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    ‘Extraordinary and deeply harmful’: Charities’ rallying cry for Lords to block Rwanda bill

    Get the free Morning Headlines email for news from our reporters across the worldSign up to our free Morning Headlines emailMore than 250 charities, religious organisations and civil society bodies have called on the House of Lords to block the “deeply harmful” Rwanda bill, labelling it an attack on universal human rights and the constitutional role of the judiciary. In a joint statement ahead of the second reading of the bill in the Lords on Monday, the charities said that the government’s plans to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda would create a “two-tiered system” of human rights where some people had access to the UK courts and others didn’t, concluding: “Either we all have human rights or none of us do.” The group, which includes political organisations, faith groups, unions and councils, condemned the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill as “constitutionally extraordinary and deeply harmful”, saying it would “threaten the universality of human rights and is likely in breach of international law”. They also warned that the bill would breach the Good Friday agreement, which commits the UK government to “complete incorporation” of international human rights law in Northern Ireland. Three peers from the Liberal Democrats, Labour and the Greens, also backed the statement saying the bill must be stopped. Rishi Sunak’s government agreed on a legally binding treaty with Rwanda in December, arguing that it addressed concerns raised by the Supreme Court about the possibility of asylum seekers deported to Rwanda being transferred back to a country where they could be at risk. Rishi Sunak has said he is prepared to ignore orders from the European Court of Human Rights Mr Sunak brought forward legislation to declare, contrary to the finding of the UK’s highest court, that Rwanda is in fact a safe country. The bill also severely limits asylum seekers’ ability to challenge their Rwanda deportation in the UK courts, making a showdown with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) more likely. Peers in the House of Lords delivered an initial blow to Mr Sunak’s plans when they backed, by 214 votes to 171, a motion to delay the treaty until the government can prove that Rwanda is indeed safe. In a hastily-arranged press conference this month, Mr Sunak warned peers not to “frustrate the will of the people” by opposing his flagship legislation.In the joint civil society statement, shared exclusively with The Independent, charities called on the Lords “to reject the bill at second reading” on Monday – pointing out: “It was not a government manifesto commitment”.In the letter, 256 civil society organisations, including Amnesty International, Unison, the Methodist Church, the Muslim Council of Britain and the International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute, said that the bill is “an attack on the constitutional role of the judiciary and the rule of law” because it “legislates something that has been authoritatively found to be false by the Supreme Court”. Home Secretary James Cleverly and Rwandan Minister of Foreign Affairs Vincent Biruta shake hands after they signed a new treaty in Kigali, Rwanda. The letter, coordinated by human rights organisation Liberty, continued: “If parliament validates legislating legal fictions in this way, it would set a dangerous precedent for future governments”. They also said that the bill would put the UK “on a direct collision course with the European Court of Human Rights”. The president of the ECHR, Siofra O’Leary, has said that the UK must legally comply with any Rule 39 orders issued by the Strasbourg court. A Rule 39 order grounded the first attempted flight carrying migrants from the UK to Rwanda in June 2022. Mr Sunak has put a clause in the Rwanda bill saying that it is “for ministers to decide whether to comply” with rulings from the ECHR.The statement addressed this saying: “Giving a minister legislative validation in ignoring them is a deeply concerning green light to the breaking of international law and erodes the UK’s commitment to the Convention.”LibDem peer Lord Purvis of Tweed, said that the Rwanda bill was “an unsustainable long-term policy”. He added: “It will cost the taxpayer millions while running roughshod over international law and doing nothing to solve the sky-high asylum backlog. “Let’s be clear, this bill sets a dangerous precedent for the future and that is why we will be voting against the bill and all that it stands for”. Labour peer Baroness Shami Chakrabarti, said the bill was “cruel, costly and un-British”, adding: “In dangerous and divided times for our country and the world, it is heartening to see so much of civil society coming together in defence of the best of our values”. Green party peer, Baroness Jenny Jones, called on her fellow members to “stop this appalling bill”. She said: “It is not a manifesto commitment and convention allows the Lords to reject it. If the prime minister wants to claim the Rwanda bill is the will of the people then please hold a general election”. Ahead of the second reading, human rights watchdog the Equality and Human Rights Commission also warned that the home secretary has been unable to confirm that the bill complies with the ECHR. A spokesperson said: “By disapplying sections of the Human Rights Act and seeking to prevent courts from considering the risk of refoulement, this bill could expose people to harm and breaches of their right to life, their rights to be free from torture and inhuman or degrading treatment and their right to effective remedy.”A Home Office spokesperson said:”We are determined to get flights off the ground to Rwanda and the UK has a strong and longstanding tradition of standing up for human rights.”Rwanda is a safe country that cares deeply about supporting refugees. It hosts more than 135,000 asylum seekers and stands ready to relocate people and help them rebuild their lives.” More

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    Top Tory peer calls for crackdown on secret polls after ‘Labour landslide’ survey row

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA top Tory peer and pollster has called for a crackdown on political surveys after a row over an anonymous poll showing Labour was headed for a landslide election win.Lord Hayward has written to the elections watchdog calling for new rules on anonymously-funded polls after rebel Conservative peer David Frost organised a £40,000 survey that forecast a 1997-style victor for Sir Keir Starmer’s party. Lord Frost has refused to reveal the names of those who funded the poll, which was commissioned by a group called the Conservative Britain Alliance, who and has now been linked to an orchestrated right-wing revolt to oust the PM.Following the row, Lord Hayward wrote to Electoral Commission chairman John Pullinge and the UK Statistics Authority “in light of the imminence of a general election”.Conservative peer Lord Hayward called for tighter rules on polling ahead of a general election expected this autumn (PA)He said: “Recent events have highlighted the need for the ‘polling world’ to catch up with other aspects of politics and electioneering.”He added: “Is it really correct that a poll can be undertaken with no credible identifiable ‘beneficial owner’?”He went on to question whether British election polls are “adequately protected from external influence”, and whether polling companies should be able to correct the representation of their data before it is published in the media.YouGov later had to clarify a suggestion by the newspaper that the presence of Reform UK is the difference between Labour securing a majority and not.It said that was their own calculation based on an unreliable calculation.The YouGov poll of 14,000 people, published in the Daily Telegraph, suggested the Tories could retain as few as 169 seats, while Labour would sweep into power with 385 – giving Sir Keir a massive 120-seat majority.It predicted that chancellor Jeremy Hunt could be one of 11 cabinet ministers to lose their seats, in what would be the biggest collapse in support for a governing party since 1906.Other ministers under threat include education secretary Gillian Keegan and defence secretary Grant Shapps.It sparked suggestions that the poll was commissioned as part of a plot to destabilise Rishi Sunak’s leadership of the Conservative Party. The poll was cited by senior backbencher Sir Simon Clarke when he called for Mr Sunak to be ousted and warned the Tories face a “massacre” at the next general election.Lord Frost was ordered by Lords leader Lord True to reveal the names of secret backers who funded the £40,000 poll or face losing the Conservative whip.A defiant Lord Frost refused to reveal the names of the secret donors or confirm rumours that it was bankrolled from overseas. The group behind the poll is simply called the Conservative Britain Alliance, though there is no official record of their existence or membership. More

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    Why are UK councils going bankrupt? | Decomplicated

    UK councils have been declaring bankruptcy, with seven local councils issuing Section 114 notices since 2018. The bankruptcies follow extreme budget cuts that have seen services pared back to their bare minimum, meaning local councils struggling to provide adequate social care, transport, education and housing to their constituents. But how does a local council go bankrupt? What happens to the services that they provide to residents? And what happens when a local council misuses taxpayer’s money?This is Decomplicated. More

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    German company aims for rocket launch every month from Shetland Islands

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA German company hopes to launch rockets into space as often as once a month from the island at the northernmost tip of the UK.Rocket Factory Augsburg’s (RFA) chief commercial officer said excitement is building ahead of their “Olympic gold medal” moment this summer – when they will try to achieve Europe’s first-ever launch delivering satellites into orbit.The company is one of several planning to use launch pads at SaxaVord Spaceport on the island of Unst, the most northerly of the Shetland Islands.In December, SaxaVord was granted the UK’s first vertical launch spaceport licence, allowing up to 30 launches each year.Jorn Spurmann spoke to the PA news agency about RFA’s plans for the first launch of their RFA One launcher – a 30m-tall three-stage rocket which can deliver a 1,300kg payload to a sun-synchronous orbit around Earth.He said “everything looks positive” for the first launch taking place in the summer but much will depend on their testing process.Mr Spurmann said: “We plan to be on pad in the summer and start the (testing) campaign.“Then we have an anticipated first launch attempt and we see how it goes.”He added: “We have on the Shetland Islands a dedicated launch pad purely for RFA. So, there’s no time pressure for us.”He said people on Unst, which has a population of around 600, were supportive of the project, saying: “The locals, they pretty much realise what a big opportunity it is for them.”After testing in Germany and elsewhere, the various components of the rocket and its cargo of satellites will be shipped to Lerwick in around a dozen containers before being driven north to Unst.Mr Spurmann said: “We do a full assembly and checkout testing in Augsburg.“And then we put it into a dozen containers roughly.“Then the final remating of these stages and encapsulation of the fairing, final testing – that all happens on site at the launch pad.”A “hot test” of the rocket’s first-stage engines at the launch pad is expected in the months ahead of the first flight.Ultimately, RFA wants to re-use the lower stage of its rockets in order to generate savings, similar to the Falcon series of rockets used by Elon Musk’s SpaceX.While this will not take place on the initial flights, the first stage of the RFA One rocket would be parachuted back to splash down in the sea after propelling the upper parts of the vehicle high into the atmosphere.The nine Helix engines on the lower part of the rocket make up the bulk of the vehicle’s cost.Mr Spurmann said: “We’re planning mid-term to get to a launch cadence of once a month, so 12 a year.“That should happen over three years. Then it really depends where the market is – if the market needs more, we have flexibility to do more.”RFA’s team of about 300 people will see the first successful launch as an “Olympic gold medal” moment, Mr Spurrmann said, as the project has been years in the making.However, if the attempt ends in failure, he said RFA would be ready with a second vehicle “as soon as possible” for another try.Last year, RFA’s British subsidiary received £3.5 million from the UK Space Agency to support its launch plans. More

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    Dorries pledges to hand back nearly £17,000 ‘golden goodbye’ given in error

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailNadine Dorries has pledged to pay back more than £16,000 she was mistakenly given during the turmoil that followed Boris Johnson’s departure from Downing Street. Ms Dorries was sacked as culture secretary by Mr Johnson’s successor, Liz Truss. But in a blunder she was later given the payment, the equivalent of three months’ salary in lieu of notice. She was not eligible for the payout, however, which according to the rules should only be given those under 65. Ms Dorries had turned 65 several months earlier. Ms Dorries promised to pay the money back “on Monday morning” as she said she was only made aware of the mistake on Friday.And she joked that as a result “everybody knows I’m not 49″. Government accounts show she received £16,876 as an exit payout as she departed the cabinet. Ms Dorries later quit as an MP in protest at her exclusion from Mr Johnson’s resignation honours list.She blamed Rishi Sunak for her lack of a gong and triggered a by-election in her Mid Bedfordshire seat. Wiithin weeks Labour had overturned a huge Tory majority to win the constituency. The Mirror revealed earlier this week that disgraced ex-MP Peter Bone had also wrongly been paid almost £5,600 after he spent just 82 days as the deputy leader of the Commons under Mr Johnson. He was 69 at the time.Baroness Stedman-Scott also got £17,442 when she stood down as a Department of Work and Pensions minister in 2022. She was 67. And Sir David Evennett also received £4,479 when he left his role as a Government whip in October 2022, at the age of 73. Labour has pledged to reform the rules on ministerial severance pay if it wins the next election this year after it emerged that last year’s political turmoil cost the taxpayer nearly £1 million.Cabinet Office minister Alex Burghart said earlier this month that the payments “should not apply where a person has attained the age of 65.”If a former minister was incorrectly given a severance payment, the relevant department will contact the individual to recover the over-payment.” More

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    Sunak fasts for 36 hours a week as part of ‘incredibly disciplined’ routine

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak fasts for 36 hours at the start of each week, it has emerged. The prime minister survives on a diet of water, tea or black coffee from 5pm on a Sunday afternoon to 5am on Tuesday morning, his friends say.One said: “He is incredibly disciplined.”A source close to the PM told The Sunday Times: “It’s true, he doesn’t eat anything at all on a Monday.“It’s remarkable really given that he is often on visits or doing PMQ prep on a Monday. It’s a real testament to the discipline, focus and determination that he shows in all aspects of his life and work.”Mr Sunak, 43, has spoken before about the practise – a key part of the Hindu religion – but the full extent of his fasting has not been revealed until now.He previously told how his morning routine consisted of an early rise and a gruelling Peloton workout, followed by either no breakfast at all or a small one, such as Greek yoghurt and blueberries. In an appearance on the Twenty Minute VS podcast last year, Mr Sunak revealed his preferred time to wake up in the morning is 6am.Mr Sunak, 43, has spoken before about the practise but the full extent of his fasting has not been revealed until nowHe said he is a “huge fan” of Peloton workouts, namely those led by Cody Rigsby, one of the brand’s most popular instructors and a huge fan of Britney Spears. “I’m a huge Cody Rigsby fan. He has been my long-term favourite, which means you do have to listen to a lot of Britney,” Mr Sunak said, adding: “But you know, no bad thing in trying to get you motivated, I guess.”When he is not taking part in a Peloton class, Mr Sunak opts for a run on the treadmill or a high-intensity interval training session at his local leisure centre. More

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    Post Office chair ousted amid government frustration over Horizon scandal

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe chair of the Post Office has been forced out of his role amid government frustration over the Horizon IT scandal. Henry Staunton has been in the job for just a year but will leave following tensions with ministers. His departure follows a conversation with Kemi Badenoch, the business and trade secretary, on Saturday. Ms Badenoch said she “felt there was a need for new leadership” at the Post Office as it was announced outgoing chairman Mr Staunton was stepping down.Business secretary Kemi Badenoch spoke to Henry Staunton before his departure was announced The Business Secretary said: “The Post Office is rightfully under a heightened level of scrutiny at this time. With that in mind, I felt there was a need for new leadership, and we have parted ways with mutual consent.”The state-owned company has come under intense scrutiny in recent weeks following a public outcry over what Rishi Sunak described as “one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in our nation’s history”.Hundreds of subpostmasters were prosecuted by the Post Office for theft and false accounting because of a faulty computer system made by Fujitsu, Horizon.The prime minister announced he would bring forward legislation to exonerate them after an ITV drama, Mr Bates vs the Post Office, highlighted the scandal. It has since emerged that the government estimates the total compensation bill paid to subpostmasters will top £1bn. ITV drama ‘Mr Bates vs the Post Office’ highlighted the scandal One source of tension between Mr Staunton and ministers is reported to be the bonus given to chief executive Nick Read and linked to the Post Office’s cooperation with the Horizon inquiry.A Department for Business and Trade spokesperson told Sky News: “The secretary of state today had a phone call with Henry Staunton, the chair of Post Office Limited (POL).“Following this call, we can confirm that he has been dismissed as POL chair. An interim will be appointed shortly.“It is important the Post Office continues the essential work to implement the necessary operational and cultural changes needed within the business.”Insiders told Sky Mr Staunton’s exit was not directly related to the Horizon scandal.Campaigning Labour MP Kevan Jones said: “The Government needs to explain why it has sacked the Post Office chair. This should be the start of a number of changes at the top of the Post Office. The government will need to ask whether the board and senior management are fit to handle the scale of this scandal.”An interim chair will be appointed shortly and then the process to find a permanent replacement will begin. Tory peer Lord Arbuthnot, who also sought justice for the subpostmasters, ruled himself out of running for the role as new chair.He said: “There is a need for dramatic cultural and governance change which can be brought in only by someone with experience of doing that sort of thing.”Mr Staunton was appointed as chair by the former business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng in September 2022. He had previously been chair of WH Smith, the retail chain. The official announcement unveiling his appointment said he would “lead the board of directors as the business looks to the future as well as working to right the past wrongs of the Horizon IT dispute”. More

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    US military destroys Houthi anti-ship missile after attack on British-linked oil tanker

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe US has said it has destroyed a Houthianti-ship missile in Yemen that posed an “imminent threat” to its Navy. The strike comes after the Iran-backed rebels claimed an attack that left a fire raging on a British-linked oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden.In response, the UK government said Britain and its allies, which include the US, reserved “the right to respond appropriately”. Announcing the latest strike, the US said the missile had been aimed towards the Red Sea and was ready to launch. It “presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and the US Navy ships in the region,” US central command said in a statement on X.The US said it had destroyed the missile “in self-defence”, adding that this “action will protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for US Navy vessels and merchant vessels.”Earlier this week, Rishi Sunak warned the UK would not hesitate to launch further airstrikes against the Houthi rebels if attacks on ships in the Red Sea continued. His warning came hours after RAF jets took part in a second wave of joint US-UK action on Monday night. The Houthis claim their attacks have been prompted by the war in Gaza.But the UK has rejected that suggestion, pointing out that the group have hit ships with no links to Israel.After the first set of US-UK strikes the foreign secretary, Lord Cameron said that the decisive action had also sent a very clear message to Iran. Houthi fighters during a rally against the US government designating Houthis as a terror group and against the US-UK air strikes (AP/Osamah Abdulrahman )But the Houthis vowed bloody revenge and have continued to attack vessels in the Red Sea. After the oil tanker attack, a UK govermment spokesperson said: “We are aware of reports that the M/V Marlin Luanda, a Marshall Islands-flagged tanker, has sustained damage from attack in the Gulf of Aden. Current reports suggest no casualties and nearby coalition vessels are on the scene.“We have been clear that any attacks on commercial shipping are completely unacceptable and that the UK and our allies reserve the right to respond appropriately.” The Ministry of Defence said the UK was not involved in the latest strike. Meanwhile, efforts to put out a fire on the British-linked oil tanker continued through the night on Thursday. The ship, operated on behalf of trading giant Trafigura, sails under the flag of the Marshall Islands but is managed by Oceonix Services Ltd, a company registered in the UK.In a statement on Saturday, Trafigura said the safety of its crew remained the “utmost priority” as it battles to control the blaze. More