Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : Parties to armed conflicts have obligations to protect local and national aid workers: UK statement at the UN Security Council [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Parties to armed conflicts have obligations to protect local and national aid workers: UK statement at the UN Security Council [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 May 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UN Security Council meeting on humanitarian personnel.

    President, I want to begin by thanking Switzerland for their work to take forward this really important initiative and the collaborative way in which they did it.

    We would also like to take the opportunity today to recognise all UN and humanitarian personnel on behalf of the UK for their vital work.

    The UK strongly supports the purposes of this resolution. UN and humanitarian workers operate worldwide in extremely difficult and often dangerous conditions, and it is right that we as a Council have today affirmed the protections that they need and deserve.

    Crucially the resolution is clear that parties to armed conflicts have obligations to protect local and national aid workers, as well as UN and international humanitarian personnel, and we call on all Member States to facilitate their work and support their efforts.

    Local and national aid workers are essential in efforts to reach the most vulnerable, and who often run significant risks to their own lives to help save the lives of others.

    We welcome the strong language reaffirming the importance of International Humanitarian Law, as well as the need to focus on protection from the scourge of sexual and gender-based violence.

    And finally, we welcome the resolution’s focus on addressing misinformation and disinformation and encourage further steps to counter this increasing threat to UN and humanitarian staff.

    We look forward to seeing the recommendations in the Secretary-General’s report and remain committed to taking forward this important agenda.

    I thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 4th International Small Island Developing States Conference: UK statement [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : 4th International Small Island Developing States Conference: UK statement [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 May 2024.

    Lord Benyon, Minister of State for Climate, Environment and Energy, gave the UK’s national statement at the Small Island Developing States (SIDS) Conference.

    Thank you, Prime Minister Browne, Secretary-General Guterres and your teams, for bringing us together on this beautiful island.

    Before I say anything else, I just want to recognise the terrible loss of life from the landslide in Papua New Guinea. We remain with the Government of Papua New Guinea and all those affected in this terrible event. It focuses our mind on what we’re here to do.

    Formally, SIDS’ unique position has been acknowledged for decades. And I’d like to take this opportunity of recognising the presence here in some numbers, representatives of the United Kingdom’s Overseas Territories, many of whom are SIDS and deserve to be considered as part of the solutions we find.

    While formally SIDS’ unique position has been acknowledged, we’re yet to see the way forward for you, and we need to hear you speak up, as you are doing very forcefully at this event – persistently and powerfully – to make sure the world really understands what it means to see things from your perspective.

    So, it is up to all of us to make a sincere effort to do so – and then to take action.

    For our part, the United Kingdom is helping Antigua to host this conference, and Samoa to host the Commonwealth Heads of State and Government meeting later this year.

    We’re working hard to make sure the support we offer SIDS takes your specific needs into account – and that we work in partnership with you in addressing them.

    And for all of us, we should be asking ourselves 3 vital questions, to check whether we have been listening.

    First, do our systems reflect the unique circumstances of SIDS?

    Prime Minister Browne, Prime Minister Fiame Mata’afa and the UK team have showcased the work that we have led with SIDS and the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee. Crucially, it includes an agreement to look into how vulnerability could be integrated into the OECD’s DAC ODA policy and processes, including on graduation.

    I know the current system creates real problems for SIDS. And frankly, the way we do aid does not work for some of the world’s most vulnerable, and that’s something that’s inherently wrong with the system.

    Second, are we offering enough funding?

    Last year, Britain announced an additional £1.6 billion for the Green Climate Fund. That’s our biggest single aid commitment to help tackle climate change.

    Earlier this month, we announced that £25 million of our new support for Antimicrobial Resistance will be for work in the Caribbean region. And last week, our Foreign Secretary pledged a further £200 million to build on our landmark Caribbean Infrastructure Fund.

    And we continue to press international financial institutions to stretch their balance sheets, so the aid that we and other donors give to them goes as far as it can – and has a real impact when it gets there.

    The final test is the most important: can SIDS actually access the money?

    Over the years, so many of you have said “we keep hearing announcements about green finance, but it seems so hard to get hold of it.”

    We are using our programme funding to boost technical assistance to SIDS. And we want to make sure all of you can harness expertise, to get the cash you need from the international finance system, and spend it effectively – be that cleaning up marine pollution, or making infrastructure better to withstand a cyclone.

    I hope you sense that the UK is listening, and that we are taking action.

    Together, we can support the communities, the biodiversity, the incredible natural beauty of the islands around the world – and it is going to take all of us to see this through.

    Thank you very much.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Myanmar’s children are bearing the brunt of this crisis: UK statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UK-hosted UN Arria meeting on youth and children in Myanmar [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Myanmar’s children are bearing the brunt of this crisis: UK statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UK-hosted UN Arria meeting on youth and children in Myanmar [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 29 May 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UK-hosted UN Arria meeting on youth and children in Myanmar.

    Thank you, excellencies, colleagues for joining today’s Arria-formula meeting on the situation in Myanmar.

    Last May, we held an Arria focused on Myanmar’s humanitarian crisis. In a span of 12 months, the number of people in need of humanitarian assistance has risen from 17.6 million to 18.6 million. The number of internally displaced persons is now 3 million, in comparison to 1.8 million in 2023.

    Myanmar’s youth and children are bearing the brunt of this crisis, triggered by the military coup and their repression of the civilian population. More than half are out of school, routine vaccinations are being disrupted, and with food insecurity on the rise, there is a risk that many will suffer from childhood malnutrition.

    So what can we do to shift the trajectory and protect Myanmar’s children and future generations?

    First, the international community needs to pay greater attention to the worsening levels of food insecurity. More than 13 million people in Myanmar are projected to fall into acute food insecurity this year. Babies will not receive the necessary nutrients to grow up healthy while children may be pushed to join armed groups or forced to be married to reduce the burden on their families. The United Kingdom has helped support 1.8 million people with nutrition and livelihood support in 2023. We call on others to urgently ramp up their response.

    Second, there needs to be greater access to education and health services, including through localised delivery partners to ensure we reach all those in need. Through local providers, the UK has helped support half a million women and children to access maternal, newborn, and child health services. And last year, we helped facilitate education to over 200,000 children, of whom more than half were girls.

    And finally, it is deeply concerning that nearly 150 children are estimated to have been killed in Myanmar in the first five months of 2024. We are also following reports of forced recruitment, increased violence, and displacement in Rakhine State, affecting all civilians, including Rohingya, Rakhine, and other ethnic communities. Unified messaging underlining the critical need for all parties to protect civilians, including children, is urgently needed. As per ASEAN’s latest review of the five-point consensus, we call on the Myanmar Armed Forces in particular, to stop targeted attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, including schools and healthcare facilities. And we reiterate the Security Council’s demand for an immediate end to all forms of violence as set out in Resolution 2669.

    Now, today, we will hear perspectives from Myanmar’s youth and children, as well as from UNICEF Emergency Operations Director, Lucia Elmi. I would now like to turn my colleagues’ attention to the screen to hear the invaluable voices of Myanmar’s future generation.

  • PRESS RELEASE : North Korea failed satellite launch on 27 May 2024 [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : North Korea failed satellite launch on 27 May 2024 [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 May 2024.

    Following North Korea’s failed satellite launch on 27 May, a Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) spokesperson gave a statement.

    An FCDO spokesperson said:

    North Korea’s failed satellite launch on 27 May is another breach of multiple UN Security Council resolutions (UNSCRs). Unlawful launches continue to destabilise the peace and security of the Korean Peninsula.

    The UK strongly urges North Korea to stop such provocations, return to dialogue and take credible steps towards denuclearisation.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Women’s participation as leaders, negotiators and peacebuilders greatly enhances the chances of long-lasting peace: UK statement at the UN Security Council [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Women’s participation as leaders, negotiators and peacebuilders greatly enhances the chances of long-lasting peace: UK statement at the UN Security Council [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 May 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UN Security Council meeting on women, peace and security and youth.

    Thank you, President, and let me thank Mozambique for convening this meeting. I’m also grateful to all our briefers for their remarks today.

    As they have set out, it is critical that we move from commitments to concrete actions on women, peace and security and youth, peace and security.

    I will set out three broad priorities.

    First: participation. We know that women’s full, equal, meaningful and safe participation – as leaders, negotiators and peacebuilders – greatly enhances the chances of long-lasting peace.

    We are working to make this a reality. Through the Peacebuilding Fund, the UK is supporting women and youth initiatives, including in Liberia, Somalia, Sierra Leone and Burkina Faso. We recently launched a programme of over $900,000 supporting women peacebuilders including in South Sudan and elsewhere.

    We fund Women Mediators Across the Commonwealth, a group of 50 conflict mediators engaged in conflict prevention. For example, Commonwealth members from West Africa are working with women and communities in Niger, leading innovative solutions to stop conflict before it starts.

    We want to see this expertise being used at scale, with networks of women mediators and grassroots women’s organisations engaged across all issues on this Council’s agenda.

    Second: empowerment. By amplifying the voices of those most affected by conflict, we can better address and mitigate its impacts. During the UK presidency last year, we supported the first child civil society representative to address this Council in person. Last week, my minister convened a roundtable in London of girls from South Sudan, DRC, Ukraine and the West Bank to hear their thoughts on the most pressing needs of children in conflict settings.

    Our Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict Initiative prioritises the voices of survivors and puts them at the heart of decision-making, including through a Survivor Advisory Group.

    Third: protection. Women and young people disproportionately bear the brunt of conflict. For children who grow up in war, the scars of conflict, including conflict-related sexual violence, remain into their youth and well beyond.

    The UK’s Platform for Action Promoting the Rights and Wellbeing of Children Born of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence is dedicated to addressing the urgent challenges faced by this vulnerable group. It includes commitments to action from the UK, Canada and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    President, the Summit of the Future and the New Agenda for Peace provide opportunities to advance our collective efforts to prevent conflict. Let us commit to moving from words to action, to empower women and youth, and take decisive steps to a more just and equitable future. I thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : HMS Duncan deploys to the Red Sea to protect shipping routes [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : HMS Duncan deploys to the Red Sea to protect shipping routes [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 27 May 2024.

    The Type 45 destroyed sailed from Portsmouth today to relieve her sister ship, HMS Diamond.

    Royal Navy warship HMS Duncan has deployed from Portsmouth today to the Red Sea.

    The Type 45 destroyer will relieve its sister ship HMS Diamond, which has been protecting shipping lanes in the Red Sea from Houthi attacks since before Christmas.

    HMS Duncan is a like-for-like replacement for Diamond – armed with the same Sea Viper missile system and equipped with the same radar systems, which are able to accurately detect faraway threats.

    During her deployment, HMS Diamond has shot down nine drones and one missile, launched by Houthis from the coast of Yemen at cargo ships.

    The 200 men and women of HMS Duncan have worked to ensure that their ship is ready to deploy, successfully completing trials and training last week in preparation for the deployment, which will see the ship work to ensure freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for merchant vessels.

    HMS Duncan spent five months leading NATO’s premier task group in the Mediterranean Sea last year, until handing over flagship duties to the Italian Navy in December.

    The ship is now ready for more operations, with over 60 new members joining the ship’s company.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Leasehold reforms become law [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Leasehold reforms become law [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 24 May 2024.

    Homeowners will receive more rights, power and protections over their homes under the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act which has become law today.

    The Act will make it easier and cheaper for leaseholders to buy their freehold, increase standard lease extension terms to 990 years for houses and flats, and provide greater transparency over service charges. The Act will also remove barriers for leaseholders to challenge their landlords’ unreasonable charges at Tribunal.

    It will further ban the sale of new leasehold houses other than in exceptional circumstances, end excessive buildings insurance commissions for freeholders and managing agents, and scrap the requirement for a new leaseholder to have owned their house or flat for two years before they can buy or extend their lease.

    The new powers also grant freehold homeowners on private and mixed tenure estates the same rights of redress as leaseholders, and equivalent rights to transparency over their estate charges, and help more leaseholders take over the management of their property if they want to. Leaseholders in some buildings are barred from taking over the management of the site or buying its freehold if more than 25% of its floor space is commercial – such as shops or offices on the ground floor. But this limit will now be increased to 50% to enable more homeowners to access Right to Manage or the right to a collective enfranchisement.

    The Act – which has officially received Royal Assent – strengthens existing, and introduces new, consumer rights for homeowners by:

    • Making it cheaper and easier for people to extend their lease or buy their freehold so leaseholders pay less to have more security in their home.
    • Increasing the standard lease extension term to 990 years for houses and flats (up from 50 years in houses and 90 years in flats), so leaseholders can enjoy secure ownership without the hassle and expense of future lease extensions.
    • Giving leaseholders greater transparency over their service charges by making freeholders or managing agents issue bills in a standardised format that can be more easily scrutinised and challenged.
    • Making it easier and cheaper for leaseholders to take over management of their building, allowing them to appoint the managing agent of their choice.
    • Making it cheaper for leaseholders to exercise their enfranchisement rights as they will no longer have to pay their freeholder’s costs when making a claim.
    • Extending access to redress schemes for leaseholders to challenge poor practice. The government will require freeholders, who manage their building directly, to belong to a redress scheme so leaseholders can challenge them if needed – managing agents are already required to belong to a scheme.
    • Making buying or selling a leasehold property quicker and easier by setting a maximum time and fee that for home buying and selling information.
    • Granting homeowners on private and mixed tenure estates comprehensive rights of redress, so they receive more information about what charges they pay, and the ability to challenge how reasonable they are.

    The Act will further benefit leaseholders by:

    • Scrapping the presumption that leaseholders pay their freeholders’ legal costs when challenging poor practice that currently acts as a deterrent when leaseholders want to challenge their service charges.
    • Banning opaque and excessive buildings insurance commissions for freeholders and managing agents, replacing these with transparent and fair handling fees.
    • Banning the sale of new leasehold houses so that, other than in exceptional circumstances, every new house in England and Wales will be freehold from the outset.
    • Removing the requirement for a new leaseholder to have owned their house or flat for 2 years before they can extend their lease or buy their freehold.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Infected Blood Compensation body and Victims and Prisoners Bill become law [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Infected Blood Compensation body and Victims and Prisoners Bill become law [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 24 May 2024.

    Today (Friday 24th May) the Victims and Prisoners Bill was granted Royal Assent, creating a new arm’s length body called the Infected Blood Compensation Authority (IBCA).

    Before the IBCA can make final payments, the Government will need to make the regulations to enact the compensation scheme for victims of the Infected Blood scandal. The legislation also means that the final regulations must be made by the Government – within three months, so by 24 August 2024.

    The Prime Minister delivered a state apology on the 20th of May, in response to the publication of the Infected Blood Inquiry report.

    The Minister for the Cabinet Office outlined the Government’s commitment to deliver compensation on the 21st of May in the House, alongside a proposed compensation scheme.

    The Government will continue to deliver interim payments, including the £210,000 announced on the 21st of May, to those living with an infection, starting in this summer, and within 90 days as of the 20th of May as announced by the Government.

    The Department for Health and Social Care has received the advance of £837 million to fund the interim payments. These payments will be made by the NHS Business Services Authority and equivalent organisations.

    Infected Blood Compensation Authority (IBCA)

    The IBCA is led by Interim Chair Sir Robert Francis KC. Sir Robert will continue engagement with the Infected Blood community in the coming weeks. The interim CEO of the IBCA has been in place for some weeks.

    The Lord’s amendments to the Victims and Prisoners Bill were considered in the House of Commons today as part of the ‘wash up’ process ahead of the general election period starting on Saturday 25 May.

    In addition, a statutory duty to review candour laws by the 1st of January 2025 has been included in the Act. The Inquiry recommended that due consideration be made of a duty of candour across Government.

    Sir Robert Francis, Interim Chair of the IBCA, said:

    I am very pleased to see that today Parliament has passed the legislation bringing the Authority into existence and to be formally confirmed as its Interim Chair.

    I fully understand the urgency for the infected and affected community to enable the Authority to start to receive applications and make awards in the shortest possible time, and we are already working very hard to achieve that.

    I will publish a more detailed statement about our work in the very near future.

  • Post Office – 2024 Letter to Postmasters Impacted by the Horizon Project

    Post Office – 2024 Letter to Postmasters Impacted by the Horizon Project

    The letter sent by the Post Office on 24 May 2024.

    Dear postmasters,

    The Horizon IT Scandal is one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in our history. Some of you have endured financial ruin, the loss of homes, livelihoods, and reputation. We have a duty to right these wrongs and deliver justice to you as quickly as possible. That’s why we introduced this Act, and why we acted quickly to make sure it was passed by Parliament before the general election.

    Parliament’s decision means that hundreds of convictions of innocent postmasters have been quashed. This clears your names, delivers justice, and ensures swift access to the financial redress that postmasters deserve.

    Convictions will be quashed if they meet the criteria set out in the Act, but in summary you will be eligible if:

    • prosecutions were brought about by the Post Office or CPS (or in Northern Ireland, the state prosecutor or the police)
    • offences were carried out in connection with Post Office business between 1996 and 2018
    • your conviction(s) were for relevant offences such as theft, fraud and false accounting
    • your conviction(s) were against postmasters, their employees, officers, family members or direct employees of the Post Office working in a Post Office that used the Horizon system software
    • the conviction has not been considered by the Court of Appeal

    Updating court and criminal records

    At this stage you do not need to take any further action. The Ministry of Justice has established a casework team who are in the process of identifying individuals in England & Wales whose convictions have been quashed by the Act and will write to them in the coming weeks to inform them of the quashing of their convictions. The Department of Justice is responsible for identifying and notifying individuals in Northern Ireland.

    The Ministry of Justice casework team will then provide details of convictions to His Majesty’s Courts & Tribunals Service (HMCTS) and the Police, and those agencies will amend court and police records to reflect the changes brought about by the legislation. The National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) acting for the Police Service will entirely delete any records relating to quashed convictions from the Police National Computer.

    Completely deleting the conviction record from the Police National Computer will mean the information is not available for any operational Police or law enforcement investigations, and in addition will no longer show up on any criminal record check, such as a DBS check. The Department of Justice, Northern Ireland Courts & Tribunals Service and Police Service of Northern Ireland will take similar steps to amend records in Northern Ireland.

    We will write to you again to confirm when your relevant court and criminal records have been updated.

    Claiming financial redress

    If you have had your convictions quashed under this legislation you will be entitled to financial redress. Work to establish the new redress scheme is underway and it will be in place by the summer, in line with previous government commitments. We will provide further information on how you can register for this scheme in due course.

    When you should contact us

    We will provide further updates on progress but expect that most relevant convictions will have been identified and letters sent by the end of July. If you have not heard from the Ministry of Justice casework team or the Department of Justice by the end of July, we would encourage you to contact them directly to ensure that your conviction has been considered.

    To make us aware of your conviction, or for any further queries, please email: PostOfficeConvictions@justice.gov.uk, or, for Northern Ireland, PostOfficeHorizon@justice-ni.gov.uk

    If you would prefer you can write to:

    Post Office Convictions

    Unit 8B
    Berkley Way
    South Tyneside
    Tyne & Wear
    NE31 1SF

    Or for Northern Ireland:

    Post Office Convictions (Northern Ireland)

    Legacy Litigation & Projects Unit
    Massey House
    Stormont Estate
    Belfast
    BT4 3SX

  • PRESS RELEASE : Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act receives Royal Assent [May 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act receives Royal Assent [May 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 24 May 2024.

    The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act has become law after receiving Royal Assent.

    • The Act will give the UK’s competition regulator tools to stop technology businesses with strategic power from misusing their position to disadvantage competitors and consumers.
    • The law will also create penalties for traders that break consumer protection law and allowing the Competition and Markets Authority to enforce consumer law directly.
    • Under the rules, it will be easier for consumers to manage subscriptions by providing clearer pricing, banning fake reviews, and giving consumers greater control over what they are purchasing online.

    The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act has become law after receiving Royal Assent.

    The Act paves the way to give consumers rights across the UK, with greater control and clarity over online purchases.

    It does this by requiring businesses to provide clearer information to consumers before they enter a subscription contract, remind consumers that their free trial or low-cost trial is coming to an end, and ensure consumers can easily exit a contract.

    Unavoidable hidden fees will also need to be included in the initial cost or clearly illustrated at the start of the purchasing journey. This will ensure consumers are clear from the offset about what they’re spending.

    The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act will also give new tools to the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) to address the challenges to competition in digital markets.

    These tools will allow the competition regulator to set tailored ‘conduct requirements’ which require a powerful tech company to change the way it operates if it is not treating users fairly. These rules could give consumers the room to freely choose the services they use, or stop companies from withholding information consumers need to make good decisions.

    The Act also gives the regulator powers to intervene and direct a firm to change its behaviour to boost competition – whether that is to benefit people using smartphones or businesses dependent on cloud services.

    The Act will also give new powers to the CMA to closely monitor road fuel prices and report any sign of malpractice to the government.

    Only a handful of the most powerful global technology companies will be subject to these new rules if, following an investigation, they are deemed to hold ‘strategic market status’.

    If companies fail to comply with decisions made by the CMA, they could be subject to fines reaching tens of billions of pounds. These fines and other measures will be balanced by rigorous checks and balances.