Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : Process activated to manage prisoner movements [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Process activated to manage prisoner movements [August 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 19 August 2024.

    A temporary measure to manage pressures in prisons in the north of England has been reactivated, following longstanding capacity failures and recent outbreaks of far-right disorder.

    In recent weeks, prisons in the north of England have seen hundreds of people enter the prison estate, after the Government took decisive action to tackle violent thuggery on our streets. This has exacerbated longstanding capacity issues in our prisons, which have been operating at critical levels for the last several years, often with under 1% capacity.

    To manage these pressures, HM Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) has reactivated an existing contingency mechanism, Operation Early Dawn, providing extra oversight of prisoner transfers between the police, courts and custody.

    This means that offenders will be summoned to a magistrates’ court only when it is confirmed that a cell in the prison estate is ready for them, should they be remanded into custody. They will be held in a police station until they are summoned to court.

    The activation of Operation Early Dawn helps to manage the prison capacity pressure felt in the short-term in a small number of regions. This action has been taken to ensure that we always have enough prison places to lock up those who choose to break the law.

    Prisons and Probation Minister, Lord Timpson, said: 

    We inherited a justice system in crisis and exposed to shocks. As a result, we have been forced into making difficult but necessary decisions to keep it operating.

    However, thanks to the hard work of our dedicated staff and partners, we have brought forward additional prison places and now introduced Operation Early Dawn to manage the pressure felt in some parts of the country.

    The police have reassured the public that this will not impact their ability to arrest criminals, and anyone who poses a risk to the public will not be bailed.

    National Police Chiefs’ Council Lead for Custody, Deputy Chief Constable Nev Kemp, said: 

    We are working closely with criminal justice system partners to manage demand in the system and ensure that the public are safe.

    Policing will continue to arrest anyone that they need to in order to keep the public safe, including policing protests and events and ensuring that people are arrested as expected.

    The Government has already brought forward a number of measures to increase capacity as a result of violent disorder, making hundreds of prison places available including a new houseblock at HMP Stocken, the repurposed HMP Cookham Wood, and accelerated maintenance work in other prisons.

    In the first week of forming a new Government, action was also taken to address the longstanding capacity issues in our prisons, announcing difficult but necessary changes to certain prison sentences.

    These changes will come into to force in early September, giving the Probation Service the time they need to safely release offenders, making such each person has somewhere to live once they leave prison and support into work.

    Operation Early Dawn involves an operational assessment being made each morning and throughout the day by the Prison Service, courts and police on which defendants can be transferred from police cells and taken to courts to ensure there is a safe and secure location if a defendant is remanded to custody.

    When previously operated, Operation Early Dawn has helped to minimise disruption to bail hearings and manage the movement of prisoners across the justice estate.

    Operation Early Dawn is expected to be implemented to address capacity concerns in the following areas:

    • North East and Yorkshire
    • Cumbria and Lancashire
    • Manchester, Merseyside and Cheshire
    • East and West Midlands

    The government will keep this measure under constant review and will activate or deactivate as necessary. Ongoing trials in the Crown Court will not be directly impacted and prisoners being held for Crown Court hearings will be brought to court and taken back to prison as usual.

    Notes to Editors

    As part of a long-term plan to address the capacity crisis the government is temporarily reducing the proportion of certain custodial sentences served in prison from 50% to 40%. These measures, which come into force in September and October, will include important safeguards and exemptions to keep the public safe and clear release plans to manage them safely in the community.

    Sentences for terrorism, sex offences, and serious violent offences of four years or more, will be automatically excluded, and, in an important distinction from the End of Custody Supervised Licence scheme, the early release of offenders in prison for domestic abuse-connected crimes will also be excluded. This includes:

    • stalking offences
    • controlling or coercive behaviours in an intimate or family relationship
    • non-fatal strangulation and suffocation
    • breach of restraining order, non-molestation order, and domestic abuse protection order

    Anyone released will be strictly monitored on licence by the Probation Service through measures which can include electronic tagging and curfews. They face being recalled to prison if they breach their licence conditions.

    The new rules will also not apply to most serious offenders, who already either spend two-thirds of their sentence behind bars or have their release determined by the Parole Board.

    Alongside the changes to early release the Government will build the prisons the country needs, review how sentencing and criminal justice works, and recruit an additional thousand probation officers.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Fostering new collaborations at 30th Sarajevo Film Festival [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Fostering new collaborations at 30th Sarajevo Film Festival [August 2024]

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

    This week in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), we are fostering new collaborations and promoting GREAT UK creative industries at 30th Sarajevo Film Festival.

    The United Kingdom is pleased to join celebrations of the 30th anniversary of the Sarajevo Film Festival, an iconic annual event for the world’s film and creative communities.

    This year, the United Kingdom will promote mutually beneficial opportunities for collaboration with world-leading British experts.

    The British Embassy Sarajevo, the British Council and the British Film Institute (BFI) will again be partnering with the Sarajevo Film Festival to support BiH creative talent.

    British Ambassador Julian Reilly said:

    We are proud of the UK’s longstanding association with the Sarajevo Film Festival. We are determined to nurture spaces where creative individuals and artists from various walks of life can come together, discuss art and culture, generate new ideas and build new collaborations .

    This year, the UK‘s lead organisation for film and the moving image, the British Film Institute, will bring a delegation of 9 UK screen professionals to engage with Bosnia and Herzegovina and Southeast Europe professions and develop potential innovative collaborations with the region.

    The BFI’s Head of UK Global Screen Fund and International Funds, Denitsa Yordanova, will join a panel discussion on collaborative opportunities, funding strategies and the exchange of creative resources with the UK.

    Ambassador Reilly will host a reception for British and regional film professionals to cement their mutual relationships and promote the UK creative industry. Nine British productions and co-productions will be screened during this year’s Festival.

    Ambassador Julian Reilly added:

    Creative industries have a very important role in the UK. Our creative industries are worth £125 billion in economic value to the country as a whole, employing 2.4 million people.

    Film and the TV sector is worth nearly £19 billion to the UK annually and provides more than 200,000 jobs. The cultural and creative industries can be a fantastic driver of economic growth, at the same time fostering cultural identity and diversity.

    I am glad that the UK has for a while now been building closer relations and collaboration between the creative sectors of our countries. Our world-leading creative industry brings energy, ambition and economic opportunity, inspires new ways of thinking and doing, and invites you to see things differently.

    We want Bosnia and Herzegovinian and Southeast European creatives to visit and collaborate with us.

    The United Kingdom and the Sarajevo Film Festival have worked together since the first phases of the Festival. Many prominent UK artists, film directors and producers such as Mike Leigh, Jeremy Irons, Lesley Manville, Katrin Cartlidge, Stephen Frears, Mike Goodridge, Simon Wilkinson, Olivia Hetreed, Selina Ukwuoma, Kevin Dolan, Steve Matthews, have shared their wide experience and knowledge at previous festivals.

    Numerous British movies were aired on the Sarajevo Film Festival screens, and major figures in British film including John Cleese, Mike Leigh, Mark Cousins, Cat Villiers, Stephen Frears, and Tim Roth have been awarded the Honorary Heart of Sarajevo.

    Through PlayUK, a British Council platform for improving film audio-visuals in the Western Balkans, UK experts have shared their knowledge on visual effects, virtual reality, film production and marketing.

    The British Council was one of the initial partners of CineLink, the Sarajevo Film Festival’s industry platform. CineLink Industry Days offers valuable insight and access to the film industry, particularly within the region and many UK experts have contributed to this platform.

    The United Kingdom hopes that this year’s strong engagement will lead to even more UK–BiH partnerships in the future, supporting economic growth and the development of the arts in both our countries.

    During the Sarajevo Film Festival, citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina will be able to learn more about the GREAT UK creative industry and about our cooperation with the Sarajevo Film Festival at the British Embassy Sarajevo  Facebook and Instagram pages.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Israel-Gaza ceasefire negotiations – UK, France, Germany and Italy foreign ministers’ joint statement [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Israel-Gaza ceasefire negotiations – UK, France, Germany and Italy foreign ministers’ joint statement [August 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 17 August 2024.

    Foreign ministers of the UK, France, Germany and Italy gave a statement following an update on Israel-Gaza ceasefire negotiations.

    Statement by Foreign Ministers of the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Italy:

    We, the Foreign Ministers of the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Italy, strongly support the ongoing mediation efforts by the United States, Egypt and Qatar to conclude the agreement for a ceasefire and the release of hostages and are encouraged by the constructive approach adopted so far.

    We welcome the fact that technical work will continue over the coming days, including on both the humanitarian provisions and the specific arrangements relating to hostages and detainees, and that senior officials will then reconvene before the end of next week with the aim of concluding the agreement.

    We urge all parties to continue to engage positively and flexibly in this process. We underline the importance of avoiding any escalatory action in the region which would undermine the prospect for peace.  There is too much at stake.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New G2G agreement with the UK will enable US$630 million hospital infrastructure benefiting 5 million Peruvians [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : New G2G agreement with the UK will enable US$630 million hospital infrastructure benefiting 5 million Peruvians [August 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 16 August 2024.

    Signing of new Government to Government agreement between the Government of Peru and the Government of the United Kingdom.

    • The signing took place at the Presidential Palace in Lima on Friday 16th August 2024 with the attendance of President Dina Boluarte, between His Majesty’s Ambassador to Peru Gavin Cook and Peruvian Ministry of Health Dr. César Vásquez Sánchez

    Lima, 16 August 2024. The Government of Peru and the UK Government have signed a new government to government agreement to enable the delivery of a large-scale $630 million hospital infrastructure that will benefit around 5 million Peruvians in northern regions of the country.

    The programme is a priority for the Peruvian government, as it aims to increase healthcare provision in those regions and reduce the regional healthcare gap in the country. It envisions the construction of two hospitals: the “Piura High Complexity Hospital” in the region of Piura, and the “Trujillo Regional Teaching Hospital” in the region of La Libertad, both in northern Peru.

    The agreement further strengthens the UK and Peru’s diplomatic and trading relationship. Similarly, this new partnership enables a consortium of UK businesses – with local and international experience – to support the delivery of two large-scale hospitals, managed by the Peruvian Health Investment Agency, PRONIS.

    HMA in Lima, Gavin Cook, said:

    Today, the signing of this new Agreement is focused on closing gaps in health infrastructure and improving health services in a decentralised manner, promoting the implementation of hospitals following international best practices and standards in the care of people, and raising the quality of hospital infrastructure.

    We hope that this is just the beginning of a new era of cooperation between the UK and Peru in the field of health where the UK can share the experience of the National Health Service (NHS) and the entire ecosystem of hospitals, primary care clinics, equipment suppliers, laboratories and researchers in the service of the health for the population.

    We want to not only deliver hospitals but also promote access to innovation, knowledge transfer and capacity building to improve people’s healthcare.

    Following an open procurement process, the UK consortium “UK Healthcare Alliance”, made up of Gleeds, Currie & Brown and Aecom, has been selected as partner on this large-scale hospital programme. The consortium will provide technical assistance, design and programme management, which will enable the hospital programme to progress.

    The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed also commits the British Embassy in Lima and the Peruvian Government to work together in the areas of health and social infrastructure, sharing best practice and expertise, fostering knowledge transfer at all levels. The UK-Peru Healthcare Partnership will be formed to promote knowledge exchange and innovation in healthcare infrastructure.

    This agreement is the fourth G2G agreement signed between the UK and Peru in the infrastructure sector, further enhancing our strong bilateral and trade relationship, boosting public investment as well as delivering social and sustainable infrastructure, resilient to climate change.

    In 2017, the G2G partnership for the organisation of the Pan American and Parapan American Lima 2019 Games began. In 2020, the Reconstruction Programme was launched, which we are now implementing together with the National Infrastructure Authority. The third G2G agreement was signed in 2021 with the Special Public Investment Project Bicentennial Schools.

    Through G2G agreements, the UK has brought international expertise and best practice to the Peruvian infrastructure landscape including through innovations in digital construction and the use of standard international contracts, that have reduced procurement timelines and increased transparency.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Win for witnesses as courts revamp waiting rooms [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Win for witnesses as courts revamp waiting rooms [August 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 16 August 2024.

    Victims and witnesses of crime will benefit from improved waiting rooms in 10 court buildings across England and Wales.

    • significant upgrades made to 10 courts across England and Wales
    • over £50,000 invested into refurbishment projects from Bolton to Truro
    • more calming environments to better support vulnerable court users

    These rooms provide a safe haven for victims or witnesses while they wait to give evidence and the results of the work will help the most vulnerable visitors feel safe and supported before giving evidence.

    The upgrades include improved video link rooms to facilitate pre-recorded evidence, new refreshment stations, and more comfortable seating as well as damp-proofing, re-painting and re-carpeting.

    By providing a welcoming and inclusive place for vulnerable people coming to court, the upgraded suites will improve wellbeing, helping witnesses to participate fully in the legal process and see justice done.

    Justice Minister Heidi Alexander said:

    Giving evidence can be an emotional experience for anyone, especially for victims, who deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.

    This refurbishment project will make the experience more comfortable for witnesses and victims, ensuring they can participate fully in our justice system and that their day in court runs as smoothly as possible.

    The refurbishment project across multiple sites in the UK has upgraded witness suites, creating clean, comfortable, and calming atmospheres.

    Courts with completed refurbishments are:

    • Gloucester Crown Court
    • Mold Crown Court
    • Highbury Magistrates’ court
    • Wolverhampton Combined Court
    • Bolton Crown Court
    • Crewe Magistrates’ Court
    • Kirklees Magistrates’ Court
    • Winchester Crown Court
    • Truro Magistrates’ Court
    • Chelmsford Crown Court

    The move comes as the government works to put victims at the heart of every stage of the criminal justice system. During this month’s King’s Speech, the government announced plans for a new Victims, Courts and Public Protection Bill which will deliver a justice system that gives victims of crimes  the support they deserve.

    The Bill will include measures that:

    • strengthen powers for the Victims’ Commissioner to ensure that they are empowered to hold the system to account for the needs of victims not being met
    • require offenders to attend their sentencing hearings so that victims and bereaved family members of deceased victims see criminals face the consequences of their actions
    • protect the public from sex offenders, restricting parental responsibility for child sex offenders and implementing restrictions on sex offenders changing their names
  • PRESS RELEASE : Hundreds more people continue appearing in court following violent disorder [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Hundreds more people continue appearing in court following violent disorder [August 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 16 August 2024.

    Data released today (16 August 2024) confirms 460 people arrested in connection with the violent disorder earlier this month have faced their day in court and at least 99 have already been sentenced.

    This means over 300 more people have appeared in court since last week.

    The rapid action taken across the justice system by police, prosecutors and those working in courts has led to over 300 of those individuals being remanded into custody. This is thanks to a collective effort to keep communities safe and free from further violence.

    The data released today shows that as of yesterday (15 August 2024):

    • 480 defendants had a first hearing scheduled in the magistrates’ court and 460 have already taken place
    • 99 were sentenced in either the magistrates’ court or Crown Court
    • 185 have been sent to Crown Court for sentencing
    • 153 have been sent to Crown Court for trial
    • 69 have received a custodial sentence in the Crown Court

    All these numbers will continue to increase over the rest of the month as more suspects are arrested, charged and sent to court.

    It comes as more than 500 prison places are also being brought online to boost capacity over the coming weeks and ensure there are cells ready to receive all those sent to custody by the courts.

    Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, said:

    We continue to see swift justice being done and more people feeling the full force of the law as a consequence of their actions.

    It is thanks to the hard work of people around the country and across the justice system that guilty offenders are being held to account.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Second World War codebreaker Alan Turing’s ‘Delilah’ project papers at risk of leaving the UK [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Second World War codebreaker Alan Turing’s ‘Delilah’ project papers at risk of leaving the UK [August 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 16 August 2024.

    A temporary export bar has been placed on Alan Turing’s unpublished Second World War papers relating to his ‘Delilah’ project.

    • The wartime documents are valued at £397,680
    • Export bar is to allow time for a UK institution to acquire the papers

    An export bar has been placed on Alan Turing’s unpublished Second World War papers relating to the ‘Delilah’ project, which developed a portable encryption system for use in military operations.

    The papers are valued at £397,680 (inclusive of VAT of £16,280 which can be reclaimed by an eligible institution), and are at risk of leaving the UK unless a domestic buyer can be found to acquire them.

    Following Turing’s groundbreaking work on the Enigma machines at Bletchley Park, he began work on the ‘Delilah’ project at Hanslope Park to develop a portable encryption system or voice scrambler to protect military secrets in the field.

    The papers consist of two bound notebooks and six separate gatherings of loose sheets. It comprises the notes of Alan Turing (1912-54) and Donald Bayley (1921-2020) relating to the World War Two project ‘Delilah’.

    Unpublished evidence of Alan Turing’s work has rarely survived. Turing himself did not usually keep research notes, working drafts, or correspondence. This collection of papers dating from 1943 to 1945 sheds light on some of Turing’s most inventive, secret, and overlooked work.

    Shortly after the Second World War ended in 1945, the Delilah machine was complete and Turing was able to demonstrate the working machine successfully, which showed a recording of one of Winston Churchill’s speeches, using a system which encrypted and decrypted communications from telephone and radio devices.

    Alan Turing’s work prefigured our modern digital world and his work at Bletchley Park is seen as being crucial to ending the Second World War early and saving many lives.  His post-war work formed the foundations of computer science as we know it today.  Alan Turing was later awarded an OBE for his work during the Second World War.

    Arts Minister Sir Chris Bryant said:

    The Delilah project papers offer unique insights into the extraordinary mind of Alan Turing, who is famed for decoding the Enigma machines, being instrumental in ending the Second World War and saving many lives.

    The British mathematician was central to the development of our modern digital world. It is right that a UK buyer has the opportunity to purchase these papers to give people the opportunity to continue to study and appreciate his work as an important part of our national story.

    The Minister’s decision follows the advice of the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest. The Committee found that the papers met the first and third Waverley criteria for their outstanding connection with our history and national life and their outstanding significance for the study of the history of computing, as well as Alan Turing’s mathematical knowledge of electrical engineering.

    RCEWA Chair Andrew Hochhauser KC said:

    The United Kingdom owes a debt of gratitude to Alan Turing. His extraordinary work on the Enigma project at Bletchley Park played a major part in winning World War Two and saved so many lives. Turing is closely connected to our modern digital world. He is generally accepted to be the founder of computer science and is also widely considered to be the father of Artificial Intelligence.

    The regard in which he is held is illustrated by the fact that in 2019 he was voted by a BBC audience the most iconic person of the twentieth century. He appears on the current £50 note. Explaining the Bank of England’s choice, the then Governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, observed, ‘All around us, his legacy continues to hold. Turing is a giant on whose shoulders so many now stand.’

    The decision on the export licence application for the papers will be deferred for a period ending on 15 November 2024 (inclusive). At the end of the first deferral period owners will have a consideration period of 15 Business Days to consider any offer(s) to purchase the papers at the recommended price of £397,680 (inclusive of VAT of £16,280 which can be reclaimed by an eligible institution). The second deferral period will commence following the signing of an Option Agreement and will last for four months.

    Notes to editors

    1. Organisations or individuals interested in purchasing the papers should contact the RCEWA on 02072680534 or rcewa@artscouncil.org.uk .
    2. Details of the object are as follows: two bound notebooks and six separate gatherings of loose paper sheets. It comprises the papers of Alan Turing (1912-54) and Donald Bayley (1921-2020) relating to the World War Two project ‘Delilah’. The papers date principally from 1943 to 1945, with some later additions. The material is divided as follows: Laboratory notebook (Turing and Bayley) (70 folios; 4to; 258 x 204mm). Papers on the Bandwidth theorem (Turing) (2 folios; 4to; 289 x 220mm). ‘Red form’ notes: mathematical diagrams, calculations and explanations written on the reverse of wireless-telegraphy intercept forms (Turing and Bayley) (20 folios; frayed; 4to; 250 x 189mm). ‘Determination of cut-off volts’: mathematical calculations, written on reverse of a wireless-operator log sheet (Turing) (1 folio; frayed; 4to; 249 x 197mm). ‘Faltung’: notes on the mathematics of convolutions, with diagram of mushroom, on reverse of radio log sheet (Turing) (1 folio; frayed and creased; 4to; 262 x 195mm). Notebook of notes taken by Bayley at Turing’s lectures delivered at Hanslope Park (90 folios), followed by notes taken by Bayley at university (140 folios) (Bayley) (230 folios; 4to; 278 x 235mm). Notes on different electrical problems (Turing) (2 folios) and summary notes on topics covered in Turing’s lectures (Turing, Bayley, and unidentified) (11 folios) (13 folios; 4to; 288 x 215 mm), two foolscap folios (325 x 200mm) one folio (227 x 288mm). Notes on a mathematical problem (Turing) (2 folios; 288 x 215mm)
    3. Provenance: Donald Bayley, thence by descent; sold at Bonham’s 14 November 2023
    4. The Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest is an independent body, serviced by Arts Council England (ACE), which advises the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport on whether a cultural object, intended for export, is of national importance under specified criteria.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor appoints Professor Alan Taylor as member of the Monetary Policy Committee [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor appoints Professor Alan Taylor as member of the Monetary Policy Committee [August 2024]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 16 August 2024.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves has today confirmed that Professor Alan Taylor will join the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) on 2 September for a 3-year term, replacing current external member Professor Jonathan Haskel who has been on the MPC since September 2018.

    Professor Taylor is an economist and currently Professor of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, New York. He has served as a senior advisor to major financial institutions including Morgan Stanley and PIMCO, is a visiting scholar at the Bank of England and has published papers in the fields of macroeconomics, international economics, finance and economic history.

    The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves said:

    Professor Alan Taylor’s substantial experience in both the financial sector and academia will bring valuable expertise to the Monetary Policy Committee.

    I would also like to thank Professor Jonathan Haskel for all his work since he joined the Monetary Policy Committee.

    Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, said:

    I’m really pleased Alan Taylor will be joining the Monetary Policy Committee this autumn, bringing with him his extensive knowledge and experience from his career in academia. This is an important time for the Committee and we will no doubt benefit from Alan’s contributions to our debates.

    I would like to also thank Jonathan Haskel for his service on the Committee over the past six years. He will be missed.

    About Professor Alan Taylor

    Professor Alan Taylor is an economist and currently Professor of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. He has served as a senior advisor at Morgan Stanley, PIMCO and McKinsey. He is a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and is a research fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research. He is also visiting scholar at the Bank of England. He has published papers in leading academic journals in the fields of macroeconomics, international economics, finance and economic history.

    Born in Wakefield, Professor Alan Taylor graduated from King’s College, Cambridge, before receiving his PhD in Economics from Harvard University.

    About the MPC

    The MPC has operational independence for monetary policy. It is comprised of the Governor of the Bank of England, three Deputy Governors, the Bank of England’s Chief Economist and four external members. External members, who are appointed by the Chancellor, may serve up to two three-year terms on the MPC.

    The appointment of external members to the MPC is designed to ensure that the Committee benefits from thinking and expertise in addition to that gained inside the Bank. Each member of the MPC has expertise in the field of economics. They are independent and do not represent particular groups or areas.

    About the appointment process

    Professor Alan Taylor has been appointed by the Chancellor following a fair and open recruitment process run by HM Treasury. The Advisory Assessment Panel (AAP) comprised of Sam Beckett (Second Permanent Secretary and Chief Economic Advisor, HM Treasury), Daniel Gallagher (Director of Economics, HM Treasury), Silvana Tenreyro (Professor of Economics, London School of Economics) and Dame Colette Bowe (external member of the Financial Policy Committee). The AAP advised the Chancellor, informing her decision.

    The Treasury is committed to appointing a diverse range of people to public appointments, including at the Bank of England. The Treasury continues to take active steps to attract the broadest range of suitable applicants for posts.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Restaurant owner, Belal Ahmed, banned as company director after abusing Eat Out to Help Out Scheme [August 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Restaurant owner, Belal Ahmed, banned as company director after abusing Eat Out to Help Out Scheme [August 2024]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 16 August 2024.

    Twelve-year director disqualification for Covid support scheme misconduct.

    • Belal Ahmed secured almost £50,000 more than he was entitled to from the Eat Out to Help Out Scheme for his Bengal Tandoori Lichfield Limited company in August and September 2020
    • Ahmed had previously abused another Covid support scheme that summer when he obtained a £50,000 Bounce Back Loan for the same restaurant in June 2020
    • The 59-year-old has been banned as a director until August 2036 after investigations by the Insolvency Service

    The former owner of an Indian restaurant in Staffordshire has been banned as a director for 12 years after making false statements to abuse the Eat Out to Help Out Scheme.

    Belal Ahmed claimed almost £50,000 more than he was entitled to from the scheme for his restaurant on Bore Street, Lichfield in 2020.

    The 59-year-old had also overstated his restaurant’s turnover to secure a £50,000 Covid Bounce Back Loan just two months before.

    Ann Oliver, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said:

    Belal Ahmed provided misleading information to secure funds from not just one, but two Covid support schemes during 2020.

    Tackling Covid support scheme abuse is a key priority for the Insolvency Service and Ahmed’s behaviour represents a serious breach of the standards expected of company directors which is why he has been disqualified for the next 12 years.

    Ahmed, of Hall Road, Smethwick, submitted claims totalling £56,500 under the Eat Out to Help Out Scheme for Bengal Tandoori Lichfield Limited.

    Eat Out to Help Out was a government scheme subsidising food and non-alcoholic drinks at participating cafes, pubs and restaurants during August 2020.

    Customers received a 50% discount on their order (up to £10 each) on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays at premises across the UK that had registered with the scheme.

    Insolvency Service analysis of Bengal Tandoori Lichfield Limited’s bank statements showed in-house restaurant sales of a maximum of just £8,055 for that month, meaning the company claimed at least £48,445 more than it was entitled to.

    Ahmed had also previously secured a £50,000 Bounce Back Loan in June 2020, claiming the turnover for the company was £420,000.

    Companies could apply for a single loan of up to 25% of their turnover from 2019, with a maximum loan limit of £50,000 set under the rules of the scheme.

    Investigations revealed the turnover was closer to £150,000 at most, meaning the company was only entitled to a loan of £37,500.

    The Secretary of State for Business and Trade accepted a disqualification undertaking from Ahmed, and his ban started on Wednesday 7 August.

    The ban prevents him from being involved in the promotion, formation or management of a company, without the permission of the court.

    Bengal Tandoori Lichfield Limited went into liquidation in June 2021 owing more than £121,000 to creditors.

    A restaurant continues to operate from the same address under a different company name. Ahmed is not a director of this company.

    Further information

    • Belal Ahmed is of Hall Road, Smethwick. His date of birth is 14 March 1965
    • Bengal Tandoori Lichfield Limited (company number 12018386)
  • Sir Robert Francis – 2024 Statement on the Infected Blood Compensation Authority

    Sir Robert Francis – 2024 Statement on the Infected Blood Compensation Authority

    The statement made by Sir Robert Francis on 16 August 2024.

    Today I have published my recommendations to the Government for how the proposed infected blood compensation scheme might be improved, based on the feedback I have received from the community of those infected and affected by this issue.

    Last May the previous Government published its proposals for a compensation scheme. This was built on the recommendations of Sir Brian Langstaff in his Infected Blood inquiry reports, in particular his second interim report, which in turn was founded on my own framework study published over two years ago.

    I have provided these recommendations to the Government on their proposals, alongside the advice of the expert advisory group led by Professor Montgomery. The Government has also published its response to my recommendations and will now decide on the final details before laying the required regulations in Parliament by 24 August.

    Community views and feedback

    Shortly after I was appointed interim Chair, I made a statement setting out the values I intended to adopt; these include candour, transparency and compassion. I recognise that the new Authority must earn the trust of those to whom we are to deliver compensation; it is imperative that we listen to, and act, on their views.

    Let me be candid now. The hard-working officials and their advisory group put together the proposals accepted by the previous Government in good faith. They sought to design a scheme to implement the recommendations made in the Inquiry’s second interim report. However, they did so without the full benefit of the input of the community – those who have been infected or affected by blood or blood products.

    As the community has since made clear, that was not the best way to gain their trust in the proposals. When I was appointed interim Chair, I was asked by the previous Government to undertake an engagement exercise. Regretfully, this was somewhat limited in time and scope because of the deadline set for the laying of the scheme’s regulations in Parliament (put in place to ensure quicker payments), and because the engagement coincided with the pre-election period. But the engagement sessions undertaken have still been invaluable.

    My report owes much to the feedback, so generously provided, by groups representing those who have lived with infections and the effects of contaminated blood and blood products, as well as those who took the trouble to write to us. Their voices have informed my recommendations, as was the case with my framework report over two years ago.

    The suffering of those who have been infected, and their families and carers has been – and continues to be – terrible. As the Infected Blood Inquiry’s report confirms, the awful consequences of being treated with infected blood products have been compounded by decades of misinformation, lack of candour, ineffective support, and delay in redress. This scandal has blighted the lives of, not only those who received harmful treatment, but also of their families and those close to them.

    I must express my deepest gratitude to those whom I have met and those who have written to us. They have shouldered the burden and the personal cost of repeatedly recounting their experiences. They have done so not just for themselves, but for their fellow community members. They did so at incredibly short notice, and without as full an account of the proposed scheme as would have been ideal. Despite an understandable scepticism as to how much attention would be paid to their views, they made incredibly helpful submissions, with impressive objectivity and dignity.

    Short though the time was for me to prepare this report, I believe that my discussions with representative groups and the written submissions we have received have provided a fair picture of what changes to the proposals the community, as a whole, believe would provide them with greater reassurance.

    Conclusions

    I have made 74 recommendations, some of them technical, but I have summarised the broad themes below.

    Alignment with Inquiry recommendations

    Firstly, I believe that the proposed scheme does reflect, broadly, the recommendations that I, and Sir Brian, have made previously. While no amount of money can ever truly reflect the terrible suffering caused by this scandal, taken as a whole the figures and methods of calculating compensation generally fall within the range of what would be awarded in comparable legal cases. As a result, many will receive very substantial awards capable of making a real difference to their lives.

    Indeed, some proposed categories of award, particularly for people affected by their closeness to someone who was infected, allow for compensation for matters which might not even be recognised by the courts. As such, some awards may even be in excess of what could be recovered in litigation.

    I sympathise with those who feel that their particular circumstances are not fully recognised.  However, a compensation scheme is about achieving broad justice at the same time as having a scheme that is as simple as possible to deliver for a majority of victims, as rapidly as possible.

    That is why a tariff-based approach has been agreed by the Government, the inquiry and me. The difference in individual cases has been accommodated in two ways. Firstly, the scheme will provide for injury awards which vary according to defined differences in severity. And secondly, it will allow supplementary claims for those whose care costs, or loss of earnings, are out of the ordinary.

    Clarity

    It is one thing for me to say the proposals are broadly fair. It is quite another for the community and the public to understand and assess the proposals as fair for themselves. It is essential that a far more detailed description is published, by Government, of the eligibility criteria, the severity criteria, and how the tariffs were devised. Those explanations should be detailed and in clear understandable language, to enable potentially eligible people, and their advisers, to understand.

    Support payments

    The strongest and most universal message I received was that those in receipt of regular support payments from existing support schemes want those payments to continue. They want compensation to be paid separately from their existing payments.

    Fears that the new scheme would result in them being worse off than they are with current support payments, have generated significant anxiety for some members of the community. Some of these fears have been caused by insufficient explanation of the proposals.

    I recognise that, for the scheme to have the confidence of the community, those who already receive  regular support payments should continue to receive them or equivalent payments in a format they recognise – separately from compensation payments. Cumulatively, this money can provide an appropriate and fair recognition of their injury and loss. I have recommended that, until the support schemes can be merged into the compensation scheme in a way that is trusted by the community, they should continue as they are now.

    Relationship between continuing support payments and compensation

    If support payments are to be continued, it should be clear how payments relate to the assessment of any future compensation awards. If no regard were given to the support payments made through existing schemes, some recipients of compensation would be paid twice for the same loss: once through an existing support payment intended to meet their needs, and again by a compensation award designed to do the same thing. Such a benefit would not be received by those not already enrolled in support schemes; they would only receive a compensation award for their assumed, or assessed, future care needs and financial losses. That would be unfair.

    So, for those who have already enrolled and who would continue to receive periodical support payments, guaranteed for the rest of their lives, those payments after 1 April 2025 should be credited towards any compensation due under the scheme for their future care needs and future financial losses.

    However, support payments before 1 April 2025 should be ignored altogether in calculating compensation. These support payments were paid “ex gratia” with no acknowledgement of liability or any wrong. Likewise, support payments to be paid in the future after 1 April 2025 should be ignored in the calculation of injury impact, social impact, or autonomy awards whether concerning past or future suffering or in relation to care awards or financial loss awards for past needs and losses. To deduct the value of support payments from those elements of the award would not be comparing like with like.

    A choice of periodical payments or lump sums

    It is important that recipients of compensation can be confident that it will reflect their actual life expectancy. This is particularly important for recipients who choose to receive a lump sum which may end up over- or under-estimating how long they will live. As such, I consider that recipients should be able to choose to receive the element of their award reflecting the future, including the support payment, by way of periodical payments, annually uprated for inflation for as long as they live – if they believe that better suits their personal circumstances. Of course, they should be free to choose to receive their entire award as a lump sum and make their own investment arrangements to protect them for the rest of their lives if they want that degree of independence.

    Severity bands

    I received much feedback about the proposed severity bands. In particular, I noted the concerns about whether sufficient recognition had been given to the factors which led to the creation of the ‘Special Category Mechanism’ for support payments, and also with regard to psychiatric injury. Among the recommendations I have made, I have asked that the Government’s advisory group consider further  how these factors can be fairly taken into account. I have also, again, advised that a detailed explanation of the clinical and other factors which distinguish between severity bands be set out in greater detail.

    Social impact award

    The social impact award is the part of the award which recognises the stigma and other adverse social experiences suffered by people who were infected  and those who were affected by this. I have suggested that the differential between the two groups was too marked and that it would be appropriate to increase the proposed tariff figure for the affected group.

    Autonomy award

    The autonomy award will be tariff-based compensation for the interference with people’s rights to control what treatment is administered to them, and to be given full and honest information about the risks. Inevitably the amount awarded will be a symbolic recognition of a wrong, rather than based on an assessment of the impact on each individual. In one respect, however, I think the proposal falls short. The Inquiry has found that some people who were infected through blood or blood products were used as research subjects without their knowledge or consent, a particularly egregious case being that of the boys at the Treloar School. I have recommended that the advisory group consider an enhanced award for those who were included in one of the research projects identified in the Inquiry’s report.

    Care award

    I have made several recommendations to clarify the factors taken into account in the tariff-based care award, and for allowing supplementary assessments where reasonable care costs have been paid in excess of the costs represented by the tariff.

    Financial loss award

    Similarly, I have recommended several technical adjustments to the proposals for the financial loss awards and, as with other categories, a more detailed explanation of the assumptions used to develop the notional period of loss or earnings over the lifetime of people who have suffered infections. I have also recommended reconsideration of the assumption that treatment would have allowed all those infected to return to work.

    Awards to estates

    Sadly much of the compensation will be awarded in respect of people who have already died because of their infection. I was told that there has been considerable anxiety about the difficulties arising out of making awards to their estates. Much of this anxiety could be removed by providing a clearer explanation of how awards for estates would be assessed, and how such awards are independent of the awards made to persons who had been affected by the deceased’s life as an infected person.

    I should note, however, that it would not be appropriate for the Authority to intervene in the distribution of the estate’s award. To do so would be to change the normal rules of inheritance and intestacy, and would deny deceased victims their freedom of choice of beneficiaries of their estates. However, the only significant asset in many of these estates will indeed be the compensation award, and but for the infection and its consequences, there would have been no estate to administer. I have therefore recommended that a standard sum might be awarded to reflect the additional administration costs, that funding for legal support should be available to assist with the making of the application for compensation, and that consideration be given to making a mediation service available to help with the resolution of family disputes arising out of the compensation.

    Finally, I have recommended that funding should be provided for legal support to assist eligible people with their applications. I also recommend that there should also be a legal advice service for those without legal representatives to assist with the compensation process. There is also a need for the scheme to offer or direct award recipients to a source of financial advice to assist them in the management of the award.

    Sir Robert Francis KC

    Interim Chair of the Infected Blood Compensation Authority