Tag: UK

  • UK encouraging return of Nigerian artefacts – High Commissioner

    UK encouraging return of Nigerian artefacts – High Commissioner

    British High Commissioner to Nigeria Catriona Laing has said that the United Kingdom is encouraging institutions and facilities in possession of the Benin artefacts to return them to Nigeria.

    Laing made this known on Sunday in Abuja, stating that the UK government has facilitated the return of many of the artefacts.

    She said that the UK is also in talks with Nigerian authorities on how they can reach an agreement to protect the Benin bronzes.

    “In terms of the returns, in the UK, we have a slightly different system in some countries. So, it is the individual Museum, the trustees of that museum, who decide on whether they can return or want to return artifacts.

    “So for example, the Horniman Museum in the UK recently returned 72 Benin artifacts, Cambridge University returned the cockerel, called The Okukor, a beautiful cultural heritage.

    “So we are encouraging them to think actively about this. They are obviously. When something is returned, it has to obviously be put into a place where we can ensure that it will be well protected.

    “So what they’re doing in Benin City is building beautiful new museum which is under the guidance of the famous Scanian architect, but it will be a wonderful museum.

    “And I think another idea that is being considered, and this is what the governor is thinking about. It is that the ownership can transfer to the Government of Nigeria, but they will then lend back to say the British Museum.

    “So you flip it around because obviously there’s so many of these, and you would not have the ability to accommodate all of them.

    “And that can be a win win because lots of people could still see the artifacts, whether here or in London, but the ownership could transfer, that’s an idea that’s been discussed.

    “Well, there’s been a proposition from the governor. So it’s an ongoing debate, but I know Germany and many other countries are now really moving quite fast to return a number of these beautiful Benin bronzes,” Laing said.

  • Half a million UK workers drop out of workforce

    Half a million UK workers drop out of workforce

    The number of people who have dropped out of Britain’s job market since 2019 and who now cite a long-term illness or mental health problems has risen by half a million or about 25 per cent.

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said on Friday.

    The increase in long-term sickness started in 2019, before the pandemic, before rising sharply by 363,000 between early 2020 and the three months to the end of August 2022 to reach 2.5 million, it said.

    The analysis adds to the Bank of England’s worries as it seeks to tame inflation, now at a 40-year high.

    The BoE is concerned that the number of people leaving Britain’s workforce will fuel inflationary pressures and the latest labour market data pointed to a record workforce exodus.

    “More understanding is needed about the impacts of National Health Service (NHS) waiting times, long COVID, and the ageing workforce,“ the ONS said in a report published  earlier on Thursday that analyses previously announced official data.

    Long-term sickness was the reason given by 28 per cent of people who were neither working nor looking for work between June and August 2022, up from 25 per cent at the start of the pandemic.

    However, most people who now cite long-term sickness as their reason for not being in work or looking for a job originally dropped out of the labour market for another reason.

    The most common, and fastest-rising, category of ill health was ‘other health problems or disabilities’ although the ONS doubted whether the increase was primarily driven by long COVID, as the biggest rise occurred in 2019.

    Mental illness and nervous disorders rose by 22 per cent, but depression and anxiety were unchanged.

    Separate data showed that Britain is trailing behind almost all rich nations in its post-COVID labour market recovery and is on track to become the only major developed country with employment below pre-pandemic levels at the start of 2023.

    A combination of factors including a rise in people taking early retirement, long-term illness and lower migration are depleting Britain’s workforce, according to the Institute for Employment Studies (IES) which analysed the data,

    Britain had 600,000 more people who were not participating in the jobs market compared to 2019. That is despite unemployment shrinking to the lowest in nearly 50 years.

    Before the pandemic, Britain had very high employment rates by historic and international standards.

    Among developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, only Switzerland and Latvia have seen bigger post-COVID falls in employment.

    “We have record low unemployment, yet hours worked are still below the levels of February 2020,” said Neil Carberry, CEO of the Recruitment and Employment Confederation.

    That he said makes economic inactivity a huge challenge to our future ability to deliver growth and prosperity.”

  • Britain says it has frozen 18bn pounds worth of Russian assets

    Britain says it has frozen 18bn pounds worth of Russian assets

    The British government said on Thursday that it had frozen assets together worth 18 billion pounds ($20.5 billion) held by Russian oligarchs, other individuals, and entities sanctioned for Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Russia has passed Libya and Iran to become Britain’s most-sanctioned nation, according to the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation, part of the finance ministry.

    The frozen Russian assets were 6 billion pounds more than the amount reported across all other British sanctions regimes.

    “We have imposed the most severe sanctions ever on Russia and it is crippling their war machine.

    “Our message is clear: we will not allow Putin to succeed in this brutal war,” said Andrew Griffith, a junior government minister in the Treasury.

    Britain has so far sanctioned more than 1,200 individuals and more than 120 entities in Russia, including targeting high-profile businessmen and companies to prominent politicians.

    The government began imposing travel bans, asset freezes, and other sanctions on Feb. 24, the day Moscow sent troops into Ukraine.

  • [Video] Popular music artist Rema, passes out on stage in the UK

    [Video] Popular music artist Rema, passes out on stage in the UK

    Popular Nigerian singer, Divine Ikubor, better known as Rema, passed out on stage during a concert in the United Kingdom.

    Although it was later found out that it was all a prank, it made his fans cry out for help as he was rushed out of the stage.

    A source at the venue said, “It was a prank. He pretended to had collapsed, then they dimmed the lights, and ran back on stage to end the show energetically.”

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  • Ekweremadu absent, Wife, Daughter present as court shifts case again

    Ekweremadu absent, Wife, Daughter present as court shifts case again

    The provisional trial of Senator Ike Ekweremadu, who is in prison custody in the United Kingdom (UK) has been rescheduled from May 2023 to January 31, 2023.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that a plea and case management hearing that was initially scheduled for October 31 this year has been moved to December.

    From the recent development on the case in court on Monday, the UK court will now hear arguments in Ekweremadu’s case in December while the trial will hold on January 31, 2023.

    The former Deputy Senate President was absent in court on Monday but his wife, Beatrice and daughter, Sonia were present.

    TNG reports Ekweremadu, who currently represents Enugu West Senatorial District in the Nigerian Senate and his wife are facing trial for plotting to traffic a man to the UK and harvest his organs for the daughter

    Sonia is said to be suffering from kidney failure and needed a transplant but a kidney donor was allegedly illegally transported to the UK from Lagos, Nigeria for the purpose.

    Ekweremadu and Beatrice were later arrested and charged to court. While Beatrice was granted bail, the former Deputy Senate President remains in prison.

  • Nigerian arrested in UK for stabbing mother to death, injures sister

    Nigerian arrested in UK for stabbing mother to death, injures sister

    A Nigerian, Nicolas Aina, has been arraigned for stabbing his 64-year-old mother, Caroline Adeyelu, to death and injuring his 33-year-old sister, Angel Adeyelu, at their family house in Dagenham, East London, United Kingdom.

    The 28-year-old allegedly went into his sister’s bedroom and stabbed her repeatedly with a knife.

    After she heard her daughter’s screams Caroline reportedly went in to see what was going on, but the suspect allegedly lunged at her with the knife before fleeing the property in Auriel Avenue.

    Aina’s mother was pronounced dead at the scene, while his sister was treated in hospital for stab wounds and discharged.

    A neighbour, Samantha Southey, who lived adjacent to the victims’ home, reportedly stated that she heard the commotion resulting from the incident.

    She said, “I just heard a bit of commotion last night. The police knocked on the door and said they caught the person. It’s a little bit frightening.”

    Aina was reported to have appeared at Barkingside Magistrates’ Court before Judge Philip Katz KC, on Tuesday, November 1, where he was charged with murder and attempted murder.

    He was remanded in custody to appear at the Old Bailey Court on Thursday.

    A detective of the East Area Command Unit, Superintendent Richard Vandenbergh, described the incident as ‘truly shocking.

  • [VIDEO] President Buhari arrives London for medical check-up

    [VIDEO] President Buhari arrives London for medical check-up

    President Muhammadu Buhari has arrived in London, UK, for his routine medical check-up.

    Recall that, Femi Adesina, shared news of the trip, stating that the Nigerian leader is expected back in the country in the second week of November, following his departure to London on the 31st of October 2022.

    In the video shared online, President Buhari was seen getting off an aeroplane before entering a car, while some Nigerian officials stood.

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  • 23-year-old woman becomes UK’s first blind black lawyer+photo

    23-year-old woman becomes UK’s first blind black lawyer+photo

    A young woman has become Britain’s first blind and Black barrister, in an achievement that has been described as ‘truly remarkable.

    23-year-old Jessikah Inaba qualified last week after studying for five years at a university in London.

    She completed her entire course using Braille and also credits her friends as well as her tutors for helping to fill in the gaps.


    Jess is completely blind and had to use Braille throughout her time at the University of Law – London Bloomsbury. She started her accelerated law degree in September 2017 before starting a master’s two years later alongside a professional training course.

    Braille can be read on a special screen that usually gives one line at a time, or from specially printed books. She said it took seven months for her university to obtain one of her two key study texts so she could read on her computer, and five months for the other.

    And, because of pictures and tables in the books, her Braille screen missed huge chunks of material, she said.

    She says she got through most of her studies by making her own Braille materials from her lecture notes, or from friends reading books to her.

    On her achievement, Jess told Mirror UK: ‘It’s been crazy – I still can’t really believe I’ve done it. One day I’ll wake up and realise how amazing this is.

    ‘It was hard and I often thought of giving up, but my supportive family gave me courage and strength.

    ‘I always believed in myself from the start – there’s nothing about me which means this isn’t possible.

    ‘I know I can do this job really well, and the more people like me who go through training the easier it will become.

    ‘It’s a really good feeling, I know I’m giving hope to others in similar situations to mine. There’s a triple-glazed glass ceiling.

    I’m not the most common gender or colour, and I have a disability, but by pushing through I’m easing the burden on the next person like me.’

    She added that the university organised one-on-one tuition to support her when the lack of books held her back.

    Jess said: ‘I was spending more time preparing my own learning materials than I was studying.

  • BREAKING: President Buhari jets out for medical checkup in London

    BREAKING: President Buhari jets out for medical checkup in London

    President Muhammadu Buhari will depart Abuja, the federal capital territory (FCT) later today for a “routine” medical checkup in London, United Kingdom (UK).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) gathers that President Buhari is expected to be back in the country in the second week of November.

    This was contained in a statement released by Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity.

  • Rishi Sunak: Not blackmailing, but whitewashing Britain – By Owei Lakemfa

    Rishi Sunak: Not blackmailing, but whitewashing Britain – By Owei Lakemfa

    Rishi Sunak, 42, walked into 10 Downing Street, London this Tuesday, October 25, 2022 as the youngest Prime Minister of ancient Britain. He is the third occupant of that residence within 51 days. But perhaps the most said about his rise, is not his capability or ability, education or competence, vision or ideas.

    Rather, that he is the first man of colour to take up residence in that famous address. This is quite a slippery road to take. Perhaps it is meant that Sunak is not, at least originally, an Englishman. It is said he is Indian, of Asian origins. Not really.

    Yes, his forbears came from Punjab, but his father, Yashvir was a Kenyan born under colonialism. His mother, Usha, was Tangayikan, before that country merged with Zanzibar to become present day Tanzania. So, his parents were Africans and they met neither in Africa nor Asia, but in England where the new Prime Minister was born British.

    What can be said about Sunak is that unlike one of his predecessors, Boris Johnson, he does not try to be more English than the English. Johnson was the grandson of a Turk, Ali Kemal Bey, from Kalfat and his father, Stanley Kemal, adopted the name of their maternal grandmother, Margaret Johnson.

    A man, who unlike Johnson, does not need to strive to be more English than the English is King Charles III. He is the Monarch who in his first two months on the British throne, has had two Prime Ministers. As I watched the likeable Monarch and Sunak smile, and, against the background of peoples origins, I reflected that King Charles is of Normandy, northern France ancestry.

    That his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, was a descendant of William of Normandy who was the Duke of Normandy from 1035-1087.  In 1066, he crushed the English led by King Harold II in the Battle of Hastings, and, having conquered the English, became known as William the Conqueror or William the Bastard. After his victory, he installed himself on the English throne taking the title, King William I. Until this day, his descendants, including Charles III, sit on the British throne. But, wait a minute, do you know William the Normand was not French? No, he was a Viking, Scandinavian ancestry.

    Before I forget, while Sunak’s father was Kenyan of Indian ancestry, King Charles III’s father, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, was a Greek. He came from Corfu, in Greece. His father, Prince Andrew was the younger brother of King Constantine of Greece. The mother of Prince Philip, was German. The Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle whose love moved Prince Harry from Britain, has just revealed that she is 43 per cent Nigerian. What does that change? For me, nothing. It is just like President Barack Obama being of African origin, did not change America’s policies towards our continent and did not stop his Presidency deliberately destroying Libya, turning it from a very rich nation into a basket case.

    His administration’s destruction of that beautiful African state, released the waters of the huge dam of terrorists and their weapons which flooded the Sahel. This is mainly responsible for terrorists flooding countries like Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Cameroun, Chad and Nigeria. It is not that the showers of terrorism were not present in these places but I am referring to the huge  volume of terrorists rain and the subsequent floods.

    I have gone through this route to make the point that we all have our origins. So the narrative of the new British Prime Minister should not be primarily his ancestry, but his ideology  and what he represents. The fact that the Tory Party is in disarray and turned to Sunak is not due to his ancestry, or a  blackmail of the British establishment at one of its lowest points. This whitewash was not planned.

    Rather, it is his conservative ideology, which if anything, would be injurious to people of colour. For instance, he pledged to press through the programme of bundling illegal migrants and asylum seekers to detention in  Rwanda. It is an inhuman policy presented as the ‘Migration and Economic Development Partnership’ under which asylum seekers arriving  in Britain are sent on a one-way ticket for “processing” in that African country either to claim asylum there or seek it in a third country. For this, Rwanda is to be paid 120 million pounds apart from the processing fees. Yet, the largest group to be affected are from India.

    This scheme reminds me of the infamous Australian system of sending asylum seekers who attempt to reach the country by boat, to detention in Papua New Guinea. It is not called detention but ‘processing’ and this can take up to seven years after which the victims are ready to sign any agreement thrust in their faces. The war in Ukraine has led to high inflation in some European countries and triggered mass protests in countries, including  the United Kingdom, UK. But Sunak  promises to increase defence spending, redouble spending  on Ukraine and “reinforce our policy of total support for Ukraine that Boris has so ably led”.

    However, the international problem Sunak has is not Russia.  The new poster boy of an integrated, multinational and culturally assimilated Great Britain, sees China as the obstacle to universal peace and prosperity. He declares: “China and the Chinese Communist Party represent the largest threat to Britain and the world’s security and prosperity this century”. Did Brexit cause part of the current economic crises in the United Kingdom? Sunak, who backed Brexit in the 2016 referendum believing it will grow the economy, does not think so. Therefore, he would  further the divide and hopes to make the divorce from the European Union irreversible.

    If a country goes through the severe shocks the UK has undergone and the Conservative Party, which is like the bus conveying the country to its destination, is faulty, it is logical to stop and effect needed repairs to prevent further breakdowns; but the party prefers to change drivers. Two months ago it changed from Boris Johnson to Elizabeth Truss, now to Rishi Sunak.

    Its determination is to drive the country until January 2025 when  new general elections would be held. British democracy is so beautiful that when the people make a choice by voting a political party into power, even if that party becomes an albatross, they are expected to do nothing but grumble and wait for the general elections which holds every  quinquennial.

    Who knows whether Sunak will be lucky enough to drive the Conservative Party bus to the next elections without it breaking down. But these are times Britain needs leaders who are full of ideas, vision, decisive and  pro-people. I miss Jeremy Corbyn.