Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : Citizens’ Rights Specialised Committee Meeting [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Citizens’ Rights Specialised Committee Meeting [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 19 June 2024.

    The UK government and European Commission gave a joint statement following the 14th meeting of the Specialised Committee on Citizens’ Rights.

    Joint statement from the UK government and European Commission following the 14th meeting of the Specialised Committee on Citizens’ Rights on 6 June 2024:

    The 14th meeting of the Specialised Committee on Citizens’ Rights was held on 6 June 2024 in Brussels, co-chaired by officials from the European Commission and the UK government. Representatives from EU member states were also in attendance.

    The EU and the UK discussed the implementation and application of the Citizens’ Rights part of the Withdrawal Agreement, with a focus on the non-permanent and the permanent right of residence. The meeting also allowed both sides to take stock of outstanding issues, as well as progress made.

    The EU focused on 2 issues, the implementation the UK High Court’s ruling in relation to the case brought by the Independent Monitoring Authority concerning residence status under the UK’s EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) and legal clarity for EU citizens, who hold a residence status under the EUSS, as to whether their rights are guaranteed by the Withdrawal Agreement or by domestic law. The EU also raised travel incidents affecting EU citizens who are Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries.

    The UK raised the evidencing of permanent residence rights by Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries in member states, the provision of appointments to acquire residence cards and guidance on evidence needed. The UK also raised family reunification rights and the provision of free visas for joining family members.

    The EU and the UK also discussed the EU’s EES (Entry/Exit System), ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) and the UK’s ETA (Electronic Travel Authorisation), from the perspective of the Withdrawal Agreement and their implications for beneficiaries of the Withdrawal Agreement.

    A part of the meeting was dedicated to engagement with external representatives from civil society organisations, representing EU citizens living in the UK and UK nationals living in the EU.

    The EU and the UK recalled the commitment expressed by the 2 parties at the level of the Joint Committee to ensure the full implementation of the Withdrawal Agreement. The co-chairs agreed to meet again in the autumn.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56: Item 2 – Interactive Dialogue on the Oral Update of the International Independent Fact-Finding Mission for Sudan [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56: Item 2 – Interactive Dialogue on the Oral Update of the International Independent Fact-Finding Mission for Sudan [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 19 June 2024.

    National Statement on Sudan, delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley.

    Mr President,

    For over a year, the world has borne witness to harrowing atrocities committed against the people of Sudan. Credible evidence suggests indiscriminate shelling by the Sudanese Armed Forces and widespread sexual and gender-based violence and ethnically targeted killings by the Rapid Support Forces has led to the largest displacement crisis in the world.

    Despite warnings of millions of excess deaths from famine, the warring parties continue their selfish agendas of seeking military victory, with little or no regard for upholding basic human rights of the Sudanese people.

    I’d like to thank the Fact-Finding Mission for their update today. While we regret that its start-up has been delayed by the ongoing UN liquidity crisis, the continued need for its independent scrutiny is absolutely clear.

    We therefore welcome resolution 578 by the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights calling on the warring parties and all neighbouring States to cooperate fully with the Fact-Finding Mission, including granting it access.

    Mr President,

    We reiterate our calls for an immediate cessation of hostilities across Sudan, including urgent de-escalation in El Fasher in line with Security Council resolution 2736, and a return to the negotiating table. Accountability must go hand in hand with finding a political solution to this horrific war and pulling Sudan out of its decades-long cycle of impunity.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – High Commissioner’s Report on Myanmar [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UN Human Rights Council 56 – High Commissioner’s Report on Myanmar [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 18 June 2024.

    Interactive Dialogue, the High Commissioner’s Report on Myanmar, delivered by the UK’s Human Rights Ambassador, Rita French.

    Thank you, High Commissioner, for your report.

    The conflict across Myanmar is escalating alarmingly, inflicting huge suffering on civilians and driving a devastating human rights and humanitarian crisis. Across Rakhine State, all communities are being targeted by ongoing airstrikes and shelling. The spread of disinformation is stoking intercommunal conflict and dividing communities. Recent attacks in Buthidaung and in Byain Phyu have fuelled further displacement and caused the loss of innocent lives.

    The suffering of Rakhine communities, including the Rohingya, has been compounded by restrictions on humanitarian access. Food and medical supplies are urgently needed. The international community must consider all options for reaching those in Rakhine.

    Since 2017, the UK has provided over £45 million to the Rohingya and other Muslim minorities in Myanmar, and £391 million to Rohingya living in camps in Bangladesh. The current conditions in Rakhine State are not conducive to returns, which must be voluntary, safe and dignified.

    Accountability is crucial. We recall the provisional measures made by the International Court of Justice, and continue to support evidence gathering, including by the International Impartial and Independent Mechanism.

    High Commissioner,

    What more can the Council do to ensure that humanitarian assistance reaches those in Rakhine?

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK agrees deals on mackerel fishing with Norway and the Faroe Islands [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK agrees deals on mackerel fishing with Norway and the Faroe Islands [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 18 June 2024.

    New fisheries arrangements will significantly reduce fishing pressure on mackerel.

    Those arrangements reduce fishing pressure on the stock significantly and act as a stepping-stone towards a long-term quota-sharing arrangement involving all coastal states to the stock.

    They will mean access for Norway and Faroes to fish some of their quota in the UK zone in return for an annual transfer of some of their quota to the UK.

    The details of the arrangements can be found on gov.uk.

  • PRESS RELEASE : World Trade Organization – Iceland’s Trade Policy Review [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : World Trade Organization – Iceland’s Trade Policy Review [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 18 June 2024.

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

    Thank you very much Chair, and welcome to your first TPR, and an equally warm welcome to the delegation from Reykjavík led by the Director General. Great to have you all here. And let me also express our thanks to the WTO Secretariat for their report, to Iceland for its report and of course to Ambassador Kelly for her ever insightful comments.

    Let me start by thanking Iceland for the significant preparations and work which I know has gone into this Review, as any other Review. As you said DG, that’s all the more challenging for a smaller country like yours but small is absolutely beautiful on this occasion, so thank you for all your work on that. And since I know you’re all going to be celebrating your 80th anniversary of independence on Monday, I hope that you’ll be able to go away from here and have a big party on Monday to celebrate all the hard work that has gone into this.

    The work that you’ve done, the work the Secretariat has done gives us a really good basis for the discussion today. And I think it’s really impressive, both to hear from you and to read the reports, to hear about the robust economic growth post-pandemic, to hear what you’ve been doing across so many fields of economic activity, whether it be on gender equality or on sustainability. Your growth records are incredibly impressive. As you’ve set out: over 5% in 2021, almost 9% in 2022. And that is obviously, in large part, due to strong export-led growth, led by services, particularly tourism, aluminium production, fisheries. And that is of course the product of that commitment to free and fair trade which you set out at the start. Similarly, your really strong renewable energies market accounting for over 90% of your energy consumption, helping you to maintain a strong growth rate, but also giving you protection during a period of geopolitical tension and high global energy prices. Similarly, a really impressive medium-term fiscal strategy focusing, as you know, on expenditure restraint, revenue generation and the challenges of inflation.

    So let me then echo what Ambassador Kelly said and what you referred to, both in terms of the ranking, the first place ranking in the World Economic Forum Global Gender Pay Gap Report, highest participation in the labour market amongst the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development countries. It’s an extraordinary record. And it’s an extraordinary record of women’s economic empowerment. So let me thank you for your responses to several of the questions that we have posed before this Review, trying to learn to be honest from your inspiring example on gender equality. And of course it’s not just about what you’ve done nationally, as both you and Ambassador Kelly have said, it’s also about what you’ve done multilaterally, including in this house, building on the Buenos Aires Declaration.

    Back last year I had the unenviable task of following in the very large and agile footsteps of Ambassador Gunnarsson, when I succeeded him as one of the co-chairs of our Informal Working Group on Trade and Gender here in the WTO, alongside my very distinguished colleagues from El Salvador and Cabo Verde. You may not be co-chairing anymore, but you continue to make a really important contribution to the work of that Informal Working Group and it’s great, but I have to say I would expect nothing less from a country which has such a proud history of female leadership and women’s economic empowerment.

    I’d also like to thank you for the responses to our other advanced written questions, particularly in response to our question on Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) Allocations, very insightful. Our producers value further understanding Iceland’s TRQ allocation system and we would be grateful for any steps that Iceland would be willing to take to create a more transparent system, including updating notifications under Article 7.3 and 8.2 of the Agreement on Import Licencing Procedures.

    Chair, as well as learning from Iceland, we welcome this Trade Policy Review as an opportunity to reflect upon the closeness of our bilateral relationship. So, we’d like to thank Iceland for its close cooperation in the implementation of our comprehensive FTA which you referred to, DG, which will be presented very soon at the Committee on Regional Trade Agreements. Since it has come into effect, we have had several opportunities to deepen that cooperation. You very kindly hosted the second annual Joint Committee last year, and we looked for further ways to realise the full benefits of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) for our businesses and our consumers. On the implementation of the Chapter on Recognition of Professional Qualifications, it has allowed our professionals to continue to access a smooth and transparent system for qualification recognition. At our recent meeting on Services, Investment and Digital just last month, we made some further progress on those key issues.

    Of course, it’s not just about the FTA. We signed back in 2020 a Joint Vision which strengthens our relationship across a whole series of areas, not just trade and investment, but also fisheries; research and innovation; regional and international cooperation; defence and security; climate change and the Arctic; and people-to-people links.  We’ve also concluded several agreements since the last Trade Policy Review, a Youth Mobility Scheme, a Social Security Coordination agreement, Arctic Science Memorandum of Understanding. And, of course, as NATO allies, we share a common outlook on foreign and security policy for a common cooperation against the security threats we face and, of course, you have joined our UK-led Joint Expeditionary Force back three years ago.

    Inevitably, given those close links, we work really closely together in this organisation, as in many others. But we are, as Ambassador Kelly hinted, particularly grateful and particularly recognise the role that you have played within the Fisheries negotiations.  A true friend of fish. And that’s not just about the positive example you have set nationally, as you set out, DG, in terms of the lack of subsidies, the very robust fisheries management systems that you have put in place for sustainable fisheries. It’s also about the crucial role that you played in the negotiations here in this house. And we look forward to working closely with Ambassador Gunnarsson in the next few weeks so that we can try and bring home the agreement that we so narrowly failed to agree back in Abu Dhabi. I really hope we can do that by the time of the General Council, Chair, next month. And I don’t want to go ‘fishing’ for compliments to the Ambassador, but truly ‘any-fin’ is possible under his guidance, and I really hope he won’t feel ‘koi’ with my heartfelt praise and thanks. So, let’s do the right thing and deliver, not only for Ambassador Gunnarsson, but because it is the right thing for our oceans and for the fishing communities that depend upon them.

    Let me just conclude, Chair, by thanking Iceland for its preparations for this Review, for its cooperation with what is after all such an important transparency exercise in this organisation, and I wish all the delegation the best for their upcoming Independence Day celebrations. Skal!

  • PRESS RELEASE : Appointment of Dean of Worcester [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Appointment of Dean of Worcester [June 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 17 June 2024.

    The King has approved the nomination of The Reverend Canon Dr Stephen Edwards, Interim Dean of Worcester, to be appointed as Dean of Worcester in succession to The Very Reverend Peter Atkinson following his retirement.

    Background

    Stephen was educated at Lancaster University and trained for ministry at Westcott House, Cambridge. He served his title in the parish of Colwyn Bay, in the Diocese of St Asaph, Wales and in 1997 he was ordained Priest. From 1999 he served as Priest-in-Charge of Bryn-y-Maen.

    In 2002, Stephen was appointed Priest-in-Charge at St Agnes Birch-in-Rusholme, with St John with St Cyprian Longsight, in the Diocese of Manchester. From 2012 he served as Team Rector of Wythenshawe and in 2013 he was additionally appointed Area Dean, Withington.

    In 2019 Stephen was appointed Residentiary Canon at Worcester Cathedral and he took up his current role as Interim Dean in 2023.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Prime Minister to travel to Switzerland for major peace summit on Ukraine [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Prime Minister to travel to Switzerland for major peace summit on Ukraine [June 2024]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 15 June 2024.

    The Prime Minister will travel to Switzerland today to reiterate the UK’s support for Ukraine, as the first leader level peace summit focused on the future of the country gets underway.

    More than 50 heads of state and governments are expected to attend the summit near Lucerne, making it the largest world leader gathering solely focused on Ukraine since the invasion began.

    Speaking at the summit this evening, the Prime Minister will say:

    Those who aid Russia by providing the weapons of war, or components for those weapons should look at this summit today. They should look at Bucha, Mariupol, Kharkiv, and they should reflect on the choice they have made.

    They are placing themselves on the side of the aggressor – and on the wrong side of history. Putin has no interest in a genuine peace. He has launched a sustained diplomatic campaign against this summit ordering countries to stay away, spinning a phoney narrative about his willingness to negotiate.

    We should ask Russia why they feel so threatened by a summit discussing the basic principles of territorial integrity, food security and nuclear safety.

    He will add:

    From a position of strength, we must work with President Zelenskyy to set out the principles for a just and lasting peace, based on international law and the UN Charter.

    That is the path to a permanent cessation of hostilities. It will show Ukraine that we’ll stand by them when they are ready for negotiations.

    And it will show Putin’s allies in North Korea, Iran and elsewhere that we will protect the right of all nations to determine their own future.

    While at the summit, the Prime Minister is expected to meet President Zelenskyy to reiterate the UK’s support for Ukraine, including ensuring any future peace deal is sustainable, and crucially, on Ukraine’s terms.

    The summit follows the meeting of the G7 in Italy this week, where the UK, alongside G7 partners, announced 50 new sanctions designations and specifications to degrade Putin’s war machine, and committed to providing £242m in bilateral assistance to Ukraine, to support immediate humanitarian, energy and stabilisation needs.

    The UK also agreed with the G7 to provide a new loan for Ukraine worth $50bn, which will be repaid by the extraordinary revenues that come from the frozen assets of Russia’s central bank, both in Europe and around the world.

    National Security Advisor Sir Tim Barrow is also expected to attend the two-day Swiss summit.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Iran: joint statement by France, Germany and United Kingdom [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Iran: joint statement by France, Germany and United Kingdom [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 15 June 2024.

    Joint statement by the spokespeople for the Foreign Ministries of France, Germany and the United Kingdom on the Iranian nuclear programme.

    Statement by the governments of France, Germany and the United Kingdom:

    We, the governments of France, Germany and the United Kingdom, condemn Iran’s latest steps, as reported by the IAEA, to further expand its nuclear programme.

    Iran has taken further steps in hollowing out the JCPoA, by operating dozens of additional advanced centrifuges at the Natanz enrichment site as well as announcing it will install thousands more centrifuges at both its Fordow and Natanz sites. These steps will further increase Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile and enrichment capacity, which already significantly exceed JCPoA limits. This decision is a further escalation of Iran’s nuclear programme, which carries significant proliferation risks. Iran’s decision to substantially increase its production capacity at the underground Fordow facility is especially concerning.

    Presenting such steps as a reaction to the IAEA Board of Governors’ adoption of a resolution calling for Iran’s long overdue cooperation on safeguards is not acceptable. Iran is legally obliged under the Non-Proliferation Treaty to fully implement its safeguards agreement, which is separate to the JCPoA.

    We remain committed to a diplomatic solution preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Alan Bates, top business executives and leading innovators honoured for King’s Birthday [June 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Alan Bates, top business executives and leading innovators honoured for King’s Birthday [June 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 15 June 2024.

    List of endorsed recipients includes current and former leaders of FTSE 100 companies.

    • Post Office campaigner Alan Bates knighted for his twenty-year campaign for justice for postmasters
    • FTSE executives also honoured for services to business and growing the UK economy
    • Leading innovators and change makers are the theme of this year’s awards

    Alan Bates, who led a 20-year campaign for justice for sub-postmasters affected by the Horizon IT scandal, has been made a Knight Bachelor (KT) as the King’s Birthday Honours are announced today.

    Top business leaders, entrepreneurs and pioneers have also been recognised for their exceptional achievements and contributions to the UK economy.

    This includes current and former leaders of FTSE 100 companies such as Unilever and Taylor Wimpey, the head of the London Stock Exchange and a series of other outstanding business leaders who have championed a wide range of sectors at home and overseas and been at the forefront of innovation and change.

    Endorsed by the Department for Business and Trade, the list of recipients also includes several individuals who have faced adversity but who have used their experience to deliver significant community impact.

    Alan Jope has received a CBE for services to business.

    Alan was responsible for leading one of the world’s largest and geographically diverse companies with operations in 190 countries. He instigated important changes, simplifying Unilever’s legal structure, streamlining the company’s portfolio to focus on growth, and undertaking reform of the company’s operating model. His leadership was crucial to Unilever’s turnover exceeding £60b for the first time, up from £50b five years prior. Under his leadership, Unilever was the first major company to voluntarily put a Climate Transition Action Plan to a shareholder vote in 2021.

    Alan Jope, Lately Chief Executive Officer of Unilever said:

    It was an enormous privilege to lead Unilever as CEO for almost five years. I am extremely grateful for this recognition in His Royal Highness’s Birthday Honours list.

    Jennifer Daly has received a CBE for services to Business and to the Housing Sector.

    Jennie Daly is the first woman to lead a FTSE 100 housebuilding company in the UK, having been appointed in April 2022. She has built a successful career in the housebuilding sector, starting in the public sector in local authority planning roles before moving into the private sector. She is an active member of the industry federation, a non-executive director on the New Homes Quality Board and has also previously served as a Board member on a not-for-profit housing trust. She is also a strong advocate for women in the industry and has demonstrated exceptional leadership throughout her career.

    Jennifer Daly, Chief Executive of Taylor Wimpey said:

    I have a real passion for housebuilding and the social and economic benefits it brings to communities across the UK, and I am deeply honoured to have been recognised in the King’s Birthday list for services to business and the industry.

    Julia Hoggett has received a DBE for services to business and to finance.

    Julia has provided inspirational leadership in helping to restore the role of the UK capital markets and the London Stock Exchange as a major provider of capital to fund innovation, productivity, growth, jobs and to support investors’ returns. She set up and chairs the UK Capital Markets Industry Taskforce to support the modernisation of the UK capital markets.

    She has also sought to ensure that the London Stock Exchange (LSE) remained strong through challenging times including during Covid and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. She has influenced quoted companies to embrace Net Zero targets and the wider Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) agenda and under her leadership the LSE is now the leading provider of green and transition finance. She is a pioneer for women and the LBGTQ+ community in financial services.

    Julia Hoggett, Chief Executive Officer of the London Stock Exchange said:

    I am deeply humbled to be included in His Majesty The King’s Birthday Honours List. Whilst I recognise that this is an individual honour, I feel it is very much for the team of people at the London Stock Exchange who do such remarkable work to support the companies, investors and intermediaries in our markets.

    It is also a recognition of the even broader community, most notably my colleagues on the Capital Markets Industry Taskforce, who are so dedicated to the task of ensuring our capital markets truly serve all stakeholders up and down the UK. This honour inspires me to work even harder on this agenda.”

    Lady Suzanne Heywood of Whitehall has received a CBE for services to business leadership.

    Suzanne is the COO of Exor, a multi-billion dollar holding company, where she uses her knowledge and experience to build and grow great companies. Suzanne is also the Executive Chair of CNH and Iveco Group and a Non-Executive Director of Louboutin and The Economist. Lady Heywood established The Heywood Foundation in 2018, which she chairs in memory of her husband Lord Heywood of Whitehall.

    The Foundation champions innovation in public policy and increasing diversity within the public sector and has recently launched the “Heywood Quarterly”, a new publication. Suzanne has written a best-selling biography of her late husband (What Does Jeremy think) and a best-selling account of her own childhood at sea (Wavewalker), which meant she was unable to have normal schooling.

    Suzanne Heywood, Chief Operating Officer at Exor, Chair of CNH and Chair of Iveco said:

    I am humbled to receive this, and grateful to my family and the many colleagues who have supported me throughout my career. It’s been a long journey – from a girl on a boat in the South Pacific with no education to here – and I owe a lot of thanks to those who made it possible.

    Kenny Imafidon has received an MBE for services to the social and market research professions.

    Kenny has overcome extreme challenges to co-found a thriving research and insights agency that counts Starbucks, Uber, the Houses of Parliament and UNICEF UK amongst its clients.

    The agency, ClearView Research, specialises in research, strategy and engagement projects, focused on diverse and underrepresented communities. Prior to founding ClearView at 22, Kenny used his limited platform to initiate The Kenny Reports, a series of reports delivered to the House of Commons, to raise awareness and articulate the challenges young people and disadvantaged communities face today.

    As Chair of the Board of Trustees of City Gateway, he was involved in the £1 million Skill Up Step Up campaign which benefited from funding from Barclays Life Skills.

    Additionally, as a Trustee of BBC Children in Need, he was instrumental in bringing about the pledge of £10m funding over 10 years, and development of a new funding programme dedicated to supporting young Black talent to achieve their full potential in partnership with BBC Radio 1Xtra.

    Kenny Imafidon, Co-founder of ClearView Research said:

    I am grateful for the recognition of my services to the research industry. My journey began with The Kenny Reports at 18 years old, it then transitioned into the building of ClearView Research at 22, to where it is today.

    I am proud that in just under a decade, ClearView has conducted hundreds of projects engaging diverse communities from all four corners of the UK; from Cornwall to Armagh; from Edinburgh to London whether online or offline; ClearView has amplified the voices of diverse and underrepresented communities in both social and market research.

    Although I am personally being recognised, my success is a team effort, and would not have been possible without my amazing team members, co-founders, support system, mentors and those who have believed in me on this journey.

    Full list of individuals endorsed in the 2024 Birthday Honours List by the Department for Business and Trade:

    Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE)

    Julia Hoggett, Chief Executive Officer, London Stock Exchange. For services to Business and to Finance

    Knights Bachelor (KT)

    Alan Bates, Founder, Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance. For services to Justice

    Commanders of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

    John Burns, Lately Chief Executive Officer and Chair, Derwent London plc. For services to Property, to Investment and to Development

    Graham Chipchase, Chief Executive Officer, Brambles. For services to Sustainable Business

    Jennifer Daly, Chief Executive, Taylor Wimpey. For services to Business and to the Housing Sector

    Lady Suzanne Heywood of Whitehall, Chief Operating Officer, Exor, Chair, CNH and Chair, Iveco. For services to Business Leadership

    Professor Michael Izza, Lately Chief Executive, Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales. For services to Accounting, Audit and to Sustainability.

    Alan Jope, Lately Chief Executive Officer, Unilever. For services to Business

    Brian Kingham, Founder and Chairman, Reliance Security Group. For services to Business, to the Economy and Charity

    Professor Elizabeth Varga, Director, Infrastructure Systems Institute. For services to Critical Infrastructure

    Lesley Wild, Lately Chair, Bettys and Taylors. For services to Business and Trade

    Officers of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

    Christopher Berridge, Managing Director, Paneltex. For services to Business, to Exports and to the Environment

    Alexandra Bolton, Director, Climate Governance Initiative. For services to the Built and Natural Environment

    Elaine Clark, Chief Executive, Rail Forum. For services to the Rail Supply Industry

    Jacqueline Gedman, Lately Chief Executive, Kirklees Council. For services to Business and to the community in Kirklees, West Yorkshire.

    Michael Hawes, Chief Executive Officer, Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. For services to the Automotive Industry

    John Heffernan, Managing Director, Fern Innovation Ltd. For services to Business and to Technology

    John Hill, Director, Technology and Strategy, The Welding Institute. For services to SMEs, to the Research Institutes Sector, to Local Economic Development and to Higher Education

    Sharon Kemp, Chief Executive, Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council. For services to Business and to the community in Rotherham, South Yorkshire

    Lucy Lytle, Founder and Creative Director, Soane Britain Ltd. For services to British Manufacturing and Craftsmanship

    Peter McCrea, Lately Chair, LionHeart RICS. For services to the Profession of Chartered Surveyors

    Suzannah Nichol MBE, Chief Executive Officer, Build UK. For services to the Construction Industry

    Professor Henry Overman, Professor of Economic Geography, London School of Economics and Director, What Works Centre. For services to Local Growth

    John Stone, Entrepreneur. For services to Philanthropy

    Subhash Thakrar, Lately Chair, London Chamber of Commerce. For services to British Trade and Investment in Africa

    Kate Tinsley, Chief Executive, MKM Building Supplies. For services to the Construction Sector and to Diversity

    Kimberly Wiehl, Board member, UK Export Finance. For services to Export Credit Finance and to International Trade

    Carl Woollins, Managing Director UK and Ireland, Nippon Gases. For services to the Chemicals Industry

    Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

    Andrew Beddows, Managing Director, Ideas Network UK Community Interest Company. For services to Innovation and Business

    Victoria Brownlie, Chief, Policy, British Beauty Council. For services to the Hair and Beauty Industry

    Emma Degg, Chief Executive, North West Business Leadership Team. For services to Business and to the community in North West England

    Angela Farrugia, Founder and Group Managing Director, Brand X Society. For services to business and licensing

    Warren Ginsberg, Chair, HiB Ltd. For services to the Home Improvement and Bathroom Industries

    Steven Gould, Council Member, General Chiropractic Council. For services to Consumers

    David Happy, Managing Director, Telint. For services to Telecommunications and to Technology

    Jennifer Hartley, Director, Invest Newcastle and Head of Economic Development, Newcastle City Council. For services to Business and Trade

    Kenny Imafidon, Co-Founder, ClearView Research. For services to the Social and Market Research Professions

    Dean Jackson, Managing Director, HUUB Ltd. For services to Business and to Innovation

    Samantha Mackintosh (Claire Cullens), Chief Executive Officer, Norfolk Community Foundation. For services to Business Development and to Charity

    Victoria Moorby, Head, Marketing, Oxley Group. For services to the Defence and Aerospace Industry

    Susan Nicholls, Lately Chief Executive Officer, Citizens Advice Staffordshire South-West. For services to the community in Staffordshire

    Maria Sarkar, Co-Founder and Vice-President of DriveWorks. For services to Manufacturing

    Helen Tonks, Founder and Director, Hydraulics Online Ltd. For services to Business and to Exports

    Harold Wilson, Owner and Group Chair, UK Docks Marine Services. For services to the Marine Engineering Industry

    Medallists of the Order of the British Empire (BEM)

    Sally Bourton, Postmistress. For services to the community in Trewoon, Cornwall

    Sellathurai Chandrakumar, Postmaster. For services to the community in Notting Hill, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea

    Geppino Dammone, Director, Salvo’s Restaurant, Leeds. For services to Hospitality

    Gianfranco Dammone, Managing Director, Salvo’s Restaurant, Leeds. For services to Hospitality

    Maureen Rickard, Lately Postmistress, St Minver Post Office. For services to the community in St. Minver, Cornwall

    Matthew Tyrrell, Postmaster. For services to the community in Penllergaer, West Glamorgan

    Staff from the Department for Business and Trade (DBT) recognised in the 2024 Birthday Honours List include:

    Officers of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

    Dr Barry Blackwell, Head, UK Building Information Modelling and National Digital Twin Programmes, Department for Business and Trade.

    Dr Joanne Bray, Deputy Director, Automotive Unit, Department for Business and Trade.

    Kate Davies, Deputy Director, Security and Business Continuity, Department for Business and Trade.

    Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

    Richard Boyd, Senior Policy Advisor, Department for Business and Trade.

  • Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech at the Summit on Peace in Ukraine

    Rishi Sunak – 2024 Speech at the Summit on Peace in Ukraine

    The speech made by Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, on 15 June 2024.

    Thank you President Amherd, President Zelenskyy.

    Colleagues, Russia chose to wage war on Ukraine, and we come here united because we choose peace.

    Peace based on the foundational principles of the United Nations Charter.

    The Ukrainian people did not ask for this fight.

    But, in defending their country, their valour and their sacrifice has been truly humbling to witness.

    It is a cruel paradox…

    …that the things that make life worth living…

    …are also the things for which brave men and women are prepared to die.

    For family.

    For freedom.

    For the ability to shape one’s own future.

    We salute them all…

    …just as we abhor all of those who have pushed this fate upon them.

    I recall my first visit to Kyiv where I saw the explosive devices that departing Russian soldiers had placed in children’s toys and footballs.

    There can be no justification for that.

    There can be no justification for escalating nuclear rhetoric.

    There can be no justification for disrupting food supplies to tens of millions of vulnerable people.

    Now there will be of course a diversity of views round this table, but I commend and thank everyone for their participation here today, demonstrating that you all seek a genuine peace to this conflict.

    Because Putin has no interest in genuine peace.

    He has launched a sustained diplomatic campaign against this very summit, ordering countries to stay away.

    And we should ask, why does Russia feel that they are so threatened by a summit discussing the basic principles of territorial integrity, food security and nuclear safety?

    Instead, Russia’s representative at the United Nations said recently that:

    “The only topic for any international meetings on Ukraine will be the unconditional surrender of the Kyiv regime”.

    Well that will never happen.

    Because aggression cannot and will not prevail.

    Instead, we must set out the principles for a just and lasting peace, based on international law and the UN Charter.

    That is the path to a permanent cessation of hostilities.

    Showing that we will always protect the right of all nations to determine their own future.

    This summit is a chance to start down that path…

    To respond together to the global impacts of the war in Ukraine, to send a strong message from the international community to Russia and beyond, that we want to end the suffering.

    We want to see an end to this war.

    And we want to make this the day that the path towards a just and lasting peace in Ukraine became that much closer.

    Thank you.