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Omagh inquiry seeks secret 15-year-old transcript from Commons archive

Omagh inquiry seeks secret 15-year-old transcript from Commons archive

Independent4 days ago
Parliament's rules watchdog has three-and-a-half months to decide whether to release a secret transcript, amid efforts to establish whether a 1998 bombing could have been prevented.
Omagh Bombing Inquiry solicitor Tim Suter has asked for information about an allegation 'that police investigators into previous attacks in Moira, Portadown, Banbridge and Lisburn did not have access to intelligence materials which may have reasonably enabled them to disrupt the activities of dissident republican terrorists' in the Co Tyrone town.
The allegation is thought to have been made during a private session of the Commons Northern Ireland Affairs Committee almost 16 years ago, on November 11 2009.
Conservative MP Simon Hoare warned there was 'no wriggle room' in Parliament's rules to hand over the information to the inquiry without MPs' say-so, because it previously went 'unreported'.
Commons committees can refrain from reporting evidence in certain circumstances, for example, if it contains information which is prejudicial to the public interest.
MPs tasked the Commons Privileges Committee with looking at the 2009 transcript.
This seven-member group has until October 30 to decide whether to report and publish the evidence, which was originally given to the House by former senior police officer Norman Baxter.
'It is very hard for the House to decide whether or not to release evidence it has not seen and cannot see before the decision is made,' Mr Hoare warned.
'It is particularly difficult in this case, as that evidence may contain sensitive information.'
The North Dorset MP added that the Privileges Committee 'might simply decide to publish it'.
But the agreed motion will give the committee power to make an alternative recommendation 'on the desirability or otherwise of the release of the evidence to the Omagh Bombing Inquiry'.
Privileges Committee chairman Alberto Costa, the Conservative MP for South Leicestershire, told MPs that his organisation 'stands ready to deal with this matter'.
The independent inquiry chaired by Lord Turnbull will consider whether the Omagh bombing 'could reasonably have been prevented by UK state authorities'.
The dissident republican bomb exploded in the Co Tyrone town on August 15 1998, killing 29 people, including a woman pregnant with twins.
Mr Hoare agreed with DUP MP for Strangford Jim Shannon, who was born in Omagh, after he told the Commons that 'justice' should be at the 'forefront of all right honourable and honourable members' minds during this process'.
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EXCLUSIVE Labour's Electric Car Grant will be a drain on taxpayers and cause 'rampant EV depreciation', experts warn
EXCLUSIVE Labour's Electric Car Grant will be a drain on taxpayers and cause 'rampant EV depreciation', experts warn

Daily Mail​

time3 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Labour's Electric Car Grant will be a drain on taxpayers and cause 'rampant EV depreciation', experts warn

Labour has taken the drastic step to reintroduce electric car grants this week, offering subsidies on EV prices as ministers desperately try to reinvigorate public demand for new models to meet Net Zero goals. But while taxpayer-funded discounts of almost £4,000 should make shiny new battery cars a little more appealing to drivers, it threatens to further compound 'rampant EV depreciation', industry insiders have warned. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander on Monday unveiled Labour's £650million Electric Car Grant (ECG), coming three years after the previous Tory regime scrapped its own plug-in car grant. The Department for Transport confirms only fully electric models below £37,000 - and that are sustainably produced - are eligible for subsidies from £1,500 to £3,750, with funding in place until 2028-29. 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The exclusive analysis revealed that a DS3 E-Tense typically depreciates at a rate of 66.7 per cent in the first 12 months, shedding almost £26,000 of its original £39,000 price. Cap hpi told us the biggest trigger of widescale EV depreciation in the last two years has been the level of discounting on new electric cars in showrooms. With manufacturers under intense pressure to meet the Government's Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate - the annually-increasing EV sales targets set out for the next decade - they have been slashing prices of battery models to make them more attractive to buyers. The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Trader (SMMT) claims car makers swallowed £4billion in losses associated to EV discounting alone. And the introduction of the Electric Car Grant will further compound this issue, a number of experts have told us. As such, buyers of new EVs taking advantage of Labour's grant will later be hit by a financial hammer-blow when they realise the value of their motors have crashed after a matter of months. Philip Nothard, insight director at analysts Cox Automotive told us: 'Heavy discounts on new EVs have already dampened demand for nearly new models available in the used car market. 'While driving down the cost of new vehicles will undoubtedly increase the EV adoption in the new market, these incentives fail to recognise the impact they will have on the used market.' Nothard says the grant now threatens to increase depreciation of electric cars up to two years old. 'The used market is a crucial source of profitability for the automotive sector, so the strength and consistency of the industry is crucial to the success of the government's net zero ambitions,' he said. 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Band two cars with a lower eco rating will be eligible for a reduced amount as low as £1,500. Bands are determined by each maker's Science-Based Target (SBT) - an industry-wide scheme, with manufacturers needing to meet carbon scores below a specific criterion to achieve the highest green standard. Volkswagen and Renault Group have both confirmed they are signed up with the SBT scheme. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said the grant will allow people to 'keep more of their hard-earned money' when buying EVs ECG bands - which could later expand beyond two tiers - will be determined by how much CO2 is emitted in an EV's production, assessing the energy used during assembly as well as battery manufacturing. An overall SBT score is weighted 70 per cent for the CO2 produced during battery manufacturing and 30 per cent for vehicle assembly emissions. Threshold levels to achieve the full £3,750 discount or the lower banded £1,500 have yet to be made public. 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Spend of €1 million on eight advisers to Taoiseach
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BreakingNews.ie

time4 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Spend of €1 million on eight advisers to Taoiseach

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Peppa Pig toy boss faces losing his home after being sacked for threatening his boss with a pen - then losing £300,000 in failed court bids to get his job back
Peppa Pig toy boss faces losing his home after being sacked for threatening his boss with a pen - then losing £300,000 in failed court bids to get his job back

Daily Mail​

time4 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Peppa Pig toy boss faces losing his home after being sacked for threatening his boss with a pen - then losing £300,000 in failed court bids to get his job back

A former top executive of Peppa Pig toys is at risk of losing his home after being sacked for threatening his boss with a pen and losing nearly £300,000 in failed court challenges. Mark Dowding, chief financial officer and company secretary of Character Group PLC, home of Peppa Pig soft toys, was sacked from his £160k-a-year salary job in September 2017. The management team were said to have 'lost confidence' in Mr Dowding after he was found in an employment tribunal to 'brandished' his boss with a pen in a 'threatening manner' during a 'heated' exchange in August 2017. Mr Dowding subsequently claimed he was unfairly dismissed based on fabricated allegations, arguing that he 'had been subjected to various acts of victimisation'. But despite losing his case in 2020, the finance executive kept fighting, bringing five years worth of appeals and challenges, as well as launching a High Court claim - running up massive legal costs. Mr Dowding still has one remaining court claim over his treatment by the company, but has now been told it will be struck out unless he stumps up the £288,000 he owes from his previous battles. Making the order, High Court judge Richard Spearman KC said it means Mr Dowding now 'faces losing' the pension fund which forms his only regular income 'and maybe also his home, to meet those costs orders'. In his ruling, he said: 'Sophocles wrote...'It is a painful thing to look at your own trouble and know that you yourself and no one else has made it'. That, in my view, is the predicament in which the claimant Mr Dowding now finds himself.' Employed by The Character Group from August 2012 to September 2017, at the time of Mr Dowding's dismissal he was working as a group finance director on a £110,000 salary plus an additional 50 per cent bonus. Describing the pen incident which occurred during a work-related meeting between Mr Dowding and his boss, Mr Shah, Judge Khalil said: 'Their discussion became heated and voices were raised. The claimant accepted in evidence he raised his voice first. 'Mr Shah also alleged that the claimant had pointed a pen towards him, causing Mr Shah to retreat. This was set out in his email, which followed this altercation on the same day. 'In that email, Mr Shah said about the incident, 'Your behaviour was inappropriate and unprofessional. You raised your voice towards me in a threatening manner and pointed a pen in my face whilst rolling forward towards me with your chair. I had to roll my chair back to prevent injury to my face'.' Despite Mr Dowding claiming that such pen threat was fabricated, Judge Khalil said: 'The tribunal concludes that the incident as described by Mr Shah did occur, which included the claimant pointing towards him, brandishing a pen in a threatening manner. 'This dismissal was within the band of reasonable responses both procedurally and substantively,' he concluded. An order was made last December securing the existing court bills on Mr Dowding's £850,000 home in Rotherhithe Street, south London. The case went before Judge Spearman on applications for Mr Dowding to clarify the terms of his claim, while TCG Toys asked for an order that his case be struck out completely if he doesn't pay what he already owes. In a judgment given this week, the judge made orders to end several elements of Mr Dowding's claim, including his bid to sue his former boss personally as a defendant alongside the company. Although the rest of the case can go ahead, the judge went on to make an order that it be struck out unless he pays the £288,000 he already owes. Explaining that Mr Dowding 'now faces losing' both his personal pension fund and his home, Judge Spearman described Mr Dowding as being 'in a very unhappy position'. He added: 'On the disclosure he has made, he can ill-afford to meet these costs liabilities: either his home may be forfeit or his pension may be forfeit - possibly, if things go on the way they have, both. 'That is a consequence of bringing and pursuing expensive litigation which has all been unsuccessful, resulting in the costs orders.' If Mr Dowding pays what he owes, the remaining case will return to court at a later date.

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