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Plans move to turn closed primary into SEN school

Plans move to turn closed primary into SEN school

Yahoo2 days ago

Plans to turn a closed primary school into a school for children with special educational needs (SEN) are taking a step forward.
Colgate Primary School in Felling, Gateshead, was transferred to the Cedars Trust to provide 180 places from September.
The academy organisation has applied to the council to expand the car park and widen its access.
Planning documents show the school is expecting a high number of children to arrive in vehicles, either with their parents and carers or by home-to-school transport provided by the local authority.
The existing car access entrance from High Heworth Lane would be widened to allow for two-way traffic, the documents said, while pedestrian access would remain from Colegate West.
It comes after the Labour-led council decided to close the school in September last year.
Colegate Primary had been dubbed the council's "most vulnerable school" in official documents, with a projected financial deficit of over £500,000 by 2025-26, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.
More than 2,000 people signed a petition backing calls to keep it open.
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School closure consultation a 'tick-box exercise'
BBC Sounds: Gateshead parents bid to save primary school
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Six months after deposing Assad, Syria faces security, economic challenges
Six months after deposing Assad, Syria faces security, economic challenges

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timean hour ago

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Six months after deposing Assad, Syria faces security, economic challenges

Syria's interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa has in six months established himself internationally and had crippling sanctions removed, but still needs to rebuild national institutions, revive the economy and unite the fractured country. AFP looks at the main challenges facing Sharaa, whose Islamist-led coalition toppled longtime Syrian ruler Bashar al-Assad on December 8. - State building - After ousting Assad, Sharaa has had to navigate four political entities, each with their own civil, economic, judicial and military organisation: the central government in Damascus, the incumbent president's former rebel authority in the northwest, Turkey-backed groups in the north, and a Kurdish-led autonomous administration in the northeast. Radwan Ziadeh, executive director of the Washington-based Syrian Center for Political and Strategic Studies, said that creating relative stability in this fragile context was "a significant accomplishment" for Sharaa. But guaranteeing the success of the five-year transitional phase will be "the most difficult challenge", Ziadeh said. The new authorities' ability to maintain stability was cast into doubt when deadly sectarian clashes hit the Syrian coast in March and the Damascus area the following month. More than 1,700 people were killed in the coastal violence, mostly members of the Alawite minority to which Assad belongs, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor. The clashes near Damascus involved the Druze minority. The treatment of minorities remains "one of the greatest internal challenges", Ziadeh said, as "building trust between different components requires great political effort to ensure coexistence and national unity". Badran Ciya Kurd, a senior official in the Kurdish-led administration in the northeast which seeks a decentralised Syrian state, warned against "security and military solutions" to political issues. The transitional government should "become more open to accepting Syrian components... and involving them in the political process", Kurd told AFP, calling for an inclusive constitution that would form the basis for a democratic system. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned last month that Syrian authorities could be weeks away from a "full-scale civil war" due to the acute challenges they faced. Sharaa's "greatest challenge is charting a path forward that all Syrians want to be part of, and doing so quickly enough without being reckless", said Neil Quilliam, associate fellow at the Chatham House think tank. - Security - There are pressing security challenges, with kidnappings, arrests and killings sometimes blamed on government-linked factions reported by the Syrian Observatory and on social media. The recent bouts of sectarian violence have raised concerns over Sharaa's ability to keep radical fighters among his forces' ranks in check. Washington wants foreign jihadists to leave the country, but Sharaa may find it difficult to let go of fighters who stood by his side for years, and some countries refuse to take them back. Six foreign fighters have been promoted in the new defence ministry, sparking international criticism. A Syrian source with knowledge of the matter said however that Damascus had told the United States it would freeze the promotions. Washington also wants the Syrian government to take control of Kurdish-run prisons and camps where thousands of suspected Islamic State group jihadists and their relatives are detained, but Damascus lacks the personnel to manage them. - Economy, diplomacy - Sharaa is leading a country battered by 14 years of civil war, with its economy depleted, infrastructure destroyed and most people living in poverty. Under the new authorities, Syria has seen an increased availability of fuel and goods including certain fruits whose import had previously been near impossible. After Western governments lifted many sanctions, Sharaa's priority now is fighting poverty in order to "stabilise the country and avoid problems", according to a source close to the president. Economist Karam Shaar said that beyond political stability which is essential for economic growth, other obstacles include "the regulatory framework and the set of laws necessary for investment, which unfortunately seem vague in many parts". Authorities have said they were studying legislation that could facilitate investments, while seeking to attract foreign capital. Rehabilitating Syria's infrastructure is key to encouraging millions of refugees to return home, a major demand from neighbouring countries and others in Europe. Syria must also contend with neighbouring Israel, which has carried out attacks and incursions since December. According to Quilliam, Damascus is "light years away from considering normalisation" with Israel -- a prospect pushed by Washington, after several other Arab states have done so in recent years. Syria has admitted it held indirect talks with Israel, but the government has avoided taking a stance on normalisation. lar/nad/lg/ami

Fresh calls for Council to back national grooming gang inquiry
Fresh calls for Council to back national grooming gang inquiry

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time2 hours ago

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Fresh calls for Council to back national grooming gang inquiry

BRADFORD Conservatives have repeated their calls for Council bosses to back a national public inquiry into child rape gangs. The call came after party leader Kemi Badenoch visited the district to speak to a victim of a Bradford grooming gang, who has called for a full public inquiry that can compel witnesses to give evidence under oath and look at all the issues across county boundaries. But Bradford Council Leader Susan Hinchcliffe argued that the recommendations from a previous inquiry into the issue, which took seven years and cost more than £185m, were not implemented by the previous Government, which Mrs Badenoch was a part of. Following the visit this week, Councillor Rebecca Poulsen, Leader of the Conservative and Queensbury Independent Group on Bradford Council said: 'It is disappointing at both a national and local level, to see Jess Phillips MP, the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Safeguarding and Violence against Women and Children, along with Councillor Susan Hinchliffe, Leader of Bradford Council, repeatedly refusing to support a full, nationwide, public inquiry with statutory powers into the child rape gangs, particularly when numerous victims, those who support them, Members of Parliament, and 77 per cent of the public have made repeated demands for such an inquiry. 'I want to pay tribute to the victims of this abhorrent crime. "Despite a rapid three-month review by Baroness Casey being announced in January by the Home Secretary, we are nearly into June with no publication of this review. 'The visit to Bradford by the Leader of the Conservative Party provided a clear message that this issue is not going to go away until the victims are put first and the will of the people prevails. 'Keighley and Ilkley MP Robbie Moore has been campaigning tirelessly for an independent national inquiry since becoming a local MP in 2019 and has raised his frustration over the Labour Party blocking this at both local and national level. 'We would have thought that all councillors across Bradford would be desperate for a statutory public inquiry in order to alleviate the suspicion and reputational damage that comes with obstructing transparency and whilst we know that some of the Council's failings regarding this issue took place whilst the Council was Conservative-led, that isn't stopping my colleagues and I from calling for an inquiry at a time when victims, more than three in four people and a cross party coalition of senior political figures want a full nationwide public inquiry with statutory powers to call witnesses to give evidence under oath." Bradford City Hall (Image: T&A) She added: 'The truth must come out, even if it means heads might roll; no one other than the victims should be protected. It is incumbent upon all members of the Council to call for an inquiry, and if there is nothing to hide or lose, what is the problem?' Replying to Cllr Poulsen's comments, Councillor Hinchcliffe said: 'We're very clear: child sexual exploitation (CSE) is an appalling crime that blights victims' lives. Anyone who commits such crimes must face the full force of the law. 'The ongoing successful prosecutions of historic CSE cases shows that no matter who you are or when the crime took place, you will be prosecuted. 'In Bradford, we're very open about how we tackle CSE. 'We have published more than 70 reports in recent years, including to cross-party committees, where councillors have asked questions and discussed CSE. These committees are open to the public and the media to attend. "An independently authored review into historic CSE cases in the Bradford district between 2001 and 2021 has been published, and we've worked with our partners to implement the review's findings. 'Nationally, we have already had an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse (IICSA) to which Bradford contributed. 'This inquiry was completed in 2022, took seven years, and cost over £185m. 'The last Government never implemented any of its recommendations. Our ask, and one that we hope all parties share, is that the recommendations from this review are implemented at pace. This is the best way in which we can protect our children in the here and now.' The Home Office has previously said that it is "wholly dedicated to delivering justice for all victims". A spokesperson said: "The grooming scandal was one of the greatest failures in our country's history, with vulnerable young people let down time again and again. 'We have already committed to supporting local authorities through our £5 million fund for local areas, the best practice framework for local inquiries and commissioned a rapid national audit to uncover the true scale of grooming gangs in the UK today, including looking at ethnicity. "We are also making it a criminal offence to cover up any report of child sexual abuse."

Aiming a blow at narcos, Colombia pays farmers to uproot coca
Aiming a blow at narcos, Colombia pays farmers to uproot coca

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time2 hours ago

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Aiming a blow at narcos, Colombia pays farmers to uproot coca

With cocaine production at an all-time high, Colombia's government is testing a pacific approach to its narcotics problem: paying farmers to uproot crops of coca, the drug's main ingredient. Among the beneficiaries are Alirio Caicedo and his son Nicolas, who a decade ago planted an expanse of coca as they staked their future on the continued patronage of criminal gangs. Today, they are uprooting the crops and hoping for the best. The Caicedos and some 4,000 other Colombian families have entered into a pact with the government to replace their coca with alternative crops such as cocoa and coffee. It is part of a $14.4 million project to reduce supply of a product blamed for untold misery in a country where armed groups force rural communities to grow coca and raze forests for its cultivation. The project seeks to eradicate coca production on 45,000 hectares in three of Colombia's most conflict-riddled regions, including the southwestern Micay Canyon where the Caicedos ply their trade in the Argelia municipality. For farmers it is a risk. They cannot be sure that their new plantations -- coffee in the Caicedos' case -- will succeed, or that guerrillas and other groups whose income depend on cocaine sales will leave them in peace. "When one is planting a coca plant, there is hope that in time... there will be a harvest and there will be some income," Nicolas Caicedo, 44, told AFP while he and his dad, 77, shoveled and tugged at the remaining coca shrubs on their property. "Uprooting the plants means that... there will be no more harvests -— in other words, no more money," from coca at least. With coca, the Caicedos said they were guaranteed an income of about $800 per month. They have received an initial payment of about $300 under the project to grow coffee, with more to come. But another farmer, who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity, said he doubted the project could work in areas such as Argelia where illegal groups outnumber the state in terms of fighters and guns. "No armed group that lives off (coca) is going to want a farmer to stop growing coca and switch to coffee," he said. - 'Naive' - Gustavo Petro, Colombia's first-ever leftist president, took office in 2022 with the goal of extricating his country from the US-led "war on drugs" blamed for double-victimization of rural Colombians already living under the yoke of violent criminal groups. On his watch, cocaine production in Colombia -- the world's biggest exporter of the drug -- reached record levels as demand continues to grow in Europe and the United States -- the principal consumer. Several previous attempts to get Colombian coca producers to change crops have failed as armed groups caused havoc and government payments and other assistance eventually dried up. For Gloria Miranda, head of Colombia's illegal crop substitution program, told AFP would be naive to think this new program will end drug trafficking "as long as there is a market of 20 million consumers and it (cocaine) remains illegal." In his stated quest for "total peace," Petro has sought to negotiate with a variety of armed groups, meaning fewer military operations and the abandonment of forced coca eradication. But talks have mostly broken down, and the arrival of Donald Trump in the White House in January has ramped up pressure on Bogota. The Trump administration is reviewing Colombia's certification as an ally in the fight against drugs -- a move that could restrict millions of dollars in military aid. With high stakes for its crop replacement gamble, observers fear the government may be taken advantage of. Some farmers may "try to deceive" by taking the money while continuing to grow coca, Argelia government secretary Pablo Daza told AFP. Without adequate monitoring, "the chances are quite high that we are wasting money," added Emilio Archila, who oversaw a similar, failed, project under former President Ivan Duque. Miranda assures there will be "meticulous" satellite monitoring, and anyone found not to be complying will be expelled from the program. Used not only for cocaine, the coca leaf is also chewed as a stimulant in Andean countries or brewed into a tea thought to combat altitude sickness. Colombia's appeals for the leaf to be removed from a UN list of harmful narcotics so it can be commercialized in alternative products such as fertilizers or beverages, have so far fallen on deaf ears. das/als/mr/mlr/dw

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