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Offenders could go free in home countries under ‘deport now, appeal later' expansion

Offenders could go free in home countries under ‘deport now, appeal later' expansion

Independent3 days ago
The UK government has expanded its "deport now, appeal later" scheme, allowing foreign criminals to be removed from the country before their human rights appeals are heard.
The scheme now covers 23 countries, with appeals conducted via video link from the offender's country of origin.
Victims Minister Alex Davies-Jones said the UK cannot guarantee offenders will be imprisoned in their home countries, but said the scheme saves taxpayers £54,000 per prisoner and frees up UK prison space.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the expansion aims to stop foreign criminals exploiting the immigration system by delaying their removal.
While the Labour government has increased foreign offender deportations by 14 per cent, critics argue the scheme is a minor measure compared to overall migration challenges.
Minister can't guarantee that murderers or rapists will spend any time in prison under 'deport now, appeal later' scheme
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Tottenham ‘disgusted' by racial abuse aimed at Mathys Tel after Super Cup defeat
Tottenham ‘disgusted' by racial abuse aimed at Mathys Tel after Super Cup defeat

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Tottenham ‘disgusted' by racial abuse aimed at Mathys Tel after Super Cup defeat

Tottenham have said they are 'disgusted' after forward Mathys Tel received racial abuse on social media after Wednesday night's UEFA Super Cup defeat to Paris St Germain. Tel missed a spot-kick in a penalty shoot-out, which Tottenham lost 4-3 after they had surrendered a late 2-0 lead to draw 2-2 after 90 minutes. The France Under-21s international, whose loan deal from Bayern Munich was made permanent in a £30million deal in June, was targeted with abuse after firing his effort wide. Tottenham said in a statement: 'We are disgusted at the racial abuse that Mathys Tel has received on social media following last night's UEFA Super Cup defeat. 'Mathys showed bravery and courage to step forward and take a penalty, yet those who abuse him are nothing but cowards – hiding behind anonymous usernames and profiles to spout their abhorrent views. 'We will work with the authorities and social media platforms to take the strongest possible action against any individual we are able to identify. We stand with you, Mathys.' Tottenham led 2-0 until the 85th minute at the Bluenergy Stadium in Udine, Italy, through goals from Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero before late efforts from Lee Kang-in and Goncalo Ramos hauled PSG level.

Ex-DWP employee shares reasons State Pension payments can never be means-tested
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Daily Record

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Ex-DWP employee shares reasons State Pension payments can never be means-tested

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'State Pension is based on the NI contributions you pay from age 16 to State Pension age - typically, a period of 50 years - so some people may have paid Voluntary Contributions 20/30 years ago for a period in the future. ‌ 'It is unlikely that HMRC would retain detailed payment details of Voluntary Contributions, both Class 3 and Class 2, paid all those years ago, even though the NI record will confirm that Voluntary contributions have been paid, which count towards qualifying years.' The DWP insider highlighted how if the State Pension was means-tested, would HMRC be able to refund NI contributions from all those years ago? Mrs Wrench said: 'In a nutshell, the answer is probably no, unless the customer had kept detailed records of all payments made for past years.' ‌ She continued: 'I myself paid a substantial sum into the Additional Pension Top Up scheme for those who were State Pension age before April 2016, and this scheme ran between Oct 2015 and April 2017. 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Spurs condemn 'cowards' for racially abusing Tel
Spurs condemn 'cowards' for racially abusing Tel

BBC News

time22 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Spurs condemn 'cowards' for racially abusing Tel

Tottenham have said they are "disgusted" by the racial abuse received by forward Mathys Tel following their defeat by Paris St-Germain in the Uefa Super club, who lost 4-3 on penalties after letting slip a two-goal lead, said people who had sent abusive messages to Tel on social media were "nothing but cowards".Tel, 20, came on as a substitute in the 79th minute and was one of two Spurs players who failed to convert from the spot in the penalty shootout."Mathys showed bravery and courage to step forward and take a penalty, yet those who abuse him are nothing but cowards - hiding behind anonymous usernames and profiles to spout their abhorrent views," Tottenham said."We will work with the authorities and social media platforms to take the strongest possible action against any individual we are able to identify."We stand with you, Mathys."More to follow.

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