the British Empire have applied to join.

    Yesterday, I got off a plane to hear of Her Majesty’s death after a visit to Singapore at the invitation of the Singaporean Government. I have often found myself being critical of them. It seemed to me that they were not living up to some of the principles I felt were important. I came back, however, with a different set of feelings. They understand China in a way that we do not. They have a fellow feeling with India that we cannot have. They understand Asia and the West. If we are not to fall into a terrible war with China and others in the East, we desperately need that depth of understanding. It is an understanding that Her late Majesty the Queen had very deeply.

    I speak of the Irish peace process. In her Golden Jubilee year, 2002, Her Majesty visited not just the Parliament here but the Senedd in Wales and the Parliament in Scotland. I was advised by the Northern Ireland Office, however, that she would not be visiting the Northern Ireland Assembly of which I was Speaker because the Northern Ireland Office felt that it would cause difficulties. I said, “I see. You’re wanting to create a constitutional crisis.” “Oh no,” they said, “We’re trying to avoid trouble.” I said, “Well, how do you think unionists will respond if Her Majesty can go to every other Parliament but not to Stormont?” They said, “But it won’t go well.” I replied, “Just back off for a little while and give me a chance to talk to those involved.”

    I talked to Dr Paisley, who was very wroth because he was convinced that it would not be possible. I talked to others. Eventually, I talked to Alex Maskey, the then Chief Whip of Sinn Féin. I said, “Alex, you know, I want to be able to invite the Irish President here but I cannot invite her if Her Majesty cannot come.” “Ah,” he said, “We’ll have a chat about it.” So the ard chomhairle of Sinn Féin got together. You can imagine them speaking in Dublin about Her Majesty’s visit to Belfast. They came back to me, and the answer was clear: “We will deal with it with a dignified detachment. We won’t be able to be there but we won’t create trouble.”

    On the morning of Her Majesty’s visit, Gerry Kelly was interviewed on the BBC. My first response was a sinking heart. What would Gerry say? He was asked whether he would meet her. He said, “Well, if she’s going to hand the place over, I’d be very happy to meet with her, but I don’t expect that’s what she’s coming for. So we will deal with it with a dignified detachment.” Of course, that is what happened; they dealt with it appropriately.

    We went on to have the remarkable visit to Dublin and the meeting with Mary McAleese. Then, in 2012, we had the visit to Belfast where Her Majesty shook hands with Martin McGuinness. In 2002, it was dignified detachment. In 2012, it was dignified engagement. None of that would have happened had she not, by her whole life, person and example, demonstrated dignity in relations and respect for and mutual recognition of those with whom she and her country disagreed. She was a remarkable person. She has given those of us in my part of the United Kingdom a remarkable legacy, but we are fortunate because King Charles III is also part of her legacy. God save the King.

  • PRESS RELEASE : President of Ukraine had a phone call with the Prime Minister of India [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : President of Ukraine had a phone call with the Prime Minister of India [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the President of Ukraine on 4 October 2022.

    President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy had a phone call with Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi.

    During the conversation, the Head of State emphasized the importance of strengthening the Ukrainian-Indian partnership against the backdrop of Russian aggression against Ukraine.

    The holding of the so-called referenda by Russia in the temporarily occupied territories of our country was also discussed. The President noted that all the aggressor’s decisions aimed at attempting illegal annexation of Ukrainian territories are null and void and do not change reality.

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy emphasized that under such conditions, Ukraine will not conduct any negotiations with the current President of the Russian Federation, and noted that our state has always been committed to a peaceful settlement through dialogue.

    “However, Russia did not stand for dialogue and put forward ultimata instead deliberately undermining this process. During my speech at the session of the UN General Assembly, I outlined our clear formula for peace. We are ready to work together with our partners to achieve it,” added the President of Ukraine.

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked Narendra Modi for India’s support of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and also emphasized the importance of the Indian leader’s recent statement that now is not the time for war.

    The Head of State noted the significant humanitarian aid provided by the government and the private sector of the Republic of India to Ukraine.

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Narendra Modi separately discussed the issue of global food security. The President of Ukraine emphasized that our state is ready to continue acting as a guarantor of the world’s food security. In this regard, the support of the entire international community, in particular India, for the further implementation of the grain initiative is important.

    The interlocutors paid due attention to the issue of nuclear safety.

    “Nuclear blackmail by Russia, in particular regarding the Zaporizhzhia NPP, is a threat not only to Ukraine, but also to the whole world,” Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.

    Separately, the President of Ukraine and the Prime Minister of India discussed cooperation within international organizations, primarily the UN.

    During the conversation, the parties noted mutual interest in deepening regular full-scale Ukrainian-Indian contacts, as well as implementation of tasks on the agenda of bilateral relations of comprehensive partnership.

    The Head of State renewed the invitation to the Prime Minister of the Republic of India to visit Ukraine.