logo
Ukraine ‘absolute focus' for UK and northern European allies

Ukraine ‘absolute focus' for UK and northern European allies

Rhyl Journal09-05-2025

The Prime Minister met counterparts at a Joint Expeditionary Forces (JEF) leaders' gathering in Oslo on Friday, during which Volodymyr Zelensky also spoke virtually.
Following the summit, Sir Keir said the UK-led group's utmost priority was defending the values 'hard-won' during the Second World War and continuing to stand behind Kyiv.
Speaking to broadcasters, the Prime Minister was asked what his message would be to Russia and Beijing as Chinese President Xi Jinping attended events in Moscow marking the 80th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany.
Sir Keir said: 'The message of leaders here is very, very clear, and that is that we're focused on Ukraine.
'(President) Zelensky came in virtually to part of that meeting.
'And so that's where our absolute focus is – with Ukraine, defending the values that yesterday at VE Day we were remembering and commemorating, that were hard-won in the Second World War.'
The JEF is a military coalition of mostly northern and eastern European nations including Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, the Baltic states and the Netherlands which has been operational since 2018.
The summit came as the UK announced a fresh wave of sanctions targeting President Vladimir Putin's shadow fleet of vessels carrying cargo in defiance of existing restrictions on oil and gas exports.
Officials have said the Government will take action against up to 100 oil tankers that have been transporting more than 24 billion US dollars (£18 billion) worth of cargo since last year.
Ukrainian President Mr Zelensky dialled in virtually to the meeting in Oslo City Hall on Friday to announce he would be hosting leaders of the British and French-led 'coalition of the willing' on Saturday.
Number 10 would not confirm whether Sir Keir planned to attend the meeting.
Military officers from around 30 countries have been involved in drawing up plans to enforce a potential peace in Kyiv, but prospects for a truce remain distant as Moscow continues to resist calls for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire backed by the US.
The Russian president declared a 72-hour pause in fighting on Thursday to coincide with Victory Day, but officials in Kyiv said his forces have continued offensive operations while the Kremlin has accused Ukraine of breaching the unilateral ceasefire.
Following Friday's summit, the Prime Minister met crew on board a Royal Navy frigate moored in Oslo's port before exchanging warm words with Norway's premier Jonas Gahr Store as he was welcomed onto a Norwegian coastguard vessel.
In a strong show of support before holding bilateral talks, the Norwegian prime minister suggested the UK was 'perhaps our best friend' while Sir Keir said relations between the two countries were stronger than 'possibly ever'.
Sir Keir said: 'We are leaders that think alike, that are politically aligned and work well together. We are colleagues and we are friends.'
In a readout of the meeting between the two leaders later issued by Number 10, a spokesperson said they 'discussed joint efforts between the UK and Norway to protect critical subsea infrastructure to safeguard economic security and working people at home'.
They also spoke about ongoing conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine.
It comes as critics argue the Labour Government will need to decide between siding with Europe or the US following the agreement of a trade deal with the White House on Thursday while Britain continues to seek to strengthen economic ties with Brussels.
Asked whether forgoing deeper ties with the bloc would be the price the UK pays for its pact with America, Sir Keir insisted his administration would be 'resetting that relationship' as well.
'That's because we will be relentless in wealth creation, driving our economy forward and making sure that working people across the country feel better-off,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Andrew Malkinson says fight will continue for justice system reform
Andrew Malkinson says fight will continue for justice system reform

The Guardian

time35 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Andrew Malkinson says fight will continue for justice system reform

Andrew Malkinson, who spent 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit, says his fight to reform the legal system's handling of miscarriages of justice is far from over. The 59-year-old had his conviction overturned in 2023 after years spent protesting his innocence. Malkinson has told the Sunday Times his 'life was desolated' by the wrongful conviction and he is determined to change the justice system, starting with the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC). 'I haven't finished. I want to change a lot more,' he said. 'It's a good feeling that something so dreadful and tragic is leading to real change.' It comes amid news Dame Vera Baird KC will become the interim chair of the CCRC. The barrister will take up the post from 9 June until 8 December next year, and is tasked with carrying out an urgent review into the running of the independent body and making sure lessons have been learned from previous cases. Malkinson said he remained 'incandescent' at the CCRC, as well as the government's compensation scheme, which makes it difficult for wrongly convicted people to receive payouts. 'This is an assault on innocent people,' he said. 'It's an assault on the public, because any member of the public could end up where I was. Anybody could be the next victim, because there will be more.' Despite having his conviction quashed in 2023, he had to wait until February to get his first compensation payment. Malkinson had been living on benefits and food banks from his release until then. Under the 2014 Antisocial Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act, payments are only awarded to people who can prove innocence beyond a reasonable doubt. Ministry of Justice data showed that only 6.5% of people who had applied for compensation due to a miscarriage of justice between April 2016 and March 2024 were awarded payouts. Of 591 people who applied, 39 were granted compensation. Figures showed that 35 have since received money, with average amounts totalling £68,000. In a statement in February, lawyer Toby Wilton welcomed the payment, but said the £1m cap on compensation payouts should be lifted. This is currently the maximum amount that can be paid to victims of miscarriages of justice who are wrongly jailed for at least 10 years.

Tulip Siddiq requests meeting with Bangladeshi leader over corruption allegation
Tulip Siddiq requests meeting with Bangladeshi leader over corruption allegation

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Tulip Siddiq requests meeting with Bangladeshi leader over corruption allegation

The former City minister Tulip Siddiq has asked to meet Bangladesh's leader during his London visit to clear up a 'misunderstanding' after corruption allegations made by his administration led her to resign from the UK government. Siddiq, whose aunt Sheikh Hasina was put on trial in absentia last week over crimes against humanity during her 15 years as prime minister, has been accused of benefitting from the former regime by the authorities in the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka. A series of allegations have been aired in the media including the claim from the country's anti-corruption commission (ACC) that Siddiq or her mother had received a 7,200 sq ft plot of land through 'abuse of power and influence'. Siddiq denies the claims which her lawyers have described as being 'politically motivated' and without foundation. She further claims not to have been contacted by the authorities over any of the allegations. She was cleared of any wrongdoing by the adviser on ministerial standards, Laurie Magnus, last year but resigned as economic secretary to the Treasury and city minister over the 'distraction' being caused for Keir Starmer's new government. In a letter to Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel prize-winning economist who is the interim leader of the Bangladeshi government, Siddiq has asked for an opportunity to discuss the ongoing controversy during his visit to London next week where he will meet King Charles and see Keir Starmer in Downing Street. In her letter, Siddiq writes that she hopes a meeting might 'help clear up the misunderstanding perpetuated by the anti-corruption committee in Dhaka that I have questions to answer in relation to my mother's sister, the former prime minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina'. She continued: 'I am a UK citizen, born in London and representing the people of Hampstead and Highgate in parliament for the last decade. 'I have no property nor any business interests whatsoever in Bangladesh. The country is dear to my heart but it is not the country where I was born, live in or have built my career in. 'I have sought to clarify this to the ACC but they refuse to engage with my lawyers in London and apparently keep sending correspondence to a random address in Dhaka.' Siddiq added: 'Every move in this fantasy investigation is briefed to the media, and yet no engagement was facilitated with my legal team. 'I know you'll appreciate how important it is to ensure those reports do not become a distraction from the critical work of doing my very best for my constituents and my country.' The ACC has been probing allegations that Sheikh Hasina and her wider family embezzled billions of pounds from infrastructure spending based on a series of claims made by Bobby Hajjaj, a political opponent of the former prime minister. Siddiq has claimed she is being targeted by a 'politically motivated smear campaign' orchestrated by her aunt's opponents. Last month it was reported that a warrant had been issued in Bangladesh for Siddiq's arrest. She claims to have no knowledge of any such warrant or court hearings to which she was required to appear. As a 2B extradition country, the UK requires ministers and judges to see clear evidence from Bangladesh before they make an arrest decision. After Siddiq had referred herself to the adviser on ministerial standards last year amid allegations about her acquirement of property in the UK, she was cleared in January of any wrongdoing. Magnus had found no evidence to suggest that any of Siddiq's assets were derived from anything other than legitimate means but added that she could have been more alive to the reputational risks arising from her family's ties to Bangladesh. The inquiry had also looked into her presence at the signing of a 2013 nuclear deal between her aunt and Vladimir Putin in Moscow over which there had been claims aired in the media of embezzlement by Siddiq. The standards adviser accepted her explanation that she had been in Moscow socially and as a tourist. Last month the National Crime Agency froze almost £90m of luxury London property belonging to two men linked to Siddiq's aunt.

Spending review 2025: How much cash will Rachel Reeves give to each government department?
Spending review 2025: How much cash will Rachel Reeves give to each government department?

Sky News

time2 hours ago

  • Sky News

Spending review 2025: How much cash will Rachel Reeves give to each government department?

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to announce how much cash each government department will get over the next few years at the spending review on 11 June. Last October, Ms Reeves set out departmental budgets for 2025-26, and will now confirm how much each department will get for the remaining years of the parliament, which ends in 2029. Sky News' politics team takes a look at what may be announced in the spending review. What could be announced? Health and social care How much funding the Department of Health and Social Care will get is one of the most highly anticipated announcements, as due to its size it is set to get nearly 40% of the total day-to-day expenditure on all departments. How much other departments get depends largely on health and defence. Two-child benefit cap After much pressure from his own MPs, Sir Keir and his ministers started softening their previous hard stance on the Conservative-introduced policy that means families cannot claim child benefits for any more than their first two children. Just a week before the spending review, the PM refused to rule out scrapping it, so this could be announced in the spending review. There have been reports Ms Reeves could give the go-ahead to a new nuclear power station in Suffolk: Sizewell C. It would mark the end of a 15-year journey for the project, developed alongside French energy giant EDF, to secure investment for the plant. The chancellor may also set out details of plans to build small modular reactors (mini nuclear power stations) in England and Wales. What has the government already announced? In a show of what is to come, the government has already said that any increase in spending will be relatively modest - and has announced sizeable cuts to some areas, while other departments have got a boost. Foreign aid In February, the government announced it will reduce aid spending from 0.5% to 0.3% of gross national income in 2027 - the lowest level since 1999 - to fund higher defence spending. Defence spending Sir Keir Starmer has agreed to increase defence spending from its current 2.3% of GDP to 2.5% by 2027 and to 3% in the next parliament, from 2029. However, NATO chief Mark Rutte wants allies to sign up to 3.5% by 2035, so there are questions about whether the PM will agree to that after his recent hard stance on defence. 1:00 Transport On 4 June, the chancellor announced £15bn for tram, train and bus infrastructure outside London. It is part of a £113bn investment in capital projects over the rest of the parliament. Winter fuel payments Sir Keir Starmer shocked parliament when he U-turned just weeks before the spending review and said more pensioners will be given the winter fuel payment. Shortly after Labour won last July's election, they took the universal payment away from most pensioners and made it means-tested. Ms Reeves is expected to share some information at the spending review about who will receive the payment, but full details will not be revealed until the autumn budget. 0:33 Free school meals A week before the spending review, the government announced it will be expanding free school meals to all children in households on universal credit, instead of just those in households earning less than £7,400. 1:21 The government said this would mean more than 500,000 more children would be eligible from September 2026, and £1bn has been set aside to pay for it.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store