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The Government's soft-touch jail reforms — coupled with budget cuts — will lead to a dangerous crimewave

The Government's soft-touch jail reforms — coupled with budget cuts — will lead to a dangerous crimewave

The Sun28-05-2025

Fail on jail
PRISON works — and don't just take it from us.
Listen to MI5, the National Crime Agency and the Met Police, who are united in believing that the Government's soft-touch jail reforms — coupled with budget cuts — will lead to a dangerous crimewave.
1
People would have more sympathy for the cops' claims of underfunding if they weren't blowing millions on diversity or going mob-handed to arrest people for social media messages.
Taxpayers might also ask how much worse it can possibly get, given police no longer bother to arrest most shoplifters and burglars.
Nevertheless, chief constables DO have legitimate concerns about what the impact of early release will be.
The Left endlessly complains about a lack of rehabilitation inside jail, but it at least gives forces and the public a break from serial offenders.
You can't burgle a house when you're behind bars.
So here's an idea to help Labour get tough on law and order:
Stop blowing £4billion a year on asylum hotels — and instead use the cash to build some prisons and put more coppers back on the beat where they belong.
Paedos WANT to be castrated to banish sick 'desires', reform tsar says - as crackdown rolled out in 20 UK jails
Water torture
It is a catastrophic failure for ministers to admit that mass immigration means the country will run out of clean drinking water in just ten years.
There is no doubt that the toxic greed of management in the water companies is partly responsible.
Ridiculous planning rules also mean the UK hasn't built a new reservoir for over three decades.
But massive population increases in our cities have driven the whole system to breaking point.
One argument from pro-immigration lobbyists is that the pressure placed on our public services is over-stated.
That idea has now been well and truly blown out of the water.
Bad medicine
All it has actually done is embolden the Marxist medics at the BMA to demand ANOTHER 29 per cent.
What next? 50 per cent?
The point of these 'resident doctors' is that they're actually resident in hospitals to help sick and dying patients.
Not to spend weeks on picket lines causing another NHS crisis with their wildly unrealistic pay demands.

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Police released my abusive ex – hours later he burned down my house as I slept but that wasn't the biggest tragedy
Police released my abusive ex – hours later he burned down my house as I slept but that wasn't the biggest tragedy

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Police released my abusive ex – hours later he burned down my house as I slept but that wasn't the biggest tragedy

WHEN Louise Simpson walks past the family home where she raised her son it isn't nostalgia that she feels but despair. It was the sight of one of the most harrowing events of her life and one that saw Louise lose not only dozens of sentimental memories but also her beloved pet dog. 8 8 8 Her violent ex, Adrian West, who was caught attacking her home on her doorbell camera returned hours after being released by police to burn it down as she slept. West had subjected Louise to months of violent attacks including strangling, punching and kicking. She finally kicked him out of her house in Crawley, Sussex, but the 61-year-old returned and smashed her doorbell camera using a rock. Louise, 53, called the police and West spent a night in the cells before being released without charge the following day. But later that day he returned to the property and started a fire in the porch which quickly engulfed the house. Louise - who was taking a nap at the time - was woken by neighbours and scrambled to escape as her bedroom was filled with thick black smoke. But her beloved British Bulldog Peggy was frozen in terror under the bed - and Louise was forced to abandon her in order to save her own life. West has now been jailed for six years after pleading guilty to arson and a string of assaults on Louise. She is now campaigning for a change in the law to consider companion animals as sentient beings rather than property as they are currently seen. Reliving the arrest, Louise says: 'The police came out and arrested him. "I was sobbing, saying: 'Whatever happens, I just don't want him to be able to come near me again'. So he was kept in custody overnight. 'They called me about 10.45am the next morning and said that he was going to be released with no further action. 'I said: 'Well, what do I do? He's going to come back.' And they said they can't do anything unless he does something more. "They genuinely seemed to be more worried about how abusive he'd been to the arresting officers the day before.' Louise called police on September 13 last year when a drunk West tried to smash her door and Ring doorbell camera with a rock. She wouldn't open the door and called the police. He was arrested on suspicion of criminal damage and held overnight at a local police station. Louise was told they could not take further action because she had not signed the witness statement she had provided. She says: "At the time I didn't particularly want to get him in too much trouble, I thought he isn't getting any younger and all I wanted was for him to just leave me alone. 8 8 8 "I asked the police that whatever happened could they please just warn him about coming back to my house again" Fearing that West would return to her house the following day, she blocked the front door with a toolbox and stockpiled food for a few days. She was 'shattered' and laid down for a nap. 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'I was just crying non-stop, I couldn't take it all in.' She now stays between her Connor's house and a friend's in nearby Crawley. The council offered her alternative accommodation but she would prefer to move back into her house once it is repaired in about a year. She says: 'I've lived in that home for 28 years. I raised my son there. I've got good memories there as well.' Her possessions suffered fire, smoke or water damage. Louise lost personal photos, her mum's ashes, a hairbrush which had her mum's hair still in it, an elephant made for her by her daughter-in-law out of her mum's clothes and Connor's baby clothes she was saving for her grandchildren. West, of no fixed address, pleaded guilty at Lewes Crown Court to arson with intent, criminal damage, non-fatal strangulation, common assault and two counts of actual bodily harm on May 2. He was sentenced to six years and three months in jail. Louise is upset that Peggy's death was not considered in the sentencing. She wants offenders to be punished for killing companion animals like dogs and cats. She adds: 'Peggy's life was given as much value as a bookcase. 'She was my absolute world. 'What I used to go through with him, she was the one constant that was there by my side; my best friend.' A spokesman for Sussex Police said: "West was arrested on 13 September 2024 on suspicion of criminal damage and spent the night in custody. 'He was released without charge as the victim did not wish to sign a statement at the time." The Ministry of Justice says it has no plans to change the law. 8 8

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Bidding war erupts over document that ‘proves Tibetan independence'
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When Sir Basil Gould attended the enthronement of Tibet's new Dalai Llama in 1940, it was obvious history would be unfolding before his eyes. But 85 years later, the British diplomat's own papers are at the centre of a purported attempt to control the past. Documents written by Sir Basil that are said to prove the independence of Tibet became engulfed in a bidding war in London this week, as followers of the Dalai Llama sought to keep them out of Chinese hands. The document was part of a cache sold by Sir Basil's family at Bonhams on Thursday. It described how Tibet exercised 'de facto independence in internal and external affairs' before China tightened its grip in the 1950s – a claim seized on by campaigners, who say it runs counter to the Chinese narrative that the region has never been free. Among the bidders was a former representative of the Dalai Llama, who wanted to preserve the documents for the region's historical record. 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He attended the enthronement of the Dalai Llama, taking a young artist called Kanwal Krishna with him who captured the event with a series of watercolours. Other lots sold on Thursday included a portrait of the Tibetan leader during the ceremony. The painting, which sold for £152,800, was also among those that Tibetans were keen to keep from Chinese hands ahead of the Dalai Lama's 90th birthday next month. Another lot – a collection of 40 watercolours from Krishna's 1939 to 1940 visit to Lhasa with Sir Basil – sold for £457,600. In a video promoting the sale, Giles Peppiatt, head of fine art at Bonhams, said: 'These are extraordinarily rare images and to have these images from a first-hand source is unprecedented. 'The Gould collection shows a remarkable insight into Tibet in the 1940s and most importantly shows us the principal characters in the divination, in the search and the enthronement of the 14th Dalai Llama.' Today Tibet is recognised as part of the People's Republic of China, known as the Tibet Autonomous Region. China claims to have held control over Tibet since the 13th century. However, many dispute this narrative, with independence advocates arguing the country in fact had long periods of freedom to run its own affairs. The document in question, which archivists understand was written by Sir Basil, appears to support this view. The Telegraph understands that it describes how '... since 1912 the Tibetan government… continuously exercised de facto independence in both internal and external affairs'. The paper goes on to say that the Chinese Republic declared that Tibet was part of China. It added that the British took a 'middle line' and informed the Chinese that they upheld the autonomy of Tibet 'while admitting the suzerainty of China'. The writer then goes on to describe how a compromise was later reached in which Tibet was divided into Inner and Outer Tibet –with some degree of Chinese control 'contemplated for Inner Tibet', while Outer Tibet was to be autonomous. The document was auctioned off as part of a larger lot described as 'a large box of papers, letters, manuscripts and other ephemera relating to Tibet'. A proof copy of Sir Basil's 1957 book, The Jewel in the Lotus: Recollections of an Indian Political, which detailed his time in Tibet, was also included in the lot. After a bidding war that lasted more than five minutes, the item was eventually won by an anonymous online bidder – for a final total of £14,080 once auction charges were added. Sonam Tsering Frasi, a former representative of the Dalai Lama to the UK and northern Europe, was among those who unsuccessfully attempted to secure the lot. Speaking to The Telegraph following the auction, Mr Frasi, 70, said: 'All of these archive materials are important to us as Tibetans because they belong to the Tibetan people and it relates to what happened before the Chinese people [came]. 'So this paper has an independent British government's thinking [and] attitude [about] what was happening on the ground in Lhasa.' He added: 'Tibet was an independent country. But that doesn't fit with the Chinese narrative.' Mr Frasi said: 'There was definitely a concern about trying to keep these out of Chinese hands because we don't know who is online bidding. 'My suspicion is that there were Chinese bidders and there might be lots of records in there that will show the thinking of British-India with regards to Tibet autonomy.' He added: 'These papers – the danger is that they would not surface at all or they would be spun around to say something else.' Bonhams does not reveal whom successful bidders are. A spokesman would not approach the winner on The Telegraph's behalf, saying this would have gone against its privacy rules.

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