logo
Starmer rejects Johnson's Brexit jet for smaller plane

Starmer rejects Johnson's Brexit jet for smaller plane

Telegraph2 days ago
The RAF jet that was resprayed in Union Jack colours by Boris Johnson at a cost of £800,000 has been sidelined by Sir Keir Starmer.
The Vespina Voyager, an air-to-air refuelling plane, was given a patriotic upgrade by the former prime minister in 2020 and compared to the US president's Air Force One.
But it has now been reported that the jet has not been used for VIP flights for two years, while Sir Keir has used a smaller plane for trips to visit other world leaders.
The Sunday Mirror reported that the Vespina has only been used as a refuelling aircraft since Labour took office, despite its new paint job to make it suitable for transporting the prime minister.
Mr Johnson ordered the plane to be resprayed in white, with a Union Flag on the tail and a blue swoosh on the fuselage.
The upgrade cost almost £900,000, and was defended by Downing Street at the time as a livery that would 'better represent the UK around the world with national branding'.
Sir Keir has instead opted to fly in the smaller government Airbus A321-2NX, which was also used by the King and Queen for their trip to Canada earlier this year.
The smaller plane is leased from Titan Airways, rather than being wholly owned by the British Armed Forces.
It is also decked out in red, white and blue paint, and has been rented by the Cabinet Office since 2021.
Meanwhile, the RAF Voyager has been used solely for refuelling military aircraft over the North Sea, which a spokesman described as its 'primary role'.
The jet, nicknamed the 'Brexit Plane', has no need to be painted in national colours when performing that role. Other RAF Voyagers are painted grey.
The plane is based at RAF Brize Norton, where Palestine Action protesters last month attacked planes with red paint.
The red, white and blue jet was not affected by the protest, which has resulted in Palestine Action being named as a proscribed terrorist group by the Home Office.
Sir Keir described the protest as 'disgraceful', but the stunt appears to have increased the group's popularity.
More than 70 people have been arrested at protests against the decision to proscribe Palestine Action, including 42 people in London on Saturday.
An RAF spokesman told The Telegraph: 'The RAF Vespina Voyager continues to be available for all roles including its primary role of AAR [air-to-air refuelling] and when required VIP flights.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Afghan leak: Judge decries ‘scrutiny vacuum' as he lifts gag order — live
Afghan leak: Judge decries ‘scrutiny vacuum' as he lifts gag order — live

Times

time25 minutes ago

  • Times

Afghan leak: Judge decries ‘scrutiny vacuum' as he lifts gag order — live

The Ministry of Defence feared that if knowledge of the dataset became public then the Taliban would find it and be able to start working through what one activist described as a 'kill list'. Conservative ministers secured a superinjunction in the High Court on September 1, 2023, which prevented anyone reporting the incident or that a court order even existed. When Labour came to power in July 2024 they continued to argue it should remain in place and it was not until January this year that John Healey, the defence secretary, ordered a review of the policy. Afghans who were on the 'kill list' were not told that their lives may be at risk despite concerns the Taliban could suddenly come into possession of the list. At about 10am on Thursday January 25, 2024, I called a senior member of the Ministry of Defence press office, whom I had known for years, to tell them I was aware of a data leak. It had put lives at risk and it was the subject of a superinjunction, I said. I told him I had known about the matters for some time and wanted to join the court proceedings. I did not realise at the time that everything I said during that initial phone call would be written down and submitted to the High Court. It would form part of a 1,568-page bundle of evidence documenting the longest ever superinjunction and the only to be sought by a government. I had no idea of the magnitude of what I was dealing with. • Read in full: Our defence editor recounts being silenced by government Tens of thousands of Afghans have begun receiving an email from the UK government telling them their data has been breached. In the email, seen by The Times, they are warned their information was sent outside 'secure systems' and may have been 'compromised'. 'We understand this news may be concerning,' it says. The email urges the Afghans to 'exercise caution and not take phone calls or respond to messages or emails from unknown contacts'. It also urges Afghans not to travel to third countries without a valid passport and visa. 'If you do so, you will be putting yourself at risk on the journey, and you may face the risk of being deported back to Afghanistan,' it says. One activist told The Times her phone was 'blowing up' with messages from concerned Afghans. Alarm bells rang in the summer of 2023 when an activist helping Afghans who had served with UK forces during the war reached out to a defence minister. It was 9.57am on Tuesday, August 15. 'Person A', as she later became known in court documents, was panicking. She had become aware of a massive data breach involving tens of thousands of Afghans. What the government did next — and how quickly — was a matter of life and death. • Read in full: MoD evacuates Afghans — without them knowing why Successive governments had tried to stop the public and parliament from knowing about the data breach in the Ministry of Defence, which it had said put up to 100,000 Afghans at risk of torture and death. The Afghans, some of whom had served alongside UK forces during the war, had applied for sanctuary in the UK because of fears they could be targeted by the Taliban. But a database containing their confidential information, including their contact details and names of their family members was sent by a British soldier to Afghans already in the UK who then passed it on to individuals in Afghanistan. One of those who received the dataset threatened to post its contents in a Facebook group 18 months later. The British military is responsible for a data leak that put up to 100,000 Afghans at risk of death — and successive governments have spent years fighting to keep it secret using an unprecedented superinjunction. UK government officials were left exposed when in February 2022 a soldier inadvertently sent a list of tens of thousands of names to Afghans as he tried to help verify applications for sanctuary in Britain. • Read in full: 'Kill list' sent in error leads to £7bn cover-up The longest ever superinjunction and the first to have been secured by the government has been lifted in the High Court after nearly two years and a lengthy legal battle spearheaded by The Times. Mr Justice Chamberlain said the 'long-running and unprecedented' order, which stopped the world from knowing about a data breach concerning Afghans applying to come to Britain, had given rise to 'serious free speech concerns' and had left a 'scrutiny vacuum'. Handing down his judgment at midday on Tuesday, he said the gagging order had the effect of 'completely shutting down the ordinary mechanisms of accountability which operate in a democracy'. The superinjunction was in place for 683 days.

Thousands relocated to UK after data leak on Afghans who helped British forces
Thousands relocated to UK after data leak on Afghans who helped British forces

The Guardian

time26 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Thousands relocated to UK after data leak on Afghans who helped British forces

Thousands of people are being relocated to the UK as part of a secret £850m scheme set up after a personal data leak of Afghans who supported British forces, it can now be reported. A dataset containing the personal information of nearly 19,000 people who applied for the Afghan relocations and assistance policy (Arap) was released 'in error' by a defence official in February 2022. The breach resulted in the creation of a secret Afghan relocation scheme – the Afghanistan Response Route – in April 2024. The scheme is understood to have cost about £400m so far, with a projected cost once completed of about £850m. Millions more is expected to be paid in legal costs and compensation. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) only became aware of the breach more than a year after the release when excerpts of the dataset were anonymously posted on to a Facebook group in August 2023. More details soon …

Most Europeans would support independent Scotland joining EU, poll finds
Most Europeans would support independent Scotland joining EU, poll finds

North Wales Chronicle

time27 minutes ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Most Europeans would support independent Scotland joining EU, poll finds

YouGov questioned people living in Denmark, France, Germany, Italy and Spain on their views on the prospect of an independent Scotland becoming part of the EU. Support across these nations for Scotland to join the EU ranged from just under two-thirds (63%) to three-quarters (75%). But across Great Britain – where more than 2,000 people were polled – less than half (46%) said they would back an independent Scotland being part of the EU, with 32% saying they would oppose this. The research was carried out despite Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer having made clear he has no plans to allow a second vote on Scotland leaving the UK. Just last month the Labour leader said having another ballot on the issue is not a 'priority' and he cannot imagine one taking place while he is in Downing Street. And while the UK Government recently announced a new agreement with the EU, there is no prospect of the UK seeking to rejoin the trading block as things stand. YouGov's research comes almost a decade on from the 2016 Brexit referendum, which saw the UK as a whole vote to leave the EU, while Scotland voted to remain. The latest poll found 63% of French people surveyed would support an independent Scotland joining the EU, with only 13% opposed. In Italy, 64% favour Scotland being allowed to join, with 11% against, broadly similar to Spain – where 65% said they would support an independent Scotland in the EU while 13% are opposed to this. In Germany, support was higher at 68%, with only 10% of people polled against an independent Scotland being part of the EU, while in Denmark three-quarters (75%) of people back Scotland being part of the trading block, with 6% against this.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store