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Nurses in UK threatening strike action over pay

Nurses in UK threatening strike action over pay

RNZ News6 days ago
United Kingdom correspondent Lucy Thomson spoke to Lisa Owen about nurses in the UK threatening strike action over pay, as well as airlines calling for an overhaul of air traffic control infrastructure.
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Former SIS boss Rebecca Kitteridge gets new role at University of Oxford
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Former SIS boss Rebecca Kitteridge gets new role at University of Oxford

Rebecca Kitteridge. Photo: RNZ / Diego Opatowski Former spy boss Rebecca Kitteridge is taking up a new teaching and research position at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. She will leave the Public Service Commission where she is currently one of two deputy commissioners. From 2014 to 2023, Kitteridge was director-general of the Security Intelligence Service, the first woman appointed to the role . She then headed up the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, before moving to the Public Service Commission in April 2024. Oxford's Blavatnik School of Government this week announced Kitteridge would be joining them as professor of practice in public policy. In a statement Kitteridge said she was thrilled, citing her experience as an alumnus of the school's Executive Public Leaders Programme. "I have experienced first-hand the quality of the teaching, and its ability to deepen and strengthen leadership capability in government," she said. "Public service, organisational leadership, and building international connections are at the heart of both my own career and the Blavatnik School's mission. I am looking forward to contributing to this work and equipping public leaders around the world with the tools they need to succeed." Founding dean Professor Ngaire Woods said she was delighted by Kitteridge's appointment. "Her leadership and deep expertise will be invaluable in enriching both our teaching and research, and in helping governments meet on Wednesday's pressing challenges with insight, integrity, and innovation." Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche said the prestigious appointment was a testament not only to Kitteridge but also the quality of New Zealand's public service. "Rebecca has a wealth of experience, knowledge, and passion, and has made a very significant contribution to the leadership of the New Zealand public service," he said. "Our loss is Oxford University's gain. I thank Rebecca for her dedicated service and wish her the best." Oxford has appointed Kitteridge for a term of three years. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal
UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal

By Alistair Smout , Reuters UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron. Photo: AFP / POOL / Ludovic Marin Britain said it will begin implementing a deal to return some migrants who arrive on small boats to France within days, a key part of its plans to cut illegal migration, after a treaty on the arrangement is ratified on Tuesday. Under the new deal, France has agreed to accept the return of undocumented people arriving in Britain by small boats, in exchange for Britain agreeing to accept an equal number of legitimate asylum seekers with British family connections. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron announced the "one in, one out" pilot scheme on migrant returns last month. More than 25,000 people have come to Britain on small boats so far in 2025, and Starmer has pledged to "smash the gangs" of smugglers to try to reduce the number of arrivals. Starmer, whose popularity has fallen since winning an election landslide last year, is facing pressure to stop small boats from Nigel Farage's Reform UK party, which leads national opinion polls. In recent weeks in England, there have been a number of protests around hotels housing the asylum seekers who have arrived on small boats, attended by both anti-immigration and pro-immigration groups. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on X that the new agreement between the countries has a "clear objective" to break up the people-smuggling networks, although British interior minister Yvette Cooper would not say how many people would be returned under the scheme. "The numbers will start lower and then build up," she told Sky News, adding that the people returned would be those who had immediately arrived on small boats, rather than people already in Britain. Government sources previously said the agreement would involve about 50 returns a week, or 2600 a year, a fraction of the more than 35,000 arrivals reported last year. Critics of the scheme have said that the scale will not be sufficient to act as a deterrent, but Cooper said that the agreement with France was just one part of the government's wider plan. The government has also targeted people smugglers with sanctions, clamped down on social media adverts and is working with delivery firms to tackle the illegal work that is often promised to migrants. A treaty on the scheme was signed last week but not previously announced ahead of Tuesday's ratification. Britain said the European Commission and European Union member states had given the green light to the plan. - Reuters

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