Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK annual defence procurement worth more than £2 billion to Scotland [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK annual defence procurement worth more than £2 billion to Scotland [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 26 January 2023.

    New figures today (Thursday January 26, 2023) show Ministry of Defence (MoD) expenditure with industry and commerce in Scotland in 2021/22 was £2.01 billion.

    This is up from just under £2 billion the previous year and is the equivalent of £370 per person in Scotland.

    For the whole UK, it is £21.1 billion, working out at an average of £310 per person.

    These figures show how crucial defence is to both the security of the United Kingdom and to delivering on the Prime Minister’s priorities – growing the economy, creating better-paid jobs and opportunity right across the country.

    Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said:

    Nothing is more important than defending our country. We are so proud of our Royal Navy and all of our Armed Services. But these figures also show defence spend contributes significantly to delivering high-skilled jobs and investment in Scotland, not least through shipbuilding at which we are a world leader.

    Defence investment in Scottish shipbuilding will see order books full until the 2030s.

    In 2021/22 construction began on the first of five new Type 31 Royal Navy frigates – HMS Venturer. Building the fleet will support around 2,500 jobs both at Babcock’s Rosyth dockyard and nationally through the UK supply chain, as well as creating 150 additional apprenticeships.

    Earlier this week, the steel was cut in Rosyth on the second frigate – HMS Active. During the coming months they will rise to 6,000-tonne warships. The construction of the Type 31 frigates is part of a wider investment in UK yards and industry under the UK Government’s National Shipbuilding Strategy of more than £4 billion.

    Each ship is larger than the current Type 23s they replace but slightly shorter and lighter than HMS Glasgow and the seven other planned Type 26 frigates also being built for the fleet by BAE Systems in Govan.

    The 26s will focus on anti-submarine warfare leaving the 31s to carry out patrols wherever they are needed, from conducting counter-terrorism/drug smuggling patrols in the Indian Ocean to helping out in the aftermath of a disaster.

    Within the last couple of decades Scotland has also delivered six Type 45 destroyers, two aircraft carriers and five offshore patrol vessels.

    In 2021/22 defence has also invested in the expansion of the operational support facilities for the Poseidon P8 submarine hunter aircraft which are based at RAF Lossiemouth and there is continued investment in facilities for the Royal Navy’s submarine fleet on the Clyde.

    MoD expenditure supports around 12,700 Scottish private sector jobs – on top of the 10,400 MoD staff in Scotland. The money spent by the MoD directly supports around 25,000 jobs across the United Kingdom, plus some 20,000 jobs supported indirectly.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Two directors, Sameer Saeed and Antonia Parkes, who wrongly claimed Bounce Back Loans convicted [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Two directors, Sameer Saeed and Antonia Parkes, who wrongly claimed Bounce Back Loans convicted [January 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 26 January 2023.

    Following two separate cases brought by the Insolvency Service, two directors were given suspended prison sentences of 20 months and six months respectively.

    Sameer Saeed, 42, from London and Antonia Parkes, 35, from Conwy, have each been convicted for offences under the Companies Act, after being found to have abused the Bounce Back Loan financial support scheme in 2020.

    Sameer Saeed was convicted on four counts under the Companies Act and Fraud Act following an Insolvency Service investigation.

    Saeed was sole director of Digital Business Box Ltd and The Home Wills Ltd. In relation to the former, he secured a £50,000 Bounce Back Loan based on inflated turnover, and applied to dissolve the company two weeks later. In relation to the latter, he attempted to secure a £50,000 Bounce Back Loan although the company had only been established on 31 March 2020 and was therefore not eligible for any funding through the scheme. He did not receive the funds, but his attempt to secure a second loan was deemed an aggravating aspect in court.

    He pleaded guilty to offences under the Companies Act as well as fraud offences. Saeed was sentenced at Snaresbrook Crown Court on 21 December 2022 to 20 months imprisonment, suspended for 18 months, and 300 hours of unpaid work. He has undertaken to repay the £50,000 Bounce Back Loan to the bank.

    In a separate case, Antonia Parkes was convicted of an offence under the Companies Act.

    She was director of Conwy Valley Lodge Ltd, which ran a hotel close to Snowdonia in Wales. The company situation deteriorated after the start of the pandemic, and she sought financial assistance from the government. Through the Bounce Back Loan scheme, genuine businesses impacted by the pandemic could take out interest-free loans of up to £50,000.

    The Insolvency Service investigation found that Parkes had secured a £20,000 Bounce Back Loan, immediately before she applied to dissolve the company.

    The striking-off application to dissolve the company was explicit that interested parties and creditors, such as a bank with an outstanding loan, must be notified within seven days of making an application to dissolve a company. The form also highlighted that failure to notify interested parties is a criminal offence, however Parkes did not heed this warning.

    She was sentenced on 14 December 2022 at Llandudno Magistrates Court to 26 weeks’ imprisonment suspended for 12 months, with an unpaid work requirement of 120 hours.

    Julie Barnes, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said:

    In each of these two cases the company directors thought they could abuse the rules to exploit a scheme, backed by taxpayers, designed to help businesses get through the pandemic.

    We will not hesitate to prosecute these cases, and they both now have criminal convictions as a consequence of their actions.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chair says collaboration needed to protect local economies and nature on the coast [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chair says collaboration needed to protect local economies and nature on the coast [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Environment Agency on 26 January 2023.

    EA Chair Alan Lovell delivers a speech at the annual Coastal Futures Conference.

    It’s great to be here in this city made global by the Tidal Thames; braved centuries of seafaring trade. That river and its tide of course bring threats too. The city is visited by the North Sea twice a day and it can be tough. Our now collective job is to ensure that it’s not as destructive as on occasions it could be.

    This weekend, we mark 70 years since the horrifying East Coast Surge of 1953. My uncle Charlie was farming on Canvey Island in the Thames Estuary in 1953, and I remember vividly him talking about the desperate measures to bring people and some animals to safety, and subsequently losing all his agricultural equipment.

    That disaster of course led to many developments in flood protection, including the construction of the Thames Barrier. I was chief contractor for the Thames Barrier about 10 years after it was built and we were certainly very proud of the work that it was doing. It helps to protect around 125 square kilometres of land and over £320 billion of property and infrastructure.

    Opened in 1984, it’s been raised in anger 207 times, so about 5 and a half times a year. It was originally envisaged to be just once a year so that gives some illustration of the change, and not surprisingly it’s been on a rising, although not uniform, trend.

    Although the Barrier was built to hold back storm surges, since the 1990s increasingly intense rainfall events have also seen it raised at low tide on several occasions to create space for water that’s arrived from the other direction.

    We are constantly surveying the future, but we are reasonably confident that this Barrier will continue to provide protection until at least 2070, but we need to think creatively about how we can transform the estuary edges. We want Londoners to feel secure, to enjoy their river, and without being cut off from the river that makes London what it is.

    The Thames Estuary 2100 Plan sets a long-term approach to managing risk in partnership with communities, developers and place-makers.

    It’s that sort of collaborative working which is what the Coastal Futures Conference is all about. It’s clear from recent successes that shared ownership of the risks and recognition of the steps to be taken by the public and private sectors, and by non-government, they can bring about the changes that are needed.

    I shall be telling you about some of the big projects that we have engaged in, but also some of the smaller and vital collaboration with parties which make a difference.

    According to the UN, more than 600 million people – around 10 percent of the world’s population – live in coastal areas that are less than 10 metres above sea level. On this small-island nation at the north-east edge of the Atlantic Ocean, nearly two thirds of people live within 15 kilometres of the sea and over a third live within 5 kilometres. The risk is obvious.

    The coastline itself is never static. Throughout our history land has been lost to the sea and created out of it. Like our Dutch neighbours, we have not always taken the sea’s word as final.

    The most productive agricultural land in England is often on land historically claimed from coastal wetlands that, due to soil erosion, is close to, or even below, sea level now.

    Since 1900 the UK has seen 16 centimetres of sea level rise and scientists believe we could see a further metre of even more in the next 80 years. And as we all know, higher sea levels create waves which carry greater energy to shore, and by the end of the 21st century, sea level events we currently describe as once a century, may occur every year.

    Another statistic to alarm is that about 12 percent of England is on the floodplain and 9,000 kilometres of the coast are at risk of sea flooding, erosion and landslips.

    Happily, the Government is on the case. You will be aware the flood plan for the 2015 – 2021 period saw us spend £2.6 million and better protect about 320,000 properties. And in this next stage, from 2021-2027, the government is investing £5.2 billion to create new flood protections, alongside support to help households and businesses get back on their feet more quickly after flooding.

    Of this big sum, £1.6 billion is directed towards coastal erosion and sea flooding projects. Very importantly, that spend on big projects is supported by a £40 million regional coastal monitoring programme which monitors evidence on beach levels, coastal habitat, tides and waves. We make all this data publicly available.

    The data helps us target investment decisions and also Shoreline Management Plans, which offer a framework for adapting to climate change. Local planning authorities are encouraged to embed Shoreline Management Plan policies in their spatial plans.

    This includes making provision for any vulnerable properties and infrastructure that may need to be relocated in the future. This could include supporting roll back of the coastline or development facing the threat of coastal erosion. Earlier this week I was in Lincolnshire and I saw some of the caravan cities, sites of constant negotiation with local authorities, which understandably are looking to support the local economy in the area, whilst we are worried about the medium, or not so medium, term impacts.

    We need to work together with coastal communities to learn, and put into practice, the best possible ways to keep them safe and prosperous.

    The government is also investing £200 million in a Flood and Coastal Innovation Programme, which includes eight local authority coastal projects.

    The National Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management Strategy sets out how the Environment Agency will work in partnership with others – including risk management authorities, partners and communities – towards the ambition of climate resilient coastal communities.

    Every year people make around 270 million recreational visits to the English coast. Alongside delicious seafood, picturesque towns and recreational activities, people travel to the seaside simply to enjoy the view and to breathe the air.

    England’s national story is a story about our relationship with the coast; a century of air travel has not totally eroded our reliance on ports and estuaries to deliver the things we need.

    Many who live on the coast were drawn by employment opportunities. Yet, some coastal towns are now among the most deprived in the country. We need a concerted effort to better protect coastal communities and economies while enhancing the marine environment.

    So to summarise, long term prosperity on the coast is vital; preserving England’s precious natural resources is also vital.

    No one wants to trade these two priorities off against each other; we need look at the evidence and work in partnership to serve both. It’s partly with that in mind that I am launching the Environment Agency’s latest The State of the Environment report.

    Scientific research and analysis underpins everything the Environment Agency does. It helps us to understand and manage the environment effectively.

    Our own experts work with leading scientific organisations, universities, and other parts of the Defra group to bring the best knowledge to bear on the environmental problems that we face now and in the future. Our scientific work is published as reports, freely available to all.

    Today’s report, produced by our Chief Scientist’s Group, looks at the coastal and marine environment in particular.

    It covers the degradation of coastal and marine ecosystems, caused by a number of pressures such as climate change, overfishing and chemical pollution. And it tells a clear story of both challenge and opportunity.

    We know that a healthy marine environment provides flood and coastal protection, nutrient and carbon absorption; it improves water quality, enhances biodiversity and provides food as well as health and well-being benefits from recreation.

    Our report shows evidence that long term, human activities have changed water temperature, acidity, salinity, sea level and degraded coastal and marine ecosystems.

    For instance, salt marshes. England’s salt marshes store the carbon equivalent to nearly 40 million people’s annual domestic emissions.

    Salt marshes provide flood protection to around 24,000 properties in suburban areas and 17,000 properties in urban areas in the UK. We can’t afford to lose these benefits, but an estimated 85 percent of salt marsh has already been lost since the 1800s.

    We are working with many partners – including some of you in this room – to address this through our habitat compensation and restoration programme, but we need to accelerate that work.

    So a small step in the right direction has been made. The latest mapped extent of salt marsh in England is just over 35,500 hectares.

    This is an overall increase of 7 percent compared with figures from 2006 to 2009. Around 37 percent of the increase is as a result of flood management schemes and habitat creation. All this area is dear to our heart.

    The Environment Agency is leading a partnership initiative, Restoring Meadow Marsh and Reef, to restore at least 15 percent of priority estuarine and coastal habitats by 2043.

    This will build on the existing investment of £120 million in the next five years to compensate for habitat loss due to coastal squeeze and the development of sea defences.

    So we are doing a lot. But nevertheless, our report raises some concerning issues, one of these is about pollution and the impact of storm overflows along the coast. Increased frequency of storms increases the transport of pollutants and untreated waste-water into the sea from storm overflows and diffuse pollution from agricultural land.

    An initial assessments of levels of persistent, bio accumulative and toxic chemicals – carried out in 2019 – showed, in blue mussels, harbour porpoise and dab, a sort of flat fish, levels of at least one of the four substances tested exceeded toxic effect thresholds in all three species.

    As I’m sure you are all aware, only 14 percent of England’s rivers are of ‘good’ ecological status – as defined in the Water Framework Directive.

    Nobody is going to say that is remotely acceptable. And, 0 percent are classed as of good chemical status (though I might say in that context this is down from 97 percent, and this change is not due to degradation but due to severe tightening of classifications which is designed to shine light on a very important area which we need to do something about).

    The Environment Agency’s updated River Basin Management and Flood Risk Management Plans, launched in 2022, include the local actions that government, regulators, the water sector, and other partners, and we ourselves need to deliver to protect the water environment from catchment to coast over the next five years.

    It also says that more than £5 billion of investment over the next five years will enhance and limit further deterioration of England’s waters, giving us increased resilience to the impacts of climate change.

    One other small but important project that we are working on too help us with estuarine and coastal recovery, the Environment Agency is investing £1.8 million over the next 3 years in Championing Coastal Coordination – 20 projects will receive funding this year.

    These are innovative projects mixing citizen science, local on-the-ground restoration and large-scale work to bring a more coordinated approach to coastal management.

    At one level, this is a drop in the ocean, but we hope what we learn from this innovation will enable us to join with others in scaling up projects and programmes that champion coastal resilience.

    Please come and talk to our team at our stall here at the conference about the work we’re doing in this field and whether you’d like to be involved in it.

    Happily, bathing water quality at beaches and resorts has shown enormous improvements in recent decades. The latest bathing water results for England show 97.1 percent of bathing waters were in decent standards following testing at over 400 designated sites.

    But, even with these excellent results, we still need the public to be aware of the risks and to make informed choices. We do encourage people to check bathing water quality on the Environment Agency’s Swimfo website before going swimming.

    Before I go, I would like to say something about winter flooding as it is so topical at the moment.

    In the last month, we have been dealing with the real impacts of more extreme weather. I recently visited the Somerset Levels where I saw the Environment Agency’s great work – temporary barriers and pumps operating there and along the River Severn.

    This is my first winter in the EA and I must say I am extremely impressed by the fantastic work both of our staff and of partners. We estimate that 138 properties are were flooded in the serious flooding 10 days ago which is too many. But set that against the fact that our estimate is that well over 5,000 properties have been protected in the West Midlands, in the Southwest and along the Thames, by the work that has been done over the last 10 years.

    We hesitate to give that relatively good statistic of the work done with still a month of winter left to go. And we need to keep reminding people that flood defences can’t provide 100 percent protection, so it’s vital that we all sign up for free flood warnings and take it seriously.

    I began this speech talking about the Thames Barrier – one of several protecting the people from the North Sea. I’ve also been to the Ipswich Barrier and on Monday, I visited the Boston Barrier, which protects over 14,000 homes and businesses. It was built after 800 properties were flooded in the 2013 tidal surge – a fantastic example of how engineering can increase the security and prosperity of those living on the coast.

    As I have mentioned today, the benefits of working with nature not only include flood and coastal protection, but also nutrient and carbon absorption; improved water quality, enhanced nature, and food as well as health and well-being benefits from recreation.

    If coastal communities are to thrive, we need to collect and share evidence of what is happening on the coast and work together to enhance both resilience and the marine environment.

    The Environment Agency is proud to sponsor of the Coastal Futures Conference 2023.

    We are delighted to be involved with it and with you all, and I look forward to our continued collaboration in the challenging, and rewarding, years to come.

  • PRESS RELEASE : We will not become numb to the suffering caused by Russia’s illegal invasion – UK statement to the OSCE [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : We will not become numb to the suffering caused by Russia’s illegal invasion – UK statement to the OSCE [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 26 January 2023.

    Ambassador Bush condemns Russia’s attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, and stresses Russia will not break the resolve of the Ukrainian people.

    Thank you Mr. Chair. Last week I, and many others spoke about the devastating Russian missile attack on an apartment building in Dnipro. The lives of 46 innocent Ukrainian civilians were tragically cut short, including six children, with 80 injured and 11 still missing. This horrific attack was yet another example of Russia’s numerous and sustained violations of international law over the course of the last 11 months, which continue to this day. Following reports of further Russian strikes overnight, we stress our solidarity with Ukraine. Russia will not break the resolve of the Ukrainian people.

    Since the start of Russia’s illegal invasion, and following several investigations by the Office of the Prosecutor General of Ukraine (OPG), ODHIR, the UN and through the Moscow Mechanism (to name but a few), there can be no doubt as to Russia’s culpability for atrocities and human rights violations carried out in Ukraine. The evidence is overwhelming.

    We have seen indiscriminate attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, and the use of wide area, inaccurate weapons in residential and highly populated areas resulting in loss of life and widespread devastation. The theatre in Mariupol sheltering children. The railway station in Kramatorsk where women and children were fleeing. The shopping centre in Kremenchuk. Too many stories. Too many innocent victims.

    We’ve heard harrowing testimony from survivors, detailing summary executions, unlawful confinement, torture, rape and other sexual violence committed in areas once under Russian control. As recorded by the UN’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine, family members, including children, were sometimes forced to witness the crimes – powerless to act. We have spoken of Russia’s disturbing policy of filtration and of those who have disappeared, some unlawfully deported to Russia – including orphaned children. We recall the attacks against sites with protected status – medical and educational facilities, cultural and religious sites, and energy infrastructure. We commend the investigators seeking the truth, often under dangerous conditions, and those courageous survivors willing to share their testimony to ensure justice is delivered.

    As reported by ODHIR, the sheer number of accounts describing allegedly systematic torture and ill-treatment inflicted upon civilians by Russian forces seems to suggest these practices were carried out in an atmosphere of impunity.

    However, we will not allow ourselves to become numb to the immense suffering caused by Russia’s illegal invasion. The victims and the survivors will be remembered. We must, and we will, deliver justice and accountability for all of them. For those in Bucha, Irpin, Izium, Makariv, Kupiansk, Mariupol. The list is far too long and the price paid by Ukrainians for their freedom far too high.

    There can be no lasting peace in Ukraine without justice. In London this March, Justice Ministers from across the world will meet to discuss further provision of financial and practical support to the International Criminal Court investigation in Ukraine. We will ensure the ICC has all it needs to pursue investigations and prosecute those responsible. The UK has joined a core group of partners to ensure criminal accountability for Russia’s aggression against Ukraine. UK legal expertise will be utilised to ensure Russia’s leaders are held to account fully for their actions. We continue our work with the Atrocity Crimes Advisory Group (ACA) for Ukraine, bringing together multinational experts to assist and advise the OPG War Crimes units in their tireless work.

    Last week we and many participating States asked the Russian Federation for a comprehensive response to the reports of SMM vehicles being used in eastern Ukraine. These are the assets of the organisation and its participating States.

    In closing, Mr Chair, the international community must collectively send a strong message to the Russian government – through our words and through our actions. We will not stand for unbridled aggression against a sovereign state; we will not tolerate violations and abuses of international law and human rights; we will not sit back and allow the perpetrators of such egregious crimes in Ukraine go unpunished; and we will seek and see justice delivered for those who have suffered at the hands of Russian aggression.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Climate change conference addresses future needs in defence [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Climate change conference addresses future needs in defence [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 26 January 2023.

    The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) has hosted its first climate change event focusing on sustainability and climate security for defence.

    The event gave experts, practitioners and stakeholders from defence and security, academia and industry an important opportunity to collaborate, develop relationships, and share ideas and expertise.

    Climate change could have many implications for defence, experts were able to come together to develop a clear understanding of science and technology activities (past, current and future), to identify and understand potential science and technology solutions to climate change problems for defence, as well as de-conflict efforts, and identify gaps in research programmes.

    The 2 day event in January 2023, opened by Dstl’s Chief Technical Officer, Professor Andy Bell, combined insightful presentations with roundtable working groups.

    Andy said:

    It is absolutely vital that defence collaborators work together to address the challenges and effects that climate change can have on how our armed forces operate. Attendees at the symposium discussed the major issues and looked at problem solving and ways forward, and was a huge success.

    Lt General (Retd) Richard Nugee provided the first keynote speech setting the scope of the challenge. Richard has earned international recognition for bringing the implications of climate change and sustainability to the defence and national security sectors. After a full career in the British Army, as his final role he wrote a review of defence’s approach to climate change and Sustainability. He is now the Non-Executive Director for Climate Change and Net Zero for the Ministry of Defence (MOD).

    The focus throughout the event was on collaboration; James Clare, MOD Director Levelling Up, The Union, Climate Change and Sustainability (Dir-LUCCS) reinforced the message that climate change is not a future concern.

    It will change where we operate, who we operate with, what we need to operate, and how we need to operate. Climate change will also impact on how the MOD will function as an organisation and that response has to be whole system or whole enterprise.

    Gen (Retd) Tom Middendorp, Chairman of the International Military Council on Climate and Security (IMCCS) gave a presentation on Walking the Climate-Security Talk with the clear message to ‘think big, act small, start somewhere.’ In this he gave examples of how defence has and can build partnerships and ecosystems and provided an overview of a climate-security ecosystem bringing together security experts, research institutes and government officials through the IMCCS.

    Lt Gen Richard Wardlaw emphasised that delivering the outcomes sought through the recently published Sustainable Support Strategy will require collaboration across defence and with academia, industry and our allies.

    In a motivating keynote Lt Gen Wardlaw said:

    We must focus our attention to the Sustainable Support Strategy as, this is an opportunity for defence, a solution for the future force in a climate changed world. It is also an opportunity to enhance military capability with emissions reduction as a consequence not as a force driver. I would ask that with the recent publication of the Sustainable Support Strategy, we view this event an open invitation to help us on that journey.

    This event is just the beginning for the science and technology research programme.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government to introduce legislation to pave way for new National Holocaust Memorial [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government to introduce legislation to pave way for new National Holocaust Memorial [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 26 January 2023.

    Holocaust Memorial Bill will update historic legislation and progress the building of a new memorial in London.

    • Holocaust Memorial Bill will update historic legislation and progress the building of a new memorial and learning centre in Victoria Tower Gardens, Westminster
    • Located next to the Houses of Parliament, memorial will serve as a powerful reminder to the whole of society
    • Memorial and learning centre will be free to visitors and its careful design means the memorial will enhance the gardens.

    The Government will introduce new legislation to progress the construction of a national Holocaust memorial.

    The Prime Minister announced in the House of Commons yesterday (25 January) that the Holocaust Memorial Bill will update historic legislation, removing a statutory obstacle that has previously prevented the building of a new memorial and learning centre in Victoria Tower Gardens in Westminster.

    Located next to the Houses of Parliament, the memorial will serve as a powerful reminder to the whole of society of the Holocaust, its victims and where prejudice can lead if unchallenged.

    The Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, said:

    “This important Bill brings us one step closer to delivering a national Holocaust Memorial and Learning Centre at the heart of our democracy in Westminster, where it rightly belongs.

    “The Memorial will honour the memory of those who were so cruelly murdered and preserve the testimonies of brave survivors so that future generations will never forget the horrors of the holocaust.

    “As the remaining survivors become older and fewer in number, it is vital that we push ahead with the Memorial which is supported by all major political parties.”

    Secretary of State for Levelling up, Housing and Communities, Michael Gove said:

    “As the Holocaust moves from living history, to history, it becomes ever more important that we take the time to remember the six million Jewish men, women and children murdered and pay tribute to the survivors.

    “We are committed to building the Memorial next to Parliament, a site which reflects its national significance and is close to other important memorials including the Cenotaph.

    “We owe it to Holocaust survivors, to the British people and future generations to remember where hatred can lead.”

    Rt Hon Ed Balls and Rt Hon Lord Eric Pickles, Co-chairs of the UK Holocaust Memorial Foundation said:

    “As the generation of brave Holocaust survivors passes away, we have a duty to create this memorial to make sure that the memory and the truth of the Holocaust is preserved.

    “Victoria Tower Gardens, at the heart of Westminster and alongside the great symbol and heart of our democracy, is absolutely the right place to construct the national Memorial to the Holocaust.”

    Manfred Goldberg BEM, a Holocaust survivor who was held captive in Stutthof concentration camp, Poland, said:

    “Several years ago survivors were promised a Holocaust Memorial in close proximity to the Houses of Parliament. I am a 92 year old survivor who would be so grateful to be alive when this project, uniquely situated next to the Mother of Parliaments, comes to fruition.”

    Planning consent for the Holocaust Memorial to be built in Victoria Tower Gardens was granted in July 2021, but the decision was quashed by the High Court in April 2022 due to historic legislation that requires the garden to be maintained as a garden open to the public.

    The memorial and learning centre will be free to visitors, with timed entry tickets.

    Careful design means the memorial will enhance the gardens, ensuring they continue to provide an important public garden available to residents and visitors to Westminster. Paths and seating will be more attractive, accessible and landscaping improvements will enhance the local environment, maintaining public access.

    Holocaust Educational Trust Chief Executive Karen Pollock said:

    “As the Holocaust fades further into history, and with survivors becoming fewer and frailer, time is of the essence. Located in the heart of our democracy, the UK Holocaust Memorial will send a clear signal for years to come of the place the Holocaust should always have in our national consciousness and the importance of learning its lessons for generations to come.”

    The proposal to construct a new national Memorial to the Holocaust, with an accompanying learning centre, was announced by the then Prime Minister with cross-party support in January 2015, and the decision to build the memorial at Victoria Tower Gardens was announced in January 2016.

    Following an international competition, a design team of Adjaye Associates, Ron Arad Associates and Gustafson Porter + Bowman was selected. A planning application was submitted in December 2018 and planning consent was granted in July 2021, following a lengthy public inquiry.

    A High Court judgment in April 2022 found that the London County Council (Improvements) Act 1900 imposed an obligation to maintain Victoria Tower Gardens as a public garden, and that this obligation was an obstacle to construction of the Holocaust Memorial at that site. Based on this conclusion, the High Court quashed the decision to grant planning consent.

  • PRESS RELEASE : EA Chair says collaboration needed to protect local economies and nature on the coast [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : EA Chair says collaboration needed to protect local economies and nature on the coast [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 26 January 2023.

    More work is needed to ensure the protection, recovery and restoration of our coastal and marine environment, and to enable coastal populations to thrive.

    A concerted effort is needed to better protect our coastal communities and economies whilst enhancing our marine environment, said Environment Agency Chair Alan Lovell today (26 January) as the EA launches its latest ‘State of the Environment: Coast and Marine’ report.

    Speaking at the Coastal Future’s Conference, Alan Lovell said that with over a third of the UK population living within 5km of the coastline, more work is needed to ensure the protection, recovery and restoration of our coastal and marine environment, and to enable coastal populations to thrive.

    Alan Lovell said:

    England’s national story is a story about our relationship with the coast and a century of air travel has not totally eroded our reliance on ports and estuaries to deliver the things we need.

    Yet, coastal towns are now among the most deprived in the country.

    We need to work together with coastal communities to identify the best possible way to keep them safe and prosperous.

    We need a concerted effort to better protect coastal communities and economies while enhancing the marine environment.

    The report, produced by the EA’s Chief Scientist’s Group, draws attention to the many consequences of climate change, with 85% of England’s salt marshes – which store the carbon equivalent of nearly 40 million people’s annual domestic emissions – estimated to have been lost since the 1800s, as well as up to 50% of seagrass meadows and 95% of our native oyster population. Meanwhile over 100,000 people are estimated to be at risk from significant coastal flooding – a figure likely to increase by 300% this century, even if global warming is kept to 2 degrees.

    However, the report also shows important progress towards tackling these threats to our marine and coastal environment, including salt marsh restoration, helping fish populations recover and improving water quality in designated bathing waters.

    Reflecting on this, Alan Lovell also said:

    Continued action must be taken to curb the threat of climate change – through evidence based, collaborative approaches spanning from large-scale projects, local on-the-ground restoration and working alongside coastal communities to identify the best possible approach to coastal management.

    The EA continues to invest in a healthy coastline through many outlets including our National Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management strategy and our Restoring Meadow Marsh and Reef initiative.

    Although some progress has been made, there is a great deal more to be done and I hope that what we learn from innovative projects such as these will encourage others to join us and invest in ways that champion coastal resilience and help in the fight against climate change.

    The EA’s Restoring Meadow Marsh and Reef initiative is just one of the programmes taking action to tackle climate change, and aims to restore at least 15% of priority estuarine and coastal habitats by 2043.

    Additionally, the EA’s £120m Habitat Compensation and Restoration Programme, funded through Flood and Coastal Risk Management, has created over 1200ha of salt marsh and mudflat since 2005 to keep pace with protected habitat lost as a result of managing risk to people and property. The latest mapped extent of salt marsh in England shows an overall increase of 7% compared with 2006 to 2009 figures, nearly half of which is as a result of habitat creation in this programme. The restoration initiative aims to build on this experience for salt marsh and help to build an accelerated programme for this and other inshore habitats.

    Other investments by the EA to protect and restore the coastal and marine environment include:

    • £1.8m in Championing Coastal Coordination over the next 3 years with 20 projects receiving funding in 2022/23. Innovative projects will mix citizen science, local restoration and large-scale work to generate resilient coastlines, and Alan Lovell has today called for further investment to scale up solutions.
    • More than £5 billion over 5 years in River Basin Management Plans which will enhance and limit further deterioration of England’s waters giving us increased resilience to the impacts of climate change. This includes 23 specific estuarine and coastal measures, ranging from habitat restoration plans and citizen science campaigns, to tackling marine litter and pollution.
    • Support to the Natural Capital Ecosystem Assessment Programme through an ambitious Land Sea Interface project. The project will provide new evidence on the value of our marine environment and underpin our restoration ambition with knowledge of all the benefits our marine ecosystem provides, encouraging policy and management decision-making that achieves a resilient coast.

    The Environment Agency will continue to invest in innovation, partner collaboration and local on-the-ground restoration to ensure a coordinated approach to manage our coastal and marine environment, combat the effects of climate change, and mitigate the damage that has already been done.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Report by the President of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly – UK response [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Report by the President of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly – UK response [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 26 January 2023.

    Ambassador Bush voices full support for the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s continued focus on Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.

    Madam President, on behalf of the United Kingdom, welcome back to the Permanent Council. I thank you for your address. We support your call for the immediate release of Vladmir Kara-Murza and all political prisoners in Russia, as well as Belarus, and those areas under temporary Russian control in Ukraine.

    A new year usually ushers in new beginnings and hopes for the future. Instead, we are faced with death and destruction in Europe as Russia continues to inflict its appalling war against its neighbour, endangering the lives of Ukraine’s citizens and threatening the peace and stability of the wider OSCE region. Most Parliamentarians across the region are rightly appalled by this unrelenting assault and complete disregard for OSCE’s commitments and principles. We are grateful for the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s focus on Russia’s illegal invasion and we join you in denouncing President Putin and his enablers for their horrific acts of violence against the people of Ukraine.

    The pursuit of justice and accountability has been an integral part of the UK’s support to Ukraine from the very beginning. We have consistently supported Ukrainian authorities’ and the international community’s efforts to investigate, document, pursue and prosecute those committing horrific crimes. Madam President, we welcomed your appointment in July of Rt Hon John Whittingdale MP as Special Rapporteur on War Crimes to the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly. His mandate to raise awareness and share information about Russia’s war crimes, and engage with Ukraine’s judiciary and the International Criminal Court (ICC) is desperately needed. In March, the UK and The Netherlands will welcome Justice Ministers from across the world to agree on practical support to the International Criminal Court and ensure it has all it needs to prosecute those responsible. Russian forces and their proxies should know they cannot act with impunity and we will back Ukraine until justice is served.

    Madam President, we agree with your and the new Chair’s view that we cannot neglect other vulnerable regions in our neighbourhood. Conflicts and instability persist in Moldova and the South Caucuses (including Georgia). Our Central Asian partners are subject to multiple security, economic and climatic shocks and we need to ensure stability in the Western Balkans. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine exacerbates many of those issues. The OSCE has the versatile toolbox required to help address all of these challenges. We must ensure it is sufficiently resourced and empowered to do so, and condemn those who deliberately seek to undermine it.

    Finally, I wish to commend the Assembly’s unwavering commitment to advancing gender equality in the OSCE region, and Special Representative, Hedy Fry’s and your own leadership on this issue. Women have a right to participate in the decisions that affect their lives, in peacetime and in war. Full, equal and meaningful participation of women leads to better outcomes before, during and after conflicts. This is no less true than in Ukraine, where women are making a critical contribution on the frontline and in their communities. This year, the UK will publish its new UK National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security for 2023-2027, which will continue the important tradition of reporting to the UK Parliament. We welcome the transparency which will be critical in holding us to account.

    Madam President, to conclude, we value the Assembly’s ongoing partnership with the OSCE and its institutions. The UK offers its full support to you and the Assembly and we look forward to continued co-operation and collaboration in 2023 and beyond.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK Defence Senior Advisor Conducts Visit to Lebanon [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK Defence Senior Advisor Conducts Visit to Lebanon [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 26 January 2023.

    The UK Defence Senior Advisor to the Middle East and North Africa (DSAME) Air Marshal Martin Sampson conducted a three day visit to Lebanon from 23 to 25 January.

    DSAME met Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri, Prime Minister Najib Mikati and Commander in Chief of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) General Joseph Aoun. He was accompanied by the British Ambassador to Lebanon, Hamish Cowell, and the UK’s Defence Attaché Lt. Colonel Lee Saunders.

    At the UNIFIL Headquarters in Naqoura, DSAME toured the Blue Line and underlined the UK’s full support for UNIFIL’s work in south Lebanon, as mandated in UN Resolution 1701, and offered his condolences following the tragic death of Private Sean Rooney. He was accompanied by the UK’s new Deputy Head of Mission, Camilla Nickless.

    DSAME also met the inspiring Lebanese endurance athlete Michael Haddad. DSAME was inspired to hear about Mr Haddad’s ambitious plan to walk 100 kilometres across the North Pole later this year, in order to draw attention to the devastating impact of climate change.

    The British Ambassador to Lebanon, Hamish Cowell, said:

    It is a pleasure to welcome Air Marshal Sampson to Lebanon. The longstanding cooperation and partnership between the UK’s Armed Forces and the Lebanese Armed Forces makes a significant contribution to Lebanon’s security, sovereignty and prosperity. The UK will continue to do all we can to support this, including through our agreement last month for a further £13 million commitment to support the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF).

    I also take this opportunity to express my admiration for Michael Haddad’s achievements. He is an inspirational role model. I wish him the best of luck in his upcoming North Pole expedition.

    Air Marshal Martin Sampson said:

    It was an important visit to Lebanon, hearing about the impact of the severe economic crisis on the Lebanese people in general and the Lebanese Armed Forces in particular. I admire the courage and resilience of the Lebanese people and that of the LAF in face of adversity. The UK remains committed to strengthening our bilateral cooperation between our two countries and supporting the LAF’s resilience.

    I conveyed my condolences and support to UNIFIL over the tragic incident which resulted in the tragic death of Private Sean Rooney and injured three others. We reiterated the UK’s position that the perpetrators must be held to account. UNIFIL’s mandate and operations in South Lebanon are important to stability and security for Lebanon and the region.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New visits to understand children’s experience of alternative provision [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New visits to understand children’s experience of alternative provision [January 2023]

    The press release issued by Ofsted on 26 January 2023.

    Ofsted and the CQC have published guidance for the first series of thematic visits to be carried out under the new area SEND inspection arrangements.

    Beginning in February, the visits will take place across the spring and summer terms, with the findings to be shared in a national report published in autumn 2023.

    Each academic year, the series of in-depth reviews will explore particular aspects of the special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) system. The first set of visits will focus on alternative provision (AP), given the large number of children and young people with additional needs in these types of provision.

    The visits will not result in judgements about local areas. Instead, the overarching report will highlight examples of good practice and identify any systemic concerns.

    Inspectors from Ofsted and the Care Quality Commission (CQC) will explore how AP arrangements are currently working, including how partners work together to commission and oversee AP. These visits will enable the inspectorates to better understand and report on the increasingly varied reasons why AP is used. By sharing examples of good practice, Ofsted and CQC aim to highlight the positive role that AP can play in the education system.

    All types of AP may be examined during the visits, which will consider how AP is being used and if it is meeting children’s needs. Evidence will be gathered from a range of stakeholders, including young people and their families, to understand the experiences and outcomes of those at the centre of the AP system.

    Lee Owston, Ofsted’s National Director for Education:

    The current SEND system is not working for too many young people and their families, and we want to play our part in driving forward much-needed improvement.

    We know that the majority of children and young people in alternative provision have some form of SEND. But all too often alternative provision is being used for purposes that it was not originally intended to serve. These visits will help us to better understand how alternative provision is working for those who rely on it most, and support the sector in meeting growing demand. They will also highlight any areas that need to be improved.

    We hope that these thematic reviews will provide valuable insights as the government develops its plans for reform of alternative provision. They will also help support partners across education, health and social care to work together in delivering important improvements for children and their families.

    Dr Sean O’Kelly, Chief Inspector of Hospitals and interim Chief Inspector of Primary Medical Services at the Care Quality Commission:

    All good services should start from an understanding of how to provide the best care for the people that use them. With a significant number of young people with SEND in alternative provision, this work with Ofsted is a critical opportunity to ask how local agencies are working together to recognise and meet the health and educational needs of children and young people in alternative provision.

    Visiting these services with Ofsted – working together as we expect other agencies to do – will help to identify and share best practice, as well as areas for improvement.