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Know someone who needs a reporter/presenter? I can fill that void! Following another strong campaign in the industry, I am hoping to take on new openings.
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@Keir_Starmer says on #PMQS that he's proud of what the @UKLabour have achieved whilst in government whilst the whole country know he,s the worst PM this country has ever seen.A complete and utter disgrace and embarrassment and the sooner he,s fucked off the better #PMQS
Today was the day I was invited to Windsor Castle to receive my MBE from His Majesty King Charles III, what an amazing honour, I still can't believe it but now I can sit and look at it and feel such a sense of achievement Thank you @mariecurieuk you are all absolutely fabulous♥️
@GMB@Kevin_Maguire#HenryNovak had been stabbed 4 times he lay there still telling police officers he,d been stabbed and couldn't breath,"What does it matter it was dark" #GMB
Reform in action
Our street cleansing crews work their socks off, but on busy days demand can outstrip capacity. You asked, we delivered: 15 extra 240L bins and one extra 1100L bin. This is all in addition to the bins already down there.
Thanks to @NELCouncil these small things make a huge difference 🙏🏻
‘Orgy of race hate!’
Solicitor for Mohammed Fahir Amaaz and Muhammad Amaad, Aamer Anwar, speaks outside Liverpool Crown Court following the decision to veto a third trial of the two brothers over the alleged assault of a police officer.
Since the murder of Henry Nowak there has been stony silence from the Government.
Not a peep from the Home Secretary.
Not a word from the Prime Minister who is normally quick to respond to deaths involving the police, both in the UK and abroad.
Remember the spectacle of him ‘taking the knee’ over George Floyd’s death? He won’t even say Henry Nowak’s name.
Henry’s death constituted a national scandal. An 18 year old, robbed of his future on a night out in Southampton after being brutally stabbed 6 times with a 21cm long ceremonial sword. Instead of helping him, the police initially arrested him as he bled to death after he was accused by his attacker of racial harassment. Henry was treated not as the victim, but as the criminal.
His murder could not have been more monstrous; the police response more shameful.
So why has this appalling injustice been met with a collective shrug by politicians in Westminster? With the exception of a couple of us including Henry’s local MP, Jen Craft, it has not been raised in the House of Commons.
I asked the Home Secretary to launch an investigation into the police’s conduct and a debate on two-tier policing - needless to say I was rebuffed.
The silence can be explained by the fact that most politicians are more interested in showing their supposed virtue by favouring minority communities at the expense of the majority. So they look away at injustices perpetrated by minorities, lest it colour the multicultural illusion they have that the country is a harmonious melting pot. And they ignore prejudiced laws and the conventions of so-called ‘anti-racism’ which lead to discrimination against the majority.
The trial of Henry’s killer, Vickrum Digwa, may be over, but the questions are only just beginning.
Why did the police arrest Henry based on one allegation he had made a racial slur - something the prosecution described as a “wicked lie”?
Why was Henry’s handcuffing and arrest considered a priority for the police when he was in a critical condition?
Why do perceived racial sensitivities consistently appear to shape how the police enforce the law these days?
The police have now apologised. But ‘sorry’ doesn’t cut it. Not remotely. Heads must roll for such a catastrophic failure. The bodycam footage must be released. And the police’s “anti-racist” training programmes need overhaul.
We can’t go back in time and undo what has been done. Henry’s family and friends will live with this forever.
But his tragic death should be a turning point. A clarion call for the authorities to act in a colour-blind way - treating people under the principle of equality before the law.
'He died an innocent man with handcuffs on having been stabbed to death by some scumbag.'
Kelvin MacKenzie says Henry Nowak's murder has much wider implications about the direction the UK is going and calls on the Government to make a statement on it.
@GTFC_Exiles@DN35GTFC There was people queuing up at the tkt office this morning before they opened it feel there certainly going to break the all the time record