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Portrait of the week: Liverpool parade crash, Starmer sacrifices Chagos Islands and an octopus invasion

Portrait of the week: Liverpool parade crash, Starmer sacrifices Chagos Islands and an octopus invasion

Spectator2 days ago

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Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, announced that 'more pensioners' would qualify for winter fuel payments, but did not say how many or when. Nigel Farage of Reform said he would scrap net zero to fund things like abolishing the two-child benefit cap and reversing the winter fuel cut in full. Millions of public-sector workers such as doctors and teachers were offered rises of between 3.6 and 4.5 per cent. From July, typical household energy costs will fall by £129 a year, still higher than a year earlier. South Western Railway was renationalised. Thames Water was fined £122.7 million by Ofwat for breaching rules on sewage and shareholder dividends. Devon fishermen complained of Mediterranean octopuses eating crabs in their pots.
Twenty-seven people were taken to hospital after a car ploughed into crowds at the Liverpool FC parade. A man was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and driving while unfit through drugs; police announced he was 'a 53-year-old white British man'. Sir Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, called for possession of cannabis to be decriminalised. Liam Og O hAnnaidh, 27, who performs as Mo Chara with the group Kneecap, was charged under the name Liam O'Hanna with a terror offence after allegedly displaying a flag in support of the proscribed organisation Hezbollah at a London gig.
Some 431,000 more people arrived in Britain than left last year, compared with 860,000 in 2023, according to the Office for National Statistics. In the seven days to 26 May, 918 people arrived in England in small boats. Sir Keir Starmer agreed to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius along with £101 million a year to lease for 99 years the Diego Garcia base on the islands, which is shared with the United States. 'Chemical castration' for some sex offenders will be mandatory at 20 prisons after the Independent Sentencing Review chaired by David Gauke said a voluntary trial should continue.

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Bizarre claims of Perthshire tea blagger Thomas Robinson – bomb disposal, surviving deadly snake bites and inventing Bag for Life
Bizarre claims of Perthshire tea blagger Thomas Robinson – bomb disposal, surviving deadly snake bites and inventing Bag for Life

The Courier

time33 minutes ago

  • The Courier

Bizarre claims of Perthshire tea blagger Thomas Robinson – bomb disposal, surviving deadly snake bites and inventing Bag for Life

It was not just the whirlwind success of Thomas Robinson's Scottish tea plantation that prosecutors found hard to swallow. There were many aspects of the 55-year-old's personal life and Forrest Gump-esque career that were difficult to believe – and even tougher to fact-check. 'I enjoy telling people that I was one of the inventors of the Bag For Life,' he said. 'They don't believe it. Then when they go away and Google it, they come back with a different impression of me.' Robinson, who was this week convicted of a £550k fake Scottish tea fraud, claimed he was part of a team of three people who produced the now ubiquitous shopping carrier for Waitrose in the late 1990s. There is no evidence to back up his claim. Investigators found no connection between the Bag for Life and Thomas Robinson. Or Thomas O'Brien. Or Tam O'Braan. So who is the man behind the Perthshire grown brew that was too good to be true? Taking the witness stand towards the end of his trial, Robinson was asked to declare his name. 'Thomas James O'Brien,' he said. Born Thomas Robinson in Greenwich, London in 1970, he said he went to an Irish primary school in County Down. But he later said by the age of eight he was educated in London. He said he achieved a qualification in food technology from a college in London's Elephant and Castle in the late 1980s. 'It was the same college where Charlie Chaplin and Michael Caine went,' he told jurors. Robinson denied he had ever told anyone he was a member of the British armed forces, but said he was part of the 'Irish Defence Force' for a year in the late 1990s. He served on the Irish border but also went to 'various overseas locations' to guard embassies. When pressed on how a London-born man with a UK passport would be in the Irish army, he told the court: 'One can have dual nationality.' Asked by fiscal depute Joanne Ritchie what kind of discharge he received from the army, Robinson replied: 'Regular.' He insisted he could not divulge any details of his army career. The court heard how he told Jamie Russell of the Wee Tea Company he saw a soldier die in combat. Robinson said his former business associate was confused and he had in fact told him he had seen a man in a Hearts top being killed in a road accident in Thailand. The court heard he had also bragged about being involved in bomb disposal operations and told others he was a military chef. 'You went as far as to make up these elaborate lies so you appeared to be a man of integrity,' Ms Ritchie told him. 'You wanted to appear as someone who people trust.' Around the same time he was supposedly in the army, he claimed to be studying plastics at the Athlone Institute of Technology in Ireland for 'a year and a bit'. Meanwhile, he was enjoying a career as a professional rugby player. He told the court he played 'to a high standard' at several clubs including Blackheath and Liverpool Stanley. He was so good at rugby, he even had a coaching career, he said. At some point, he also studied Gaelic in Kilkenny. But all evidence of his head-spinning achievements during the 1990s were lost in a flood, he said. All of his qualifications, rugby coaching certificates and paperwork from his army days are now a 'pile of mush' in a water-logged part of an outhouse in Dalreoch. Robinson then claimed to work in the flour and cereal industry, before moving into plastics, where he supposedly developed the Bag For Life. By April 2010 when he married partner Grace Wallace in their then-home city of Edinburgh, he had changed his name to Thomas O'Brien. During his tea plantation days he told people – including the press – his wife was a lawyer but in court he said she worked for the office of national statistics. Their marriage certificate reveals Robinson was a chemical engineer, also noting his father James Robinson was a colonel in the Royal Artillery. Asked how he got a job as a chemical engineer with no chemistry qualifications, he said he studied the subject at Napier University – but did not graduate. At some point, he somehow managed to live on a canoe in the Amazon for four years where he was bitten by a deadly spider, as he told Country Life in 2017. In November 2010, his company Thomas James Consultants Ltd – set up to protect his 'intellectual property' – received a £20,469 grant from the European Development Fund. The grant was to develop and test degradable plastics, which became crucial to his tea-growing business in Perthshire. Robinson became director of a company called EconVerte which carried out crop trials and experiments. He told the court his work secured him a contract with President Barrack Obama's administration to carry out maize trials in a dustbowl. Where was this contract now? The same bag of mush in his basement. He resigned from EconVerte in 2012, the year he moved with his family to Dalreoch Farm, Amulree. According to Companies House records, the Wee Tea Plantation was incorporated in August 2014. Sole shareholder Robinson said he had earlier travelled to the Himalayas to see for himself how to grow tea in harsh conditions. There, he was struck by the revelation that quality tea could be grown in Scotland. 'I spoke to an elder there and he said he had always wondered why we didn't do it in Scotland,' he said. 'We have the right conditions, the hills and the water.' He shared his idea with his friend Jamie Russell, who he had met at his Bread Street cafe in Edinburgh around 2008. Robinson told the trial he was a near-daily customer at the coffee shop and the pair bonded over their love of rugby. At the cafe, he also met Derek Walker, another regular customer, as well as Lindsay Deuchars who was an employee. Mr Russell and Mr Walker established the Wee Tea Company at an industrial unit in Dunfermline in 2012. A year or two later, Robinson made a pitch to the fledgling business owners. 'I told Jamie what I was doing,' he said. 'I told him I thought I had worked out how to grow tea in Scotland.' The trio gathered for a meeting in a freezing potting shed in Dalreoch, where Robinson explained his big secret – a 'unique' polymer sheeting that better retained moisture in the soil and prevented crops from being smothered by weeds. Robinson said the plastic sheeting allowed his plants to grow at a much faster rate than normal. He described the sheeting as 'known technology' but used in an innovative way, comparing himself to Steve Jobs inventing the iPhone. Prosecutors said it looked like a bin liner. His role, he said, was to attract larger retailers while supplying Mr Russell with wet tea leaves grown at Amulree. It was decided Robinson would became Tam O'Braan 'for press purposes'. He named himself after the river that runs through his plantation. The plan was to aim for the higher end of the tea market. While they claimed the Dorchester, Balmoral and Fortnum and Mason among their stockists, Robinson had further lofty targets including Harrods and the Savoy. One of the tricks he used to secure sales was to tell people his produce was a favourite of the Queen. When pressed on this, he said he had at some point received a call from a member of staff at Buckingham Palace who told him how much Her Majesty had enjoyed his tea while visiting the Dorchester. Robinson's Wee Tea Plantation was dissolved in October 2019, around the time the Food Standards Scotland probe was getting into full swing. Since, Robinson said he has worked for an environmental company in Birmingham and driven a school bus for Stagecoach during the Covid lockdown. He most recently secured a job as a senior chef at the plush Taymouth Castle, near Kenmore. He told jurors his job had been kept open for him after an industrial accident in 2023, which left him with cognitive and memory issues. When asked what happened, he said: 'I tripped over an electrical wire and fell into the basement of a castle.' Taymouth Castle declined to comment on the alleged incident, which is understood to have happened without witnesses and was not caught on CCTV. During his evidence, Robinson apologised for some unusual mannerisms such as taking deep breaths before reading printed words. 'I know it can look a bit strange,' he said. 'I'm better with pictures.' When the jury were out of the room, he appeared in discomfort or pain. Concerned, Sheriff Keith O'Mahony told Robinson he was welcome to sit and give his evidence, instead of stand. 'I just want to come across as normal as possible,' Robinson replied.

SNP's 2026 candidates 'ignore' Scottish independence campaigners
SNP's 2026 candidates 'ignore' Scottish independence campaigners

The National

time42 minutes ago

  • The National

SNP's 2026 candidates 'ignore' Scottish independence campaigners

Yes Berwickshire sent a letter to every sitting MSP as well as every prospective candidate for the party on Monday, May 19, titled 'together for independence'. The group believe 'a lot of Yes groups are raring to go but are looking for a lead', writing in the letter that there are 'thousands of us out here who are not SNP members but are passionate about Scotland's independence and are more than willing to lend a hand and work hard' as part of the 2026 campaign. The group were invited to a recent Berwickshire SNP branch meeting and local candidate, John Redpath, is coming to the next Yes Berwickshire meeting. READ MORE: Scottish Government 'will need to find extra £2bn to foot welfare bill', experts say However, to date, just four sitting MSPs have replied to the "call for unity". From the list of 2026 candidates, just one other than Redpath has responded – after The National questioned them on their lack of reply. One member of Yes Berwickshire said there was 'only one conclusion to be drawn". 'There's an arrogance about it to me to not even get a reply from so many folk – as if we don't have a contribution to make,' they added. Yes Berwickshire has recently joined the coalition titled 'Liberate Scotland'. Indy4Indy, ISP, Salvo, Scottish Sovereign Research Group, and Independence Forum Scotland have all signed up to come under the umbrella. The letter sent to SNP MSPs and candidates states: 'As we are now less than 12 months until the 2026 Holyrood elections, we at Yes Berwickshire (YB) are gearing up to a period of much more regular activity in pursuit of Scottish independence. "For the last 16 years YB have been active with street stalls, extensive leafleting, bridge events, letters to the local and national press and more general activity and support for the cause of independence. YB has some members from political parties, but most do not belong to any party but are passionate about fighting for independence. 'YB have approached the local SNP branch and intend also to contact Alba, the Greens, and any other organisation promoting independence in Berwickshire with a view to pooling our resources in the hope of creating a more cohesive and organised campaign in our area. "With such a large and sparsely populated area, cutting down on double or treble campaign coverage by different parties seems a sensible way forward. We have had a very good response from the local SNP and joint meetings are proposed for the near future. READ MORE: Labour minister backs down after comparing Reform and parts of media to Nazis 'While we here hope to make progress for a united, co-ordinated and most importantly of all, effective, campaign here in Berwickshire there seems to be a marked reluctance by the SNP at national and Holyrood level to unite behind an all-encompassing campaign for independence – is this the case? 'It seems to us in Yes Berwickshire absolutely obvious that if we are to deliver an independence-supporting majority in large and un-challengeable numbers the first and most important thing, we need is a united, unified, co-ordinated and effective campaign. The most important of those characteristics is united – we need aw oor mitts tae the pump as they say. 'Is the SNP, nationally, willing to be part of, and indeed lead, that united campaign? There are thousands of us out here who are not SNP members but are passionate about Scotland's Independence and are more than willing to lend a hand and work hard for our independent, free at last, future.' The SNP have been contacted for comment.

Mother of jailed British-Egyptian activist hospitalised after 242 days on hunger strike
Mother of jailed British-Egyptian activist hospitalised after 242 days on hunger strike

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Mother of jailed British-Egyptian activist hospitalised after 242 days on hunger strike

The mother of the imprisoned British-Egyptian human rights activist Alaa Abd el-Fattah has has been admitted to hospital after spending more than 240 days on hunger strike. Laila Soueif's family said she had been admitted to St Thomas' hospital in London on Thursday night with dangerously low blood sugar levels, but continues to refuse medical intervention that would provide her with calories. Soueif has been on hunger strike for 242 days in protest against the imprisonment of her son, who has been in jail in Egypt since September 2019. Last week, Souief told the Guardian that she weighed 49kg and had lost about 42% of her body weight since beginning the protest. In December 2021, Abd El-Fattah was sentenced to five years in prison for 'spreading false news' and should have been released last year. His mother has not eaten any food since 29 September 2024, the date her son's prison sentence was due to end. She had been surviving only on herbal tea, black coffee, rehydration salts and 300-calorie liquid supplements. She resumed her full hunger strike on 20 May, saying: 'Nothing has changed, nothing is happening.' UN investigators have declared Abd El-Fattah's imprisonment in breach of international law. Earlier this year, Keir Starmer promised he would 'do everything I can' to ensure his release. In a statement on Friday, Soueif's family said she had received glucagon treatment, which induces the liver to break down stored fat to obtain glucose, but continued to refuse treatment that would provide her with calories. She was previously admitted to hospital in February, with doctors saying she was at 'high risk of sudden death'. In March, she agreed to move to a partial hunger strike following a call between Starmer and the Egyptian president, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Abd El-Fattah has been on his own hunger strike for 90 days since his mother's admission to hospital in February. Explaining her decision to resume a full hunger strike, last week Soueif said: 'I have never seen [the UK government] act as if the situation was urgent, except when I was hospitalised. For me and for my family the situation is urgent. We have used up more days than we ever thought we had. We need Alaa released now. We need Alaa with us now. We need Alaa reunited with his son, Khaled, now.'

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