Tag: 2024

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Resignation Speech

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Resignation Speech

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 5 July 2024.

    Good morning, I will shortly be seeing His Majesty the King to offer my resignation as Prime Minister.

    To the country, I would like to say, first and foremost, I am sorry.

    I have given this job my all.

    But you have sent a clear signal that the government of the United Kingdom must change…

    …and yours is the only judgement that matters.

    I have heard your anger, your disappointment; and I take responsibility for this loss.

    To all the Conservative candidates and campaigners who worked tirelessly but without success…

    …I am sorry that we could not deliver what your efforts deserved.

    It pains me to think how many good colleagues…

    …who contributed so much to their communities and our country…

    …will now no longer sit in the House of Commons.

    I thank them for their hard work, and their service.

    Following this result, I will step down as party leader…

    …not immediately, but once the formal arrangements for selecting my successor are in place.

    It is important that after 14 years in government the Conservative Party rebuilds…

    …but also that it takes up its crucial role in Opposition professionally and effectively.

    When I first stood here as your Prime Minister, I told you the most important task I had was to return stability to our economy.

    Inflation is back to target, mortgage rates are falling, and growth has returned.

    We have enhanced our standing in the world, rebuilding relations with allies…

    …leading global efforts to support Ukraine…

    …and becoming the home of the new generation of transformative technologies.

    And our United Kingdom is stronger too: with the Windsor Framework, devolution restored in Northern Ireland, and our Union strengthened.

    I’m proud of those achievements.

    I believe this country is safer, stronger, and more secure than it was 20 months ago.

    And it is more prosperous, fairer, and resilient than it was in 2010.

    Whilst he has been my political opponent, Sir Keir Starmer will shortly become our Prime Minister.

    In this job, his successes will be all our successes, and I wish him and his family well.

    Whatever our disagreements in this campaign, he is a decent, public-spirited man, who I respect.

    He and his family deserve the very best of our understanding, as they make the huge transition to their new lives behind this door…

    …and as he grapples with this most demanding of jobs in an increasingly unstable world.

    I would like to thank my colleagues, my Cabinet, the Civil Service – especially here in Downing Street…

    …the team at Chequers, my staff, CCHQ…

    …but most of all I would like to express my gratitude to my wife Akshata and our beautiful daughters.

    I can never thank them enough for the sacrifices they have made so that I might serve our country.

    One of the most remarkable things about Britain is just how unremarkable it is…

    …that two generations after my grandparents came here with little, I could become Prime Minister…

    …and that I could watch my two young daughters light Diwali candles on the steps in Downing Street.

    We must hold true to that idea of who we are…

    …that vision of kindness, decency, and tolerance that has always been the British way.

    This is a difficult day, at the end of a number of difficult days.

    But I leave this job honoured to have been your Prime Minister.

    This is the best country in the world and that is thanks entirely to you, the British people…

    …the true source of all our achievements, our strengths, and our greatness.

    Thank you.

  • Clive Lewis – 2024 Comments on the General Election Result

    Clive Lewis – 2024 Comments on the General Election Result

    The comments made by Clive Lewis, the Labour MP for Norwich South, on 4 July 2024.

    A fantastic result on the surface. The lives of thousands of my constituents can now change for the better. But possible shock double digit Reform MPs and the breakthrough of the authoritarian right, means there is absolutely no room for complacency or hubris. We must deliver, and I expect us to.

  • Ruth Davidson – 2024 Comments on the General Election Result

    Ruth Davidson – 2024 Comments on the General Election Result

    The comments made by Ruth Davidson, the former Scottish Conservative leader, on 4 July 2024.

    So actually 131 – while, there is no dressing it up, this is a massacre – they’ve actually, if this is right, pulled a few back from where they thought they were.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Royal Navy ship sails to support Caribbean hurricane relief effort [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Royal Navy ship sails to support Caribbean hurricane relief effort [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 4 July 2024.

    Royal Navy warship HMS Trent will deploy to the Cayman Islands to offer UK support following the devastation brought this week by Hurricane Beryl.

    HMS Trent, an Offshore Patrol Vessel, is scheduled to arrive in the Cayman Islands this weekend, where her crew will be ready to offer assistance with equipment and support to help communities affected by flooding and storm damage.

    The hurricane, which has previously been rated Category 5, could bring winds of more than 155mph and has already caused a large amount of destruction in the region this week.

    HMS Trent is crewed by more than 50 sailors and departed from Puerto Rico yesterday, carrying bottled water, basic emergency supplies, and equipment.

    The ship has a Crisis Response Troop embarked, comprising members of 24 Commando Royal Engineers and their equipment, and further augmented with personnel to support planning, information operations, meteorological forecasting, and image capture.

    Additional personnel include a team from 700X Naval Air Squadron who provide HMS Trent’s embarked PUMA Flight (Remote Piloted Air System), allowing them to conduct airborne reconnaissance and damage assessment in direct support of 24 Commando activity.

    A specialist Rapid Deployment Team has already travelled to the Eastern Caribbean to provide consular assistance to any affected British Nationals. The UK continues to work with the Caribbean’s crisis response organisation, CDEMA, to provide assistance for the worst affected islands, including St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Grenada.

    In previous years, members of the Armed Forces have deployed to the Caribbean under Operation Ventus to provide humanitarian assistance in the form of food and basic medical relief, as well as engineering to repair damaged homes and infrastructure, and creating flood and hurricane defences.

    Hurricane Beryl has been described as the earliest ever Category 5 storm to form in the Atlantic, with storms of this scale usually recorded later in the summer.

    HMS Trent has been deployed to the Caribbean since the end of 2023, where she has been disrupting drug networks across the world following a series of drugs seizures at sea.

    In May, it was confirmed HMS Trent’s crew had seized more than £204 million worth of cocaine following an intercept in the Caribbean Sea – which followed a double-bust earlier in the year where nearly £300 million was seized.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Graves of six soldiers of Welsh regiments identified on the Western Front [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Graves of six soldiers of Welsh regiments identified on the Western Front [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 4 July 2024.

    The graves of six soldiers from Welsh regiments, who went missing in France and Belgium during World War One, have now been marked more than a century after their deaths.

    Though all six soldiers had been buried at the times of their deaths, their names had been lost. Their graves were only identified recently after researchers submitted cases to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s (CWGC).

    Further research by the MOD’s Joint Casualty and Compassionate Centre (JCCC), also known as the ‘MOD War Detectives’, the CWGC, and the National Army Museum, used sources such as war diaries, service records, grave registration reports and other documents. Following this, the original findings were confirmed allowing each soldier to be commemorated by name.

    The grave rededication services were organised by JCCC, and saw named headstones provided for Second Lieutenant (2/Lt) Noel Osbourne Jones; 2/Lt Herbert Taggart; Private (Pte) Lionel Grove and Captain (Capt) Clifford Nichols, all of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, as well as Lance Corporal (L/Cpl) Arthur Dowding of the Monmouthshire Regiment and Pte George Price of the South Wales Borderers. The services were attended by serving soldiers and representatives of The Royal Welsh.

    The services were held in France on 2 July at CWGC’s Bellicourt British Cemetery and Cabaret Rouge British Cemetery, as well as in Belgium, on 3 July, at Bedford House Cemetery and Chester Farm Cemetery. The family of Captain Nichols attended.

    JCCC Caseworker, Alexia Clark, said:

    Researching these six men and getting to know their individual war stories has been a fascinating journey. It has been a privilege to have played a part in the conclusion of those stories and to know that their families finally have answers to what happened to them.

    2/Lt Noel Osborne-Jones, 2/Lt Herbert Taggart, and Pte Lionel Grove were all killed on 8 May 1916 while conducting a trench raid. Their bodies were recovered by the Germans and buried by them at Fournes, before being moved to the Cabaret Rouge Cemetery after the war. Unfortunately, the Germans did not know their names, and as such they identified their bodies only by rank and regiment. Following the war, all three men were named on the Memorial to the Missing at Loos.

    L/Cpl Dowding was killed in action near Ramicourt in October 1918, just weeks before the end of the war. Although he was buried at the time of his death, key information about his grave was lost in the chaos of conflict, and after the war he was named on the Vis-en-Artois Memorial.

    Captain Nichols was killed during the Battle of Passchendaele on 31 July 1917. At the time of his death, he was listed as a member of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers who had been attached to 164 Machine Gun Company. His body was recovered from an unmarked field grave near Spree Farm in 1923, and his rank and regiment were identified by his buttons and badges. Unfortunately, there was nothing to indicate his name at the time, and he was buried as an unknown officer. Following the war, Capt. Nichols was commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing in Ypres.

    Private Price was killed in action near Hill 60, Belgium in October 1917. He was originally buried in a field grave, but by the end of the war all recordings of his name had been lost. He was commemorated on the Tyne Cot Memorial to the Missing.

    The services were conducted by The Reverend Richard Mutter CF, Chaplain to 1st Battalion The Royal Welsh.

    The Reverend Richard Mutter CF said:

    To restore the names to these young men and to honour their sacrifice here in this place is a very special thing. I am pleased to have led these services of rededication and to help close the final chapter of these men’s stories.

    The headstones over the graves were replaced by CWGC. Xavier Puppinck, France Area Director at CWGC, said:

    It is an honour for the CWGC to care for the graves of these six valiant soldiers of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, the Monmouthshire Regiment and the South Wales Borderers who went missing in France and Belgium during World War One. They paid the ultimate price while fighting on the Western Front, more than 100 years ago. And now, it is our privilege and duty to care for their graves in perpetuity.

  • PRESS RELEASE : World Trade Organization – Mozambique’s Trade Policy Review [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : World Trade Organization – Mozambique’s Trade Policy Review [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 4 July 2024.#

    The UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN in Geneva, Simon Manley, gave a statement during Mozambique’s WTO Trade Policy Review.

    Chair, let me offer a warm welcome to the delegation from Mozambique led by Mr. Silvino Augusto José Moreno, Minister of Industry and Commerce. Let me also express my gratitude to colleagues from the WTO Secretariat for their respective reports, to the Chair, as ever, and to our Discussant, Mr. Li Chenggang, for his insightful comments.

    Economic Analysis

    1. I’d particularly like to thank the delegation and the secretariat for all of the hard work which goes into a Trade Policy Review. The secretariat and government reports offer invaluable insight into Mozambique’s trade policies and wider economy.
    2. Mozambique has faced various shocks since the last TPR in 2017: climate, COVID-19, ongoing conflict. In order to accelerate economic growth and reduce poverty, Mozambique is progressing with some key economic reforms including as part of the IMF programme initiated in 2022. We were also pleased to read that the government is taking steps to address the recent public sector wage bill overrun discussed in the reports.
    3. I am pleased to say that our development assistance has been supporting Mozambique’s emergency and humanitarian response, basic service delivery, and economic reforms to strengthen domestic revenue mobilisation, debt and State Owned Enterprises transparency. These economic reforms were crucial for the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and African Development Bank (AfDB) decisions to resume programmatic support in 2022 and 2023.
    4. The UK deeply appreciates the insights afforded to us by Mozambique’s engagement with this important transparency exercise, including their answers to our Advanced Written Questions.
    5. They allow us to better understand Mozambique’s trade policies, which in turn, allow us to understand how we can work together to further improve our trading relationship, which has seen rapid growth in the last two years. In 2023, UK exports to Mozambique grew by over 100%, whilst our imports from Mozambique increased in value by 175%.

    Southern African Customs Union Member States (SACUM) Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA)

    1. Close cooperation between our two countries, and regional partners, has enabled this rapid growth. We are grateful to Mozambique for its constructive work implementing the SACU-Mozambique-UK Economic Partnership Agreement, which came into force in 2021 and underpins our trading relationship with Mozambique, as well as Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia and South Africa.
    2. The UK is fully committed to the EPA, principally as a means of increasing trade and investment to promote sustainable growth and poverty reduction in southern Africa. We look forward to holding the first EPA Joint Council and working with Mozambique and SACU partners to continue implementation and look towards deepening the Agreement and enhancing the benefits for businesses and consumers in the UK and Southern Africa.
    3. Last month we celebrated the first anniversary of the UK’s Developing Country Trading Scheme. DCTS has now been in force for one year, providing improved market access to 65 developing countries – home to 3.3 billion people – including Mozambique. Free and open trade is a crucial tool in helping Least Developed Countries (LDCs) to drive economic growth and support sustainable development, and the DCTS helps Mozambique to export to the UK and play a more active part in fast growing global supply chains.

    WTO

    1. Chair, given the benefits trade can bring to LDCs, the UK was pleased to see that the reports reference Mozambique’s commitment to uphold the principles of a rules-based, predictable and transparent trading system; and equally, to hear Minister Moreno’s reference this morning to Mozambique’s objective to create a stable and sustainable environment for trade. Mozambique’s commitment is evidenced by the significant role global trade plays in the Mozambique economy, with aggregate two-way trade flows ranging from 92.8% and 137.7% of GDP between 2017-23.
    2. Mozambique’s constructive work within the WTO itself is also praiseworthy. In particular, the UK welcomes the role which Mozambique plays on Trade Facilitation; Mozambique is a focal point within these important discussions. We look forward to continuing to work together with Mozambique within the Committee on Trade Facilitation, ensuring that the WTO continues to work for LDCs and Developing Countries. We were also pleased to see Mozambique enhancing its participation at the WTO through the Informal Working Group on Micro Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (MSMEs), and the Dialogue on Plastics Pollution.
    3. The UK is also keen to hear more about Mozambique’s efforts in promoting inclusive economic development in the future. As one of the co-chairs of the WTO Informal Working Group on Trade and Gender, I would welcome hearing more about Mozambique’s initiatives, in the spirit of sharing best practice and learning in this group.

    African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)

    1. Chair, we would like to take this opportunity to commend Mozambique for its Accession to another multilateral body: the African Continental Free Trade Area. The UK is a firm supporter of the AfCFTA, which has the potential to be a game-changer for intra-regional trade across the continent and thereby inclusive economic growth and development.
    2. The UK was proud to be the first non-African country to sign a Memorandum of Understanding with the AfCFTA Secretariat, and through our development assistance, we are working closely to support the AfCFTA Secretariat and Member States to get the agreement up and running.
    3. Finally Chair, let me thank Mozambique for their full cooperation with this important exercise in transparency. I would particularly like to thank the delegation for their hard work answering the UK’s questions, hard work which I hope didn’t distract them from celebrating the Dia da Independência last week.
  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – UK Statement on human rights situation in Venezuela [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – UK Statement on human rights situation in Venezuela [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 3 July 2024.

    ID with the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on Venezuela. Delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley.

    Thank you, Ms Vice-President.

    We are less than a month before elections in Venezuela, and we are really worried by what we are seeing in terms of political repression, arbitrary detentions and enforced disappearances.

    We condemn the ongoing harassment and intimidation of human rights defenders, journalists, and the political opposition. And we are concerned at the threat to remaining civic space through the proposed NGO law. As Venezuela approaches these elections, we think it is really imperative to ensure that all candidates, the political opposition, and civil society can all operate without fear of reprisal.

    High Commissioner,

    We continue to call for the unconditional return of your Office to Venezuela. We reaffirm our commitment to its mandate and that of the Fact-Finding Mission and call for their renewal in September at this Council. Their work is essential to ending human rights violations, particularly for vulnerable populations.

    High Commissioner,

    It has been three years now since the arbitrary detention of human rights defender Javier Tarazona, whilst Rocío San Miguel and many others also remain detained. What prospects do you see for an improvement to the current situation?

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – UK statement for the Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – UK statement for the Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 3 July 2024.

    UK statement for Interactive Dialogue on the oral update of the Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic. Delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley.

    Thank you, Mr President.

    Commissioners, thank you for your comprehensive assessment of human rights violations in Syria. In the fourteenth year of the conflict, human rights violations remain systematic and widespread.

    The Syrian people continue to live in uncertainty and insecurity, without the protection of the rule of law. Access for humanitarian aid is precarious and civilians are all too often the innocent victims of violence and attacks by the Assad regime and its Russian allies and armed groups.

    Mr President,

    Syrian refugees have the right to return to Syria in a manner that is safe, voluntary and dignified. However, for those returning to Syria, an uncertain fate awaits. We are alarmed by reports of gross human rights violations and abuses suffered by returnees at the hands of the Syrian authorities and armed groups, including reports of returnees being arrested and arbitrarily detained. While the Syrian authorities continue to show such scant regard for human life and international law, it is simply not viable for people to return.

    Commissioners, how can the international community support you in seeking accountability for those who have violated and abused the rights of detainees, including through arbitrary detention, ill-treatment and torture?

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK welcomes the appointment of Prime Minister Conille to lead the Transitional Government in Haiti – UK statement at the UN Security Council [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK welcomes the appointment of Prime Minister Conille to lead the Transitional Government in Haiti – UK statement at the UN Security Council [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 3 July 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki, UK Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on Haiti.

    The crisis in Haiti has affected the lives of Haitians for far too long. Schools are closed, hospitals have run out of supplies and access to food is severely limited. We continue to hear chilling accounts of gangs using sexual violence and gender-based violence as a means to control the population.

    We commend the recent arrival of members of the Multinational Security Support Mission (MSS) to Haiti and pay tribute to Kenya’s leadership of this mission. The mission remains vital to supporting Haitian efforts to resolve instability. The UK has pledged over $6 million dollars to support it.

    The appointment of Prime Minister Conille and a cabinet to lead the Transitional Government is an important development, which we strongly welcome. We urge Haitian political and civil society, with the active participation of women and youth, to seize this opportunity to address the root causes of the security crisis and to create the conditions necessary for lasting change. Prime Minister, you have our support in this vital task.

    Let me reiterate also, as the Council considers the renewal of BINUH’s mandate, the United Kingdom’s full support to the SRSG and the mission. BINUH will continue to play an important role in supporting the Transitional Government. This should be coordinated with the MSS mission.

    President, these developments have created positive momentum in Haiti. It is vital that the international community now supports Haiti’s Transitional Government to take advantage of this, to bring about the stability and security that the Haitian people so desperately need and that they deserve.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – Joint Statement with UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria [July 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – Joint Statement with UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria [July 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 3 July 2024.

    Joint Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria. Delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley.

    Mr President,

    This statement is on behalf of 54 countries.

    We commend the Commission of Inquiry’s continued work in shining light on large-scale, systematic, and arbitrary or unjust detentions and related violations and abuses. This, together with the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism, is crucial for ensuring accountability.

    We deplore the fact that tens of thousands of Syrians are estimated to have been subjected to arbitrary and incommunicado detention. Torture and other ill-treatment, including sexual and gender-based violence, have been reported on an alarming scale, and continue to this day. We strongly condemn all deaths, torture and abuse of detainees in detention facilities, particularly in Syrian government facilities. We recall the Commission’s clear assessment that the rights of detained persons have not been respected throughout the conflict.

    Tens of thousands of families continue to live with the anguish caused by not knowing the whereabouts of their loved ones. Cooperation, by all parties to the conflict, with the newly created Independent Institution on Missing Persons is also essential.

    Mr President,

    The Syrian regime and all parties must cease such practices; release unjustly detained Syrians; clarify the fate of the missing; ensure appropriate access for independent and humanitarian monitoring organisations and hold those responsible to account.

    Finally, we reiterate our call for a sustainable and comprehensive political solution for Syria in line with Security Council Resolution 2254.

    Co-signatories: 1. Albania 2. Andorra 3. Argentina 4. Australia 5. Austria 6. Belgium 7. Bulgaria 8. Canada 9. Czechia 10. Colombia 11. Costa Rica 12. Croatia 13. Cyprus 14. Denmark 15. Ecuador 16. Estonia 17. Finland 18. France 19. Germany 20. Georgia 21. Greece 22. Hungary 23. Iceland 24. Ireland 25. Israel 26. Italy 27. Japan 28. Latvia 29. Liechtenstein 30. Lithuania 31. Luxembourg 32. Malta 33. Monaco 34. Montenegro 35. Moldova 36. Netherlands 37. New Zealand 38. North Macedonia 39. Norway 40. Poland 41. Portugal 42. Qatar 43. Republic of Korea 44. Romania 45. San Marino 46. Slovakia 47. Slovenia 48. Spain 49. Sweden 50. Switzerland 51. Turkey 52. UK 53. Ukraine 54. US