
Council leader concerned protests could be ‘hijacked by agitators'
A protest has been organised at the Town Hall after two men, reportedly Afghan asylum seekers, were charged by Warwickshire Police over the alleged rape of a 12-year-old girl in Nuneaton.
A Stand Up to Racism protest is also taking place at the Town Hall in Nuneaton on Saturday.
Ahmad Mulakhil, 23, was charged with rape, according to Warwickshire Police, while Mohammad Kabir, 23, was charged with kidnap, strangulation and aiding and abetting rape of a girl under 13 after the alleged offence in Nuneaton.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and Mr Finch claimed there had been a 'cover-up' of details about the alleged rape case by authorities.
In a post shared on his Facebook page, Mr Finch wrote: 'I am aware that there are protests planned in Nuneaton tomorrow.
'While the right to peaceful protest is a fundamental right, I am deeply concerned about the risk for these events to be hijacked by agitators who seek to cause disorder and division within our community.
'In other towns, we have seen examples of these protests resulting in violence to police and damage to property.
'These actions have no place in Warwickshire and would damage our community spirit we value so much.'
The council leader said people should conduct themselves 'in a peaceful manner and with respect to others in mind', adding that 'our community's reputation is at stake, and we must show that we are better than the chaos that some wish to incite'.
Mr Finch's statement concluded: 'If you witness any suspicious or illegal activities, please report them to the police immediately. Together, we can ensure that the town of Nuneaton and Warwickshire as a whole remains a safe place for all its residents.
'Thank you for your understanding and cooperation.'
Warwickshire Police chief constable Alex Franklin-Smith said the force 'did not and will not' cover up alleged criminality and had followed national guidance.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has since called for more transparency from police about suspects, and said it was an 'operational decision' for forces and the Crown Prosecution Service over what information to release.
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Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
White working-class pupils ‘written off' by society, admits Phillipson
White working-class children in Britain are being 'written off' by society, the Education Secretary has admitted. Speaking ahead of A-level results day on Thursday, Bridget Phillipson said it was a 'national disgrace' that so many white working-class pupils were unable to get the marks needed for university. The Government is preparing a series of interventions to tackle the issue in a white paper to be unveiled in the autumn. Plans include publishing more data on how white pupils are performing, as well as harnessing artificial intelligence (AI) to identify schools falling short. It comes as Labour seeks to tackle claims by Nigel Farage's Reform UK party that it has abandoned its traditional working-class voters. Ms Phillipson said: 'It is a national disgrace that so many young people are written off and don't get what they need to achieve and thrive. 'Far too many young people, particularly white working-class British students, don't get the exam results that they need at GCSE or A-level to allow them to continue onto university.' Under the Education Secretary's reforms, ministers will for the first time publish data showing soaring school suspension and exclusion levels among white working-class pupils, The Telegraph understands. Attendance comparison tool The Government is also considering expanding its AI-powered attendance tool, showing schools how they fare against those with similar demographic make-ups. The wider rollout will inform schools with high levels of white working-class pupils about how they compare in areas such as school readiness and exam results. Just 18.6 per cent of white British pupils eligible for free school meals achieved at least a grade 5 – equivalent to a high C under the former marking system – in their English and Maths GCSEs last year. This compares to 45.9 per cent of all state school pupils in England, according to Department for Education (DfE) data. A Whitehall source said there was a 'chicken and egg' debate among officials over whether white-working class pupils were doing badly because they were frequently absent from school, or vice versa. The Government is understood to want to use data to highlight the scale of underperformance among these children as it draws up measures to tackle the issue. Writing for The Telegraph, Ms Phillipson said failure to get to grips with wider school absence levels risked stoking a worklessness crisis as children left school. She warned that a pupil who frequently missed classes 'might grow into an adult who sees no issue with skipping work or breaking commitments', adding: 'If children see school as optional, that mindset will continue throughout their life.' Earlier this year, Mr Farage claimed Reform had replaced Labour as ' the party of the working class ' and accused Sir Keir Starmer of imitating his policies on issues such as immigration, for fear of a voter swing to the Right. Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, told Sir Keir last month that the UK risked a repeat of last summer's riots unless 'the Government shows it can address people's concerns'. She said anger over high levels of illegal immigration was threatening social cohesion in the poorest communities. The Government is concerned that stubbornly high school absence levels following the pandemic may be a symptom of wider disengagement from society among young people, The Telegraph understands. Figures published by the DfE last week showed that the rate of severe absence in schools continues to worsen, with experts now warning the ongoing attendance crisis has become 'deeply entrenched'. More than 147,600 pupils were classed as severely absent in the autumn term last year, meaning they missed at least half their classes. This was a slight increase on the year before and the highest severe absence rate for an autumn term since comparable data began in 2016-17. The Centre for Social Justice (CSJ), a think tank, warned that without urgent action, the absences would drive up the number of young people missing out on future education, employment or training by nearly 180,000. This would result in an estimated lifetime cost to the taxpayer of £14bn in lost earnings and from young people going on benefits, it added. The DfE currently publishes data showing school absence levels among minority ethnic groups, but is understood to be alarmed at figures for white working-class pupils. The Government also holds statistics highlighting increasing suspension rates and low attainment rates among poor white children, and hopes to publish them from next term. Speaking to the Press Association, Ms Phillipson said: 'The schools white paper we will be publishing in the autumn will set out an ambitious vision for how we can tackle this generational challenge of what many young people experience.' Students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their A-level results on Thursday and will decide whether to study in higher education, do an apprenticeship or go straight into work. This year's A-level results are expected to show a continuing trend of boys performing worse overall than their female peers. The CSJ has previously highlighted figures showing boys are now 1.5 grades behind girls on average at A-level. Dame Miriam Cates, a former Conservative MP and senior fellow at the CSJ, said Ms Phillipson was 'absolutely right' in her focus on white working-class children, but suggested under-performance among the cohort was also the result of high rates of family breakdown. Recent research by the CSJ found that, among the wealthiest fifth of white families, 84 per cent of parents were married and 12 per cent were cohabiting, and in the poorest fifth this dropped to 12 per cent married, with nine per cent cohabiting. Dame Miriam said: 'There's a close link between male marriageability and jobs for men. They're all linked factors. and it just is the case that a huge, huge number of poor white children are growing up without a dad, and that's the biggest factor behind educational under-achievement.' Scandal of school absence risks weakening the bonds of society By Bridget Phillipson One thing was non-negotiable in my mam's house when I was little – when Monday morning rolled around, off to school I went. No ifs, no buts, no excuses. My mam knew the value of education. She knew how important every day in the classroom was to my future life chances, and she was damned if she was going to let me throw away a brighter future by skipping school. What my family knew then instinctively, we now know statistically. The strong foundations for children to achieve and thrive are rooted in the classroom – every school day counts. Children with good attendance have twice the odds of achieving strong GCSE results compared to their peers who miss just 10 more school days. And those early differences cascade into later life. By age 28, children who consistently went to school are earning £10,000 more per year than their classmates with poor attendance records during their GCSEs. But it's not just about grades or earnings – it's about habits and how children grow into adults. Laying the building blocks School isn't just where children learn facts, figures, to read and to write. It's where they learn habits that will shape them in life beyond the classroom, in the workplace, and in their relationships. It's where the building blocks of a healthy society are laid. If children see school as optional, that mindset will continue throughout their life. They might grow into an adult who sees no issue with skipping work or breaking commitments, weakening not only the relationships they form but also the bonds of obligation that tie us together as a society. It's why, 18 months ago, I said that attendance would be a top priority for me as Secretary of State. The urgency of that priority was laid bare when I took office last July – in the school year that was then coming to an end, 1.5 million children had been persistently absent, missing a day a fortnight or more. That's double the pre-Covid figure – 1.5 million life chances needlessly blunted. Since then, thanks to the hard work of the Government, schools and parents, we've begun to turn the tide through our Plan for Change. Now, the latest data shows that the approach is working with persistently absent children – almost 10 per cent of those children, over 140,000, are now regularly back in school. Overall, children have spent more than five million more days in the classroom this year than last. It's the biggest improvement in a decade, a huge achievement for government, schools and families. Behind that statistic lies the crucial extra learning that will translate into more than £2bn in higher earnings throughout children's lifetimes. And it is reaching the whole country – we're seeing improved attendance among children on free school meals, and the rates of attendance in the North-East and South-West are starting to catch up with better-performing regions. Nipping problems in the bud Our response to the absence crisis has been rooted in what works, harnessing the power of data to deliver promising results. We're helping schools to spot the early warning signs. Backed by AI-powered reports, school leaders can now nip problems in the bud before they escalate. Where more intensive help is needed, we are piloting mentoring and expanding whole family support to benefit the most vulnerable pupils. But I am not complacent. There's much more to do to get attendance where it needs to be, particularly for those who are severely absent. The latest data shows clear attendance challenges for children with Send, in particular when it comes to the children missing large chunks of school. It's one of the key reasons why our plans to transform the Send system are so important. We are also expanding school mental health support to cover almost one million more pupils by March next year, with access for all pupils by 2029/30. And from September, we're rolling out our new attendance and behaviour hubs, led by the nation's highest-performing schools that will, in time, see two million children benefit. More than 500 schools facing the biggest challenges will get intensive, personalised support. 4,500 more will benefit from practical resources as well as visits, so that staff can learn from great practice elsewhere. Time to redouble our efforts Be in no doubt – reversing the harmful attitudes towards school attendance that set in before, and were supercharged by, the pandemic will not happen overnight. But we are beginning to make progress. Now is the time to redouble our efforts; for the Government, parents and schools alike to take our share of responsibility to get more children back through the school gates, every single day. We will only continue to drive absence down and attendance up if we discharge our shared responsibility: that of parents, like my mam, to send their children to school, that of schools to create warm and welcoming classrooms, and that of government to provide support and accountability throughout the system. That's how we build a brighter future for our children, and for our country too.


Telegraph
9 hours ago
- Telegraph
‘Don't share pictures of shoplifters – it breaks data protection rules'
Photographs of suspected shoplifters should not be displayed in stores in case they breach data protection laws, the UK data watchdog has said. The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) said putting up images of thieves in a local area, such as in shop windows, 'may not be appropriate' behaviour. Its advice page for shopkeepers on how to tackle shoplifting says retailers 'must only share personal information that's proportionate and necessary to achieve your purpose'. The disclosure comes after The Telegraph revealed that police officers had told a shopkeeper to take down a sign calling shoplifters 'scumbags' because it could cause offence. Richard Tice, the leader of Reform UK, said that shopkeepers should be encouraged to put up photographs of shoplifters. 'We should be letting the general public know of the photographs of people who have a track record of stealing in towns,' he said. Anybody who was against doing so 'is on the side of the criminals and should be ashamed of themselves', he added. 'This highlights the complete insanity of GDPR which is damaging to healthcare, it's damaging to law and order. It's damaging to businesses and our economy,' he told The Telegraph. Mr Tice added that shopkeepers should be able to put up signs and have the right to say 'it's my shop and I determine who comes into it'. Katie Lam, a shadow home office minister, said that she met a constituent last week who was 'plagued by shoplifters', but police told him to take down photographs of the suspects. She wrote on X: 'He gives police CCTV, card details, licence plates. No action apart from a visit to say he must take down pics of thieves 'because of GDPR'. 'Our system should crush the lawless and protect the law-abiding. It does the opposite.' Official figures last month showed that nearly three thefts per minute were being reported in Britain. Retailers have expressed frustration that police have 'abandoned' treating shoplifting like a crime, following an increase of 20 per cent in a year. Last week, The Telegraph disclosed that Rob Davies, a North Wales shopkeeper, had put up a handwritten note in his store following repeated thefts that read: 'Due to scumbags shoplifting, please ask for assistance to open cabinets.' But officers from North Wales Police attended his retro shop in Wrexham and told him to take down the sign because it could cause offence. The ICO said that data protection laws could help retailers tackle shoplifting by sharing criminal offence data 'as long as it's necessary and proportionate'. In a blog post from 2023, the regulator said: 'We want businesses to be able to take action to prevent crime, but we want people who aren't breaking the law to be able to go about their day without unjustified intrusion.' Actions that the ICO recommends as 'appropriate' to retailers include sharing suspect details with the police, or information about the incident with a manager or another store nearby. But under actions that it says 'may not be appropriate', it includes local businesses sharing images between each other on a messaging platform, or in a staff room. It also cautions against 'putting images in the local area, such as shop windows and lampposts. You must only share personal information in a way that's proportionate and necessary to achieve your purpose'. The guidance says: 'Sharing images in this way gives access to those who don't have the appropriate authority to see them or take any action.' The ICO is a non-departmental public body, which is sponsored by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology The British Retail Consortium calculates that businesses are losing £1.8bn to theft each year, and an additional £700m is spent on extra security.

South Wales Argus
14 hours ago
- South Wales Argus
Taliban investigating death threats against UN Afghan female staff
In its latest update on the human rights situation in Afghanistan, the UN mission to the country said dozens of female national staff were subjected to explicit death threats in May. The threats came from unidentified individuals related to their work with the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, or UNAMA, other agencies, funds, and programmes, 'requiring the UN to implement interim measures to protect their safety', according to the report. It said the Taliban told the UN mission that their personnel were not responsible for the threats. An Interior Ministry investigation is under way, the report said. Afghan girls attend a religious studies class at the Tasnim-e-Nusrat religious education centre in Kabul (Ebrahim Noroozi/AP) The Interior Ministry spokesman, Abdul Mateen Qani, said no such threats had been made. 'This is completely incorrect,' Mr Qani said. 'The ministry has an independent department for this, and we have a strategic plan for protection and security so there is no threat to them in any area, nor can anyone threaten them, nor is there any threat to them.' Mr Qani did not answer questions about an investigation. The Taliban barred Afghan women from working at domestic and foreign nongovernmental organisations in December 2022, extending this ban to the UN six months later, and then threatening to shut down agencies and groups still employing women. Humanitarian agencies say the Taliban have hampered or interfered with their operations, allegations denied by authorities. The UN report is the first official confirmation of death threats against Afghan women working in the sector. The report also highlighted other areas affecting women's personal freedoms and safety. In Herat, inspectors from the Vice and Virtue Ministry began requiring women to wear a chador, a full-body cloak covering the head. Dozens of women deemed 'not in compliance' were barred from entering markets or using public transportation. Several women were detained until relatives brought them a chador, the report said. In Uruzgan, women were arrested for wearing a headscarf, a hijab, rather than a burqa. Women have also been denied access to public areas, in line with laws banning them from such spaces. In Ghor province, police forced several families to leave a recreational area. They warned the families against visiting outdoor picnic sites with women. In Herat, vice and virtue inspectors stopped family groups with women and girls from accessing an open recreational area, only allowing all-male groups. Nobody from the Vice and Virtue Ministry was immediately available to comment on the Ghor, Herat and Uruzgan incidents, which the UN said happened in May. In Kandahar, the Public Health Department instructed female health care workers to be accompanied to work by male guardians with an identification card proving that they were related to the woman by blood or marriage. It was not immediately clear if the card is specific to Kandahar or will be rolled out across Afghanistan. 'The process to apply for a mahram (male guardian) identification card is reportedly cumbersome and can take up to several weeks as it requires the de facto Department for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice and a member of the local community (eg malik, imam or village elder) to verify the relationship,' the UN report said.