Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : Library book loan payment scheme updated to benefit authors [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Library book loan payment scheme updated to benefit authors [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 10 October 2023.

    Library book loan payment scheme updated to benefit authors enabling authors to earn up to £6,600 from loans of their books from libraries.

    • Scheme enables authors to earn up to £6,600 from loans of their books from libraries
    • Payments to authors for library loans to be made fairer through use of improved data
    • Estates of deceased authors will be able to receive payments for their work more easily

    More authors are set to benefit from improvements to the Scheme that pays them when their books are loaned from public libraries in the UK.

    The Public Lending Right (PLR) Scheme provides authors with an income of up to £6,600 a year from loans of their books from public libraries in the UK and pays out more than £6 million annually. The rate paid to authors for each loan is calculated by dividing the total money available by the estimated total annual number of loans in public libraries.

    The PLR Scheme currently specifies that the number of loans is to be determined by means of a sample, with data from 30 councils used to assist payment calculations. These new changes will see the British Library move towards collecting comprehensive loans data from all library authorities in the UK to ensure authors are getting their fair share.

    This means that the more of their books are loaned out by public libraries, the more income an author will receive through the Scheme.

    According to the latest public statistics, Richard Osman’s novel The Thursday Murder Club was the most borrowed book from libraries in 2021/22 while authors including Roald Dahl, Daisy Meadows and Lee Child were among the top ten most popular.

    The Scheme will also be changed to simplify the process for those who have inherited rights to a book from a deceased author, removing unnecessary, bureaucratic processes like the requirement to involve legal professionals.

    Arts & Heritage Minister Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay said:

    Libraries are an invaluable resource for people of all ages and backgrounds across the country, opening up access to a wealth of enlightenment and enjoyment.

    It is only right that authors receive fair payment when their work is loaned from libraries. These changes to the scheme will ensure that it is working as fairly and effectively as possible.

    Phil Spence OBE, Chief Operating Officer of the British Library, said:

    We welcome these changes to the Public Lending Right Scheme – this allows for more information to be gathered on loans data, which will enable us to better serve the authors and creators whose works are loaned from public libraries, and the readers that borrow from them too.

    The British Library receives funding from DCMS to run the Public Lending Right Scheme. Payments are made annually to eligible authors who register their work. Authors residing in the UK or European Economic Area are eligible to apply.

    Changes to the Public Lending Right Scheme, which was established in 1982, will come into force on 31 October 2023.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The NHS will go bankrupt if it doesn’t reform, warns Labour [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The NHS will go bankrupt if it doesn’t reform, warns Labour [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Labour Party on 11 October 2023.

    The NHS faces bankruptcy unless it is reformed, Wes Streeting will warn today.

    The Shadow Health Secretary will argue that fundamental reform of the health service is needed if it is to survive another 75 years. He will say that reform will play a bigger part than investment in rebuilding the NHS. Labour plans for reform will secure the future and sustainability of the NHS, providing better service for patients and better value for taxpayers.

    The IFS estimates that half of all public sector workers are set to be employed by the NHS by 2036. The proportion of total departmental spending going on health is 42% this year and is forecast to rise.

    Shadow Health Secretary, Wes Streeting will say:

    “Be in no doubt about the scale of the challenge. In the longer term, the challenge of rising chronic disease, combined with our ageing society, threatens to bankrupt the NHS. 

    “Pouring ever-increasing amounts of money into a system that isn’t working is wasteful in every sense.

    “A waste of money we don’t have. A waste of time that is running out. A waste of potential, because the NHS has so much going for it.”

    Pledging that Labour’s reform agenda will provide a better service for patients while securing better value for taxpayers’ money, Streeting will promise to “turn the NHS on its head”:

    “When I look at leading health systems across the world, the fundamental problem with the NHS becomes obvious: we have an NHS that gets to people too late. 

    “Labour’s reform agenda will turn the NHS on its head. From a service focused on hospitals to one providing more care in the community, analogue to digital, sickness to prevention.

    “A neighbourhood health service as much as a National Health Service, pioneering cutting edge treatment and technology, preventing ill-health, not just treating it. Better for patients, less expensive for taxpayers.

    “Achieving our mission will take time, investment, and reform. Reform is even more important than investment.”

    He will also set out Labour’s plans to tackle the immediate waiting lists crisis facing the NHS. Today, 7.7 million patients are waiting for treatment, 390,000 of whom have been waiting for more than a year. 1.6 million patients are waiting for tests and scans, with the 6 week waiting times target not hit since 2017. Labour has pledged to:

    • Provide 2 million more operations, scans, and appointments a year on evenings and weekends, with £1.1 billion paid to staff in overtime
    • Double the number of NHS scanners, buying AI-scanners which work 35% faster, to diagnose patients earlier
    • Deliver 700,000 urgent dentistry appointments, recruit more dentist to areas most in need, introduce supervised toothbrushing for 3-5 year-olds, and reform of the NHS dental contract.

    The plans will cost £1.6 billion in total and be paid for by abolishing the non-dom tax status, which allows people living and working in Britain to pay their taxes overseas.

    On Labour’s plan to cut waiting lists, Streeting will say:

    “A Labour government will take immediate action to cut waiting lists.

    “We’ll provide an extra £1.1bn to help the NHS beat the backlog, with extra clinics at evenings and weekends – providing two million more appointments each year.

    “Faster treatment for patients. Extra pay for staff. The first step to cut waiting lists and beat the Tory backlog.

    “Paid for by abolishing the non-dom tax status, because patients need treatment more than the wealthiest need a tax break.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Labour to unveil “real world” primary maths teaching to encourage stronger lifelong numeracy [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Labour to unveil “real world” primary maths teaching to encourage stronger lifelong numeracy [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Labour Party on 11 October 2023.

    Labour’s Shadow Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson will today unveil a landmark new plan to encourage stronger lifelong numeracy by boosting early intervention and “real world” maths teaching at primary school and a new expert-led review to as part of its plan to drive “high and rising standards in education”.

    Phillipson will set out Labour’s plan, which will set children up with basic, practical maths skills to help them achieve at secondary school, at work and throughout life to the party’s conference on Wednesday.

    Labour’s maths plan will centre on upskilling primary school teachers who are not maths teachers with the right skills and knowledge to deliver high class maths teaching through the Teacher Training Entitlement, paid for through Labour’s plans to end private schools’ tax breaks.

    Labour said it would also task its Curriculum Review with bringing maths to life and directing teachers to show children how numeracy is used in the world around them, such as through household budgeting, currency exchange rates when going on holiday, sports league tables and cookery recipes.

    The party said this would include bringing elements of financial literacy into maths teaching, such as using the concept of Individual Savings Accounts to teach about percentages.

    Labour’s focus will be on driving improvements at primary level, so they will reform Rishi Sunak’s Maths to 18 working group, so it focuses on primary maths as a first priority and investigates the maths equivalent to phonics.

    Labour will also work with nurseries to develop trained ‘Maths Champions’ who can support early learning in childcare settings, ensuring children are set up for school. Independent evaluations show ‘Maths Champions’ can boost learning with three months’ extra progress.

    The party said its plan would aim to tackle the growing gaps in early maths attainment that lead to falling engagement and to children falling further behind as they grow up. The party cited evidence showing that that one in four children was already behind expected levels by age five.

    Labour pointed to the achievements of the work started by the last Labour government on phonics, laying the basis for a policy which has improved the reading ability of children throughout their time at school, as a template for its plans for primary maths.

    Phillipson’s intervention would also seek to target deep-rooted problems with childhood numeracy that persist into adulthood, such as the inability to analyse basic graphs and calculate the value of supermarket offers.

    An OECD estimate from 2016 found that nine million working-age adults in England have low basic literacy or numeracy skills with five million having low skills in both areas, while the lack of basic numeracy skills costs the economy £25bn a year.

    Bridget Phillipson MP, Labour’s Shadow Education Secretary, is expected to say:

    “In every part of our system, in every year of children’s lives, in every corner of our country, we will be the party of high and rising standards.

    “Maths is the language of the universe, the underpinning of our collective understanding. It cannot be left till the last years of school.

    “It’s why I’m proud to tell you today, that we’ll tackle our chronic cultural problem with maths, by making sure it’s better taught at six, never mind sixteen.

    “I am determined that Labour will bring maths to life for the next generation. I want the numeracy all our young people need – for life and for work, to earn and to spend, to understand and to challenge. I want that to be part of their learning right from the start.

  • Yvette Cooper – 2023 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Yvette Cooper – 2023 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Yvette Cooper, the Shadow Home Secretary, in Liverpool on 10 October 2023.

    Conference, every one of us in this hall will have stories from friends, families or neighbours about the violence and abuse that too many women face.

    My great, great grandmother was attacked by her husband.

    First when she was pregnant. The report says he struck and kicked her so she could not sit or lie in bed.

    Then he attacked her with a poker. In front of her daughter.

    The case went to court. The magistrates bound him over to keep the peace.

    But you know the most shocking thing about that story?

    That is more protection from the police and courts than many domestic abuse victims get today.

    And it was over 100 years ago.

    Conference we cannot stand by and let our daughters face the same abuse as our grandmothers. This has to change.

    With us this morning is Nour Norris.

    Her niece Raneem Oudeh – faced abuse, stalking, threats to kill from her ex-partner.

    Repeatedly she asked the police for help.

    But nothing was done. On the night Raneem and her mother Khaola were murdered they called 999 four times. But no one came.

    I am determined no woman should ever be ignored and abandoned in this devastating way.

    You know we’ve talked about change for years, but I am sick and tired of women who face abuse and violence being failed – generation after generation.

    Sick and tired of the most serious perpetrators getting away with it.

    Sick and tired of women still feeling worried on the streets, saying to friends “text me when you get home”.

    When the first women’s safety march in Leeds was nearly 50 years ago.

    Enough is enough, we will not stand for this any more.

    So Conference, the next Labour Government will put rape investigation units in every force, domestic abuse experts in every 999 call centre.

    We will require police forces to use tactics normally reserved for organised crime or terrorist investigations.

    To identify and go after the most dangerous repeat abusers and rapists and get them off our streets.

    Know this. If you abuse and hurt women, under a Labour Government the police will be after you, because everyone has the right to live in freedom from fear.

    And who better to lead the fight against crime than someone who spent years pursuing criminals and terrorists and standing up for victims – the person we pledge to make the next Labour Prime Minister, Keir Starmer.

    From Labour, this week, you get serious plans to change our country.

    From the Tories, last week, what were they on?

    And the chaos just gets worse.

    We’ve had five Tory Prime Ministers in seven years – and seven Tory Home Secretaries.

    Suella Braverman is literally the only person who could make you want to bring back Priti Patel.

    A Home Secretary more interested in going after Elton John than going after criminals.

    I mean seriously? Well I guess that’s why they call them the Blues.

    Labour believes security is the first duty of any Government.

    Security is the bedrock of opportunity.

    Families don’t thrive if they don’t feel safe.

    Security means knowing someone will be there for you if things go wrong, that laws will be respected and enforced.

    And it means strong communities – where people pull together instead of turning on each other.

    Because when communities fracture, antisocial behaviour grows and organized crime and extremists step in.

    But instead of standing up for security, the Tories have done the opposite.

    That feeling we have that nothing works and everything is broken.

    A brittle Britain, where we face the future with foreboding.

    They have taken a wrecking ball to the criminal justice system, so 90% of crimes now go unsolved.

    More criminals let off. More victims let down.

    Criminals today are less than half as likely to be caught as they were under the last Labour Government.

    That is the scale of the collapse in law and order under this Tory Government.

    Criminals laugh at the law, communities pay the price.

    Conference this isn’t an accident.

    It is the result of deliberate Tory choice.

    A choice to cut police from our streets, a choice to undermine respect for the law and for standards in public life, a choice to chase headlines not solutions, and a shameful choice to ramp up the rhetoric and pit people against each other rather than bringing communities together.

    Weak on crime, weak on its causes, weakening our security.

    A reckless Tory Home Secretary. A hopeless Tory Government. They need to go.

    Labour’s task in Government will be to restore respect and rebuild our security – for our nation: at our borders, on our streets, and in our homes.

    That starts with defending our national security.

    Labour will work tirelessly with our intelligence and security agencies to defend our country from fast changing threats be they from terrorists, organised criminals or other states who seek to do us harm.

    And Conference, we have seen the devastating and barbaric terrorist attacks in Israel this week.

    As David Lammy has said “terrorism can never, never be justified”.

    And let us be clear.

    Here in the UK, we will work with the police, with the Community Security Trust, with the Government because there is no place in Britain for the promotion of proscribed terror groups like Hamas.

    There is no place in Britain for antisemitic hate.

    Conference, delivering security for our communities also means securing our borders.

    We want to see strong border security and a properly controlled and managed asylum system so the UK does our bit to help those fleeing persecution and conflict while those who are not refugees are swiftly returned.

    That is what Labour believes in.

    Under the Tories we have none of that.

    Criminal gangs are making a mockery of our border security and the asylum system is in total chaos.

    The taxpayer spending an astronomical £8m a day on hotels.

    Returns of failed asylum seekers down by 70%.

    And £140million cheques already sent to Rwanda – even though they’ve sent more Home Secretaries there than asylum seekers.

    Time and again all the Tories offer is gimmicks and no grip.

    Labour will deploy hundreds more police and investigators to go after the smuggler and trafficking gangs who undermine our border security and put lives at risk.

    And to pursue their supply chains. To stop the boats before they reach the French coast.

    And we will clear the backlog, end the use of asylum hotels, save the taxpayer £2 billion and fix this Tory chaos.

    But Conference, we’ve seen a Tory Home Secretary target and blame LGBT+ refugees to distract from her mess.

    This is less than 2% of UK asylum applications, at a time when Uganda and other countries threaten gay people with the death penalty.

    That is shameful and it demeans her office.

    Labour will never scapegoat people because of who they are and who they love.

    And conference, we will rebuild security here on our streets.

    Our town centres should be the beating heart of our communities.

    But instead, we’ve got local shops chaining fabric conditioner to the shelves, putting security tags on packs of cheese and butter to fend off organised gang raids.

    An epidemic of shoplifting and violence against shop workers.

    A law brought in by the Tories means shop thefts under £200 aren’t investigated even if the same gang comes back time and again.

    So Conference, we will end the £200 rule to tackle the shoplifting gangs.

    Bring in Respect Orders to ban repeat offenders from town centres.

    And we’ll restore neighbourhood policing – 13,000 more neighbourhood police and PCSOs back on our streets.

    Guaranteed patrols in the heart of our towns.

    And conference we will stand with USDAW, the Co-op, Tesco, small convenience stores with a new law and tougher sentences for attacks on our shopworkers.

    Everyone has the right to feel safe at work.

    And Conference it falls to us to rebuild confidence in British policing.

    Turning around the collapse in prosecutions, recruiting detectives so that more complex crimes, like fraud, are solved, reforming policing with new powers for the inspectorate if police forces fail, with firm action to tackle racism, and new vetting and misconduct rules to keep standards high.

    If officers shame their uniform or abuse their position, they will be quickly out.

    But for the tens of thousands of officers who strain every sinew, to keep the rest of us safe, we will back you.

    And we will be proud to introduce a bravery medal for police officers, firefighters and emergency service workers who lose their lives in the line of duty.

    We owe them our thanks for keeping us safe.

    Conference, more than anything else, we need to keep our children safe.

    Last year Keir and I met with a grieving mum in Hartlepool who showed us the video she kept on her phone of her cradling her teenage son in his hospital bed, singing to him as he lay dying from a knife wound.

    It was one of the hardest things I have done in this job.

    Families who feel like they have lost their future.

    But who are calling for us to help them save other children’s lives.

    Knife crime has gone up by 70% in eight years – some of the steepest increases in towns and suburbs.

    Yet far too little is done, and a generation is being failed.

    We must not fail them any more.

    Too often when teenagers say they don’t feel safe, no one listens.

    Too often when they start to struggle with mental health, or go off the rails. Or are groomed by criminal gangs, nothing is done.

    Tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime.

    We said it, we mean it, that means we have to act.

    So Labour will bring in new laws to crack down on dangerous knife sales and to stop gangs exploiting children.

    But we also need to step in early.

    25 years ago, I was one of the Labour Ministers responsible for Sure Start.

    Bringing communities and services together to help families with the very youngest children.

    Conference I am determined that the next Labour Government will do the same for our teenagers.

    That’s why I am announcing today a new ten-year programme bringing together services and communities to support for young people.

    New youth hubs, with both mental health workers and youth workers, to tackle the crisis in youth mental health, to give teenagers the best start in life, to stop the knife crime that is killing our children.

    Imagine it – communities coming together with that same awesome capacity to transform lives.

    We did it in Government before. That’s what Labour in Government can do again.

    Conference this is Labour’s mission.

    To halve serious violence, to put police back on the beat, to restore respect for the rule of law, to keep our children safe.

    Labour, the true party of law and order. Giving our children their future back. Giving our country its future back.

    That is what the next Labour Government will do.

    Thank you.

  • Keir Starmer – 2023 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Keir Starmer – 2023 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, in Liverpool on 10 October 2023.

    Now, before I get going – I know what you’re thinking: please, please, please – no more Arsenal jokes.

    But conference – I do want to offer my sympathies to Manchester… Not because of that but because I really do feel for any city that had to host that circus last week.

    Honestly – what can you say about a Prime Minister who goes to Manchester to cancel Manchester’s trainline?

    The self-declared champion of motorists, who had to borrow a shopworker’s car for his photo op. A man who keeps a close watch on the cost-of-living crisis – from the vantage point of his short-haul helicopter.

    Conference, I never thought I’d say this but I’m beginning to see why Liz Truss won. Although I still think we’d be better off with that lettuce.

    After all, it’s been thirteen years now and what does Britain have to show for it?

    Where is their minimum wage?

    Where’s their Sure Start?

    Crime down by a third.

    More students than ever.

    Devolution.

    The shortest NHS waiting times in history.

    Half a million out of child poverty.

    Peace in Northern Ireland.

    I’m not going to do the whole list. I haven’t got time. But isn’t the contrast stark?

    Thirteen years of ‘things can only get better’ versus thirteen years of ‘things have only got worse’.

    Conference – this is what we have to fight: the Tory project to kick the hope out of this country. Drain the reservoirs of our belief. That’s why I started with our achievements. I wanted to remind everyone there was a time – and it wasn’t that long ago – when questions such as “is Britain destined for decline?” would have felt ridiculous even to ask.

    I have to warn you: our way back from this will be hard. But know this. What is broken can be repaired. What is ruined can be rebuilt. Wounds do heal. And ultimately that project – their project – will crash against the spirit of working people in this country. They are the source of my hope.

    Because there are two stories of the past thirteen years. A Westminster of chaos and crisis. Five Prime Ministers in seven years. And then the other side a Britain where working people never let each other down.

    In fact, whenever they were asked, they dug deep for this country. Came together for this country. That’s the cruellest cost of these thirteen years of decline. That a government this weak can winnow the confidence of a proud nation. Undermine our foundations with the gnawing rot of despair. A sense that government cannot achieve great things. That Britain cannot achieve great things.

    But I believe in this country. I believe in its spirit. In its people, in its businesses, in its communities. I don’t just see the sewage in our streams and our seas. I see the volunteers – people who love their community – standing up to fight for clean water.

    I don’t just see the crumbling concrete in our schools. I see the teachers, in the temporary classrooms, still giving our children the education they deserve.

    I don’t just see the boards going up in our high streets. I see the businesses – the pubs, the cafes, the retailers still trading. Still finding a way through the chaos. Still serving their community.

    That’s the real Britain, conference. Millions of people who’ve looked at the Tory circus and said: ‘fine, we will get on with it ourselves.’ I say – let’s stand with them. Give them a government they deserve. Turn our backs on never-ending Tory decline, with a decade of national renewal.

    Do not doubt that the fire of change still burns in Britain. The question is whether it lives on inside Labour. Today we show it does.

    Today we turn the page. Answer the question “Why Labour?” with a plan for a Britain built to last.

    With higher growth.

    Safer streets.

    Cheap British power in your home.

    More opportunities in your community.

    The NHS – off its knees.

    A Britain with its future back.

    It will require an entirely new approach to politics – Mission Government. New priorities. Totally focused on the interests of working people.

    Five national missions all fixed on a single-minded purpose to govern for the long-term. End the Tory disease of “sticking plaster politics” with a simple Labour philosophy that together we fix tomorrow’s challenges, today.

    And conference, this new path can only be walked by a new party. A changed Labour Party. No longer in thrall to gesture politics. No longer a party of protest. A party of service.

    Rebuilt. Renewed. Reconnected to an old partnership. A bargain. That we serve working people as they drive our country forward.

    That’s why we had to move so fast. Why we had to fight so hard to change this party. The bond of respect that comes from service is precious. National renewal depends on it.

    That’s why we stood with NATO – an historic achievement of this party. Held out our hand to business. Ripped antisemitism out by the roots. Backed Ukraine.

    Country First, Party Second.

    Conference, I am shocked and appalled by events in Israel.

    I utterly condemn the senseless murder of men, women and children – including British citizens – in cold blood by the terrorists of Hamas.

    This party believes in the two state solution. A Palestinian state alongside a safe and secure Israel. But this action by Hamas does nothing for Palestinians. And Israel must always have the right to defend her people.

    And conference, these events, the war in Ukraine, they show precisely the test of our era. The world is becoming a more volatile place.

    Revolutions in energy, science, technology are reshaping the global economy. The race is on for the new jobs, new industries, new supply chains that will emerge.

    Climate change is a recipe for instability – we’ve seen that on our TVs all summer.

    Terrorism. The movement of people. Criminal gangs who exploit their vulnerability. They’re all challenges we must confront. And through all this, because of all this democratic rules, democratic values, democratic certainties are under attack.

    A new “age of insecurity”. With fault-lines that run right through the living standards of working people. But look, as we’ve seen throughout our history, where there is change, there is also possibility.

    Possibility in industry – in winning the race for the jobs of the future.

    Possibility in technology – innovations like gene editing that will save countless lives.

    Possibility in four nations – standing together, no longer distracted or divided.

    And possibility in working people in the parts of our country ignored, passed over, disregarded as sources of growth and dynamism but with the potential ready to be unlocked.

    It boils down to this: can we look the challenges of this age squarely in the eye and amidst all the change and insecurity find the hunger to win new opportunities and the strength to conserve what is precious.

    Because conference, I tell you, that is what Britain needs and that is what we must become.

    People are looking to us because they want our wounds to heal. And we are the healers.

    People are looking to us because these challenges require a modern state. And we are the modernisers.

    People are looking to us because they want to build a new Britain. And we are the builders.

    But they also look out at the chaos – in the world and at Westminster – and want to know can we find that elusive path to an economy that serves their community?

    Can we deliver the rock of stability they need to move forward in their lives? Shelter from the storm and a passage to calmer waters.

    Because conference, we should never forget that politics should tread lightly on peoples’ lives. That our job is to shoulder the burden for working people, carry the load, not add to it.

    This year, I went on holiday with my family to the Lake District. And we were sitting in a pub near Windermere. I was eating fish and chips. Vic had the plant burger.

    Anyway, we were sitting there. It was calm, it was beautiful. The Lake District never lets you down. I went there every year as a child with my Mum. Even though she struggled so much to walk she loved the Lakes so it was so special to share it with my kids. If you can believe it, it was sunny. Yes, this summer.

    But the reason I remember it, the privilege of it, is because on my first day back from holiday I was in a café, in Worthing, in Sussex.

    Talking to people. And what one woman said, really stuck in my mind. She was a single Mum, two kids. And she said to me:

    “It’s survival mode. I can’t think ‘oh let’s do something nice’. There’s no long-term planning. No thinking about the future.”

    I could see the hurt in her eyes as she told me. That’s what this cost-of-living crisis does. It intrudes on the little things we love. Whittles away at our joy.

    Days out, meals out, holidays the first things people cut back on. Picking up a treat in the supermarket just to put it back on the shelf.

    Conference, we have to be a government that takes care of the big questions so working people have the freedom to enjoy what they love. More time, more energy, more possibility, more life.

    It could be football. Could be fishing. Or just quiet time with your family.

    But we all need that, conference. We all need the ability to look forward – to move forward – free from anxiety. That’s what getting our future back really means.

    But look – here’s what we can’t do. We can’t take advantage.

    Because it’s exactly in moments like this, when people want change, need change, cry out for change that the hope of the easy answer can prosper. And conference – we cannot be about that.

    Changing a country is not like ticking a box. It’s not the click of a mouse. Long-term solutions are not “oven-ready”.

    If you think our job in 1997 was to rebuild a crumbling public realm. That in 1964 it was to modernise an economy left behind by the pace of technology. In 1945 to build a new Britain out of the trauma of collective sacrifice. Then in 2024 it will have to be all three.

    And at a time when our politics feels broken, when our public services are broken, our public finances wrecked, a Tory mortgage bombshell that has blown up the finances of millions.

    Nurses, teaching assistants, builders, drivers, shop-workers, carers. People who never before missed a payment in their life. Working harder than ever for the wage in their pocket. And who now find themselves walking a little more slowly past the food bank in their town.

    The age of insecurity loaded onto the backs of working people. But there’s no magic wand here. A decade of national renewal. That’s what it will take.

    We will need ambition, determination, patience – absolutely.

    But also bravery. Because it’s brave to reject the hope of the easy answer. Courageous to choose instead the hope of the hard road.

    But if we give Britain the certain destination. If we walk step by step with working people. Bulldoze through the barriers in their way. Lay secure foundations at their feet. Mission Government our guide. Then yes, we can get our future back.

    So let’s set the course.
    Let’s get Britain building again.

    Take back our streets.

    Switch on Great British Energy.

    Tear down the barriers to opportunity.

    Get our NHS back on its feet.

    And today – another step along that road. An answer to the outrage that is seven and a half million people waiting, waiting, waiting for treatment in our NHS.

    People like Hamza Semakula. A semi-pro footballer, plays for Hendon in the Southern League. Last year he tore his knee ligaments badly. Left with the choice of paying £15,000 to go private or abandoning his career, his love, his joy. Now, Hamza actually crowd-funded his operation in the end. The British people dug deep and got him back on the pitch and he’s back in the goals as well. He’s already scored in the FA Cup this season.

    But honestly, how has it come to this? Working people paying for their own healthcare – in a cost-of-living crisis. Pensioners waiting weeks, months, sometimes waiting years just to get the care that they need.

    No – the whole point of our NHS is to be the crowd-funded solution for all of us. That’s the fundamental principle and at the next election it’s on the line. The Conservative Party that brought our NHS to its knees, will put it in the ground. We have got to get it back on its feet.

    The non-dom tax status is a legal loophole that allows some of the richest people in the world to avoid paying tax in Britain. That’s money we could invest in our NHS – that’s always been our priority. And right now, the biggest challenge is cutting waiting lists.

    So we will invest that money in boosting capacity. We will get the NHS working round the clock. And we will pay staff properly to do it.

    More operations.

    More appointments.

    More diagnostic tests.

    You will be seen more quickly. In an NHS clearing the backlog seven days a week.

    But do not doubt the hard road either. Because if all we do is place the NHS on a pedestal then I’m afraid it will remain on life support. I know some people don’t like the word ‘reform’ but I tell you now there’s no other option.

    We must be the government that finally transforms our NHS. We can’t go on like this, with a sickness service. We need an NHS that prevents illness, keeps people healthy and out of hospital in the first place. We must use technology to overhaul every aspect of delivery. Move care closer to communities. Deploy the power of artificial intelligence to spot disease quickly.

    Mental health treatment when you need it. We’ll guarantee that.

    The 8am scramble for a GP appointment. We will end it.

    Dangerous waits for a cancer diagnosis. We will consign them to history.

    But here’s the bigger lesson. Because what is true of our NHS is true right across the board. We’re not here to manage the shop. We’re here to make government more dynamic. More joined-up. More strategic. Focused at all times and without exception on long-term national renewal.

    Mission Government. It’s not about size. It’s about capacity. A more powerful engine, not a bigger car. A reforming state, not a cheque-book state.

    People will say: “don’t rock the boat, we’ve always done it like this, Is this really necessary?”

    I’ve reformed a public service before, I know how it goes. But it’s our responsibility to do it. And across our public services, the prize is huge.

    Because, if we call time on wasteful police procurement then we can have a community policing guarantee. More police in your town, fighting anti-social behaviour, taking back our streets.

    If we ignore appeals for the status quo on private school tax breaks or an outdated national curriculum, then we can have mental health staff in every school. More expert teachers in the classroom. More creativity, speaking skills, confidence. Shatter the class ceiling at source.

    And if we want to challenge the hoarding of potential in our economy then we must win the war against the hoarders in Westminster. Give power back and put communities in control. That’s mission government.

    But conference – it also has to be something more. A deeper bond. A partnership between people and politics that in our age, after these thirteen years of decline, will be hard to renew.

    Some people say to me “it’s about honesty, isn’t it? We were lied to. These politicians are liars.” But do you know, that’s not it. Well – maybe it is for one of them…

    But for people like Rishi Sunak its more that they cannot see the country before them. The walls of Westminster are so high. The view that your lives, your services, your future – are just pieces on their board. That is so deeply ingrained in their mindset. They have no way to understand what you’ve been through.

    You know, they actually believe what comes out of their mouths.

    When your public services were cut to the bone and they said “we’re all in it together”.

    When they told you – to your face – that Brexit would only bring benefits to your business.
    When they say now, that they’re taking tough decisions for you, in this cost of living crisis.

    They’ve convinced themselves that this is what they’re really doing. They can’t see Britain – not your Britain. Can’t accept – that every time your interests were on the line, they made you pay. But when it’s people like them, they look after themselves.

    Rishi Sunak and the shallow men and women of Westminster. Unable to see, unable to listen, unable to stand in your shoes and serve this country. And they won’t change. They can’t change. Couldn’t change even in the pandemic when our country came together to follow rules. Rules that they set. And they broke.

    Conference, my sister is a care worker. She was a care worker during the pandemic. Fourteen hour shifts, often overnight. Unimaginable pressure. And the reward? A struggle every week – and I mean every week – just to make ends meet.

    But it’s not just about that. It’s also about respect. Working people never let each other down. And in the pandemic, the British people didn’t let them down. The bond of respect was there. That’s why we clapped. Britain knew exactly who was serving it, in its time of need.

    And for me, that’s the biggest frustration. Not just the pitiful reward this government gave for that service. But also, the countless missed opportunities to deepen that bond. Use it to change our country.

    Because I believe this country respects itself. I believe the British people respect each other. And I believe that if people see that respect. See that service in their politics. Then they will commit to the mission of national renewal.

    Let me put it this way. At some point in your life, many people here will have heard a nagging voice inside, saying no this isn’t for you. You don’t belong here. You can’t do that. Working class people certainly hear that voice, trust me. In some ways – it’s the hardest class ceiling, of all.

    But conference, imagine if instead a whole country said – you do belong. Imagine if a whole country said we back your potential. Imagine if a whole country commits, properly, to unlocking the pride you have for your community.

    Then look what we could build. A country where every contribution is equally respected. Where you don’t have to change who you are just to get on.

    Where whatever your background you feel secure. Valued. Certain that things will be better for your children. A Britain strong enough, stable enough, secure enough for you to invest your hope, your possibility, your future.

    A Britain built to last.

    Where working people are respected.

    Crime is prosecuted.

    Ambulances come.

    The minimum wage is enforced.

    Infrastructure gets built.

    Children feel safe in their classroom.

    Business and workers unite in partnership.

    Fight together for the jobs of the future.

    Jobs that are well-paid and in your town.

    And where MPs have only one job – service.

    No more bonuses for people pumping sewage into our rivers.

    No more pensioners freezing while energy firms make record profits.

    No more government contracts awarded via the back-door.

    No more cleaners mocked, as they scrub mess off the walls of illegal parties in Westminster.

    A future where we believe worker rights are good for growth.

    Inequality corrosive.

    Communities should have a bigger stake.

    Climate change is an opportunity we can’t pass up.

    Young peoples’ aspirations must be met.

    Britain is respected again around the world.

    That’s our future conference.

    Let’s get it back.

    Because government can be a force for good. We can fight alongside working people in the name of justice and opportunity. That’s why I came into politics.

    I’ve looked into the eyes of the people we must serve. At the Crown Prosecution Service. In my work in Northern Ireland. And I’ve seen reflected back the knowledge that government can make or break a life.

    It’s that responsibility that drives me on towards the reforms I know we must make. The Britain I know we must build. So let’s get to work. Because there is one barrier so big, so imposing that it blocks out all light from the other side.

    A blockage that stops this country building roads, grid connections, laboratories, trainlines, warehouses, windfarms, power stations. An obstacle to the aspirations of millions – now and in the future – who deserve the security of home ownership. A future hidden by our restrictive planning system…

    Conference, we must bulldoze through it.

    We used to call it the ‘dream of home ownership’, didn’t we? We used to say it glibly on stages like this. But look at Britain now – it has become a dream. It’s out of reach for millions. And if we don’t take action – it will only become more distant. A luxury for the few not the privilege of the many.

    I’m trying really hard not to mention the house that I grew up in again. But seriously, that pebble-dashed semi was everything to my family. It gave us stability through the cost of living crises of the seventies. Served as the springboard for the journey I’ve been on in my life. And I believe every family deserves the same.

    To have made that aspiration harder for working people, that’s been a disaster for our economy and for the unity of this country.

    So today we launch a new plan to get Britain building again. A signal of our determination to fight the blockers who hold a veto over British aspiration.

    No more land-bankers sitting comfortably on brownfield sites while rents in their community rise.

    No more councils refusing to develop a local plan because they prefer the back-door deals.

    No more inertia in the face of resistance – and there will be resistance from people who say – no, we don’t want Britain’s future here.

    My message to them is this. A future must be built. That is the responsibility of a serious government. And if we continually wash our hands of this task – we all end up stuck in a rut. Just like now.

    So it’s time to get Britain building again. It’s time to build one and half million new homes across the country.

    Opportunities for first time buyers in every community. New development corporations with the power to remove the blockages. New infrastructure to support families and communities to grow. Roads, tunnels, power stations – built quicker and cheaper.

    And a new effort to re-wire Britain. The National Grid moving faster – a lot faster. Laying the cables our future prosperity needs.

    It’s a future with more beautiful cities. More prosperous towns. New parks, new green spaces, new public services – all aligned with our plan.

    And conference, sometimes the old Labour ideas are right for new times. So where there are good jobs. Where there is good infrastructure. Where there is good land for affordable homes. Then we will get shovels in the ground. Cranes in the sky.

    And build the next generation of Labour new towns.

    And no, this doesn’t mean we’re tearing up the green-belt.

    Labour is the party that protects our green spaces. No party fights harder for our environment. We created the national parks. Created the green-belt in the first place. I grew up in Surrey.

    But where there are clearly ridiculous uses of it, disused car parks, dreary wasteland. Not a green belt. A grey belt. Sometimes within a city’s boundary. Then this cannot be justified as a reason to hold our future back.

    We will take this fight on. That’s a Britain built to last.

    And here’s why. Because getting Britain building again is critical for economic growth. Our most important mission. Because it’s also a means a way to soften that hard road. Deliver on national renewal. And escape the cost-of-living crisis permanently.

    That’s why this Labour Party will fight the next election on economic growth. An economy that works for the whole country is what the British people want. The Tories know that they stood at this crossroads before. They called it levelling-up.

    But as soon as they counted their votes, they turned back.

    Back to the comfort of the easy answer.

    Back to the trickle-down nonsense, that sees wealth trickle-up and jobs trickle-out.

    You cannot understate this. Those ideas are finished. Blown away. By a world where tyrants like Putin pay little regard to the niceties of market dogma. But also because in the end they always make working people pay.

    You saw it last year.

    Tax cuts for the richest.

    The pound sinking like a stone.

    A wrecking ball to our finances.

    Economic shrapnel everywhere.

    Family budgets shredded.

    A £300 billion bill

    The only remedy: Labour stability.

    You know, I never thought I would hear a modern Conservative Prime Minister say that 50% of our children going to university was a “false dream”. My Dad felt the disrespect of vocational skills all his life. But the solution is not and never will be levelling-down the working class aspiration to go to university.

    But this is the Tory mindset now. Don’t solve problems – exploit them.

    So if you are a Conservative voter who despairs of this, if you look in horror at the descent of your party into the murky waters of populism and conspiracy, with no argument for economic change.

    If you feel our country needs a party that conserves.

    That fights for our union. Our environment. The rule of law.

    Family life. The careful bond between this generation and the next.

    Then let me tell you: Britain already has one. And you can join it. It’s this Labour Party.

    And this is our mission. Every new era of growth must start with an expansion of the country’s productive capabilities– that is an iron law.

    But what isn’t an iron law is who that growth benefits. Back in the eighties the Tories gave us a financial “big bang” and we’re still counting the cost. Wealth and opportunity – concentrated in the hands of the few.

    Our Labour era will instead unleash the “big build”. And the winner this time will be working people, everywhere.

    That’s a Britain built to last.

    And conference – it is a new way. Unlike the Tories, we won’t be dragged back to easy answers. The barriers of dogma will not block our path.

    That’s why we hold out the hand of partnership to business.

    Champion the need for a competitive tax regime.

    Understand that private enterprise is the only way this country pays its way in the world.

    And at the same time we scrap zero-hour contracts.

    We end fire and rehire.

    Make work pay with a real living wage.

    And say unambiguously this is good for growth.

    We say yes to sound money.

    Yes to cutting waste and debt.

    Embrace the need for stability.

    Fiscal responsibility is non-negotiable.

    And if investment can kick-start growth.

    If investment can save money in the long-run.

    Can protect jobs, create jobs, crowd in billions of private investment.

    Then yes – we must get on and do it.

    Business is ready to join us in this endeavour. I can’t tell you how many conversations I’ve had with leading CEOs who tell me it’s the chopping and changing. The sticking plaster politics. The chaos. That is holding back investment in our country.

    That’s why we’ll set up a National Wealth Fund. Work hand in glove with the private sector to rebuild this country. But as we share the risk, we must also share the rewards. So we will make sure that the British people retain a stake in our investments.

    This is our mantra. The fight for the future must go hand-in-hand with the fight for every pound. That’s a Britain built to last.

    Not state control, not pure free markets. But a genuine partnership, sleeves rolled-up, working for the national interest.

    Worker and business. Public and private. Building a bridge from the jobs we must protect today to the opportunities we have to win tomorrow.

    That is why the global crises of the last thirteen years have been so painful for Britain. The stand-aside state leaves nobody with the future they want, because there’s no direction. An irresponsibility towards the future, that defies the values conservatives say they support.

    You heard the Prime Minister banging the drum again last week. But I say to him, look around Britain. Look at the bills working people are paying now.

    They’re more expensive because you didn’t build the gas storage.

    You didn’t invest in clean British energy.

    You scrapped home insulation.

    And you’re doing it all again.

    Moving the targets back.

    Passing it on to the next generation.

    Letting the costs rise because you won’t pay.

    Sticking plaster politics.

    An approach as riven through the foundations of our security as the crumbling concrete in our schools. The never-ending cycle of Tory Britain. Party first, country second. Drift. Stagnate. Decline.

    We have to turn the page on this, conference. Government must steer the ship on industrial policy. That’s a crucial part of any plan for growth. So here is our strategy.

    Step one. Our national wealth fund. Standing with business. Ready to invest in the critical infrastructure we need. The battery gigafactories, the clean British steel, the ports that can finally handle large industrial parts. More growth, more demand, more jobs.

    Step two. Long-term stability for researchers, investors, innovators. A real boost for life sciences and the automotive industry. And a British jobs bonus that will attract new investment to our industrial heartlands from Bridgend to Burnley. The backbone of Britain, once again powering us towards national renewal.

    Step three. A new direction for skills. Because a future must be trained as well as built. And the generation that sacrificed so much during the pandemic – their potential must be backed.

    So today we commit to a new generation of colleges. Technical Excellence Colleges. Colleges with stronger links to their local economies. Planted firmly in the ground of young peoples’ aspiration…

    But also in the pride, the pull of the badge on the shirt, the ambition you feel when building a legacy for your community.

    Training lab workers in Derbyshire.

    Automotive Engineers in Wolverhampton.

    Computer Scientists in Manchester.

    Nuclear Technicians in Somerset.

    Builders in Staffordshire.

    Toolmakers in Hull.

    My Dad would have loved that.

    And conference, step four, a new mindset. Because when an opportunity is there to be won, you have to take it.

    Clean British energy is cheaper than foreign fossil fuels. That means cheaper bills for every family in the country. But also a chance to make us more competitive across the board.

    Countries like America are using this gift to create manufacturing jobs the like of which we haven’t seen for decades. And they’re not the only ones.

    So when Rishi Sunak says row back on our climate mission, I say speed ahead.

    Speed ahead with investment.

    Speed ahead with half a million jobs.

    Speed ahead with Great British Energy.

    A new energy company that will harness clean British power for good British jobs. A company that will be publicly owned, conference, and that will be based in Scotland.

    Because though Great British energy will be a shared mission,

    Scotland has the skills. Scotland has the ingenuity. And Scotland is at the heart of a Britain built to last. That’s what the people of Rutherglen voted for.

    Conference, I want to thank Anas for his inspiring leadership in that campaign and beyond. And Michael Shanks, who will serve his community with dignity, pride and determination.

    Scotland can lead the way to a Labour Government. But be under no illusions. We must earn every vote. And we must understand that the Scottish people are not just looking at us.

    They’re also looking at Britain.

    The challenge of change remains. But nonetheless, for the first time in a long time we can see a tide that is turning. Four nations that are renewing. Old wounds of division exploited by the Tories and the SNP beginning to heal.

    So let the message from Rutherglen ring out across Britain. Labour serves working people in Scotland because Labour serves working people across all these islands.

    There’s nothing more important, no distractions, no higher cause. That’s who we stand for. What we stand for. Our argument for Britain.

    An old partnership, perhaps. But a flame now re-ignited to face a modern age of insecurity. A Britain once again – united by the solidarity of working people. Staring down the challenges of a more volatile world. Fighting for our future together.

    And conference – it will be a fight. The SNP will re-group, of course they will. Once again they will wave away the lessons of history. Try to present nationalism as a bridge to the world.

    We have to remind them it can barely provide a ferry to the Hebrides.

    As for the Tories, I have to warn you, a party that has so completely severed its relationship with the future, that is prepared to scorch the earth just to get at us. They will be dangerous.

    Trust me. Wherever you think the line is, they’ve already got plans to cross it. They will be up for the fight. They’re always up for the fight to save their own skin. And this isn’t over. In fact, it’s barely begun.

    So we have to be disciplined. Focused. Ready to fight back. And confident, conference, because we have come so far, already.

    We’ve dragged this party back to service. We can do the same for politics.

    I grew up working class. I’ve been fighting all my life. And I won’t stop now.

    I’ve felt the anxiety of a cost-of-living crisis before. And until your family can see the way out, I will fight for you.

    That’s my mission and we will do it.

    We will face down the age of insecurity. Together.

    Break the stranglehold of Tory decline. Together.

    Walk towards a decade of national renewal. Together.

    Why Labour? Because we serve your interests.

    Why Labour? Because we will grow every corner of our country.

    Why Labour? Because we have a plan.

    To take back our streets.

    Switch on Great British Energy.

    Get the NHS back on its feet.

    Tear down the barriers to opportunity.

    And get Britain building again.

    A plan for a Britain built to last.

    A plan to heal the wounds.

    A plan to turn the page and say, in a cry of defiance to all those who now write our country off:

    Britain must. Britain can. Britain will get its future back.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 54 – Statement on Central African Republic [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 54 – Statement on Central African Republic [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    Statement for the Interactive Dialogue on the Central African Republic. Delivered by the UK at the 54th HRC.

    Thank you, Madam Vice-President,

    The United Kingdom remains deeply concerned by the increase in the number of human rights violations and abuses in the Central African Republic. Reports have highlighted that Central African Armed Forces and Wagner Group forces are now responsible for the majority of these – and that when operating independently in CAR, Wagner mercenaries have engaged in a disproportionately higher level of violence targeting civilians.

    The UK calls for a revitalisation of the peace process in the wake of the increased reports of human rights violations and abuses. The Political Agreement for Peace and Stability remains the only viable option to end conflict and crisis in the Central African Republic, and we call on the Central African authorities, to build on political progress and ensure meaningful engagement with all political actors in country.

    We are also deeply concerned that the conflict in Sudan and the global economic crisis has further compounded the situation in CAR, increasing the price of basic commodities and driving levels of food insecurity so that half the country is experiencing severe food insecurity and 56% of the country is in need of humanitarian assistance. A rapid solution to CAR’s crisis is needed to build resilience and coping mechanisms for the population who are suffering from this sustained, long-term damage.

    Mr Agbetse

    Thank you for your report and presentation. We would welcome your views on what steps CAR and the international community should take to support the people of CAR and those fleeing violence in Sudan.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK enhances security and climate cooperation with Sri Lanka [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK enhances security and climate cooperation with Sri Lanka [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    Minister for the Indo-Pacific, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, is visiting Sri Lanka to strengthen cooperation on climate change, regional security and human rights.

    • Minister for the Indo-Pacific to strengthen cooperation with Sri Lanka on climate change, regional security and human rights.
    • Anne-Marie Trevelyan will reaffirm UK support for maritime security, attending the Indian Ocean Rim Association Ministerial meeting in Sri Lanka.
    • UK and Sri Lanka celebrate 75 years of diplomatic relations.

    To deepen UK-Sri Lanka cooperation on environmental protection, regional security and human rights, UK Minister for the Indo-Pacific Anne-Marie Trevelyan will arrive in Sri Lanka today (10 October). The three-day visit to Colombo and Jaffna marks the celebration of 75 years of diplomatic relations between the UK and Sri Lanka and is the Minister’s first visit to Sri Lanka in her role.

    Minister Trevelyan will emphasise the UK’s long-term commitment to the region at the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) Ministerial meeting hosted by Sri Lanka. With around 60% of global shipping passing through the Indo-Pacific, ensuring maritime security is of critical importance to the Prime Minister’s priority of growing the UK’s economy. The UK is increasing its long-term presence in the Indo-Pacific by permanently deploying two Offshore Patrol Vessels to tackle maritime security challenges in the region alongside partners and allies.

    Minister Trevelyan will also seek to strengthen IORA work on climate mitigation. Through collaborative programmes that underpin biodiversity objectives and the Glasgow Pact (agreed at COP26), the Minister will highlight UK support for Sri Lanka’s environmental work. This builds on the UK’s strong track record as the first major economy to legislate for Net Zero, cutting carbon emissions faster than any other G7 country. Sri Lanka are also prioritising green growth, with their own commitment to net zero by 2050.

    Indo-Pacific Minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan said:

    ” As the UK celebrates 75 years of diplomatic relations with Sri Lanka, we’re working together on climate action, peacebuilding and human rights.

    “Through key regional forums like IORA, we can accelerate progress towards enhanced security for the Indian Ocean region, collaborate on shared climate goals and on boosting maritime security.”

    While in Colombo, Minister Trevelyan will meet members of the Sri Lankan government including President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Foreign Minister Ali Sabry. Discussions will focus on climate finance and green growth, justice reform and opportunities to enhance UK-Sri Lanka diplomatic ties.

    Travelling to Jaffna, in the Northern Province, Trevelyan will meet with Governor P. S. M Charles, and regional parliamentarians. She will then visit a land mine clearance site in Muhamalai to see UK-funded demining and sustainable resettlement work. Supported by the UK’s Conflict, Security and Stability Fund (CSSF), charity The HALO Trust has been working to clear unexploded ordnances in Muhamalai since 2012, with the Sri Lankan government anticipating that the country will be landmine-free by 2027. UK funding to the United Nations Development Programme has also supported the resettlement of displaced communities on land cleared of mines, helping provide community infrastructure and build sustainable livelihoods.

    To engage UK businesses in Sri Lanka on bilateral trade discussions, Minister Trevelyan will meet civil society and business leaders from across Sri-Lanka at a breakfast meeting.

    Following her engagements in Sri Lanka, the Minister will travel to India as part of a wider trip to reaffirm the UK’s commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK updates Travel Advice for Lebanon [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK updates Travel Advice for Lebanon [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office advises against non-essential travel to Lebanon and against all travel to south of the country.

    The British Embassy in Beirut has announced updated Travel Advice for Lebanon. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office advises against non-essential travel to Lebanon and against all travel to some areas in the south of the country.

    This means that British nationals should only travel to Lebanon if their travel is essential. We now advise against all travel to the area south of the Litani river which includes the main Naqoura-Tyre-Saida-Beirut highway and areas to the west of it.  In addition, we continue to advise against all travel to the Hermel Area, including the towns of Arsal, Ras Baalbek, Qaa, Laboué and Nahlé, Palestinian refugee camps or within 5km of the border with Syria.

    We keep our Travel Advice under constant review. The situation is unpredictable and could deteriorate without warning.

    British Nationals in Lebanon continue to have access to 24/7 consular assistance. Please call +961 (0) 1 960 800 for inquiries.

    We encourage all British nationals to stay up to date with our Travel Advice in full at Lebanon travel advice – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk).

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 54 – Statement on Cambodia [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 54 – Statement on Cambodia [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 10 October 2023.

    Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on Cambodia. Delivered by the UK at the 54th Human Rights Council at the UN.

    Thank you, Vice President.

    The UK thanks the Special Rapporteur for his update on the human rights situation in Cambodia and welcomes the conclusions and recommendations in his latest report.

    We recognise that Cambodia has made progress on economic, social and cultural rights. In particular, we commend Cambodia on its response to COVID-19, including on social protection, as well as its commitment to climate, education, and healthcare.

    The UK remains committed to working constructively with Cambodia in its efforts to advance all human rights, including by supporting the implementation of the benchmarks and recommendations set out in the Special Rapporteur’s report.

    Following Cambodia’s national elections earlier this year, the UK supports the Special Rapporteur’s call for the new generation of leaders to open up civic and political space; engage in constructive dialogue with civil and political actors; and guarantee an open political environment.

    Advancing freedom of speech, association, and thought would also serve to support Cambodia’s economic sector by encouraging greater innovation through the open sharing of ideas and information.

    Special Rapporteur,

    What are the most important measures that you believe the government of Cambodia needs to take to ensure an open civic space?

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Report highlights impact of UK contribution to the Gaia mission [October 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Report highlights impact of UK contribution to the Gaia mission [October 2023]

    The press release issued by the UK Space Agency on 10 October 2023.

    UK funding for scientists working on a mission to map the Galaxy has helped advance the frontiers of human knowledge, according to a new report, published today alongside the latest Gaia data release.

    The UK Space Agency commissioned space economics and strategy consultancy know.space to study the impact of the UK’s national funding to date for the UK’s role in contributing to the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Global Astrometric Interferometer for Astrophysics (Gaia) mission.

    Launched in 2013 and expected to be in operation until 2025, Gaia is undertaking the ambitious task of providing a 3D chart of positional and velocity measurements of up to 2.5 billion stars, quasars, exoplanets, comets and asteroids. The mission’s aim is to construct by far the largest and most precise 3D map of the Galaxy ever made.

    The report found that Gaia publications since 2014 have been cited more than 200,000 times, and UK authored papers are cited significantly more than average. For example:

    1. Papers with UK involvement constitute 46% of total citations, while accounting for 31% of publications
    2. UK first authored papers constitute 15% of total citations, while accounting for 10% of total publications
    3. The average number of citations for a UK-authored publication (first-authored or contributing author) is 35, compared to 23 for a Gaia paper without UK involvement

    Among the findings the report also shows that by partnering with the Imaging and Molecular Annotation of Xenografts and Tumors laboratory at the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute and others, the UK’s Gaia team has employed star map analytical techniques to study cancers and tumours. This novel approach, aiming to develop the world’s first virtual reality cancer map could redefine diagnosis and promote more personalised cancer treatments.

    Dr Caroline Harper, Head of Space Science at the UK Space Agency, said:

    Gaia is a groundbreaking science mission, in terms of both the quality and richness of the scientific data and the advances in ‘big data’ processing that it has stimulated, and which can be applied to other areas such as medical diagnostics.

    It’s fantastic that the UK is a core member of the international Gaia consortium and has been making such important contributions to the mission. This study has provided a timely and valuable insight into the positive outcomes of UK Space Agency funding for space science missions like Gaia.

    The UK has a key role in developing the processing and analysing of data in the mission. This enables the UK space science research community to play a central role in ongoing data processing and scientific discovery.

    The Impact Evaluation, which comes as new Gaia data is made available today (10 October), analysed the work to date across the four core themes of science, UK competitiveness, collaboration inspiration and innovation to identify the outcomes of national funding to date.

    The report highlights the instrumental role played by the UK in developing Gaia’s spectrophotometry instruments, which has allowed the observatory to study around 2.5 billion celestial bodies, revealing deep insights into our Milky Way and the stages of stellar evolution.

    It also reveals that many PhDs have been made possible, both through research projects exploiting data from Gaia, of more specifically through Gaia related doctoral training networks, supported by UK and/or EU funding, such as the current MWGaia Doctoral Network.

    Will Lecky, Co-founder and Director at know.space, said:

    There can be little doubt that Gaia is a scientific success story. Our report highlights how UK funding has enabled the processing and release of high-quality data that is of huge value to the global scientific community, helping to advance the frontiers of human knowledge. The impact is also set to continue for years and decades to come.

    Our analysis also shows how funding has helped to expand the reach and reputation of the UK space sector, develop sought-after data skills, inspire the next generation, and lead to widespread ‘spillover’ benefits as new advanced statistical methods, algorithms and capabilities are applied elsewhere in the space sector and beyond.

    Scientists and engineers from around the UK also played key roles in the design and build of Gaia. UK participation in the mission is funded by the UK Space Agency which has invested £23 million to date, with an additional £2.4 million from the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).

    Dr Colin Vincent, STFC Associate Director Astronomy, said:

    The UK Space Agency and STFC have jointly supported data centres in the UK that are essential to the exciting science from this unique international mission to explore the evolution of our own galaxy.

    By developing and applying advanced data extraction and processing techniques UK experts have enabled the maximum science to be extracted from the raw data science to deliver new insights.

    Release of the latest Gaia mission data

    The mission’s latest ‘focused product release’, provides many new unexpected and exciting insights which includes the revelation of half a million new and faint stars in a massive cluster, 380 possible cosmic lenses, and the pinpointing the positions of more than 150,000 asteroids within the Solar System.

    Dr Nicholas Walton, lead of the UK Gaia Project team and ESA Gaia Science Team member, said:

    This release will open up new insights across astronomy, from the precise orbits of asteroids in our Solar System, to quasar discovery in the distant cosmos. A truly wonderful release demonstrating the breadth of science enabled by Gaia. This release represents but a small taster of the riches to be revealed with the publication of the next full release, Gaia Data Release 4.