logo
The exact date YOUR mobile will blast out alert siren as the Government tests emergency system for 'danger to life' situations

The exact date YOUR mobile will blast out alert siren as the Government tests emergency system for 'danger to life' situations

Daily Mail​5 days ago
Mobile phones will ring out with an alarm this September as the Government tests its emergency alert system.
The emergency alert system will be tested at around 3pm on September 7, in its second ever nationwide drill.
The first time the system was tested was in April 2023, but some mobile phone users warned their devices did not sound, with the problem traced to specific networks.
The emergency alert is used to warn if there is a danger to life nearby, in instances like extreme weather.
During the test, the UK's approximately 87 million mobile devices will ring out with a high pitched alarm and vibrate for approximately 10 seconds, while a message will appear on the screen making it clear the alert is only a test.
The system has already been used in several scenarios - including storms, flooding and in one case when an unexploded Second World War bomb was discovered.
Ahead of the national test, ministers are spearheading a public awareness campaign to ensure people understand when it is taking place.
It will also aim to draw attention of the test to vulnerable groups like those facing domestic abuse, who may have secret mobile phones which they want to remain hidden from their partners.
People who find themselves in this situation are being told to consult details about opting out from alerts on gov.uk, the Government website.
Pat McFadden, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, is the Cabinet Office minister who has taken charge of efforts to boost national resilience against crises.
Speaking as the Government announced the test is to take place, he said: 'Emergency alerts have the potential to save lives, allowing us to share essential information rapidly in emergency situations including extreme storms.
'Just like the fire alarm in your house, it's important we test the system so that we know it will work if we need it.'
Some five alerts have been issued since the system was first created.
These included when 3.5 million people across Wales and the South West of England received an alert during Storm Darragh in December 2024, which went on to kill two people.
Localised flash flooding in Cumbria and Leicestershire, and the discovery of a Second World War bomb in Plymouth in February 2024, also triggered the alert for nearby residents.
Tracey Lee, chief executive of Plymouth City Council, said the alert 'proved to be an invaluable tool during the Keyham bomb operation'.
She added: 'This was the first time the system had been used in a real emergency, and it played a vital role in helping us safely evacuate over 10,000 people and coordinate a complex, multi-agency response.'
Other countries, including Japan and the USA, also regularly test their emergency alert systems.
On Tuesday, Mr McFadden will also unveil a new resilience action plan, which includes advice for how the British public should prepare for emergencies.
Ministers will also publish an update on how they are implementing the 2023 Biological Security Strategy, aimed at preparing for future pandemics.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Battle of Britain — through the eyes of the enemy
The Battle of Britain — through the eyes of the enemy

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

The Battle of Britain — through the eyes of the enemy

E ighty-five years ago this summer Britain was on the back foot — and all eyes were on the skies. France had succumbed to the Germans. British, French and Belgian troops had been evacuated from Dunkirk. Now only the Royal Air Force, supported by a newly established radar system, stood in the way of a German invasion of Britain. Hermann Göring had promised his Führer that his air force, the Luftwaffe, would clear the skies to allow the invasion of southern England — Operation Sea Lion — to begin. The intense aerial combat and RAF victory that ensued over July and August became the stuff of legend, leading Winston Churchill to declare in parliament on August 20, 1940: 'Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.' Tales of RAF derring-do are legion. But what was it like for the defeated Luftwaffe pilots? A new book, Eagle Days, attempts to answer that question, featuring rare photographs from the German side. Eagle Days by Victoria Taylor (Head of Zeus £25). To order a copy go to Free UK standard P&P on orders over £25. Special discount available for Times+ members In this propaganda photo a German soldier holds the remains of a British fighter plane shot down over the English Channel SZ PHOTO / SCHERL • Spectrum: Ghana's colourful fantasy coffins — in pictures Luftwaffe airmen are briefed on flight manoeuvres against British maritime targets, August 24, 1940 SZ PHOTO / SCHERL British workers carry the fuselage of a downed German aircraft, August 31, 1940 SZ PHOTO / SCHERL • Spectrum: Sony World Photography Awards 2025 — the best pictures from the shortlist On a hot summer's day, German fighter pilots wait on standby at an airfield SZ PHOTO / SCHERL • Spectrum: Photographs from South Sudan — a population fighting floodwaters German Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighters prowl the White Cliffs of Dover, September 7, 1940 SZ PHOTO / SCHERL

'I found my brother in Australia, just in time to make memories'
'I found my brother in Australia, just in time to make memories'

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

'I found my brother in Australia, just in time to make memories'

Six years ago, Jess Basey-Fisher was holding her mother's ashes when her father, Nicholas, said he needed to tell her revealed that his wife, Jess's mother, Ann, had kept a secret until the day she died. She had given birth before she met him and put the baby boy up for adoption."From the moment I found out, I was determined to find my older brother," says the 53-year-old nurse, who lives in Carleton St Peter in Norfolk. Jess did not have many facts to go on. She knew that the father was someone who Ann had met at a ball at a US airbase in Sculthorpe in who went on to work as a nurse and a midwife, was sent away to London to give that information, Jess managed to track down her brother's birth record from September 1962 on the Ancestry website, after searching for a 15-year period."I knew the surname, and I just had a hunch that she would have called him something like James, and it turned out to be correct," Jess father, Nicholas, a GP, was very supportive of the search but died on a cycling holiday a few months after revealing his wife's secret. 'An incredible moment' Jess contacted a social worker who managed to find James on Facebook in 2021. He had been renamed Alistair Dalgliesh, though the social worker could not tell Jess due to data social worker sent him a message, and he replied with his email address, but there was no further correspondence, and Jess presumed he did not want to be found."I was very anxious because I didn't even know whether he was aware he had been adopted," Jess October, Jess decided to try and contact her brother again, through social workers, and a conversation started."That was an incredible moment for me," Jess says. "And I found out my brother lives in Australia."In an astonishing coincidence, Alistair's adoptive mother, Marjorie, was a nurse and his father, Ken, was a GP - mirroring Jess's had a daughter but were struggling to have another child when they adopted Alistair. They went on to have another biological son, and the family then moved from Kent to Australia when Alistair was three, under the Ten Pound Poms scheme. The siblings arranged to speak on FaceTime and had a conversation for two hours, in which they laughed about how similar they recognised her brother's mannerisms as being very similar to their mother, and told him they shared a passion for music and 62, did not actively search for his birth family but often thought about them over the years."I was really happy to be found," he says, speaking from his home in Queensland. "I had such a great upbringing with amazing parents, and I feel very lucky." Fortunately, Alistair knew from the age of ten that he was adopted, but Jess was worried about telling him that their mother had took the news well, but wishes he could have reassured his biological mother before she died that he had a great life."My only regret is that I didn't get to tell her. All I wanted to do was say, 'It's ok. Don't worry about me," he says. Jess was able to share with her brother that her parents got married on his birth date, six years after he was says the information sent a shiver down his spine."That made me realise that I still meant a lot to her," he says. A month after the siblings first spoke, Alistair called his sister with some news. He had been diagnosed with stage four lung decided to visit him to help him through chemotherapy and arrived in Australia in April to spend five weeks with adoptive mother Marjorie was particularly pleased to meet her. "I just wanted to support him. It was a magical time. He is the most loving person - he gave me a kiss and a hug every morning and night, and the whole family embraced me," Jess says. Alistair is coming to stay with Jess in Norfolk in October, when he will meet his wider says she wishes her mother could have shared her secret before she died."I feel devastated for her and I feel cheated out of knowing Alistair for longer. But we are going to make the most of the time we have left," she says.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store