
Who still supports Keir Starmer?
Anas al-Sharif, the Al Jazeera reporter whom Israel blew up, intentionally, last Sunday, left what he described as 'my will and final message' to be published on Twitter once 'Israel has succeeded in killing me and silencing my voice'. Allah knows, says Anas, that 'I gave… all my strength to be a support and a voice for my people' since he was born in the Jabaliya refugee camp. Allah will also 'bear witness against those… whose hearts are unmoved by the scattered remains of our children and women'. (Anas was less moved by the scattered remains of children and women on 7 October 2023, when he sent out an exultant post on Telegram: '9 hours and the heroes are still roaming the country killing and capturing… Great God, how great you are.' Being in close contact with the Hamas Nukhba brigade that day, he could post a picture of a Hamas terrorist placing his foot on a dead Israeli's head and comment 'All you feel is just high spirits. Remember, we hit them right on their heads in the midst of their military positions.') His testament continues: 'I entrust you with Palestine – the jewel in the Crown of the Muslim world, the heartbeat of every free person in the world.' Don't let 'borders restrain you. Be bridges towards the liberation of the land and its people'. 'O Allah,' he prays, 'accept me among the martyrs…and make my blood a light that illustrates the pathway for my people… I kept my promise and never changed or betrayed it.' The IDF says Anas was a Hamas operative and have produced evidence. I am not in a position to judge the exact truth. But he clearly loved Hamas, worked with Hamas, propagandised for Hamas, and was seemingly unacquainted, as Al Jazeera also seems to be, with clause I. iv of our own dear Editors' Code of Practice, which says reporters 'must distinguish clearly between comment, conjecture and fact'. His bias was all-consuming and his desire was martyrdom, not scoops. He was a jihadist, not a journalist.
In the past three weeks, I have been sent 26 emails from the Tucker Carlson Network telling me my request has been received 'and is being reviewed by our support staff'. I have never sent a request to the Tucker Carlson Network. This assiduity in reply, absence of content in the reply and response to a request never made (or never made by the recipient of the replies) is a uniquely 21st-century form of customer service.
British waters are 0.2 per cent hotter than in 1980, says a BBC analysis of Met Office data. This causes some species (cod, whelks) to flee and others (octopus, bluefin tuna) to burgeon. Obviously, this creates some problems ('Swarm of jellyfish shuts French nuclear power plant' was a good headline from Reuters), but there are benefits from the slightly higher temperatures. When my wife began keeping records of moths in our Sussex garden about 25 years ago, few beautiful southern species were to be found. Today, the exotic arrivals have increased, including Zelleria oleastrella – which traditionally inhabits olive groves – borne across the sea on the warmer air currents. The Jersey Tiger, admired for its orange hindwings and black and cream forewings, was excitingly rare then. Today, it has given up tax exile in the Channel Islands and is well ensconced with us. Its range is extending north.
Nicola Sturgeon says she is moving to London because she 'can't breathe freely in Scotland'. That is how a great many of her fellow countrymen and women feel. Her party, the SNP, has now been in government in Scotland since 2007. Could these two phenomena be related?

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Leader Live
an hour ago
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Tories and Reform decry two-tier justice as suspended Labour councillor cleared
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South Wales Argus
2 hours ago
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Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Labour axes north Cyprus envoy Afzal Khan after the Mail broke the story of his unauthorised trip
The UK's trade envoy to Turkey was sacked on Friday after causing a diplomatic spat with an unauthorised trip. Six days after the Daily Mail first reported the story, and following a week of building pressure, Labour MP Afzal Khan was removed from his post following a visit to northern Cyprus. In common with the rest of the world bar Turkey, the UK does not recognise the breakaway state – and is forbidden from doing so by UN resolutions. Nevertheless, Mr Khan met its leader in his official residence and posed for photographs beneath the territory's flag – a breach of international protocol. The act of freelance diplomacy riled the official Cypriot government in the south who described his actions as 'absolutely condemnable and unacceptable'. They called for UK officials to 'respect' their state and the international agreements that forbid recognition of the self-declared government in the north. Sir Keir Starmer finally relented yesterday and sacked Mr Khan in a bid to smooth relations with Greek Cypriots. Dame Priti Patel, Shadow Foreign Secretary, said: 'Keir Starmer should have sacked his trade envoy straight away for his ill-judged travel. Yet again the Prime Minister has serious questions to answer about his poor judgment and actions that undermine Britain's global standing.' In recent days, the National Federation of Cypriots in the UK called for Mr Khan to go, pointing out that no UK official would visit occupied Ukraine. Tories branded Sir Keir 'spineless' for leaving him in post for so long, while Labour MPs and Mr Khan's constituents also raised the matter with the Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds. The row was sparked by Mr Khan's visit to Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar's official residence last week. Mr Khan, the MP for Manchester Rusholme, told officials that it was a personal visit and ministers are understood to have been unaware of the trip. On Friday night, Christos Karaolis, president of the National Federation of Cypriots in the UK, thanked the Mail for raising the issue. 'We welcome Afzal Khan's departure as the trade envoy to Turkey. His position was clearly untenable following his deeply inappropriate and unacceptable visit to occupied northern Cyprus,' he said. 'Mr Khan's condemnable actions compromised UK foreign policy, undermined the sovereignty of the Republic of Cyprus and contravened international law. A Government spokesman said: 'Mr Khan has left his position as trade envoy to the republic of Turkey.'