Tag Archives: Britons

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Three Britons jailed on drugs charges by Dubai court

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A Dubai court has jailed three Britons for four years on possession of drugs. The men, all in their twenties, were found with synthetic cannabis.

The police deny allegations the trio were beaten in jail.

Their convictions will be on David Cameron’s agenda as the UAE President visits Britain this week.

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UK to confiscate passports from ‘suspected’ terrorists, criminals, football hooligans

May told parliament the move is aimed at “individuals who seek to engage in fighting, extremist activity or terrorist training outside the United Kingdom, for example, and then return to the UK with enhanced capabilities that they then use to conduct an attack on UK soil.”“The need to disrupt people who travel for these purposes has become increasingly apparent with developments in various parts of the world.”Previously, the Home Office could only confiscate passports if a UK citizen engaged in “demonstrably undesirable” acts. The sanction was applied infrequently, and since 2005 not one Briton has been divested of their travel documents.Earlier this week Foreign Secretary William Hague said a “substantial number” of UK citizens is fighting in the Syrian conflict as part of radical Islamic groupings. Most of Britain’s domestic terrorists, including the organizers of the 2005 London bombings, received training in terrorist camps in countries such as Afghanistan and Pakistan.The Home Office will be able to make the decision to withdraw a passport without consulting Parliament or going through the legal system, as the issuing of foreign passports is a Royal Prerogative, a legacy power possessed by the monarchy, and by proxy, by the Cabinet.Nonetheless, those refused passports will be informed of the reasons for the rejection.The new rules will not just cover potential terrorists, but those facing arrest warrants, bail restrictions or international orders. As an example, May said that known football hooligans could be banned from leaving the UK.But May insisted that despite the wide-ranging discretion given to the Home Office on the issue, the measure will only be used where it is “necessary and proportionate”.The last people to lose their passport under the current guidelines were four Britons returning from Guantanamo eight years ago. The new law is expected to be applied much more readily, though the Home Office refused to estimate how many people will lose their right to travel.Being a Royal Prerogative, the new policy comes into force immediately. Read More

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Homelessness rife in UK: Research shows millions are paycheck away from losing home

Some 35 percent of poll respondents – equivalent to 8.6 million Britons – would be unable to pay rent from savings, a recent YouGov poll found. The study, published on Thursday, polled 2,000 UK residents. If these statistics are extrapolated to the entire UK population, 3.9 million British families could be just one paycheck away from losing their family home.Britons can lose their homes very quickly if they miss payments, especially both members of a resident couple are laid off in a short space of time.  If mortgage payments are not made on time, homes can be repossessed – especially if further outstanding debts are secured against the house, as was the case with a resident from Kent, southeast England.“We knew there was no hope. We looked for help from the council and even tried renting the house out, but things spiraled out of control right away,” he told the Guardian.If a tenant falls behind on rental payments and refuses to leave, the landlord can issue two eviction notices, and the tenant is taken to court and evicted if payments still have not been made. Landlord autonomy and decentralization means that tenants have little protection, and councils have been heavily criticized in the past for failing to support those at risk of homelessness.Unemployment in the UK rose by 7,000, to 2.52 million in the three months before January 2013, according to the Office for National Statistics.UK housing charity Shelter said it is “bracing itself” for a surge in demand for housing, especially amid the recent wave of welfare reforms that has struck the UK. The charity’s work involves providing support for those facing problems with homelessness and housing.In the last two weeks, the UK has implemented welfare cuts, benefit reforms and cuts to central council funding, which has spurred over 70 percent of local councils to impose a minimum council tax payment, hitting low-income families especially hard.Among poll respondents, 18 percent – equivalent to 4.4 million people, one-fifth of Britons – would be unable to pay rent or mortgage at all if they did not immediately secure new employment after losing their job.“Millions are living on the edge of a crisis, only secure in their homes for a matter of weeks. At the same time, support for people who have lost their homes is being stripped away,” Shelter Chief Executive Campbell Robb said. Read More

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CrossTalk: Arrest Blair!

http://www.youtube.com/v/543Ul8w-LcM?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Continue reading:  CrossTalk: Arrest Blair!

Researchers argue Britain now has seven distinct classes –including ‘new affluent workers’ and ‘precariats’

A new survey of 166,000 Britons found that instead of the three traditional classes – upper, middle, and working – that are prominent in shows like ‘Downton Abbey,’ shown at left, now there are seven distinct strata.(PBS/AP) Britain’s infamous class system has become… ;

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UK fears homecoming of ‘London boys’ fighting in Syria

A recent Home Office’s annual report titled ‘The United Kingdom’s strategy for Countering Terrorism’ highlights the growing threat that might come to the UK from Syria, where jihadists from European states have joined the ranks of the Al-Qaeda-linked armed groups to fight the government of President Bashar Assad.“There are now hundreds of foreign fighters from Europe in Syria. And when UK residents return here there is risk that they may carry out attacks using the skills that they have developed overseas,” the report claims.Freelance Syrian journalist Malik Al-Abdeh, who joined RT in London, pointed out that some young British citizens fighting in Syria are actually veterans who have already fought in a war: In Libya, where they helped oust the country’s strongman ruler Colonel Muammar Gaddafi.He recalled a 21-year-old British citizen of Arabic descent who recently died in Syria fighting the regime, calling him a “London boy” who, despite a British upbringing and education, found the ideals of jihad attractive. “Ultimately, it proved to be a fatal attraction because he was ultimately killed in Homs,” said Al-Abdeh, who spoke to jihadist’s friends in the UK.The real number of Muslim Britons on the warpath in Syria could be higher than the 100-odd fighters cited in British media, Al-Abdeh said. “It depends on whether we classify them as British-born or simply happening to be living in the UK,” he explained, adding that in the second case the number could be higher.Al-Abdeh defined “two levels of threats… There are Arabs who live in the UK or lived for a long time in the UK, who went to Libya or Syria to fight in those countries – they would be a secondary threat.”“What would be the most concerning for the British security services are British Muslims of Asian descent – Pakistani, Bangladeshi or Indian – who might go to the places like Syria, because they are the ones who have been involved in the most dangerous terror threats in the UK over the last 10 years,” Al-Abdeh said.Charles Farr, the director of the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism who presented the Home Office’s annual report, estimated that between 70 and 100 Britons are fighting Assad in Syria.The Telegraph reported on Wednesday that British-born jihadists, young converts to Islam of both Asian and African descent, “are said to have joined the fight with Jabhat al-Nusra, the country’s most militant Al-Qaeda gang.””We’re in a potentially key moment,” said Charles Farr, the director of the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism,British Foreign Secretary William Hague warned in February that jihadists who had become experienced “in weapons and explosives” in war-torn Syria could return to Europe to carry out terror attacks.Despite these concerns, Britain and France announced in mid-March their plans to put pressure on the EU to lift the arms embargo on Syria. The move comes amid the unending debate over Syria’s chemical weapons, which many countries, particularly the US and Israel, fear could fall “into the wrong hands.”However, others point out that the Arab country, two years into its civil conflict, is slowly turning into a “Jihadist magnet” and a new real-life training ground.Every 5 to 10 years there is a “particular location or a battlefield” where radical Muslims could go to war, Al-Abdeh explained. In the 1980s, it was Afghanistan against Soviets; in the 1990s, it was Bosnia against the Serbs and Chechnya against the Russians; today, it is Syria. Apart from being relatively easy to travel to, Syria is a “very attractive place to go and fight” from the Islamic point of view. “There is a lot of historical and religious importance attached to Syria, and to Damascus especially, the place where, it is said in the Koran, Jesus Christ is going to come back and there will be Armageddon and so on,” Al-Abdeh said. “Many of the jihadists that go to fight in Syria actually believe in these things, and that Syria has special religious significance.” Read More

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Stop, thief! Run on ATMs in Cyprus as govt mulls savings tax

The adage ‘the best way to rob a bank is to own a bank’ hasperhaps never before held more truth than now.On Saturday, Cypriot deposit-holders got a nasty surprise whenthey learned that EU ministers and the IMF agreed to massivebailout plan for Cyprus, which includes a one-time tax of 9.9percent on Cypriot bank deposits that exceed 100,000 euros, as wellas a tax of 6.75 percent on smaller deposits.The deal is part of a $13-billion (10-billion-euro) bailoutpackage for Cyprus – which witnessed its banking sector exposed tothe Greek financial crisis – to save the country frominsolvency.The unprecedented decision, which appears to punish ordinarycitizens for failures in the financial system, has sparked panicand protests as people queued up at ATM machines to rescue theirsavings. Many cash machines ran out of banknotes because of thepanic withdrawals – one bank had its entrance blocked with abulldozer by one disgruntled customer.To further complicate matters, Monday is a public holiday inCyprus, which means bank customers will have to wait until Tuesdayto access their money.Meanwhile, the government appears to be waffling at a time whendepositors are looking for some sign of certainty that theirsavings – in some cases, their life savings – will not be decimatedin what has been called a ‘raid.’The Cypriot parliament on Sunday postponed an emergency sessiondebating the controversial provision. Earlier, President NicosAnastasiades postponed an informal meeting of lawmakers called forSunday morning.Several parties in the 56-member parliament, where no singleparty enjoys a majority, have already said they will not supportthe levy.At least one country has already announced plans to protecttheir citizens’ savings: Up to 60,000 British savers may lose“thousands of pounds each” if the raid on personal bank holdingsgets the green light, the Daily Mail reported on Sunday.According to the British paper, Britons have about £1.7 billionin deposits in Cyprus, and could lose up to £170 million.Cyprus banks are reportedly holding around 68 billion euro ondeposit, of which foreigners hold about 40 percent; most of theseclients are reportedly Russian nationals.It has been estimated that Russian citizens hold between €8billion and €35 billion in deposits in Cypriot banks, which meansindividuals could lose up to €3.5 billion total.This may account for why Cyprus did not impose a levy on non-EUdepositors, since it may have been difficult to distinguish betweenCypriot and Russian clients, Jacob Kirkegaard, a senior fellow atthe Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washingtontold the Mail.Kirkegaard speculated that Cypriots may eventually come towelcome the unexpected levy, since the government “managed towiden its tax base to include a lot of Russians.”He compared the situation to other bailout recipients in theEurozone – namely Greece, Portugal and Ireland – where the nativepopulation is forced to shoulder the burden of higher tax rates bythemselves.Meanwhile, political analysts fear the decision to slap a tax onsavings will create panic withdrawals in other eurozone countries,where investors may think they are next in line to receive a levyon their holdings. Read More