Nodwch fod y brotest gan ymgyrch Ysgol De Caerdydd tu fas i Neuadd y Sir ddydd Iau yma wedi'i chanslo.
Please note that the protest by the Ysgol De Caerdydd campaign near County Hall this Thursday is cancelled.
Mae’n glir o’r cyfathrebu a fu rhwng Huw Thomas a Mark Drakeford fod yna gytundeb dros yr angen am y 4edd ysgol uwchradd a bod rhaid ei lleoli wrth galon cymunedau mwyaf aml-ddiwylliannol y brifddinas... sef Tre-biwt, Grangetown a’r ardal.
https://t.co/6zu9aVHfw5
@Golwg360
Joe Healy:
"Mae gyda ni’r ysgol gynradd yma nawr yn yr ardal, ond hefyd ni eisiau trio pwyso am ysgol uwchradd i ddod gyda hwnna, lle fydd plant lleol yn gallu mynd a defnyddio Cymraeg nhw yn yr ardal leol..."
Diolch i'r ymgeiswyr Senedd sydd wedi ymateb i'r llythyr am gefnogi ysgolion Cymraeg yng Nghaerdydd gyfan. Edrychwn ymlaen at weld ymatebion yr ymgeiswyr eraill cyn hir!
👋 PLÎS bawb e-bostiwch eich ymgeiswyr - am ganllaw a thempled ewch i'r ddolen yn y postiad nesaf...
'Ni’n creu problemau i’r Gymraeg gan bod ni’n lleihau capasiti'
Mae angen i lywodraeth nesaf Cymru greu polisi newydd ar gyfer diogelu ysgolion bach a gwledig Cymru, yn ôl Cymdeithas yr Iaith. https://t.co/atUiyXB7fK
Tony Blair pressured officials to ensure British soldiers accused of war crimes in Iraq would be tried in UK military courts, rather than by juries or at the Hague, newly declassified documents show.
The then-prime minister wrote in 2005 that it was “essential” the International Criminal Court (ICC) did not investigate the UK’s actions in Iraq.
“We have, in effect, to be in a position where the ICC is not involved and neither is CPS,” he said, referring to the UK’s Crown Prosecution Service. “That is essential.”
Blair was replying to Antony Phillipson, his private secretary for foreign affairs, who wrote that two former UK military chiefs had “claimed that armed forces personnel could be prosecuted before the ICC”.
Just months before Britain joined the US in invading Iraq, a move widely regarded as a war crime in itself, Blair told Australia’s then-prime minister John Howard that western countries had no need to worry about the ICC.
“We envisage the ICC acting only in the case of failed states or where judicial processes have broken down,” he wrote.
Files released in 2022 showed Blair’s government only signed the Rome Statute in 1998 after receiving assurances that UK soldiers would not be prosecuted by the ICC.
The newer files, released to the National Archives, also show that Blair said British soldiers accused of killing an Iraqi civilian named Baha Mousa “must not” be tried in a civilian court.
Mousa was detained in Basra in September in 2003 before being hooded, forced into stress positions and severely beaten.
An inquiry later heard his mistreatment was in breach of the Geneva Convention, but the judge said many of the soldiers involved would escape justice because of a “more or less obvious closing of ranks”.
The only person to be convicted over the incident was corporal Donald Payne, who was jailed for a year and dismissed from the army.
Payne, the first British soldier ever to be convicted of a war crime, beat Mousa and other civilians while they were hooded and handcuffed. He kicked and punched the captives in sequence and joked that their cries of pain were “music” forming what he called a “choir”.
By restricting jury trials, removing protest rights and expanding surveillance, Labour is entrenching an authoritarian legal infrastructure that a far-right government will not hesitate to exploit. https://t.co/XFaCu025YE
Cardiff Council loves to talk about "Caerdydd Ddwyieithog / Bilingual Cardiff" which, in terms of access to the Welsh language, is more ambition than reality. There are still too many obstacles. 🧵
Mae Cyngor Caerdydd yn hoff o siarad am "Caerdydd Ddwyieithog" sydd, o ran mynediad at y Gymraeg, yn fwy o uchelgais na realiti. Mae gormod o rwystrau’n parhau.
Mae o wir yn drychinebus pan wyt ti’n meddwl am y peth… Ysgrifennydd Gwladol CYMRU mwy neu lai yn gwrthod printio ffurflenni yn y Gymraeg ar sail fod bron pawb yn siarad Saesneg
https://t.co/8umJr45lJV
📰"We don’t have to save the language, the language is what will save us.” Manex Mantxola Urrate @kontseilua
📰@Guardian coverage on the #ELEN2025 General Assembly and how our languages are facing a digital future.
@stephenburgen@rogerserra@VilaFx
https://t.co/Cc2MaV6iTY