
Lammy not accepting Iran's claims over enriched uranium
Representatives from the United Kingdom, Germany and France held talks with Iran last week to try to break the deadlock over the country's nuclear programme.
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Tehran maintains it is open to diplomacy, though it recently suspended cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
A central concern for western powers was highlighted when the IAEA reported in May that Iran's stockpile of uranium enriched to 60% – just below weapons-grade level – had grown to more than 400kg.
In a wide-ranging interview with The Guardian, Mr Lammy said: 'Its leaders cannot explain to me – and I've had many conversations with them – why they need 60% enriched uranium.
'If I went to Sellafield or Urenco in Cheshire, they haven't got anything more than 6%. The Iranians claim it's for academic use, but I don't accept that.'
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Mr Lammy warned that Iran developing nuclear weapons could lead to an escalation of tensions in the Middle East.
Israel and the United States carried our strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities in June.
'Many of your readers will have watched Oppenheimer and seen the fallout of (the US building an atomic bomb),' he said.
'So it's what (a nuclear Iran) might mean in terms of other countries in the neighbourhood who would desire one, too. And we would be very suddenly handing over to our children and grandchildren a world that had many more nuclear weapons in it than it has today.'
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The Foreign Secretary said he had heard Israeli arguments in favour of regime change in Tehran, but did not believe that was behind the US decision to strike.
The Tottenham MP added any decision to topple the government was one for the Iranian people, with his focus 'on what the UK can do to stop Iran becoming a nuclear power'.
Last month, Mr Lammy suggested that Britain, France and Germany could 'snap back' on sanctions against Iran unless the country gets 'serious' about stepping back from its nuclear ambitions.
He told the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee: 'Iran face even more pressure in the coming weeks because the E3 can snap back on our sanctions, and it's not just our sanctions, it's actually a UN mechanism that would impose dramatic sanctions on Iran across nearly every single front in its economy.
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'So they have a choice to make. It's a choice for them to make.
'I'm very clear about the choice they should make, but I'm also clear that the UK has a decision to make that could lead to far greater pain for the Iranian regime unless they get serious about the international desire to see them step back from their nuclear ambitions at this time.'

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The Independent
23 minutes ago
- The Independent
‘Anger doesn't get you anywhere' says minister after latest anti-migrant protests
A Home Office minister has hit back at those taking part in anti- migration protests across the UK, warning 'anger doesn't get you anywhere'. While Dame Angela Eagle said that those are worried about migration have an 'absolute right' to demonstrate peacefully, she warned: 'People don't have a right to then have a pop at the police, which has been happening in some isolated cases outside hotels.' It comes amid escalating protests across the UK opposing the use of hotels to house asylum seekers, with a number of people arrested after a protest outside a hotel in Canary Wharf in London on Sunday. Protesters jeered at people going in and out of the hotel, and officers were forced to step in after flares were let off in the crowd, the Metropolitan Police said. A group of people outside the Britannia International Hotel in Canary Wharf were 'harassing occupants and staff', trying to prevent people make deliveries, as well as trying to 'breach the fencing and access the hotel', a statement said. Speaking to Sky News, Dame Angela warned: 'One mustn't mix up people's genuine concerns and worries peacefully expressed with those who are trying to turn it into violence'. She said ministers are 'doing the detailed work' to bring down the asylum backlog, adding: 'We've taken 35,000 people off our streets who have no right to be in our country and sent them back to their countries of origin within a year.' 'We are doing all we can to deal with the challenges that the police are facing on the streets to make sure that women and girls are safe, and in fact, that everybody is safe on our streets.' But asked about people who are expressing their anger over migration, she said: 'Anger doesn't get you anywhere. 'What we have to do is recognise the values we have in this country, the rule of law we have in this country, the work we're doing with the police to protect people. We will close asylum hotels by the end of the Parliament. We'll do it faster if we can.' Robert Jenrick, Tory shadow justice secretary and former immigration minister said he "understands why people are so angry", telling BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'The basic problem with illegal migration is we simply know nothing about these people. They're undocumented, mostly men, who are coming across the Channel in flagrant abuse of our laws and being dumped in communities. I completely understand why people are so angry." Mr Jenrick said he thinks the 'public's patience has snapped'. 'This is issue is beyond party politics - it is causing immense harm to communities, people's lives are being wrecked as a result of it, and we simply have to fix it. 'I respect people who are peacefully protesting outside hotels this weekend. I understand why they feel so concerned. They're seeing their communities damaged', he added. Labour has put a pledge to crack down on the number of people coming to the UK on small boats at the centre of its plan for government. But with boat crossings at a record high, and the asylum backlog still above 75,000, there is mounting pressure on ministers to take more drastic action - pressure which is exacerbated by the success of Reform UK in the polls. Last week figures showed that the number of migrants arriving in the UK after crossing the English Channel topped 25,000 – the earliest point in a calendar year at which the 25,000 mark has been passed since data on Channel crossings was first reported in 2018 On Monday it was announced that the government will pour an extra £100m into efforts to tackle migration as pressure piles on ministers to crack down on small boat crossings. The money will support the pilot of the new "one in, one out" returns agreement between the UK and France, paying for up to 300 more National Crime Agency (NCA) officers and new technology and equipment to step up intelligence-gathering on smuggling gangs. It comes after a number of other measures to deter migrants from coming to the UK, with a "one in, one out" deal with France agreed last month meaning the UK will for the first time be able to send migrants back to France in exchange for asylum seekers with links to Britain. Meanwhile, anyone who advertises small boat crossings or fake passports on social media could be face up to five years in prison under a new offence to be introduced under the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill. Dame Angela said any social media creators who advertise illegal routes into the UK, whether from overseas or within the UK, will be targeted under the new law. 'This is a crime that, when it goes in the Border Security Bill, will apply to anyone who arrives if they've done that, whether they're abroad or not', she told Times Radio. The minister also promised to tighten legal routes for entering the UK if there is evidence they are being misused, such as charity visas. 'It there's any evidence that legal routes to visas are being misused, then we will tighten up the rules to stop that abuse happening', Dame Angela said.


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Truss accuses Badenoch of not telling truth about Tory failures
The Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, is not telling the truth about the 'real failures of 14 years of Conservative government', the former Conservative prime minister Liz Truss has said. Writing in the Telegraph Truss said: 'In a recent speech Kemi said: 'From now on, we are going to be telling the British people the truth even when it is difficult to hear.' If she's not willing to tell the truth to her own supporters, the Conservative party is in serious trouble.' Truss's comments cameafter Badenoch's own Telegraph article in which she claimed the current Labour government was failing to heed the warnings of the disastrous mini-budget that defined Truss' short-lived premiership. The former prime minister has been fighting a desperate battle to rewrite the narrative around her 45 days in office in 2022. She released a memoir and embarked on a campaign tour that allowed her to talk up her record and offer her views on the political landscape in the UK and US. In her Telegraph article, she claimed her mini-budget would have helped the UK escape a 'doom-loop' of low growth and high taxes. 'Yet, it was sabotaged by the Bank of England and the Treasury – which didn't want to be challenged and wanted to cover up their failings – and Conservative MPs who either didn't believe in supply-side economics or cravenly wanted preferment under a Sunak premiership.' But Truss has faced an uphill battle – not least when she was mocked by the campaign group Led By Donkeys, which unfurled a banner during one of her appearances bearing the phrase: 'I crashed the economy.' It also included a picture of a lettuce – a reference to a Daily Star livestream stunt that sought to determine whether Truss's battle to survive in No 10 could last longer than a 60p iceberg lettuce from Tesco. Illustrating her criticism of the current Labour government, Badenoch invoked Truss's failures in No 10. 'Picture the scene: a new prime minister and chancellor spending billions without also making the necessary savings to offset their splurge and balance the books. The markets react adversely, interest rates spike and the cost of living gets worse with prices soaring. 'For all their mocking of Liz Truss, Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have not learnt the lessons of the mini-budget and are making even bigger mistakes,' she wrote in the Telegraph on Saturday. Hitting back, Truss wrote: 'She is wrong. Labour is doing the opposite of the mini-budget, which is why the country is headed for disaster.' Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion And listing several policy recommendations that place her close to the US president, Donald Trump, politically, Truss added: 'It is disappointing that, instead of serious thinking like this, Kemi Badenoch is instead repeating spurious narratives. I suspect she is doing this to divert from the real failures of 14 years of Conservative government in which her supporters are particularly implicated.'


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
UK politics live: minister pushes back at Tory claims linking small boat arrivals to sexual crime
Update: Date: 2025-08-04T08:53:20.000Z Title: Chris Philp Content: Good morning. During August, when parliament is not sitting and the tap of domestic news is running dry, opposition parties often like to run campaigns. Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, is following this model with gusto and today, for the third week in a row, he is holding a press conference on the subject of crime. Reform's success in the polls is almost entirely down to the fact it advocates hardline policies to cut immigration, and small boat crossings, and Farage is trying explicitly to link this issue to crime, arguing that asylum seekers are disproportionately likely to be criminal. The Conservative party don't have a single theme for their summer campaigning. (Yesterday Kemi Badenoch was campaigning about the uselesness of the Liz Truss mini-budget, a topic where the nation largely agrees.) But in response to an overnight announcement from the government about new measures to crack down on small boat crossings, they have also depicting these migrants (whose numbers, of course, increased dramatically while they were in office) as a threat to public safety. In a statement released overnight , the shadow home secretary, said: 'This weak Labour government has lost control of our borders, and we now see rapes and sexual assaults by illegal immigrants reported on a near daily basis.' And, in an interview on the Today programme this morning, Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, doubled down on this claim. He said: I am afraid there is increasing evidence of a serious link between illegal migration, migration generally, and crime, particularly sexual crime against women and girls. In London, 40% last year of all of the sexual crimes were committed by foreign nationals, despite the fact that they only make up 25% of the population. And some of the data that – we're seeing we don't have good data at the moment – some of the data we're seeing is very striking. Afghans and Eritrean nationals are 20 times more likely to be convicted of a sexual crime than a British national. These are very shocking statistics. Farage recently told the New Statesman, for an interesting, lenghty profile written by Harry Lambert, that he thought Jenrick would 'almost certainly' end up to the right of him on migration by the next election. 'I suspect he will probably go further – that's just my instinct for someone who wants to make noise,' Farage said. Angela Eagle, the minister for border security and asylum, has been giving interviews this morning, and on the Today programme she suggested that there was not firm data to back up the claims that Jenrick was making. She said: [Jenrick] did actually say that we don't have good data at the moment, and yet he's asserting with great certainty data points, and I don't know where he's got them from. So it's difficult for me to criticise from a data point of view. But he's admitted in that interview that we don't have good data. Asked if she thought that the Tories were 'playing with fire' by linking asylum seekers with sexual crime, Eagle replied: I think that we need to deal with all crimes, all sexual crimes, regardless of who has perpetrated them in the same way. And we need to crack down on violence against women and girls, which is why we've actually got Jess Phillips, a minister, whose entire job is about doing that. Asked if she was open to discussing possible links between immigration and crime, Eagle replied: I don't mind having debates about anything, but I think we haven't got good data on this, and I think that we've got to look at the principle. And that is that we've got to deal with all sexual criminality, whoever perpetrates it in that way, in an almost colour blind way. If a girl has been abused by somebody or has been subjected to a vile sexual crime, it doesn't really matter what the colour of the skin of the perpetrator is. As Eagle said, it is hard to assess the truth about the link between immigration and crime because the data is complicated, and in some respects limited. But one person who has tried recently is the researcher and scientist Emma Monk, who on her Substack blog recently published an analysis of the claim that some people arriving in the UK on small boats are 20 times more likely than Britain to be criminal. This is a claim that Jenrick referenced, describing it as 'shocking'. Monk argues that it is shockingly inaccurate. Her whole post is worth reading, but here is her conclusion. As you can see, the claim that migrants arriving on small boats are 24x more likely to end up in prison was an easy manipulation of available statistics. It wasn't entirely fabricated - they can point to 'official statistics' to claim credibility - but it's clearly misinformation all the same. A Tory MP briefed it to a right-wing newspaper, which published it unquestioningly. That was picked up by the rest of the right-wing media ecosystem, and now the 24x figure is firmly in the minds of those who want to believe it, and is being repeated all over the internet, and across dinner tables and garden fences. There are only two items in the diary for today. 11am: Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, holds a press conference. 11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing. (For readers who keep asking why we feature the Reform UK press conferences, but not the Lib Dem ones, or the Green party ones, the answer is simple; they are not holding any.) If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can't read all the messages BTL, but if you put 'Andrew' in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word. If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @ The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary. I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can't promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.