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UK says several ceasefire proposals for Ukraine are on table
UK says several ceasefire proposals for Ukraine are on table

Yahoo

time03-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

UK says several ceasefire proposals for Ukraine are on table

The UK has stated that several proposals for a possible ceasefire in Ukraine are currently being discussed. Source: Reuters, as reported by European Pravda Details: The statement comes after French President Emmanuel Macron suggested an initial "partial" cessation of hostilities between Russia and Ukraine – specifically in the sky, at sea, and on energy infrastructure. "There are clearly a number of options on the table. I'm just not getting into a running commentary on the options," said a spokesperson for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Background: On Sunday, Starmer hosted a summit of European leaders in London, after which he announced that an agreement had been reached to develop a peace plan for Ukraine and present it to the United States. While travelling to the summit, Macron raised the idea of a one-month truce, though other leaders have not yet expressed support for his proposal. Starmer confirmed plans to assemble a "coalition of the willing" with "boots on the ground and planes in the air". Starmer also announced £1.6bn (US$2bn) in funding for Ukraine to procure 5,000 air defence missiles. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

US lawmakers respond to the UK's Apple encryption backdoor request
US lawmakers respond to the UK's Apple encryption backdoor request

Yahoo

time13-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

US lawmakers respond to the UK's Apple encryption backdoor request

The UK's shockingly intrusive order for Apple to create a backdoor into users' encrypted iCloud data doesn't only affect Brits; it could be used to access the private data of any Apple account holder in the world, including Americans. Less than a week after security experts sounded the alarm on the report, US Congress is trying to do something about it. The Washington Post reported on Thursday that, in a rare show of modern Capitol Hill bipartisanship, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ) wrote to the new National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, asking her to take measures to thwart the UK's surveillance order — including limiting cooperation and intelligence sharing if the country refuses to comply. 'If Apple is forced to build a backdoor in its products, that backdoor will end up in Americans' phones, tablets and computers, undermining the security of Americans' data, as well as of the countless federal, state and local government agencies that entrust sensitive data to Apple products,' Biggs and Wyden reportedly wrote. 'The US government must not permit what is effectively a foreign cyberattack waged through political means.' See for yourself — The Yodel is the go-to source for daily news, entertainment and feel-good stories. By signing up, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy. The pair told Gabbard that if the UK doesn't retract its order, she should 'reevaluate US-UK cybersecurity arrangements and programs as well as US intelligence sharing with the UK.' Wyden sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Biggs is on the House Judiciary Committee and chairs the Subcommittee on Crime and Federal Government Surveillance. Wyden reportedly began circulating a draft bill that, if passed, could at least make the process harder for UK authorities. The proposed modification to the 2018 CLOUD Act would make information requests to US-based companies by foreign entities more onerous by requiring them to first obtain a judge's order in their home country. In addition, it would forbid other countries (like, oh, say... the UK) from demanding changes in encryption protocols to the products or services of companies in the US. Request challenges would also be given jurisdiction in US rather than foreign courts. The UK order, first reported by The Washington Post, requires Apple to create a backdoor into its Advanced Data Protection, a feature introduced in iOS 16.2 in 2022. Advanced Data Protection applies end-to-end encryption to many types of iCloud data, including device backups, Messages content, notes and photos, making them inaccessible even to Apple. The order demands a blanket ability to access a user's fully encrypted data whenever and wherever the target is located. The order was issued under the UK's Investigatory Powers Act 2016, known (not so affectionately) as the 'Snooper's Charter,' which expanded the electronic surveillance powers of British intelligence agencies and law enforcement. It would be a criminal offense for Apple to publicly confirm receiving the order, so the company hasn't commented on the matter. Security experts warn that implementing this backdoor would needlessly expose anyone with an Apple Account to foreign spying, hackers and adversarial countries. Apple reportedly received a draft of the order last year when UK officials debated the changes. In a written submission protesting them, the company said the planned order 'could be used to force a company like Apple, that would never build a back door into its products, to publicly withdraw critical security features from the UK market.' The company can appeal the notice but can't use the appeal to delay compliance. 'Most experts in the democratic world agree that what the UK is proposing would weaken digital security for everyone, not just in the UK but worldwide,' Ciaran Martin, former chief executive of the UK's National Cyber Security Center, told The Washington Post.

Five years after we were 'punished', Greater Manchester is being asked 'what happened to you during Covid?'
Five years after we were 'punished', Greater Manchester is being asked 'what happened to you during Covid?'

Yahoo

time06-02-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Five years after we were 'punished', Greater Manchester is being asked 'what happened to you during Covid?'

Five years on from the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, people in Greater Manchester are being asked to share what happened to them. In March 2020, millions of people across the country watched Boris Johnson announcing the first national lockdown. Then, millions were united in grief, suffering through the deaths of their loved ones, or themselves battling a disease that would cast a long shadow on their health all these years later. By autumn of 2020, Greater Manchester was united in fury as the region was not only thrust into the toughest restrictions in the country, but penalised for having a voice following a stand-off with the government. READ MORE: Waiting in the toilets at Manchester Airport, a gang of Americans thought they were about to make a lot of money READ MORE: Man tragically found dead in river almost two months after major search commenced is named The UK Covid-19 Inquiry has heard from around 54,000 people across the UK, exploring the deep human impact of the pandemic. From tomorrow (Thursday), the inquiry will be in the city for two days, giving the people of Manchester their turn to finally share their stories. 'We really want to hear from as many people as possible about their pandemic story,' Kate Eisenstein, the inquiry's deputy secretary, told the Manchester Evening News. 'We know that different people in communities across the UK and in different parts of the Greater Manchester and the north west, experienced the pandemic in different ways – whether they were a frontline health or social care worker, whether they were homeschooling their kids, whether they were shielding and feeling isolated from friends and family. 'The Covid inquiry has two goals. The first is, establish the facts of what happened during the pandemic. The second is to make findings and recommendations that will help the UK be better prepared for the next pandemic because, unfortunately, it is likely there will be another pandemic we just don't know when.' Greater Manchester has been disproportionately affected by Covid-19. The north west, particularly parts of Greater Manchester, was already suffering some of the worst health in the whole country because of higher deprivation, higher pollution, poorer housing, and fewer job opportunities. The pandemic only served to sharpen those inequalities with the rest of the UK, with scores going to hospital with severe coronavirus, some of the highest infection rates in the country, and major pressures on the NHS in the years after. 'There has been a real range of perspectives shared,' said Ms Eisenstein. 'Most of them are quite personal experiences. We frequently hear about some very positive things like I learned a new hobby, I had more time with my family, there were some stresses which slipped away. But we also hear about really challenging personal or community circumstances, mental health worries, fear about job security, feeling socially isolated. 'Here in Manchester, it'll be interesting to hear if people living in the more rural areas of Saddleworth had a different experience to people working in the city center or frontline workers, working in some of the south Manchester hospitals.' 'One of the things that I'm looking forward to hearing here in Manchester and Greater Manchester might be about people who were students in one of the Manchester or Salford universities at the time, who might have felt they missed out on a typical university experience,' continued Ms Eisenstein. 'Contrasting with perhaps older people who might have been living on their own and feeling isolated from friends and family who might normally provide them with support. 'All the way through to people running care homes, who were constantly in contact with other people, but worried about their own safety and the safety of the residents that they were supporting, and having to make judgments every day about how they do that during a changing and scary situation.' There were also the political revelations that set the region apart. Bombshell moments at Covid Inquiry hearings in 2023 exposed how government committee was told that Greater Manchester deserved a 'punishment beating' with tougher Covid restrictions because of Andy Burnham's 'appalling behaviour' during the Tier 3 stand-off in autumn 2020 The Greater Manchester mayor told the inquiry how ministers made an example of the region for taking a stand as Tier 3 restrictions were forced upon it – despite local leaders arguing there was not enough financial support available. He told the inquiry of suggestions Lancashire should have a lighter set of measures than Greater Manchester because they 'showed a willingness to cooperate'. The stand-off between Mr Burnham and the government over how much money Greater Manchester would get to support workers affected by the tougher Tier 3 restrictions came to a head on October 20, 2020. The mayor found out during a press conference outside Bridgewater Hall that a decision had been made by the government despite failing to reach an agreement with local leaders. Mr Burnham told the inquiry: "It just felt that we were treated in a way that other parts of the country were treated. There is no way that a borough in Greater London would have been treated in the way Bolton was." There are some people who never want to revisit the pandemic. But those leading the inquiry say it can be 'cathartic'. Ms Eisenstein said: 'Here in Manchester, there were particular local and regional circumstances like the Tier 3 restrictions; a big younger population due to the universities; people are very connected across the 10 boroughs of the city-region; such a mixed economy of people in roles who would normally be office based, but also people who are having to continue their front line roles in health care or transport or in manufacturing. 'It will be really interesting to see if those local considerations and how people felt about how they and their community across Greater Manchester were treated, and whether they did feel there were particular local circumstances or local experiences that they think the inquiry should know about.' Every Story Matters event is a 'safe, confidential space' where, if people become distressed, there are 'trained people on site to support'. The inquiry will be visiting on Thursday 6 and Friday 7 February and will be at Manchester Town Hall Extension, next to Central Library, on both days from 10.30am until 5.30pm. Members of the public will be able to speak to inquiry staff to find out more about Every Story Matters and share their experience of the pandemic in person, online or using a paper form. Counsellors will also be present to provide emotional support for those who may need it. 'For those who do come down to see us in person, you can either sit with us and fill in a form on your own or with some assistance,' explains Ms Eisenstein. 'Or if you'd rather sit and actually talk to someone who will help record your story in writing, then we can do that. 'We do recognise that sometimes it can be upsetting or distressing to remember what happens during the pandemic, and that's completely normal. We're looking for a whole range of stories, big or small. Something that might seem like a small experience to you is really important for the inquiry to hear. 'It could be something like a parent remembering a particular toy that their child sought comfort in, to somebody talking to us about their worries that they'd lose their business, to somebody who experienced a really difficult bereavement, to somebody recalling how actually they took up knitting or crochet because they had a bit more time whilst they were furloughed from work. 'There is no right or wrong story for people to share. This is about us understanding as many stories as we can possibly hear.'

EU's Sefcovic and UK's Thomas-Symonds have ‘productive' talks on closer ties
EU's Sefcovic and UK's Thomas-Symonds have ‘productive' talks on closer ties

Yahoo

time05-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

EU's Sefcovic and UK's Thomas-Symonds have ‘productive' talks on closer ties

The UK and European Union have discussed 'concrete ways' to improve ties as part of Sir Keir Starmer's drive to 'reset' relations with Brussels. Cabinet Office minister Nick Thomas-Symonds and the EU's trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic met in Brussels in the latest stage of the process to forge closer ties. Mr Thomas-Symonds, the minister responsible for leading efforts to restore relations with the EU after the strains of the Brexit wrangles, said it had been a 'productive meeting'. A good meeting with @NickTorfaen, discussing concrete ways to enhance 🇪🇺🇬🇧 cooperation in a meaningful, balanced way. Looking forward to engaging on the areas of a mutual interest, while ensuring that our core agreements are fully applied. We stay in regular touch. — Maroš Šefčovič🇪🇺 (@MarosSefcovic) February 5, 2025 'As we progress forward to the UK-EU Summit in May, this Government is working to deliver for the UK to make people more secure, safer and more prosperous,' he said. Mr Sefcovic said they had discussed 'concrete ways to enhance' EU-UK co-operation 'in a meaningful, balanced way'. He said he was 'looking forward to engaging on the areas of a mutual interest, while ensuring that our core agreements' – the Trade and Co-operation Agreement and the Windsor Framework – are 'fully applied'. The meeting on Wednesday came after Mr Thomas-Symonds suggested improving UK-EU trade would boost ailing economies across the continent. In a speech in Brussels on Tuesday he promised a 'ruthlessly pragmatic' approach to boosting trade, defence and border security co-operation. Productive meeting this morning with @MarosSefcovic discussing our mutually aligned interests and challenges. As we progress forward to the UK-EU Summit in May, this Government is working to deliver for the UK to make people more secure, safer and more prosperous. — Nick Thomas-Symonds (@NickTorfaen) February 5, 2025 At the start of an intensive week of UK-EU diplomacy, Sir Keir visited Brussels for a dinner with the bloc's 27 leaders. A UK-EU summit is planned for May 19, where the Prime Minister will host European Council president Antonio Costa and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen. As part of the drive to strengthen ties, the EU has pushed for a new youth mobility scheme, allowing under-30s from the bloc to live, work and study in the UK and vice versa. But this has been publicly resisted by the Government, which is wary of anything that could be seen as allowing the return of free movement. Sir Keir's red lines in the negotiations include not rejoining the single market – which would require free movement of people – or the EU's customs union. Mr Sefcovic has insisted that Brussels will 'remain fully respectful of the limits the UK has set, in particular when it comes to economic co-operation' in the reset talks.

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