Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : New global taskforce unveiled to bolster resilience in aviation workforce [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New global taskforce unveiled to bolster resilience in aviation workforce [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Transport on 6 July 2023.

    UK-led taskforce launched to address global skills challenges in aviation.

    • global Aviation Skills Taskforce launched to boost careers in aviation as demand for flights grows post-COVID-19 pandemic, creating a resilient workforce and helping to grow the economy
    • this taskforce will demand collaboration between international partners to address global skills challenges in aviation
    • comes as government has also signed 2 memoranda of understanding to work with Spain on accelerating the use of sustainable aviation fuel, establishing green shipping corridors and protecting seafarers

    The Aviation Minister has today (6 July 2023) launched a UK-led global taskforce at the International Civil Aviation Organisation’s (ICAO) Gender Summit in Spain to boost careers in the aviation sector.

    Building on the success of the government’s existing domestic programme Generation Aviation, which aims to build a resilient and diverse workforce fit for the future, the UK is partnering with Airport Council International (ACI World), International Air Transport Association (IATA) and the International Coordinating Council of Aerospace Industries Associations (ICCAIA) – demonstrating the importance of international collaboration to address global skills in aviation and aerospace.

    Alongside other countries and industry, the taskforce will aim to inspire the next generation to pursue careers in aviation and will retain and upskill the current workforce, as well as promote diversity – unleashing the sector’s economic potential and helping grow the economy.

    Aviation and Maritime Minister Baroness Vere said:

    Since the pandemic, demand for flights has grown but the sector is still facing challenges in recruiting and retaining the people it needs globally.

    It takes a united effort to fix that, which is why I am keen to work with international partners to attract the best talent to aviation and deliver a diverse and resilient workforce to overcome the challenges of the future.

    The UK has also committed to levelling up both the aviation and maritime sectors by working with Spain to grow the economy and boost the sectors’ standards and sustainability.

    Future-proofing our aviation sector doesn’t just sit with the next generation of aviators but requires leadership today. That is why Baroness Vere is also signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Spain to promote sustainable aviation fuel to reduce emissions in the aviation sector by sharing knowledge and best practice and fostering high standards of sustainability globally.

    Building on our shared naval heritage, Baroness Vere is also signing the MOU to establish green shipping corridors and protect seafarer welfare.

    Earlier this year, the UK government implemented its Seafarers Wages Act, to increase pay and protect seafarers regularly entering the UK.

    As part of its Nine-point-plan to work with international partners to reform employment and welfare of seafarers, the UK and Spain will collaborate on protecting seafarers and raising standards on the Anglo-Spanish shipping routes, as well as sharing expertise to develop maritime standards.

    The environmental impact of shipping remains at the forefront of the government’s push to decarbonise transport, which is why the UK is also establishing green shipping corridors with Spain as part of the Clydebank Declaration. This will not only contribute to reducing carbon emissions but also promote sustainable economic growth and enhance global efforts to combat climate change.

  • PRESS RELEASE : NHS Recovery Summit held to help cut waiting lists [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : NHS Recovery Summit held to help cut waiting lists [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 6 July 2023.

    Health and Social Care Secretary will convene the next NHS Recovery Summit with health experts to help drive innovation across the NHS.

    • Summit will focus on digital innovation and technology to help deliver better care for patients and boost work to cut waiting lists – one of the government’s top 5 priorities
    • Ministers to host roundtable sessions across elective, urgent and emergency, primary and adult social care

    The Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay will convene ministers, clinical leaders and health experts for the next NHS Recovery Summit today (6 July 2023) to drive forward plans to help cut waiting lists and improve care for patients, in the week of the NHS’s 75th birthday.

    Health and social care ministers will host roundtable sessions covering elective, primary, urgent and emergency and adult social care, bringing together NHS chief executives and clinical leaders from across the country and experts from independent and charity sector organisations. This includes the Chief Executive of NHS England, Amanda Pritchard, NHS England’s National Director of Transformation, Dr Tim Ferris and Dr Amanda Doyle OBE, National Director for Primary Care and Community Services.

    Demonstrations throughout the day will showcase how technology in the NHS is transforming care for patients and consider how to go further and faster in embracing new technology to improve access to services, as well as boosting use of NHS 111 and the NHS App to ease pressures and improve choice for patients.

    It follows on from the Prime Minister’s NHS Recovery Forum held in Downing Street on 7 January, which discussed a range of measures such as the expansion of virtual wards, greater use of pharmacy to ease pressures on general practice and more choice over elective care for patients, many of which have now been introduced across the health service.

    Waiting times have substantially reduced from the peak of winter pressures in December, and since then the NHS has published the Urgent and Emergency Care Recovery Plan, the Primary Care Recovery Plan and the first ever NHS Long Term Workforce Plan to help put the NHS on a sustainable footing.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    The NHS is a national treasure and it’s important we take the chance to look at its achievements over the last 75 years, take stock of where we are now and look ahead to where we want to be in the future.

    Today’s summit is about keeping up momentum to recover health and social care services, by bringing together key experts to share knowledge and arrive at solutions to tackle the key challenges facing the NHS and social care, from embracing innovative AI tools to maximising the full potential of the NHS App for patients.

    I’m focused on improving care for patients through the use of technology to diagnose and treat patients more quickly – delivering on the government’s commitment to cut waiting lists.

    Examples of the tech being demonstrated include DERM AI, which is being used to assess skin lesions for cancer across the NHS. DERM has been shown to be 99.7% accurate in predicting skin lesions as non-cancerous. The number of people being referred for skin cancer is increasing year on year, with more than 600,000 people sent for a skin cancer check last year, almost a 10% increase on the year before. DERM could help to triage more patients faster, which could reduce the burden on clinicians and help people receive the care they need sooner.

    The government is investing in DERM and other technologies through the AI Awards, with £123 million invested into 86 technologies since 2020. Last month the government also announced an additional £21 million fund to roll out the latest AI diagnostic tools across the NHS.

    There will also be a demonstration of cutting-edge medical technology that can help the NHS improve care, such as Rezum – a minimally invasive procedure that uses water vapour to treat enlarged prostates, relieving symptoms without the need for an overnight admission as people can be treated as outpatients.

    Virtual reality headsets will be used to showcase Hospital 2.0 designs, demonstrating what the new, nationally designed hospitals of the future will look like as part of the government’s New Hospital Programme. This includes a design that will be adaptable to a variety of locations, featuring an open and light environment, single inpatient bedrooms and staff rest spaces.

    The landmark NHS Long Term Workforce Plan will deliver hundreds of thousands more staff over the next 15 years, and the most radical modernisation and reform of the workforce since the NHS was founded in 1948.

    Significant progress has been made on elective care, as 2-year waits have been virtually eliminated and 18-month waits have fallen by more than 91% from their September 2021 peak. Community diagnostic centres have formed a vital part of this effort, with 111 already open across the country and over 4 million additional tests, checks and scans delivered since July 2021.

    In May, the government also announced plans to empower patients to choose where they receive their NHS care through the NHS App. Patients should be offered a choice of a minimum of 5 providers, where clinically appropriate, by their referring clinician, with information available about waiting times, distance to travel and quality to help them make their choice. Research shows that giving patients choice can cut up to 3 months off their waiting time by selecting a different hospital in the same region.

    As part of the Urgent and Emergency Care Recovery Plan, the NHS has already rolled out 7,000 virtual ward beds to adults, and now they will be expanded to tens of thousands of children across the country to allow them to be treated from the comfort of their own home.

    The Primary Care Recovery Plan included £240 million for practices across England to embrace the latest technology to tackle the 8am rush and reduce the number of people struggling to contact their GP, alongside the introduction of Pharmacy First, which will see pharmacists treating patients for common conditions, as well as an expansion of blood pressure and contraception services within pharmacies.

    Work is also underway across community health services and intermediate care to improve social care this winter and beyond, supported by the Better Care Fund – including £1.6 billion of discharge funding over the next 2 years to ensure patients can leave hospital as soon as they’re ready.

  • PRESS RELEASE : For the first time, a Permanent Member of this Council, the Russian Federation, is listed for over 1200 grave violations against children – UK statement at the Security Council [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : For the first time, a Permanent Member of this Council, the Russian Federation, is listed for over 1200 grave violations against children – UK statement at the Security Council [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 July 2023.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the UN Security Council meeting on Children and Armed Conflict.

    My thanks to our briefers, in particular Ms Violeta for your tremendous courage and valuable insights on the impact of conflict on children.

    The scale of grave violations outlined in the Secretary-General’s report is shocking. Over 8000 children were killed and maimed in 2022. Attacks on schools and hospitals increased by 112%. Violations in the Sahel increased by 85%, in Myanmar by 140%. And over 1,500 children were recruited and used in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. These are not just statistics. These are the stories of real children and their families and communities.

    For the first time, a Permanent Member of this Council, the Russian Federation, is listed for over 1200 grave violations against children. A listing based on robust UN data that represents the tip of the iceberg. There is only one solution to ending the suffering of Ukrainian children: an end to Russia’s illegal invasion.

    We will continue to support the Government of Ukraine’s efforts to protect its children and bring them home after Russia’s forced deportations.

    International frameworks to ensure children’s rights such as the Safe Schools Declaration, the Children and Armed Conflict Working Group and the CAAC Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism need our full support.

    The United Kingdom is taking action. We support programmes delivering psychosocial support, safe spaces, and addressing the drivers of recruitment. And we are a major donor to Education Cannot Wait, helping over 8.8 million children achieve their right to an education.

    We will continue to drive the global response to conflict-related sexual violence. To remove barriers to justice, increase support for child survivors, and implement our commitments under the Platform for Action Promoting the Rights and Wellbeing of Children Born of conflict-related sexual violence.

    Children do not start wars but they continue to be the most vulnerable to its effects.

    We should do better.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Major agreement to deliver new cancer vaccine trials [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Major agreement to deliver new cancer vaccine trials [July 2023]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 5 July 2023.

    Ground-breaking new cancer treatments have moved a step closer with the signing of a major agreement between the government and BioNTech SE.

    • Government signs agreement with BioNTech SE to provide up to 10,000 patients with precision cancer immunotherapies by 2030
    • NHS England’s new Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad aims to improve access to personalised treatments and clinical trials
    • BioNTech SE to set up laboratories and a regional hub in England to support the development of immunotherapies

    Ground-breaking new cancer treatments have moved a step closer with the signing of a major agreement between the government and BioNTech SE.

    Building on a memorandum of understanding signed in January, the partnership will provide cancer patients with improved access to the latest cancer trials and therapies currently being developed.

    The government has signed a long term partnership agreement with the German-based company BioNTech – which previously developed a world leading COVID-19 vaccine with Pfizer – to ensure more patients can benefit from personalised cancer treatments.

    This includes UK-based clinical trials intended to help treat patients through the use of precision immunotherapies which work by stimulating the immune system to recognise and eliminate cancer cells. The aim is to provide access to personalised treatments for up to 10,000 patients by 2030.

    BioNTech SE has already begun conducting clinical trials in the UK. Further trials will be launching although the majority of patients are expected to be enrolled from 2026 onwards.

    To help deliver this research, BioNTech plans to set up new laboratories in Cambridge with an expected capacity of more than 70 highly skilled scientists as well as a new regional hub for the United Kingdom.

    The Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, said:

    This landmark new agreement takes us one step closer to delivering life-saving new cancer treatments for thousands of patients right across the country.

    The UK is a global leader in life sciences – helping to create thousands of highly skilled jobs and pioneering research – and it is testament to this success that BioNTech have chosen to make this significant investment here today.

    Personalised cancer vaccines have the potential to completely revolutionise the way we treat this cruel disease and it is hugely welcome that, thanks to today’s announcement, clinical trials will be rolled out widely

    Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Steve Barclay said:

    This partnership is a huge step forward in the fight against cancer.

    By working together with BioNTech on these innovative treatments we can make progress and save lives and I’m excited by the potential these trials have to both treat patients with cancer and those who have had it to stop it returning.

    This further demonstrates that the UK is an attractive location for innovative companies to invest and pioneer cutting edge treatments for our patients and underlines this government’s commitment to research and development.

    A new Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad (CVLP) led by NHS England in partnership with Genomics England, will help to rapidly identify cancer patients who could be eligible for potential trials.

    It will work by creating a database of suitable NHS cancer patients who will be offered the choice to take part in personalised cancer vaccine trials.

    The partnership will aim to help patients with early and late-stage cancers and, if successfully developed, cancer vaccines could become part of standard care.

    Amanda Pritchard, chief executive of the NHS said:

    The NHS will not stop in its efforts to pioneer new treatments that could be life-changing for future generations. This is why we are developing our very first Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad, enabling us to identify thousands of NHS patients suitable for cancer vaccine trials – giving them the earliest possible access to cutting-edge technology that has the potential to change cancer care forever.

    Thanks to advances in treatment and care alongside NHS awareness campaigns, cancer survival is at an all-time high, but the potential to stop cancer from returning is truly remarkable – and with the first patients set to take part in vaccine trials this autumn, we hope to find a way of vaccinating people against their own cancers and improve their chances of survival.

    Trials will focus on personalised mRNA-based cancer immunotherapies – a type of cancer treatment that activates the patient’s immune system and can either be designed to target shared abnormalities in a specific type of cancer or tailored to an individual’s tumour.

    Immunotherapies tailored to an individual are created by analysing a patient’s tumour to identify mutations that are specific to that individual’s cancer, then using that information to create an immunotherapy personal to that patient.

    The partners involved will work to make processes as simple and effective as possible with BioNTech aiming to start further clinical trials and make potential new therapies available in the UK as soon as possible.

    Professor Uğur Şahin, M.D., Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of BioNTech said:

    We are truly honoured to be an integral part of this landmark partnership, alongside the UK government, NHS England, Genomics England, and the National Institute for Health and Care Research.

    The United Kingdom’s expertise in genomic analyses in cancer patients is a critical component of our shared endeavour to make mRNA-based and precision cancer immunotherapies widely accessible through clinical trials.

    If successful, this collaboration has the potential to improve outcomes for patients with cancer not just in the UK, but also worldwide.

    Sean Marett, CMG, Chief Business Officer & Chief Commercial Officer at BioNTech SE, said:

    Through the development by the UK of a unified national contract approach for clinical trials that will let hospitals rapidly sign-up to clinical trials being undertaken in the UK by BioNTech, we are hoping to reach many UK cancer patients that wish to participate in clinical trials with new BioNTech investigational cancer treatments quickly and efficiently.

    Business & Trade Secretary, Kemi Badenoch, said:

    This government is supporting our life sciences sector to be among the best in the world, with no better example than our global leadership in developing and rolling out the first Covid-19 vaccines.

    Investment in life sciences is key if we are to become a science superpower by 2030, helping to grow the economy and provide substantial health benefits for the British public and the world.

    Patients will be asked by the NHS to consent to be put forward for clinical trials, and surplus tissue samples will be used to assess their eligibility.

    The detail of any suitable clinical trials will be made available to the participant and their treating clinical team to see if they would like to take part in the relevant trial.

    Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Chloe Smith said:

    I know from personal experience how it feels to face a cancer diagnosis. I was immensely fortunate to benefit from world-leading care from our wonderful NHS. There are brilliant scientists, researchers, and medics working on the kinds of lifesaving cancer treatments and therapies that this deal will deliver.

    This partnership is the perfect example of how our £94 billion life sciences sector is improving lives across the country. This deal will anchor high-skilled jobs and investment in the UK. But most importantly, it will deliver better outcomes for patients with cancer in England, ensuring that more of them can go on to live long, happy, and healthy lives.

    Chris Wigley, Chief Executive Officer of Genomics England said:

    Since the times of Darwin, Franklin, and Sanger, the UK has been a true world leader in genomic science and healthcare. To sustain that leadership, we have to continue to deliver more world firsts, more innovations, and more benefits to patients, both nationally and internationally.

    We talk about the Cancer Vaccine “Launch Pad” – the rocket that is being launched is access to ground-breaking personalised cancer therapies that can transform lives and improve outcomes for those affected by this terrible disease. It’s almost hard to comprehend, but there are medicines made just for you, to attack your very own cancer tumour.

    We’re thrilled that this partnership will see genomics extend beyond diagnosis and take us towards a future of personalised cancer treatment.

  • Gillian Keegan – 2023 Speech at the Local Government Association Conference

    Gillian Keegan – 2023 Speech at the Local Government Association Conference

    The speech made by Gillian Keegan, the Secretary of State for Education, in Bournemouth on 5 July 2023.

    Thank you, Kevin.

    It is a great pleasure to be here to address the LGA conference for the first time.

    I know how important the work, and the voice, of local government is.

    My first step into public life after a long business career was as a local councillor where I was also trained by the LGA.

    And now as an MP, a Minister, a Secretary of State, I see every day the hard work that councils up and down this country do.

    I often get asked what a “good” or a “great” start in life is for children and that looks like.

    Every child, every family, is different. But to me, there is a common thread.

    Every child needs stability plus parents or carers around them that are fully engaged, so that they can grow, they can learn, and they can thrive.

    This is something that we all worry about, how can we make sure that all children get the stability they need to set them up for life?

    You are often the first line of defence for children in your area and I want you to know that I know how vital your role is.

    What you do changes lives. You can’t ever be thanked enough for this.

    I want you to know that I am right behind you in your efforts.

    It is not lost on me that I am addressing you today while children and young people in schools across the country face disruption from industrial action.

    This disruption is undermining the stability we have been working so hard to recover after the pandemic.

    Let me be clear, we should not be having these strikes. In general, but certainly not now.

    Children have been through so much in the pandemic; I can’t think of a worst time to be willingly keeping them out of school.

    And we know that it’s critical to ensure children spend as much time in school as possible.

    Because we know that time spent in school is time well spent. School provides stability, it provides education, it provides support, it provides community.

    But there are significantly more children missing school than before the pandemic.

    Sadly, tragically, too many children are not attending school regularly, are persistently absent or, are missing education altogether.

    Some have labelled these “ghost children” – but I don’t like that label – they are real children, and their potential is being cut short.

    I’m determined we fix this, and I am grateful for the work you have already done with schools and families to ensure that they and their children get the right support.

    We are clear that the system needs to work together to improve attendance, focusing on a “support-first” approach.

    When we can we will put these new expectations on a statutory footing. Because this really matters.

    In the meantime, we continue to support you in your efforts.

    Our new data tool means you can respond quickly to trends in near real time, our attendance advisers are already working with around 115 local authorities, and our Attendance Action Alliance, which I chair, and which includes the Children’s Commissioner, the President of the Royal College of General Practitioners and the Children’s Mental Health lead from NHS England. Championing good attendance is top of our agenda.

    I’m delighted to say that bit by bit, little by little, our approach is working.

    And this is critical in the next few months as we know that children who miss the first few days of the new term, without good reason, are much more likely to miss long periods of their schooling than their peers.

    This is a critical period, but it is also an opportunity.

    By September we want to be welcoming as many children back to school as possible.

    I believe, truly, that not only can we get this right, but that working together, we will get this right.

    By supporting children, and families, to get kids into school, to get them learning.

    To get them the support they need, and the stability the deserve.

    Of course, there are children who face bigger challenges than others.

    When you look at vulnerable children, whether it’s because of their home life, a disability, or a previous experience, it’s often the same children, who are being counted and treated as vulnerable in three, four, five different systems.

    Nearly half of our children in need also have special educational needs, as do 57% of children who were looked after for at least 12 months.

    Those children, they are just as smart and have just as much potential as their peers. The only difference is that they got dealt a tougher hand in life.

    We all know that they need the support, the stability, and the help that will allow them to reach their potential.

    The reality is that for children with more complex needs, support often takes too long to arrive – and when it does – it is not always of the quality or consistency that they deserve.

    Families have to jump through hoops to get their children what they need, and providers and services are under increasing pressure to deliver.

    That’s why we’re investing, doubling high needs funding in the past four years, so that it now stands at a record £10 billion, and putting £2.6 billion into special and alternative provision school places.

    But it’s not just about funding. It’s about how we use this and that’s why our SEND and Alternative Provision Improvement plan outlines a mission to transform the system so that all children, whatever their needs, can fulfil their potential.

    These children face many challenges, not just one. This creates more need for support, even though they have less to draw on.

    That is why we are working with you to deliver consistent high-quality support, providing more social workers, more educational psychologists, and more support staff.

    We are going to deliver new national standards and practice guides, that will not only show what excellence looks like, but will provide a benchmark of support that every child with special needs can expect.

    We will set out clear roles and responsibilities across the system and end the bureaucratic battle that prevents families and children getting the support they need.

    A standardised EHCP template and national digital requirements will mean families can get the support your teams and partners provide, more simply and quicker.

    We will work with you, and with families, to develop and test these resources over the coming months.

    We will also announce details of how we will work together on testing our reforms through our Change Programme and the establishment of new Regional Expert Partnerships.

    So the good news is, we are definitely going in the right direction.

    But there will always be more to do, and I’m so grateful for your support on this journey.

    That brings me to the second area of partnership I want to speak about – and that’s our work together supporting families.

    You may well have heard the Prime Minister speak about how central family is to our vision of the future.

    But it’s hard for young families to balance both their children’s education and their own careers, especially with financial challenges and especially in the early years.

    Parents in 2022 were paying nearly 6% more for childcare for under 2s and 6.4% more for 2-year-olds than they were the previous year.

    This is why the Chancellor pledged the single biggest investment in childcare this country has ever seen, and why by 2028 we will have doubled spending on childcare with more than £8 billion every year on early years education. But I know you need extra support to deliver this.

    I know you want precise figures, and I’m pleased to say we’ll be confirming funding allocations for each local authority later this week.

    We have also announced £289m of investment to help you set up and deliver wraparound childcare, available from next year. And we’ll be seeking your views on how we make this scheme work effectively.

    This investment will make a real difference to families up and down the country, so that they can balance their lives and support their children.

    This is the support I would like every child to have. But the reality is, family life is often complex. Sometimes there are challenges, and families need extra support.

    In February this year, we set out how we will provide this and ensure children are kept safe and stay happy.

    We called it ‘Stable Homes, Built on Love’, because love and stability are what every child craves and what they deserve.

    Our strategy sets out how we will work with families to help them manage challenges.

    We’ll shortly be announcing which local areas will participate in the first wave of our Families First for Children pathfinder.

    These areas will provide a vision of the future system, supporting families through new Family Help services and an expert child protection response, to ensure frontline workers have the knowledge and expertise to support children and their families. Where children need protection, we will ensure that services, we will give staff the skills and support to take decisive action.

    Where children cannot stay with their parents, we should look first at wider family networks and support them and care for the child.

    And, where a child needs to enter the care system we will provide the same foundation of love, stability, and safety.

    There are 82,000 children in care. They are in our family, they are in our care, and we owe it to them to ask ourselves everyday – are we doing the best we can?

    We must always be ambitious for children in care and care leavers and I’m proud of what we’re doing in Government to help these children thrive and achieve their potential in adulthood.

    One of my most rewarding parts of this job is seeing this first-hand and chairing our cross-government Care Leavers board.

    And I am proud to work in a Government that care so deeply about this and it is great to be working with my colleague Johnny Mercer who is working on taking the lessons we have learnt about supporting veterans, and joining-up support for care leavers in the same way.

    We have increased the leaving care allowance from £2,000 to £3,000 and have consulted on expanding our corporate parenting responsibilities, so that more public bodies provide the right support to care leavers and also businesses.

    These young people need support when they start out on their own. Our Staying Close and Staying Put programmes will enable young people to  stay with their foster carers or close to their children’s homes when they leave care.

    Working together is a huge part of the making sure that all children get the future they deserve.

    I have seen this myself whether through Family Hubs and Start for Life, working with 87 councils in England; or the Supporting Families programme which has helped over 650,000 families already.

    When we get it right, and work together, it leads to incredible outcomes.

    Let me take fostering for example.

    I know first-hand the role foster carers play because many of my aunties fostered children.

    I have also been privileged to meet plenty of inspiring people who open their homes and their hearts to children.

    People like Marites. Marites is a dedicated foster carer – like many other across the country.

    She told me about one of the children she fostered. A seven-year-old boy.

    When he first arrived with her, he didn’t say a word. In fact, he didn’t speak for weeks. They didn’t know what he had gone through in his short life, but his silence spoke volumes.

    But Marites never gave up in the time she supported him. She gave this silent little boy the love and care he needed and slowly he began to recover.

    Years passed and then by chance she caught up with him walking through her borough. Her silent little boy was now the mayor.

    What a story, and what a life changed because one person took a chance on one child.

    You will all have had similar rewarding stories.

    Our job is to make sure every child gets the stability and foundation in life they deserve.

    A child, wherever they are, should be able to feel safe with unconditional love. They should be supported so that they know anything is possible.

    I know we ask a huge amount of you; I know that you wrestle with difficult decisions and pressures every day.

    But let’s just think about the prize. Together, we can create a world where all children, regardless of where they come from, can get the start in life they really deserve.

    Where it truly doesn’t matter where you came from, only where you are going.

    Together, we have started to make that future possible. But there is a lot more work to do.

    Work we must do. Because those children deserve nothing less.

    For me and many of your I know this is personal and I know we’re doing this for the right reasons, and together we can change lives.

    And I promise you, when we see those children grow up, thrive, and deliver that same love and support to their own families.

    We will know that all of the effort we have put in will have been worth it.

    Indeed, it may be the best thing we ever do.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government issues call for information on use of private telecoms [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government issues call for information on use of private telecoms [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology on 5 July 2023.

    The government has launched public call for information on the uses and security of private telecoms networks in the UK.

    • Government launches public call for information on the uses and security of private telecoms networks in the UK
    • The exercise will help develop understanding of the private telecoms market
    • The remit will cover technologies being deployed, the sectors using these networks, and the security measures taken to protect them

    The government has today (5 July 2023) launched a public call for information on the uses and security of private telecoms networks in the UK. These are networks that provide bespoke services to closed user groups and are different to public telecoms networks, which supply a standard service to individuals or businesses, relying on common infrastructure.

    The call for information will help the government develop its understanding of the private telecoms market, including the technologies being deployed, the sectors using these networks, and the security measures taken to protect them. This information will be used to determine if any government intervention is required to promote the security and resilience of private telecoms networks.

    The call for information will be open for 10 weeks and closes on 13 September 2023.

    Read further details, including how to submit a response to the Private Telecommunications Networks: call for information.

    While anyone can respond to it, the government would particularly welcome responses from telecoms providers, businesses that currently procure, or are planning to procure, and use private telecoms networks, and consultants, contractors, or academics involved in the industry.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The regime cannot ignore calls for change – UK and partners call out Iran over executions [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The regime cannot ignore calls for change – UK and partners call out Iran over executions [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 July 2023.

    The UK’s Minister of State for the Middle East has urged the Iranian regime to end the surge in executions, following a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council.

    The UK’s Minister of State for the Middle East Lord (Tariq) Ahmad has urged the Iranian regime to listen to the calls from the international community and end the surge in executions, following a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council today.

    The UN Fact Finding Mission, set up by the Human Rights Council earlier this year to investigate Iran’s human rights violations, reported to the Council on human rights violations during recent protests in Iran.

    Following the meeting, more than 50 states, including the UK, signed a statement led by Costa Rica criticising the ‘alarming pace’ of executions in Iran.

    The regime has carried out more than 300 executions in 2023 alone. This is a shocking trend – executions are on track to exceed 2022, and more than double 2021’s figures. Analysis of the executions has shown that many are for minor crimes such as non-violent drug offences and the list included five individuals arrested following the death of Mahsa Amini.

    The statement called out the frequent reports of forced confessions, following torture and inhumane treatment, leading to death penalty sentences in Iran.

    Lord Ahmad said:

    The UK and our partners have today condemned the Iranian regime for their brutal use of executions to stifle dissent.

    The regime cannot continue to ignore the calls from the Iranian people, and the international community, for change.

    A moratorium on the death penalty must be the first step in the regime changing course and listening to the concerns of the Iranian people.

    The UK has more than 350 sanctions in place on Iranian individuals and entities in response to the regime’s actions, including on the Prosecutor General and Deputy Prosecutor General who are responsible for Iran’s application of the death penalty.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN HRC53 – Statement on human rights situation in Venezuela [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN HRC53 – Statement on human rights situation in Venezuela [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 July 2023.

    Interactive Dialogue with the High Commissioner for Human Rights on Venezuela, as delivered by Simon Manley, UK Ambassador to the WTO and UN in Geneva.

    Thank you, High Commissioner, for your report. The UK notes your office’s improved engagement with the Venezuelan authorities.

    Nonetheless, we remain concerned by the continued deterioration of social, economic, and cultural rights. According to the last National Survey of Living Conditions (ENCOVI), 81.5% of the Venezuelan population live in poverty. More than nine million people have a chronic health condition and a strained public healthcare system does not have the capacity to respond.

    Human rights defenders continue to operate under a high risk of arbitrary detention and harassment. Civil and political rights must be protected, including the right to participate in public affairs. It is right that your office closely monitors the situation, given the upcoming electoral period and the ongoing practice of disqualifying candidates without due process.

    The Concluding Observations of the CEDAW in May also evidenced a challenging reality for women: unequal access to justice, little prevention of gender-based violence, and harassment of female rights defenders, journalists and opposition leaders and limited action against human trafficking.

    High Commissioner,

    What is your assessment on the adequacy of current guarantees and protections regarding civic space as elections approach? Is your Office engaging with the Administration to follow up on the recommendations issued by the CEDAW?

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN HRC52 – Statement on the Commission of Inquiry on Syria [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN HRC52 – Statement on the Commission of Inquiry on Syria [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 5 July 2023.

    Statement on the oral update of the Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic. Delivered by UK’s Ambassador to the WTO & UN in Geneva, Simon Manley.

    Thank you very much Mr President.

    And thank you, Commissioners, for your update. It’s a sober reminder that the war in Syria is far from over and that the suffering of the Syrian people continues unabated.

    Just in recent days we have seen further indiscriminate airstrikes in northwest Syria that have resulted in further civilian deaths. Deaths that add to the toll of over 300,000 civilians killed since 2011. So let me once again implore all parties to abide by international humanitarian law and to seek peace through the process set out so clearly in UNSCR 2254.

    Mr President, the protracted conflict continues to limit women and girls’ ability to exercise their rights, as we have heard again today. Sexual and gender-based violence has increased and women have scarce recourse to justice.

    Mr President, the widows and the wives of the hundreds of thousands killed, missing or forcibly disappeared by regime forces suffer multiple hardships, often searching fruitlessly for their loved ones, stuck in a legal limbo. So let me, like others, warmly welcome the creation of the new Independent Institution on Missing Persons in Syria and encourage all States to support this mechanism, and all parties to co-operate with it.

    Commissioners,

    I would be interested to hear your further thoughts on the state of women’s legal rights in Syria, in particular the legal and customary discrimination that mitigates against justice for acts of gender violence.

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak call with the President of the United Arab Emirates [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak call with the President of the United Arab Emirates [July 2023]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 5 July 2023.

    The Prime Minister spoke to His Highness Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed al-Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates, this morning.

    The leaders reiterated their personal commitment to growing the strong defence and trade partnership between our countries, noting that the pledge from the UAE to invest £10 billion in strategic industries in the UK is being delivered well ahead of schedule.

    They welcomed opportunities to further develop economic and technological cooperation between the UK and UAE, including in green industries and nuclear power. The leaders looked forward to working together on this agenda and driving innovation and investment to address climate change ahead of the COP28 Summit in the UAE later this year.

    They also discussed international security issues, including Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine and Iran’s concerning and destabilising activity. The Prime Minister and Sheikh Bin Zayed highlighted the vital importance of our defence and security relationship, including military cooperation and intelligence sharing.