Tag: UK

  • Britain’s new monarch, King Charles reacts over Queen’s death

    Britain’s new monarch, King Charles reacts over Queen’s death

    Britains new monarch, King Charles has reacted to the passing of Queen Elizabeth II.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Queen Elizabeth II died peacefully on Thursday.

    In a statement shortly after the death of the British longest-serving monarch, King Charles described the moment as a “moment of the greatest sadness”.

    The statement reads: “The death of my beloved Mother, Her Majesty The Queen, is a moment of the greatest sadness for me and all members of my family.

    “We mourn profoundly the passing of a cherished Sovereign and a much loved Mother. I know her loss will be deeply felt throughout the country, the Realms and the Commonwealth, and by countless people around the world.

    “During this period of mourning and change, my family and I will be comforted and sustained by our knowledge of the respect and deep affection in which The Queen was so widely held”.

  • Prince Charles succeeds Queen Elizabeth II as King

    Prince Charles succeeds Queen Elizabeth II as King

    The longest-serving monarch in British history, Queen Elizabeth II has died “peacefully” on Thursday.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Buckingham Palace confirmed the death of Queen Elizabeth II in a statement.

    Queen Elizabeth II had been under medical supervision as doctors expressed “concerned for Her Majesty’s health.”

    The announcement comes a day after the 96-year-old monarch cancelled a meeting of her Privy Council and was told to rest.

    With Queen Elizabeth II’s death, Prince Charles would become king and his wife, Camilla, formerly the Duchess of Cornwall, will become the Queen Consort, a request made by Queen Elizabeth.

    “The Queen died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon. The King and The Queen Consort will remain at Balmoral this evening and will return to London tomorrow,” the statement reads.

    Recall that Charles was previously married to the late Princess Diana, mother of Prince Harry.

    Prince Charles is 73. He is the oldest-recorded person to become a British monarch: King William IV was 64 when he was crowned in 1830.

    Operation London Bridge, as the queen’s funeral plan is known, gets a military-style name in part because the military is heavily involved in organizing and carrying out many of the processions and ceremonies.

    Details of Operation London Bridge first leaked in The Guardian in May 2017, describing what would happen during the 10-day period from the day after the death and the funeral at Westminster Abbey followed by interment in St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle.

    • Day 1: At the moment of the sovereign’s death, her eldest son and heir, Prince Charles the Prince of Wales, instantly becomes Britain’s 42nd monarch since William the Conqueror in 1066. (The new king will likely pick Charles III as his reign name.)
    • The late monarch’s private secretary will call the prime minister on a secure line to say the code phrase, “London Bridge is down,” followed by a number “cascade” of similar calls to cabinet officials and other high-ranking officials in the United Kingdom and in the 15 Commonwealth countries where the British sovereign is head of state.
    • Day 2: The queen’s coffin will be transferred from the place of death to the throne room at Buckingham Palace overlooking the north-west corner of the Quadrangle interior courtyard.
    • Days 3-5: The new king will receive Parliament’s motion of condolence at Westminster Hall, then depart on a tour of the kingdom to meet his people.
    • Day 5: The procession of the coffin from Buckingham Palace to the Palace of Westminster will take place, followed by a service in Westminster Hall.
    • Days 6-9: The queen lies in state at Westminster Hall.
    • Day 10: The queen’s state funeral will be at Westminster Abbey.  The day will be declared a Day of National Mourning and two minutes of silence will be marked across the nation.

     

  • Liz Truss’s cabinet is Britain’s first without white man in top jobs

    Liz Truss’s cabinet is Britain’s first without white man in top jobs

    The new British Prime Minister Liz Truss has selected a cabinet where for the first time a white man will not hold one of the country’s four most important ministerial positions.

    Truss appointed Kwasi Kwarteng – whose parents came from Ghana in the 1960s – as Britain’s first Black finance minister while James Cleverly is the first Black foreign minister.

    Cleverly, whose mother hails from Sierra Leone and whose father is white, has in the past spoken about being bullied as a mixed-race child and has said the party needs to do more to attract Black voters.

    Suella Braverman, whose parents came to Britain from Kenya and Mauritius six decades ago, succeeds Priti Patel as the second ethnic minority home secretary, or interior minister, where she will be responsible for police and immigration.

    The growing diversity is in part thanks to a push by the Conservative Party in recent years to put forward a more varied set of candidates for parliament.

    British governments have until a few decades ago been made up of mostly white men.

    It took until 2002 for Britain to appoint its first ethnic minority cabinet minister when Paul Boateng was appointed chief secretary to the Treasury.

    Rishi Sunak, whose parents came from India, was Kwarteng’s predecessor in the finance job and the runner-up to Truss in the leadership context.

    “Politics has set the pace. We now treat it as normal, this diversity,” said Sunder Katwala, director of non-partisan think-tank British Future, which focuses on migration and identity.

    “The pace of change is extraordinary,” Katwala added.

    However, the upper ranks of business, the judiciary, the civil service and army are all still predominately white.

    And despite the party’s diversity campaign, only a quarter of Conservative members of parliament are women and 6 per cent from minority backgrounds.

    Nevertheless, the Conservatives have the best track record of political firsts among the main political parties, including appointing the first Jewish prime minister in Benjamin Disraeli in 1868.

    This is despite the fact ethnic minority voters are much more likely to back the opposition Labour party and the ruling party has faced accusations of racism, misogyny and Islamophobia.

    Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson apologised in 2019 for describing Muslim women wearing burqas as looking like letter boxes.

    The Conservatives have elected all three of Britain’s female prime ministers, Margaret Thatcher, Theresa May and now Truss.

    The first lawmaker of Asian descent, Mancherjee Bhownaggree in 1895, also came from the Conservatives.

    Johnson assembled the youngest and most ethnically diverse Cabinet in history when he elected prime minister in 2019.

    His three finance ministers included two men of South Asian origin and one of Kurdish background.

    The changes followed a years-long effort by former leader and Prime Minister David Cameron.

    When he took over in 2005, the party had just two ethnic minority members of parliament out of 196, and he set out to ensure that his party more closely resembled the modern Britain it hoped to lead.

    The next year, Cameron introduced a priority list of female and minority candidates to be selected, many for safe seats in the House of Commons.

    Truss was a beneficiary of this push.

    “A key part of ensuring the strength and resilience of any group, including a political party, is the avoidance of everyone thinking and acting in the same way – the avoidance of group-think,” said James Arbuthnot.

    Arbuthnot is a member of the party board’s committee on candidates when Cameron introduced the changes.

    But Kwarteng has played down the significance of his ethnicity.

    He has said that, although he experienced racist insults growing up in the eighties, he does not see himself as a symbol of anyone other than his constituents in Spelthorne, which borders London’s south-west suburbs.

    “I actually think that it’s not that much of a big deal,” he said after being appointed as the first Black Conservative front-bench minister.

    “I think once you’ve made the point, I don’t think it’s something that comes up that much,” he added.

  • British PM, Liz Truss appoints Nigerian, Kemi Badenoch into cabinet [SEE FULL LIST OF APPOINTMENTS]

    British PM, Liz Truss appoints Nigerian, Kemi Badenoch into cabinet [SEE FULL LIST OF APPOINTMENTS]

    British Prime Minister, Liz Truss has appointed Nigeria-born Kemi Badenoch as Secretary of State for International Trade and President of the Board of Trade.

    Truss, a former Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Affairs, succeeded Boris Johnson as British prime minister on Monday.

    Badenoch was appointed alongside other ministerial appointments. According to a statement on the UK government website, the appointments were ratified by Queen Elizabeth ll.

    The PM confirmed the appointment of the new cabinet members on her verified Twitter page – @10DowningStreet, yesterday.

    Other appointees are:

    • The Rt Hon Elizabeth Truss MP as Prime Minister, First Lord of the Treasury, Minister for the Civil Service, and Minister for the Union
    • The Rt Hon Dr Thérèse Coffey MP as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. She will also be Deputy Prime Minister
    • The Rt Hon Kwasi Kwarteng MP as Chancellor of the Exchequer
    • The Rt Hon James Cleverly MP as Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs
    • The Rt Hon Suella Braverman QC MP as Secretary of State for the Home Department
    • Wendy Morton MP as Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury (Chief Whip). She will attend Cabinet
    • The Rt Hon Ben Wallace MP has been re-appointed as Secretary of State for Defence
    • The Rt Hon Brandon Lewis CBE MP as Lord Chancellor, and Secretary of State for Justice
    • The Rt Hon Nadhim Zahawi MP as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Minister for Intergovernmental Relations and Minister for Equalities
    • The Rt Hon Penny Mordaunt MP as Lord President of the Council, and Leader of the House of Commons
    • Lord True CBE as Lord Privy Seal, and Leader of the House of Lords
    • The Rt Hon Jake Berry MP as Minister without Portfolio
    • The Rt Hon Alok Sharma MP has been re-appointed as COP26 President
    • The Rt Hon Jacob Rees-Mogg MP as Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy
    • The Rt Hon Simon Clarke MP as Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
    • Chloe Smith MP as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
    • The Rt Hon Kit Malthouse MP as Secretary of State for Education
    • Ranil Jayawardena MP as Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
    • The Rt Hon Anne-Marie Trevelyan MP as Secretary of State for Transport
    • The Rt Hon Michelle Donelan MP as Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
    • The Rt Hon Chris Heaton-Harris MP as Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
    • The Rt Hon Alister Jack MP has been re-appointed as Secretary of State for Scotland
    • The Rt Hon Sir Robert Buckland KBE QC MP has been re-appointed as Secretary of State for Wales
    • Chris Philp MP as Chief Secretary to the Treasury. He will attend Cabinet
    • Rt Hon Michael Ellis QC MP as Attorney General. He will attend Cabinet
    • Edward Argar MP as Paymaster General and Minister for the Cabinet Office. He will attend Cabinet
    • Vicky Ford MP as a Minister of State (Minister for Development) in the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. She will attend Cabinet
    • Tom Tugendhat MBE MP as a Minister of State (Minister for Security) in the Home Department. He will attend Cabinet
    • James Heappey MP has been re-appointed as a Minister of State in the Ministry of Defence. He will be Minister for the Armed Forces and Veterans and will attend Cabinet.
    • Graham Stuart MP as a Minister of State (Minister for Climate) in the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. He will attend Cabinet.
  • BREAKING: Liz Truss to become next UK prime minister

    BREAKING: Liz Truss to become next UK prime minister

    Liz Truss will be the new UK prime minister after defeating Rishi Sunak in the Tory leadership contest.

    She beat her rival by 81,326 votes to 60,399, after a summer-long internal contest sparked by Boris Johnson’s resignation in July.

    Speaking after her victory, Truss thanked Sunak for a “hard-fought contest”

    Details to follow…

  • BREAKING: Senator Ekweremadu to remain in prison till next year

    BREAKING: Senator Ekweremadu to remain in prison till next year

    The provisional trial of Senator Ike Ekweremadu, who is in prison custody in the United Kingdom (UK) has been scheduled for the 2nd of May 2023.

    Barring any changes, this means Senator Ekweremadu will remain in the UK prison till next year. However, a plea and case management hearing has been scheduled for October 31 this year.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Judge Richard Marks QC as saying the case would be heard by a High Court judge.

    On Thursday, Mrs Beatrice Ekweremadu, who is on bail, appeared at the Old Bailey for a plea and directions hearing, with Ekweremadu and Obinna Obeta also attending by video link from Wandsworth and Belmarsh prisons.

    The judge granted Mrs Ekweremadu continued conditional bail and remanded Senator Ekweremadu and Obeta, a 50-year-old London doctor involved in the case, into custody.

    TNG reports Ekweremadu has denied any wrongdoing. Martin Hicks, QC, defending the Senator, has said: “We deny that there was any exploitation or any intent to do so. The argument will be factual denial”.

    Senator Ekweremadu, Mrs Ekweremadu and Obeta are facing trial for plotting to traffic a man to the UK and harvest his organs.

    Prosecutors claim they planned to have his kidney removed at the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead, north west London, so it could be given to their daughter who suffers from kidney failure.

    The man is said to have refused to consent to the procedure after undergoing tests.

    The alleged offences are said to have taken place between between August 1 last year and May 5.

    “The case began on 5 May 2022 when the complainant presented himself at Staines Police Station and claimed he had been transported to this country for the purpose of his kidney being removed.

    “He arrived on 20th February 2022 and was taken to Royal Free Hospital where tests were conducted. For the purpose he was there he did not consent to the taking of his kidney.

    “He returned to the house he was staying and his treatment changed dramatically. He described being treated effectively as a slave,” Prosecutor Tim Probert-Wood had said.

  • Commonwealth Games: Ugandan runner opens medal table for Africa

    Commonwealth Games: Ugandan runner opens medal table for Africa

    Ugandan runner, Victor Kiplangat has become the First African to win a gold medal at the ongoing Commonwealth games in Birmingham, UK.

    The long-distance runner produced an impressive performance to give Uganda their first-ever Commonwealth Games marathon gold in Birmingham on Saturday.

    Kiplangat took a wrong turn but still found his way to marathon gold providing some late drama to what had been an uneventful race.

    After more than 40 kilometers of running through the twisting Birmingham streets, Kiplangat veered off course in the late stages but had built up such a commanding lead that the miscue did not cause any damage.

    He posted a time of  2hr 10min 55sec, coming home with a broad grin on his face more than a minute and a half clear of Tanzania’s 2017 world bronze medallist Alphonce Felix Simbu.A delighted Michael Githae of Kenya wiggled his finger with a big smile at the spectators in the finishing straight as he took the bronze, more than two minutes behind the winner.Long-time pacesetter Luke Adams of Australia made a valiant effort at trying to give his country their third successive win in the event but had to settle for fourth.

    The medallists, draped in their respective national flags, delighted the crowd gathered at the finish in central Birmingham by going over and chatting to them.

    The women’s race was in its early stages with 41-year-old defending champion Helalia Johannes of Namibia confident she can win again.

    Johannes is not the oldest runner in the small but select field as Australia’s Sinead Diver is 45, the oldest competitor in athletics at the Games.

  • Britain: Conservative MPs to select final 2 leadership candidates

    Britain: Conservative MPs to select final 2 leadership candidates

    A final vote of Conservative members of parliament on Wednesday will select the two candidates to be put to the party’s membership in the race to become Britain’s next prime minister.

    Liz Truss and Penny Mordaunt are battling to win over Kemi Badenoch’s supporters after she was knocked out of the contest, for an opportunity to face frontrunner Rishi Sunak in the run-off.

    Foreign Secretary Truss received a surge in support in the penultimate ballot, putting her within touching distance of Mordaunt as the right of the party appears to be coalescing around her.

    The momentum of her latest result now puts her favourite to face Sunak in the head-to-head competition to win a ballot of Conservative members, with that result being announced on Sept. 5.

    Truss picked up 15 votes to command the support of 86 Tory MPs on Tuesday after 31 votes were freed up by the elimination of Tom Tugendhat a day earlier.

    Mordaunt increased her share by 10 to sit on 92, while Mr Sunak gained an extra three votes to put him in 118, just shy of the number effectively guaranteeing him entry to the final phase.

    Badenoch came last in the ballot on 59 votes, with Truss believed to be more likely to pick up a significant number of those votes than Mordaunt.

    The rival campaigns accused one another of transferring votes in a bid to boost their own positions, with David Davis, a backer of Mordaunt, saying it was the “dirtiest campaign” he had ever seen.

    “Rishi just reallocated some … He wants to fight Liz because she’s the person who will lose the debate with him,” the former Cabinet minister told LBC Radio.

    Sunak, the former chancellor, received a blow in the latest limited polling of the party membership, which forecasts he would lose against both of his remaining rivals in the run-off.

    Mordaunt, the trade minister, said: “We are so nearly across the finish line. I am raring to go and excited to put my case to members across the country and win.”

    She thanked Badenoch, the former equalities minister, and praised her “fresh thinking and bold policies” in a possible pitch to begin winning over her now-floating voters.

    Mordaunt said the Tory brand had “not been helped by some of the TV formats” as she called for “some positivity and some professionalism” to be restored to the often bitter race.

    Truss, who is being backed by Boris Johnson’s most loyal allies, insisted the party’s reputation is “in a positive place.”

    Sunak’s campaign focused on polls showing that he could beat Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and “is the candidate the public think would make the best PM.”

    Who the Tory membership favours is hard to judge because of the low levels of participation in existing polling.

    But a YouGov survey of 725 party members over Monday and Tuesday saw Sunak losing against all of his remaining rivals by large margins.

    The survey put Truss beating Sunak by 54 to 35 and Mordaunt beating him 51 to 37.

    Mordaunt, who had been put ahead in recent weeks, was losing to both Truss and Badenoch in head-to-heads by narrow margins.

    The current size of the Conservative membership is unknown, but at the last leadership election in 2019 there were around 160,000 members, and insiders expect it to have grown, meaning the polling is not representative of the party.

    A spokesperson for the Truss campaign said: “Now is the time for the party to unite behind a candidate who will govern in a Conservative way and who has shown she can deliver time and again.”

  • BREAKING: London court rules David Ukpo in Ekweremadu’s ordeal not a minor

    BREAKING: London court rules David Ukpo in Ekweremadu’s ordeal not a minor

    The Westminster Magistrate Court in London, United Kingdom (UK) has ruled that David Ukpo, who is in the middle of the organ harvesting trial of Ike Ekweremadu and his wife, Beatrice, is not a minor.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the London court passed the ruling on Thursday, while adjourning the case till August 4.

    Earlier, TNG had reported the arrival of Ekweremadu and his at the West Minister Magistrates Court for the continuation of their trial.

    The prosecution have accepted that David Ukpo is 21, contrary to the claim of 15. The case was, thereafter, adjourned and transferred to the Criminal Court in Central London.

    Ekweremadu and Beatrice are to remain in custody till the next hearing date, per the court ruling. Both defendants pleaded not guilty to all charges.

    Recall that on Wednesday, a Federal High Court in Abuja, Nigeria ordered the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) to supply the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) with the certified true copy (CTC) of biodata information of David Ukpo for onward transmission to the UK.

    Justice Inyang Ekwo gave the order following an omnibus application made by Muazu Mohammed, counsel for  NIMC, to the effect.

    Ekweremadu and wife, Beatrice had, in the application dated and filed on June 27 by their lawyer, Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN, sued NIMC and four others.

    Others mentioned in the suit are the Comptroller General (C-G), Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS); Stanbic-IBTC Bank; United Bank of Africa (UBA) and Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System Plc as 2nd to 5th respondents respectively.

    In the originating summons marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/984/2022, the couple prayed the court for an order directing all the defendants to supply them with the CTC of Ukpo’s biodata in their care for the purpose of facilitating the criminal investigation and tendering same to establish their innocence with respect to Ukpo’s age in the criminal charges against them.

    Justice Ekwo granted the couple’s prayers by directing all the defendants to release the CTC of Ukpo’s biodata to the Ekweremadus.

    In his ruling, Justice Ekwo ordered NIMC to supply the information of biodata of David Ukpo’s national identification number which is in its care to the AGF for onward transmission to the UK.

    The couple were, on June 23, remanded in the UK police custody, after they were first arraigned before the  Uxbridge Magistrate Court for alleged conspiracy to facilitate the travel of Ukpo, alleged to be a minor, for organ harvesting.

    They, however, denied the allegations and the court adjourned till July 7 for hearing.

    Ekweremadu also appeared before the Uxbridge Magistrate Court on June 30 where he was denied a bail.

  • BREAKING: Boris Johnson finally resigns as British PM

    BREAKING: Boris Johnson finally resigns as British PM

    Embattled Prime Minister Boris Johnson has finally resigned, setting the path for the election of a new British Prime Minister.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Boris Johnson announced his resignation as British PM on Thursday.

    Johnson confirmed the process to appoint a new leader would begin now, with a timetable set out next week.

    “I want you to know how sad I am to be giving up the best job in the world, but them’s the breaks.

    “No one in politics is remotely indispensable,” Johnson said, speaking from Downing Street.

    He thanked millions of people who voted Conservative at the last election, and gave a reason why he fought so long to remain in office.

    “I thought it was my job, my duty and my obligation to you,” Johnson said.

    TNG reports Boris Johnson became Prime Minister in July 2019.

    He will, however, remain as PM until a successor is in place, expected to be by the time of the Conservative Party conference in October.

    Johnson was weakened by anger about Partygate, in which his administration was accused of hosting parties on government property despite government guidance to avoid social gatherings due to COVID-19.

    Then allegations arose that he had picked Chris Pincher for key party roles in spite of knowing about accusations of sexual misconduct against Pincher.

    Johnson’s resignation came after the prime minister haemorrhaged support among his ministers and member of his Tory party.

    More than 50 lawmakers resigned from government or party roles since Tuesday night when the mass exodus was triggered by the resignations of Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid from the Cabinet.

    The prime minister had sought to defy his critics and carry on in the office, in spite of warnings from Cabinet colleagues that this was not sustainable.

    But resignations continued and Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi who was only appointed to the role on Tuesday, went public with his call for the prime minister to quit.

    The timetable for the Tory leadership contest would be agreed upon between the 1922 Committee, which ran the parliamentary proceedings to whittle the candidates down to two, and Conservative headquarters.

    But critics of the prime minister suggested he should not be allowed to remain in office until October.

    George Freeman, who quit as science minister on Thursday, said that now Johnson had finally done the decent thing, he should hand in the seals of office, and apologise to her majesty.

    “To allow her to appoint a caretaker under whom ministers can serve, so the Conservative Party can choose a new leader properly.’’