Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : North and South East Area Chairs appointed to Arts Council England [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : North and South East Area Chairs appointed to Arts Council England [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 14 November 2023.

    The Secretary of State has appointed Annabel Turpin and Sally Shaw MBE as North and South East Area Chairs to Arts Council England for terms of four years.

    Sally Shaw MBE – South East Area Chair

    Appointed for a four year term commencing 01 December 2023.

    Sally is Director of Firstsite, Colchester where she has been for seven years. With the team, she has delivered an exceptional turn-around programme realigning Firstsite with a highly creative and relevant purpose targeted at deploying art and culture as a means of addressing critical challenges in the community such as deprivation, food poverty and inequity.

    Sally’s focus on ground-up community collaboration combined with exceptional quality contemporary art has led Firstsite to be recognised nationally and internationally for the gallery’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and to win Art Fund Museum of the Year in 2021.

    Along with major exhibitions by groundbreaking artists such as Sarah Lucas, Grayson Perry, Everton Wright and Elsa James, Firstsite’s agile and creative projects have included free digital art packs for families across the nation during COVID-19 and galvanising the top national museums across the country through the Great Big Art Exhibition. Firstsite’s innovative Holiday Fun programme has now provided more than 21,000 free meals to children and families in need during school holidays and as a result has engaged thousands of children in art and creativity at Firstsite for the first time.

    These initiatives saw Sally recognised with an MBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list for Services to the Arts during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Sally has also been invited to be a Fellow of the University of Essex Human Rights and Law Centre and is the University of Essex Honorary Fellow 2023.

    Previously Sally was Head of Programme at Modern Art Oxford, Deputy Head of Culture for the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, Chief Curator for London Underground, Director of Media Art – Bath and Residency Programme Manager at Spike Island, Bristol. She has also established a number of independent projects and programmes including an artist residency programme in an open prison in Gloucestershire.

    Annabel Turpin – North Area Chair

    Appointed for a four year term commencing 01 December 2023.

    Annabel Turpin is Chief Executive of Storyhouse in Chester, one of the country’s largest arts centres, incorporating theatres, a cinema and the city’s library, and welcoming more than 800,000 visitors a year. She is also Co-Director of the 140-strong Future Arts Centres national network, championing the role of arts centres in driving social, economic and cultural change.

    In her previous role, as CEO and Artistic Director of ARC in Stockton on Tees, Annabel established the venue as a leading North East arts organisation with national and international influence, including for its Pay What You Decide pricing and arts freelancers’ policies. She founded Venues North, developing best practice through a network of venues supporting artists making new work, and produced and toured new theatre work nationally and internationally.

    Prior to her 15 years at ARC, she was Director of Norden Farm Centre for the Arts in Maidenhead from 2002-2008.

    She is a long-term advocate of purposeful strategic collaboration, and horizontal and vertical sector partnerships. She played a significant role in securing £20 million+ investment in local creative industries as Deputy Chair and Strategic Lead for Creative Place for the Tees Valley Combined Authority’s Business Board. She has previously held a number of board positions including North East Culture Partnership, North East Screen industries Partnership, Sunderland Culture and Tangled Feet.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    Area Chairs of Arts Council England are remunerated £6858 per year. This appointment has been made in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Sally Shaw MBE and Annabel Turpin have not declared any significant political activity.
  • Rishi Sunak – 2023 Speech at the Lord Mayor’s Banquet

    Rishi Sunak – 2023 Speech at the Lord Mayor’s Banquet

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, at the Guildhall in London on 13 November 2023.

    My Lord Mayor, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    These are deeply challenging times for our world.

    Events far beyond our shores echo here at home with implications for our security, our economy, and our very social fabric.

    It falls to us to do everything we can to shape these events.

    And so, we’ve delivered one of the most significant years for British foreign policy in recent times.

    That’s due in no small part to James Cleverly.

    I know he’ll bring the same vigour to the equally vital job of Home Secretary.

    And I’m pleased to have appointed a new Foreign Secretary who will build on everything we’ve achieved in the last year…

    A year in which we’ve gone further than ever to support Ukraine as the first G7 nation to move on sending tanks first to send long-range weapons and first to step up on training pilots.

    In the last few weeks, I’ve travelled to Cyprus, Jerusalem, Riyadh and Cairo, to respond to the crisis in the Middle East and I’m in constant contact with leaders across the region.

    Since we last gathered here a year ago, we’ve secured the Windsor Framework with the EU launched AUKUS with the US and Australia, building one of the most advanced submarines the world has ever known…

    …signed the Hiroshima Accord with Japan, and the Atlantic Declaration with the US…

    …secured membership of the CPTPP, which will drive global growth…

    …delivered returns agreements to tackle illegal migration – an approach now being followed by many others…

    …and brokered the first international statement on the risks of Artificial Intelligence – including the US and China, something many thought impossible.

    But these treaties and alliances speak to something deeper:

    Our willingness to act…

    to shape the world, not be shaped by it…

    …wherever there’s a challenge, wherever there’s a threat, wherever we can promote peace and security.

    That’s why we’ve deployed troops to Kosovo, supporting stability in the Balkans.

    20,000 servicemen and women are on their way to protect NATO’s eastern flank and the high north.

    Royal Navy vessels are in the Middle East to deter further escalation.

    And vital humanitarian aid is reaching civilians in Gaza, and across the Horn of Africa – funded by the British people.

    This is who we are.

    The difference we make, every single day, across the world, should make each and every one of us here tonight enormously proud.

    We’re hard-headed about our interests and our security.

    But Britain’s realism has always had values, and this is a moment for moral clarity.

    My Lord Mayor,

    The past is trying to stop the future being born.

    What motivated Hamas to launch their horrific attack on Israel?

    It wasn’t just hatred – it was also their fear that a new Middle East was being born…

    …one that would see Israel normalising relations with its neighbours, and which gave hope for a better, more secure, more prosperous way forward.

    Why did Russia invade Ukraine?

    Because Putin feared the emergence of a modern, reforming, thriving democracy on his doorstep – and wanted to pull it back into some imperialist fantasy of the past.

    So, we must keep alive the promise of a better future, bolster those striving for it and stand up for the innocents who Russia see as targets and Hamas see as human shields.

    I recall those lines from Yeats:

    “The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere, the ceremony of innocence is drowned… the best lack all conviction, while the worst, are full of passionate intensity.”

    That’s what our adversaries believe.

    So, we will outmatch them with our conviction and intensity.

    We must and we will prove them wrong.

    Let me set out what that means – in Ukraine, in how we help the most vulnerable around the world and in the Middle East – a region whose tragedy and heartbreak hang heavy on us all.

    In Israel, I met the families of British victims.

    I sat with them, held their hands, and saw the profound pain in their eyes.

    I heard the existential fear that Israelis are feeling.

    Their country was founded to ensure that what happened in the Holocaust could never happen again.

    Hamas poses a fundamental challenge to that idea.

    Hamas have stated clearly: “We will repeat the October 7 attack time and time again until Israel is annihilated.”

    Last week was the 85th anniversary of Kristallnacht.

    And as we see hatred rising, we all have a responsibility to meet the promise of the words that in recent days have lit up the Brandenburg Gate:

    “Never again is now.”

    So, Israel must be able to defend itself against terror, restore its security and bring the hostages home.

    But there are things that Israel must do as part of its response.

    We’ve been clear they must act within international law.

    They must take all possible measures to protect innocent civilians, including at hospitals, stop extremist violence in the West Bank and allow more aid into Gaza.

    Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian Authority, described to me the terrible suffering of the Palestinian people.

    Too many civilians are losing their lives.

    That’s why I’ve doubled our aid to Gaza and why we continue to press – both at the UN and directly with Israel – for unhindered humanitarian access and urgent and substantive humanitarian pauses.

    We want aid coming in by land, air and sea – and we’re ready to use our bases in Cyprus as a staging post.

    Alleviating the suffering is our foremost priority.

    But we need to do more – to create a new political horizon.

    We must unite around the only answer that can come close to creating peace in those troubled lands.

    The only answer that can acknowledge the history and hurt of both peoples.

    The only answer that can allow a new future to be born and that is a two-state solution.

    The UK wrote the original UN resolutions setting this out.

    We’ve argued the case for decades.

    But now we must help make it a reality.

    So, to the UK’s friends across the region, like Jordan, Egypt, UAE, and Saudi Arabia, who support normalisation and peaceful co-existence and to our communities at home…

    …I pledge to redouble efforts to this end.

    That means providing the serious, practical and enduring support needed to bolster the Palestinian Authority because they are the best route to sweep away the terrible scourge of Hamas and all it has wrought.

    As hard as it may be, no matter the obstacles, we must put the region on the path to a genuine peace.

    We’re also supporting a better future for Ukraine.

    And let me tell you this: the last year has shown that Russia cannot win.

    They tried to blockade Ukrainian shipping routes – and they failed.

    Ukraine has pushed back the Black Sea Fleet and made Crimea a vulnerability for Putin rather than a strength.

    Russia is mounting its third wave of attacks on Avdiivka – and again they continue to fail, at horrendous cost.

    Since their invasion, Russia has suffered over a quarter of a million casualties…

    Half of the territory they seized has been taken back…

    And Putin has faced a more united response than he ever imagined.

    He’s ensured defence spending is rising across Europe, led by the UK…

    He’s fast-tracked Finland into NATO, with Sweden close behind…

    And he’s seen an armed rebellion marching on Moscow.

    It’s a self-inflicted strategic calamity.

    Putin’s vain hope is that we lose patience but, friends, we never will.

    Instead, we’re providing more air defence to protect Ukraine’s cities and infrastructure, more help for the long, hard winter and we’re going further.

    In February at the Munich Security Conference, I argued Ukraine needs long-term security assurances.

    And in July, allies delivered.

    Following the NATO summit, over 30 other leaders joined us in agreeing to put assurances in place.

    Together we’ll strengthen Ukraine’s defence and boost their economy so they can thrive even while they fight to regain their territory.

    And, to do so, Ukraine needs the City of London.

    It needs all of you, it needs expertise and capital – and war risk insurance to support trade and investment and keep the ships moving.

    I know you’ll deliver.

    And so will the government – building Ukraine’s navy, training their pilots, and training their soldiers.

    We’ve now trained over 50,000 Ukrainian troops.

    President Zelenskyy and I went to meet some of them earlier this year.

    I recall sitting together on a Chinook flying to the south coast.

    Over the din of the rotors, we chatted and shared family photos.

    It was a moment of normality in an abnormal setting – and a reminder of what unites us.

    In the face of aggression, we will always protect our values and all we hold dear.

    We will stand with Ukraine until they prevail.

    Finally, to deliver a better future, we must lead not just with strength, but with compassion, helping the poorest and tackling global problems.

    So, while Russia seeks to starve the world by choking off food supplies – we’re helping Ukraine get their food to those who need it most.

    And next week we’re hosting an international conference on alleviating global hunger.

    While some load the poorest nations with unsustainable debt, the UK is driving fundamental reforms of development finance, including a capital increase for the World Bank.

    While some talk down our record on climate, we’re actually a world leader, cutting emissions faster than any other G7 country…

    …and with $2 billion recently announced for the Green Climate Fund, I’ve delivered the biggest single international climate pledge the UK has ever made.

    We’re also a leading donor to global health initiatives, helping vaccinate over a billion children, saving millions of lives.

    But we bring more to the table than funding – we also bring our expertise.

    Right now, the world’s first ever malaria vaccine is being rolled out across Africa – with the second one following soon.

    It has dramatically cut early child mortality.

    And where were both of those vaccines developed?

    Right here in the UK.

    We don’t talk about it enough, but every day Britain is out there helping the poorest and most vulnerable, saving and transforming lives.

    So, I say it again – this is who we are, and it should make us proud.

    My Lord Mayor,

    When conflicts overseas create division at home, it’s more important than ever that we preserve the values we hold dear – tolerance, free speech, the rule of law, respect for our history.

    We’ll protect all communities from violence and intimidation.

    And prevent people being drawn into radicalisation.

    In these dangerous times, we’re not just defending a better vision of the future against those who would destroy it, we’re marshalling our expertise, our people, and our alliances to bring that future into being.

    We’ll continue to stand up for what is right.

    We’ll stand with our allies and with the most vulnerable, wherever they may be.

    We’ll show that the best is full of conviction and that our values will prevail.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New counter fraud team saves taxpayers £311 million in first twelve months, beating target by more than £100 million [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New counter fraud team saves taxpayers £311 million in first twelve months, beating target by more than £100 million [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 13 November 2023.

    • The Public Sector Fraud Authority far exceeded its £180m target and saved taxpayers £311 million in its first year, according to its annual report published today
    • The savings come from counter fraud schemes designed to prevent and identify fraud across the public sector – with the Authority created by the Prime Minister when he was Chancellor in 2022
    • Baroness Neville-Rolfe hails the saving as a “fabulous result for taxpayers, which shows the government has the right plan to fight fraud as we take the long term decisions needed to change this country for the better.”

    The Public Sector Fraud Authority has saved taxpayers £311 million in its first year of operation, according to the authority’s first annual report, published today to mark the start of International Fraud Awareness Week. The savings figure compares favourably with the original target of £180 million set when the authority launched last year – meaning more money which could be spent on schools, the health service, policing and more.

    These savings were identified through several activities led by the Public Sector Fraud Authority and working with other public bodies that helped prevent, identify and recover public money lost to criminals, including:

    • National Fraud Initiative saved £170,000,000 by collaborating with more than 1000 public bodies to compare sets of records to identify discrepancies that exposed fraud
    • Covid-19 Loan Schemes Fraud Analytics Programme uses advanced tools combined with public and private sector data to identify and recoup money stolen by fraudsters during the pandemic. The annual report shows the programme delivered respective savings of:
      • £99,476,014 by using government data to identify fraud in the Bounce Back Loan Scheme
      • £40,509,531 from loans that were repaid after the government blocked companies from being removed from the Companies Register due to outstanding loans.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced the creation of the Public Sector Fraud Authority while serving as Chancellor of the Exchequer in March 2022. The authority launched just five months later in August 2022, following intensive joint working between the Cabinet Office and His Majesty’s Treasury.

    Since then, the authority’s first annual report shows it has hired more than 30 new counter fraud experts, introduced technical counter fraud training for professionals across the public sector and established a secondee programme to share expertise between private sector businesses such as EY and Deloitte and public sector bodies such as HMRC and DWP.

    The Public Sector Fraud Authority also signed a partnership with the Australian Government’s Commonwealth Fraud Prevention Centre, to share best practice and facilitate secondments between the two organisations.

    This month the authority launched a new artificial intelligence tool developed as part of a £4 million partnership with the tech unicorn Quantexa, which was signed in January 2023. The tool, known as the Single Network Analytics Platform, analyses millions of data points from across the public sector to identify patterns and connections that may indicate fraudulent activity. Companies House is the tool’s first user and it will soon be rolled out to other public sector bodies.

    Last week Baroness Neville-Rolfe chaired the authority’s first roundtable with leaders from 12 industry bodies, private businesses and law enforcement agencies, illustrating the government’s continued commitment to learn from and collaborate with experts outside government.

    Baroness Neville-Rolfe DBE CMG, Minister for the Cabinet Office, said:

    The £311 million saving is a fabulous result for taxpayers, which shows the government has the right plan to fight fraud as we take the long-term decisions needed to change this country for the better. Every pound stolen by fraudsters is one pound less spent on vital public services, such as schools or hospitals or on reducing the burden of tax.

    In the past year, we’ve transformed the government’s approach to public sector fraud. We’re training new experts across government and giving them the skills they need to prevent fraud from happening in the first place. When fraud does occur, we’ve partnered with the private sector to use the very latest technology to identify criminal networks and recover public money. It is exciting to be rolling out our new fraud busting AI tool in partnership with Quantexa.

    But there’s more work to do. Last week I sat down with industry bosses to discuss further action we can take to reduce the money lost to criminals. By forming partnerships, both within government and across the private sector, we will remain prepared for the ever-changing threat posed by fraudsters.

    Mark Cheeseman OBE, Chief Executive of the Public Sector Fraud Authority, said:

    The strength of our performance this year shows the depth of our commitment to transform the fight against criminals defrauding public money.

    Over the past twelve months we’ve stepped up the government’s use of AI in counter fraud, launched new training courses to upskill public servants, and signed partnerships with businesses to share best practice between the public and private sector.

    All this work is a sure foundation we can build on in the years ahead, as we begin to roll out more tools and programmes across the public sector.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Somerset cheesemaker, Alvis Brothers Ltd, fined £20,000 for third pollution offence [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Somerset cheesemaker, Alvis Brothers Ltd, fined £20,000 for third pollution offence [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Environment Agency on 13 November 2023.

    Somerset cheese making company, Alvis Brothers Ltd, who make Lye Cross Farm cheeses, has been ordered to pay fines and costs of over £23,700 for a third case of causing pollution from their farm, near Bristol.

    The company, of Lye Cross Farm, Redhill, Bristol, admitted a charge of causing discharge of poisonous, noxious or polluting matter and fined £20,000 and ordered to pay costs totalling £3520.20, and a victim surcharge of £190. The case was brought by the Environment Agency.

    Alvis Brothers Limited supply a number of large supermarket chains, including Waitrose, Ocado and Asda, and export to more than 40 countries.

    Bristol magistrates heard on Friday that the company had similar offences from 2013 and 2019. District Judge Matthews said that this was another case of the company failing to self-report a pollution incident to the Environment Agency because “they hope to get away with pollution incidents.” She ordered the Farm Operations Director, Nick Green, to tell the court under oath how many times they had self-reported a pollution incident, to which he replied “zero.”

    The court heard that in September 2020, following reports of white discolouration in a watercourse, Environment Agency officers went to a tributary of the Congresbury Yeo, downstream of Lye Cross Farm. The watercourse was milky both in colour and odour.

    The source of the pollution was found to have been caused by a blockage in a pipe that took wash water from their cheese production facility to their onsite treatment works which had subsequently overflowed to the watercourse. The blockage had consisted of a plastic bag containing gloves and other plastic.

    In a later interview under caution, Mr Green, on behalf of the company, admitted the offence and said the company was sorry and pointed out the measures taken after they became aware of the pollution spill to mitigate the effect on the watercourse.

    The Environment Agency maintained in court that the materials that caused the blockage were everyday items clearly inappropriately disposed of, there appeared to be no form of alarm to notify of the blockage to the drainage system or of a spill and while the pollution was clearly visible it was not reported to the Environment Agency.

    The judge said that in view of the company’s history of offending, she was not surprised that their offer to the Environment Agency of paying an Environmental Undertaking sum – an alternative penalty to a criminal conviction – was rejected.

    Following the court hearing, Senior Environment Officer, Jo Masters said:

    This is the third time Alvis Brothers Limited has been prosecuted since 2015 for polluting the watercourse. We strive to work with farmers to prevent pollution through advice and guidance, but we are clear we will take action where offending is repeated and offenders aren’t willing to change their practices to ensure environmental protection. Incidents can be reported to our incident hotline 24/7, 365 days a year on 0800 80 70 60.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Kosovo – Jonathan Hargreaves [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Kosovo – Jonathan Hargreaves [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 13 November 2023.

    Mr Jonathan Hargreaves has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Republic of Kosovo in succession to Mr Nicholas Abbott who will be transferring to another Diplomatic Service appointment.  Mr Hargreaves will take up his appointment in early 2024.

    Curriculum vitae

    Full name: Jonathan Mark Richard Hargreaves

    Married to: Kate Wilson Hargreaves

    Children: Two

    Date Role
    2020 to present FCDO, UK Special Representative for Syria
    2017 to 2020 Department for International Development (DFID), Deputy Director, Middle East and North Africa Division
    2014 to 2017 DFID, Head of Governance, Open Societies and Anti-Corruption Department
    2012 to 2014 DFID Jerusalem, Head of Office, and Head of DFID Palestinian Programme
    2008 to 2012 DFID Kenya/Somalia, Deputy Head, and Somalia Programme Manager
    2006 to 2008 UK Stabilisation Unit, Team Leader/Senior Adviser
    2005 to 2006 DFID, Top Management Group, Adviser, White Paper Team
    2002 to 2005 DFID, Governance Adviser, Great Lakes and Horn of Africa
    2000 to 2002 DFID, Governance Adviser, Central and South Eastern Europe
    1997 to 2000 KPMG, Consultant, Public Services Consulting
    1996 to 1997 Dansk Energi Management, Belgium, Consultant
    1994 to 1996 Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lithuania, Adviser
    1993 to 1994 United Nations Development Programme Lithuania, Programme Officer
    1991 to 1993 European Commission, Brussels, Desk Officer

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : Violent robbers ordered to serve longer in prison [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Violent robbers ordered to serve longer in prison [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General’s Office on 13 November 2023.

    Three men with a history of violence who robbed a man in a Bristol takeaway have their prison sentences increased after the Solicitor General intervened.

    Jack Walker, of Yate, Abdifatah Sharif, of Easton, and Billy Madden, of Hartcliffe, saw their sentences increase after the Solicitor General referred their sentences to the Court of Appeal as being unduly lenient.

    The court heard that on 18 February 2023, the three men entered a takeaway on Stockton Croft with their faces hidden. The trio approached a man demanding the keys to his car before violently attacking him.

    They repeatedly punched the victim in the face and head before Jack Walker threatened him with a large machete. The men left the takeaway with the victim’s bag, which contained £3,000, €400, his passport, a silver ring, and a pair of sunglasses.

    Thirty minutes later, Walker targeted a second victim, who was riding an electric scooter.  Walker punched the victim in the face and threatened to stab him before taking the victim’s bag and scooter worth £600.

    The Solicitor General, Michael Tomlinson KC MP, said:

    The level of violence and brutality used by these men in this case was particularly heinous.

    The courts have quite rightfully increased their sentences and I hope it send a clear message that we will pursue violent offenders through the court to protect the public from harm.

    Walker, Sharif and Madden were sentenced on 18 August 2023 at Bristol Crown Court after pleading guilty

    Walker was sentenced to 20-month’s imprisonment for two counts of robbery and one count of possessing a bladed article. Sharif was sentenced to 26 months’ imprisonment for one robbery offences and possession of class A drugs. Madden was sentenced to 24 months’ imprisonment for one offence of robbery.

    On Friday 10 November, the Court of Appeal increased Walker’s sentence to five years imprisonment, Sharif’s to three years and four months imprisonment and Madden’s to two years and 10 months imprisonment.

    The trio’s sentences were referred under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme.

  • Therese Coffey – 2023 Letter of Resignation sent to Rishi Sunak

    Therese Coffey – 2023 Letter of Resignation sent to Rishi Sunak

    The letter of resignation sent by Therese Coffey to Rishi Sunak on 13 November 2023.

    Resignation Letter (in .pdf format)

  • PRESS RELEASE : Brothers who recruited vulnerable youngsters to supply crack and heroin as part of a £100K County Line Operation have their sentence increased [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Brothers who recruited vulnerable youngsters to supply crack and heroin as part of a £100K County Line Operation have their sentence increased [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Attorney General’s Office on 13 November 2023.

    Two brothers who recruited vulnerable young people to supply crack cocaine and heroin worth more than £100,000 in Shropshire have been ordered to serve longer in prison after their sentence was strengthened by the Court of Appeal.

    James Mason, 33 and his brother Joshua, 25 from Liverpool were part of an organised crime gang which operated the County Line, called the Boris Line from between Merseyside and Oswestry, a market town in Shropshire, between July 2018 and February 2020.

    County Lines typically involves using vulnerable children and young adults to supply drugs as a form of forced or compulsory labour. Nine young people were recruited as runners to supply crack and heroin for the gang – one was just 14 – and many were known to Children’s Services.

    The Boris Line was controlled by their associate – Adam McCardle – but both brothers took an active role travelling between the two locations to supply drugs and sending regular messages to hundreds of drug users in Oswestry offering their products.

    When the home of James Mason was raided in July 2019, Police found large quantities of heroin and crack cocaine as well as drug paraphernalia and £10,000 in cash. They also found a black Samsung phone, which, turned out to be the Boris Line telephone.

    Both brothers pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of crack cocaine and heroin but were put on trial for conspiracy to require a person to commit forced or compulsory labour.

    In August this year, James Mason was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment and Joshua was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment.

    On Thursday 9 November, the Court of Appeal increased the sentence for both brothers after the Solicitor General referred them under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme.

    Solicitor General Michael Tomlinson KC MP said:

    There is no doubt that class A drug use has a devastating impact on local communities and the young age of some of the people recruited to act as runners for this gang makes this case even more appalling.

    Thankfully, the court recognised the damage caused by these brothers and they have been ordered to spend longer in jail. I hope this case serves as a strong warning that those responsible for distributing hard drugs on our streets will be punished.

    James Mason’s sentence was increased to a total of 10 years imprisonment and Josh Mason’s sentence was increased to a total of eight years imprisonment.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New undersea capability to strengthen AUKUS partnership [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New undersea capability to strengthen AUKUS partnership [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 13 November 2023.

    As part of the AUKUS partnership, a joint exercise took place testing new capability, ADV Guidance, that will increase protection of underwater infrastructure.

    • New technology successfully trialled by Australian, UK and US maritime forces.
    • New Australian Undersea Support Vessel in service.
    • Trial marks a positive step forward for AUKUS delivery, and a promising development in UK’s autonomous maritime capabilities

    The UK, US and Australia have strengthened their maritime forces, introducing new uncrewed undersea vessels to extend the range and lethality of their warfare capabilities.

    As part of the AUKUS partnership, the nations have taken part in a joint exercise off the east coast of Australia to test new equipment that will increase the protection of critical underwater infrastructure. During the exercise, Australia’s new Undersea Support Vessel, ADV Guidance, hosted a range of undersea capabilities while they were tested and trialled at sea.

    A recent addition to the Australian fleet, the ADV Guidance’s primary role is to support undersea and surveillance systems trials and includes the ability to host a small team of sailors as well as on-board and off-board systems, with both crewed and uncrewed capability. Earlier this month, Lieutenant General Rob Magowan, the UK’s Deputy Chief of Defence Staff for Military Capability, joined international representatives to witness the showcase of a range of advanced undersea capabilities deployed from ADV Guidance.

    The UK’s Offshore Patrol Vessel HMS Tamar, which is on a 5-year deployment to the Indo-Pacific, also played a key role in the exercise. HMS TAMAR used a combination of divers and autonomous underwater vehicles to conduct mine countermeasure operations, and monitor critical infrastructure, including pipelines and communication cables.

    Last week, First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Ben Key visited Australia to address the Australian Sea Power Conference, discussing the UK’s commitment to the collective security of the region.

    First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Ben Key said:

    The recent AUKUS trials and exercise demonstrate the advances being made possible by our tri-lateral collaboration under the partnership. It is hugely exciting to see the strength of our three nations, coming together through the AUKUS partnership to successfully develop and demonstrate a range of underwater capabilities that are crucial to ensuring safety and security in the region and more broadly.

    AUKUS is a landmark security and defence partnership between Australia, the UK, and the US to support a free and open Indo-Pacific by strengthening regional global security. This exercise is a significant step forward for delivery of the undersea warfare capabilities work stream under the second pillar of AUKUS.

    AUKUS Pillar 2 seeks to strengthen trilateral capabilities in cutting-edge military technologies, increase interoperability, and drive knowledge-sharing and innovation. AUKUS partners are developing a suite of advanced capabilities including autonomous systems, artificial intelligence, and other key technologies for the three AUKUS nations. Pillar 2 complements trilateral efforts under AUKUS Pillar 1 to deliver a conventionally-armed nuclear-powered submarine capability to Australia.

    Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Mark Hammond AO, Royal Australian Navy, said:

    Submarines are critical to the defence of Australia. Our submarines, and other military assets, will increasingly work with autonomous systems below and on the surface of the ocean to extend range and lethality.

    AUKUS Pillar Two is about delivering advanced capabilities, including through technologies that extend reach and range.

    As we have seen in the Ukraine conflict, scalable autonomous and semi-autonomous systems have the capacity to transform warfighting. The Defence Strategic Review (DSR) identified asymmetric capabilities like these as critical in the defence and protection of the nation.

    These technologies originate from a range of industries, like the off-shore oil and gas and communications industries. They have been modified to carry a military payload to become force multipliers, working in concert with our ships, submarines and aircraft, and to serve as a key deterrent.

    What we get by working with industry in this way is speed, what we get by doing it together under the AUKUS partnership is scale, where the sum of the whole is greater than its parts.

     Admiral Samuel Paparo, U.S. Navy said:

    These exercises accelerate our combined development of advanced military capabilities. In a dynamic strategic environment and the escalation of competitors’ coercive activities, AUKUS is not just about the exchange of submarines and capabilities, it is an expansion of our continued trust in and commitment to our allies.

    We are prioritizing capabilities that improve our warfighter’s ability to see, understand, decide and act – then work together to bolster integrated deterrence.

    Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States are developing and fielding joint advanced military capabilities to promote security and stability in the Indo-Pacific region. The strategic alignment of our national defense strategies anchored by shared values is driving unprecedented collaboration in advanced technologies.

    Our trilateral exercises develop and deliver interoperable, threat-informed capabilities key to the warfighter, and contribute to sustained defense industrial-based collaboration. Meanwhile, the AUKUS partners are investing in trilateral projects that are enhancing our scientific and technological capacity to build enduring advantages for the future.

    Earlier this month, the Australian Deputy Prime Minister joined the UK Defence Secretary Grant Shapps on a visit to Rolls Royce in Derby – the location where the nuclear reactors will be built for the SSN-AUKUS submarines under the AUKUS collaboration.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Djibouti [November 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 44th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Djibouti [November 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 13 November 2023.

    Simon Manley, the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, delivered a statement during Djibouti’s Universal Periodic Review at the Human Rights Council.

    Thank you, Mr President,

    Bienvenu à Genève M. Ali Hassan Bahdon, Ministre de la Justice. We welcome Djibouti’s collaboration with her partners to combat human trafficking and Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) and champion girls’ education.

    Further action is, however, needed and we recommend that Djibouti:

    1. Works collaboratively and transparently on combatting trafficking, with clear data and milestones in place to assess progress ahead of the next UPR.
    2. Takes all necessary steps to implement proposed FGM legislation, with a roadmap that outlines regional cooperation, consulting religious leaders as well as political leaders.
    3. Ensures that school-based counselling programmes are provided for pregnant girls and adolescent mothers, with peer review and evaluation mechanisms in place.