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A letter was sent last month by a large group of senior civil servants to the MoD’s permanent secretary alongside anonymised testimonies in which women described their personal experiences.

The accounts included claims that women had been “propositioned”, “groped” and “touched repeatedly” by male colleagues at the MoD in a workplace culture the civil servants said was “hostile to women as equal and respected partners”.

In the letter, which is marked “official-sensitive”, the group of “senior civilian women” said their “day-to-day professional lives are made difficult thanks to behaviours that would be considered toxic and inappropriate in public life, but that are tolerated at the MoD”.

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Asked what the government should do in response to the Supreme Court ruling.

  • 29% say the government should pursue a similar agreement with a different country;
  • 39% say the government should scrap the policy;
  • 14% say they should do something else;
  • 18% say they don't know

Asked if the UK should remain a member of the European Convention on Human Rights:

  • 51% said the UK should remain a member;
  • 28% say the UK should withdraw;
  • 21% say they are not sure.

30% of the country are idiots who will jump under any racist banner they can find. They have absolutely no idea what they are signing up to. A more pertinent poll would be to ask if they understood the ECHR and what it does.

The ECHR is a higher court than we hold in the UK for a reason. It is where you hold government to account. Without the ECHR the tragedy of the Hillsborough disaster would still be blaming the Liverpool fans, and there would be no accountability.

This is the text and what power we would be handing to government.

Article 1 – obligation to respect human rights

  • The state has the responsibility to respect every individual’s human rights, as set out in the Convention itself.

Article 2 – right to life

  • We all have the right to life, and not be killed by another person.

  • The state must protect people’s lives by enforcing the law, protecting those in danger, and safeguard against accidental deaths.

The state could murder you and not be held accountable for it.

Article 3 – prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment

  • Nobody, under any circumstances, can torture or abuse anyone else. We should never be treated in ways that cause us serious physical or mental suffering.

Forced confessions could become a thing again in the UK.

Article 4 – prohibition of slavery and forced labour

  • Nobody should ever be made a slave or forced to work against their will.
  • There are minor exceptions to this article, for example in some cases it is legal to require someone to work in if they’re in prison or the military services.

This government has tried to implement unpaid work in the past and failed because of this law.

Article 5 – right to liberty and security

  • We can only be detained in certain circumstances, for example if we’ve been convicted by a court, or if we’re considered to be a danger to ourselves.

The government could just lock you away without accountability.

Article 6 – right to a fair trial

  • We have the right to a fair and public trial, within a reasonable amount of time, by an independent and unbiased judge.

  • If charged with an offence we should be assumed innocent until proven guilty.

Speaks for itself

Article 7 – no punishment without law

  • All crimes should be clearly defined by the law. We can only be found guilty of a criminal offence if there was a law against it at the time the act was committed. Once found guilty of a crime we cannot later be given a heavier sentence.

They can make laws and convict you in retrospect. ie: making walking on cracks on the pavement illegal, then show evidence you did this last week.

Article 8 – right to respect privacy and family life

  • This right exists to protect four things: our family life, our home, our private life, and our correspondence.

  • We have the right to live with our family and our loved ones.

  • Respect for the home guards against intrusion into where we live, or to protect us being forced from where we live without good reason.

  • Respect for private life protects our personal freedoms, including respect for our sexuality, the right not to be placed under unlawful surveillance, or for us not to have personal information spread about us against our will.

  • Respect for correspondence allows for us to communicate with others freely and in full privacy.

This is the protection you have over the big brother state and its abuse.

Article 9 – freedom of thought, conscience and religion

  • We all have the right to hold religious and other beliefs. We also have the right to change these beliefs when we choose. We should be free to worship and express our beliefs both in public and private spaces.

Let Braverman loose with this one if you dare.

Article 10 – freedom of expression

  • We have the right for us to hold our own opinions, to express our views and ideas, and to share information with others.

  • This article can protect our right to express views that some may find unpopular or offensive.

Article 11 – freedom of assembly and association

  • We have the right to join with others to protect our common interests, to form trade unions political parties.

  • Importantly this article also exists to protect our right to hold meetings, and to assemble in groups to peacefully protest.

This one is already under threat.

Article 12 – right to marry

  • We have the right marry who we want to, and to start a family.

Article 13 – right to an effective remedy

  • If our rights are violated then we must be able to challenge this through legal means. The state must make arrangement for this, and there may be compensation for any damage caused to us.

This about government accountability.

Article 14 – prohibition of discrimination

  • Our rights should never be denied to us due to any form of discrimination, whether due to our ‘sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority, property, birth or other status’.

Anyone who saw how Braverman played the protests at the weekend should understand this.

Article 15 – derogation in time of emergency

  • A state can choose to ignore some specific rights in the ECHR at a time of war or other emergency threatening the life of the nation, but any removal of rights should be limited to those absolutely required by the situation. A state must always make sure these measures are consistent with its obligations under International Law.

Article 16 – restriction on political activity of non-nationals

  • A state can restrict the political activity of non-nationals, but this does not apply to the nationals of EU member states when in an EU country.

Article 17 – prohibition of abuse of rights

  • Nothing in the ECHR allows for any state, group or individual to destroy the rights and freedoms that the convention protects.

Article 18 – limitation on use of restriction of rights

  • The restrictions allowed by the convention should not be applied for any other purpose than those explained in the convention itself.

The link to the text also has a petition on it. Maybe now would be a good time to attach your name to it.

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cross-posted from: https://fedinews.net/m/ImproveTheNews/t/4787

  • King Charles, who turned 75 Tuesday, announced he wanted to use his birthday to shine the spotlight on a good cause, to officially launch the Coronation Food Project to address waste and food poverty. Dw.Com
  • Charles’ project's main objective is to provide 200M meals to undernourished people in the UK. Euro Weekly News
  • King Charles has spent more than five decades campaigning on environmental issues, as well as sustainability. In a recent article, he wrote, "Food need is as real and urgent a problem as food waste." Reuters (LR: 3 CP: 5)
  • The co-chair of the project, Baroness Louise Casey, stated their aims are to create distribution hubs that connect surplus food with food banks, and charities providing food parcels — claiming that one-in-five people suffer from food insecurity. BBC News (LR: 3 CP: 5)
  • The royal couple planned to meet with staff and volunteers at an organization that distributes surplus food to discuss how food waste can be repurposed for social good. Independent (LR: 2 CP: 3)

Pro-establishment narrative:

  • The rising cost of living has put millions of Britons at risk for food insecurity. In an effort to raise awareness, King Charles has been planning the Coronation Food Project for months, using his 75th birthday to highlight the problem of food waste and hunger. King Charles is an outspoken campaigner on environmental issues and has spent his adult life working toward a sustainable economy.
    The Big Issue

Establishment-critical narrative:

  • In a week when the former home secretary, Suella Braverman, described homelessness as a "lifestyle choice," King Charles suspiciously launched a new campaign to combat homelessness and food insecurity. Millions of Britons live with food insecurity in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis at a time when the government is plotting yet more welfare cuts.
    Guardian (LR: 2 CP: 5)
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Honestly, I'm baffled by this. I've been watching this sport for coming up to twenty years. And whilst these sorts of injuries are rare, they do happen.

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In just over a month, 11,200 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza by Israeli forces. This cannot go on. Labour MPs must put themselves on the right side of history and vote for a ceasefire, writes former Scottish Labour Party leader Richard Leonard.

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The cosmetics brand famous for its doorstep slogan "Ding dong, Avon calling!" is about to open physical stores in the UK for the first time.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/8195265

There are several reasons why exposure to silica dust remains a problem in British workplaces:

The extensive use of power tools (like concrete breakers and rotary tools for cutting and polishing stone), but a poor understanding of the importance of measures like using on-tool air extraction to capture silica dust at source to prevent it being breathed in; using on-tool water suppression to reduce dust emissions; and adopting other control measures, such as the use of local exhaust ventilation, like an enclosed booth that extracts dust from the air

An over-reliance on respiratory protective equipment – such as respirators – as the main control measure

Since 2013, silicosis is no longer a notifiable (i.e. reportable) disease under the UK’s RIDDOR reporting regulations, making it hard to track and assess the problem nationally

https://www.britsafe.org/safety-management/2022/breathe-more-easily

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mental

*TORRO defines a severe thunderstorm as producing one or more of the following:

one or more tornadoes and / or waterspouts

hail with diameter of at least 20mm

non-tornadic winds gusting to 55 mph or more at surface (but which are not part of synoptic-scale straight-line winds of such velocities)*

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The case echoes two similar cases in 2019, where the Home Office was forced to do a U-turn on refusing entry to the children of two women researchers at Oxford University, after widespread condemnation from academics across the world.

Academics say that banning the children of researchers is not uncommon, but parents are typically too scared to go public. Kiguru said this weekend that she was “devastated” by the “horrific” decision to ban her daughter from moving to the UK and could not bear “to think about how alone and isolated she is feeling” back in Kenya.

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