
Charity boss offers ‘olive branch' to Jenrick in migration comments row
During a BBC broadcast earlier this week, Mr Kandiah claimed Mr Jenrick had echoed 'fear of the stranger', adding: 'The technical name for this is xenophobia.'
The BBC apologised to Mr Jenrick and has since removed references to xenophobia from the programme.
The Conservative politician had accused the broadcaster of thinking it was 'acceptable to smear millions of worried citizens as 'xenophobic' for their completely understandable fears about undocumented men entering illegally'.
Mr Kandiah's comments, made in the Thought for the Day section of the BBC Radio Four Today programme, followed a piece Mr Jenrick had published in the Mail on Sunday.
The Tory MP wrote: 'I certainly don't want my children to share a neighbourhood with men from backward countries who broke into Britain illegally, and about whom we know next to nothing.'
Mr Kandiah previously appeared to double down on his comments, posting the original audio from his broadcast online and urging people to 'take a listen and let me know what I am wrong about factually?'
On Thursday, he took to social media with a direct plea to Mr Jenrick.
Writing on X, formerly Twitter, he posted: 'Olive branch offered … Mr Jenrick, I want your daughters and mine to be able to walk down the road safely and without fear. I worked with you when you were housing minister and the UK welcomed over 200,000 people from Hong Kong.
'I was grateful for your support and compassion during that time. I would love to find a way we could work together to de-escalate the fear and anger many are feeling in our country.
'I believe we need to focus on the real challenges that are making people worried – housing, jobs and the cost of living – rather than ramping up anti-immigrant sentiment.'
Mr Jenrick's team has been contacted for comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Canada's conservative leader Pierre Poilievre projected to win Parliament seat
Canada's Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre is projected to win a crucial by-election in the province of Alberta to secure a new Parliament seat after losing his constituency in the last general final ballots still being counted, Poilievre leads with 80.1% of the vote in the rural Battle River-Crowfoot riding, according to Canada's public broadcaster CBC, which projects he will win."Getting to know the people in this region has been the privilege of my life," he told a rapturous crowd on projected victory comes four months after his party was defeated by Mark Carney's Liberals and he lost the Ottawa-area seat he had held for two decades to Liberal Bruce Fanjoy. In this by-election, Poilievre faced a record 214 candidates, many of whom are associated with a protest group seeking electoral is the second time the group has targeted Poilievre in a campaign. Voters were asked to fill out a write-in ballot due to the unusually high number of projected win will allow the 46-year-old to return to the House of Commons for the autumn sitting after his April conservative leader faces crucial election testHow Canada's Conservatives threw away a 27-point lead to lose againThe special election was called in June after former Conservative member of Parliament Damian Kurek stepped aside to let Poilievre thanked Kurek for his "gracious sacrifice" in his victory is a Conservative stronghold - Kurek, the former MP for the riding, had won with 83% of the vote. In the past, the riding was won by Conservatives with at least 70% of the Conservative leader faced pushback from some locals, including independent candidate Bonnie Critchley, who had accused him of seeking to win the riding as "nothing more than a means to an end".Poilievre defended his campaign, telling the Calgary Herald newspaper that he had canvassed like he was "one vote behind"."I believe in humility and earning people's trust," he now faces a mandatory leadership review in January, where Conservative party members will vote on whether he should stay on as leader at their upcoming national convention.

Western Telegraph
an hour ago
- Western Telegraph
Starmer hails ‘breakthrough' on security guarantees after Ukraine talks
The Prime Minister was one of several European leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron and Nato secretary general Mark Rutte, who travelled to Washington on Monday as Volodymyr Zelensky held talks with the US President. Sir Keir said work with the US on what the security guarantees would entail could start as soon as Tuesday. 'The two outcomes were a real significant breakthrough when it comes to security guarantees, because we're now going to be working with the US on those security guarantees,' he told the BBC. 'We've tasked our teams, some of them are even arriving tomorrow, to start the detailed work on that.' Mr Trump said he had spoken directly with Vladimir Putin to begin planning a meeting between the Russian leader and Mr Zelensky, which will then be followed by a three-way meeting involving himself. The US president said Moscow will 'accept' multinational efforts to guarantee Ukraine's security. Mr Zelensky, meanwhile, said he was 'ready' for bilateral and trilateral meetings. But he told reporters following the White House meeting that if Russia does 'not demonstrate a will to meet, then we will ask the United States to act accordingly'. Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte said the US and Europe would 'do more' on tariffs and sanctions against Russia if the country 'is not playing ball' on direct talks with Ukraine, in comments to Fox News. Sir Keir described the talks as 'good and constructive' and said there was a 'real sense of unity' between the European leaders, Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky. He said Mr Trump's plans to arrange the bilateral and trilateral meetings showed a recognition that Ukraine must be involved in talks. 'That is a recognition of the principle that on some of these issues, whether it's territory or the exchange of prisoners, or the very serious issue of the return of children, that is something where Ukraine must be at the table.' Mr Trump called the talks 'very good'. 'During the meeting we discussed security guarantees for Ukraine, which guarantees would be provided by the various European countries, with a co-ordination with the United States of America,' he posted on his Truth Social platform. 'Everyone is happy about the possibility of PEACE for Russia/Ukraine. 'At the conclusion of the meetings, I called president Putin and began arrangements for a meeting, at a location to be determined, between president Putin and president Zelensky. 'After the meeting takes place, we will have a trilat which would be the two presidents plus myself.' Mr Zelensky participates in a multilateral meeting with European leaders in the East Room of the White House (Aaron Schwartz/PA) The US president met with Mr Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, on Friday, where he declared there was 'no deal until there's a deal' to end more than three years of fighting in eastern Europe. 'The Alaska summit reinforced my belief that while difficult, peace is within reach and I believe, in a very significant step, President Putin agreed that Russia would accept security guarantees for Ukraine,' he said on Monday. 'And this is one of the key points that we need to consider.' He later said: 'We also need to discuss the possible exchanges of territory taken into consideration the current line of contact.' Future three-way talks 'have a good chance' of stopping the conflict, the US president said. But he appeared to share conflicting views on whether a ceasefire was necessary to stop the war. 'I don't think you need a ceasefire,' he originally said, before later explaining that, 'all of us would obviously prefer an immediate ceasefire while we work on a lasting peace'. Mr Trump's envoy, Steve Witkoff, had suggested over the weekend that measures similar to Nato's article five mutual defence provision – that an attack on one member is an attack on the entire bloc – could be offered by the US without Kyiv joining the alliance. Sir Keir welcomed plans for 'article five-style guarantees' during Monday's talks and said that they would fit with the work of his 'coalition of the willing' group of countries. He said to Mr Trump: 'Your indication of security guarantees, of some sort of article five-style guarantees, fits with what we've been doing with the coalition of the willing, which we started some months ago, bringing countries together and showing that we were prepared to step up to the plate when it came to security. 'With you coming alongside, the US alongside, what we've already developed, I think we could take a really important step forward today – a historic step, actually, could come out of this meeting in terms of security for Ukraine and security in Europe.' Mr Trump meets with Mr Zelensky in the Oval Office (Aaron Schwartz/PA) Sir Keir also described potential future trilateral talks as a 'sensible next step'. The PA news agency understands the Prime Minister disrupted his holiday plans over the weekend to join calls, including with Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky, before he headed to Washington, as reported in The Times. Mr Zelensky, whom Mr Trump greeted at the door of the West Wing with a handshake earlier in the evening, wore a black shirt with buttons and a black blazer to the meeting at the White House. His attire had appeared to become a point of irritation for Mr Trump during a previous meeting in February. Early in the meeting, the Ukrainian described the talks as 'really good', saying they had been 'the best' so far. Mr Zelensky said: 'We are very happy with the president that all the leaders are here and security in Ukraine depends on the United States and on you and on those leaders who are with us in our hearts.'


Metro
an hour ago
- Metro
Normal People author 'risks being arrested after support for proscribed terroris
Sally Rooney is at risk of being arrested after pledging her support for Palestine Action – which was recently proscribed as a terrorist organisation in the UK. The Irish author, 34, has written the best-selling novels Normal People, Conversations with Friends Beautiful World, Where Are You and Intermezzo (2024). The first two were adapted into TV miniseries of the same name, both with funding from the BBC. She has now declared she plans to use the residual fees from the programmes to support Palestine Action – a British pro-Palestinian direct-action network that was founded in 2020 with the goal of 'ending Israeli apartheid'. But after activists caused an estimated £7,000,000 of damage to jets at RAF Brize Norton in June, the UK government banned the group. More than 700 people engaging in Palestine Action protests have been arrested since then. Despite this, Rooney has revealed she will be donating her earnings to support the group. 'I feel obliged to state once more that – like the hundreds of protesters arrested last weekend – I too support Palestine Action,' she wrote in The Irish Times this week. 'If this makes me a 'supporter of terror' under UK law, so be it. 'My books, at least for now, are still published in Britain, and are widely available in bookshops and even supermarkets. In recent years the UK's state broadcaster has also televised two fine adaptations of my novels, and therefore regularly pays me residual fees.' She then explained: 'I want to be clear that I intend to use these proceeds of my work, as well as my public platform generally, to go on supporting Palestine Action and direct action against genocide in whatever way I can.' Rooney also wrote how she believed the 'present UK government has willingly stripped its own citizens of basic rights and freedoms, including the right to express and read dissenting opinions, in order to protect its relationship with Israel'. 'The ramifications for cultural and intellectual life in the UK… are and will be profound,' she added. In a statement Downing Street has told several media publications that 'support for a proscribed organisation is an offence under the Terrorism Act'. Funding the group can now carry up to 14 years imprisonment under the Terrorism Act 2000. However, the group are not banned under Irish law, where Rooney lives. In a statement to Metro, a BBC spokesperson said: 'Matters relating to proscribed organisations are for the relevant authorities.' It is understood the BBC is not currently working with Rooney on any upcoming projects and has never been a staff member at the national broadcaster. More Trending Yesterday Dr Jilan Wahba Abdalmajid, the ambassador of the state of Palestine in Ireland, expressed her support for Rooney and said: 'Sally Rooney is using her voice to call out international law and human rights violations in Palestine. 'I hope these calls result in practical actions that will stop the horrors we're witnessing carried out by Israel in Palestine; to stop the genocide and forced displacement and end the Israeli occupation.' In 2021 the author previously refused to allow Beautiful World, Where Are You to be translated into Hebrew by an Israeli publisher, which she explained was in support for calls to boycott Israel over its policies towards Palestinians. View More » Metro has contacted the Home Office for comment. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Culture appropriation never used to bother me — hummus changed everything MORE: An Irishwoman's guide to Ireland's best beaches — no matter the weather MORE: American tourist's £660 'extreme day trip' to Ireland raises a lot of questions