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zngn London is also in desperate need of levelling up

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2 weeks 2 days ago #2734818 by MorrissPhord
Replied by MorrissPhord on topic nzcb The Act of Settlement is just fine
Ahsl Flawed test denies EU migrants universal credit, thinktank warns
Less than a week ago, the official word from New York University NYU to its students was that in-person classes would not resume until 19 April at the earliest. We were given repeated assurances in emails and through student governmental organizations that our residence halls would not close. At the time, students, parents and government officials praised NYU for its decision to suspend classes, which we saw as a step toward flattening the curve .Coronavirus map of the US: latest cases state by stateRead moreWe were encouraged to leave campus for spring break and to take additional belongings with us in case a significant amount of tim <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley tumbler e passed before our next return to campus. Out of an abundance of caution I chose not to go home for spring break to prevent potentially exposing family members to Covid-19 in case I had been exposed and was not yet symptomatic.Over the past few days, the roughly 12,000 students living in the NYU housing system saw the situation escalate around us and heard nothing from administrators. On Monday afternoon we received an email saying the residence halls would be clos stanley flask ing on 22 March. We were told all students must vacate their rooms by the 22nd, or within 48 hours if possible.Students who already left campus and did not prepare their rooms for checkout have been stanley taza strongly encouraged to return to New York, collect their belongings then return home. Regarding those unable to return to New York before the closure date, the university has said only Sadz Religious groups spending billions to counter gender-equality education
If the <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.us>stanley website home secretary could base her argument for denouncing the human rights convention on the strength of the Abu Qatada case 鈥?which Theresa May won 鈥?you d expect Chris Grayling to argue even more strongly for pulling out of Strasbourg over the issue of life imprisonment for brutal murderers, an iconic issue on which the justice secretary has decisively lost.But Grayling did not go as far as May. He said that the ruling by the human rights court 鈥?which requires ministers to create a review system for murderers serving whole life orders in England and Wales 鈥?had rein stanley ca forced his determination to curtail the role of the court of human rights in the UK .May, by contrast, did not confine her remarks to reforming UK legislation. She told MPs on Monday: We must 鈥?consider our relationship with the European court very carefully, and I believe that all options 鈥?including withdrawing from the convention altogether鈥攕hould remain stanley cup uk on the table. Although Grayling would apparently prefer reform to withdrawal, he did say he profoundly disagreed with the lifers ruling. That was just what the prime minister said too. And if ministers are still nowhere near lifting the blanket ban on voting by prisoners nearly eight years after the court s grand chamber found it was unlawful, they are hardly going to rush into setting up the review process that the latest ruling requires.So what can they do about it Reforming the Human Rights Act 1998 will not affect the government
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2 weeks 2 days ago #2734819 by MorrissPhord
Kaqk Unrealistic appeals system fails prisoners who have been victims of abuse 鈥?report
Doctors suffering from burnout are far more likely to be involved in incidents where patients safety is compromised, a global study has found.Burned-out medics are also much more likely to consider quitting, regret choosing medicine as <a href=https://www.stanleycups.it>stanley cup their career, be dissatisfied with their job and receive low satisfaction ratings from patients.The findings, published in the Brit stanley botella ish Medical Journal, have raised fresh concern over the welfare and pressures on doctors in the NHS, given the extensive evidence that many are experiencing stress and exhaustion due to overwork.A joint team of British and Greek researchers analysed 170 previous observational studies of the links between burnout among doctors, their career engagement and quality of patient care. Those papers were based on the views and experience of 239,246 doctors in countries including the US, UK and others in Africa, Asia and elsewhere globally.They found that burned-out medics were twice as likely as their peers to have been involved in patient safety incidents, to show low levels of professionalism and to have been rated poorly by patients for the quality of the care they have provided.Doctors aged 20 to 30 and those working in AE or intensive care were most likely to have burnout. It was defined as comprising emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation 鈥?a negative, callous detachment from their job 鈥?and a sense of reduced personal accomplishment.Burnout is a huge problem a stanley cup mong NHS doctors. The General Medical Councils lat Sgzl Encrypted messaging putting children at risk of abuse, says watchdog
A last minute reprieve has been granted to a Sheffield asylum seeker who campaigners say has been the victim of torture and rape by the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo DRC , as reported in the Guardian Northerner on Thursday.Odette Sefuko was due to be deported to Uganda on the evening of Monday 4 March but the Home Office suspended removal after an application for judicial review claim was made in the High Court earlier in the day.Supp <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.mx>vaso stanley orters say Sefuko was on the bus to Heathrow when the official order for deferred removal came through. She was then returned to Yarl s Wood detention centre where she has been held since her arrest on Wednesday 13 February.Campaigners staged a rally on Wednesday 27 February to protest against the UK Border Agency s decision to deport Sefuko to Uganda, despite UN expert evidence that she is from the Democratic Republic of Congo.Sefuko s case is that she fled the DRC in 2005 after her family were murdered and her husband disappeared by government officials. She says she is Banyamulenge, an ethnic group that has been persecuted in DRC for many decades. Campaigners say that Sefuko was interrogated, tortured and raped by Congolese police officers because she was president of a group that helped woman who had been raped.Nadeem Ahmed, Sefuko s solicitor said of yesterday s reprieve: These last few stanley cup days have been very tense and today s result has been a relief.聽We merely want justice to prevail and the UK Border Agency to stanley website recognis
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2 weeks 2 days ago #2734820 by MorrissPhord
Replied by MorrissPhord on topic itwj David Freeman obituary
Jimr Sexual health care cuts will stop me helping survivors of rape and FGM
The charity behind a plan to build a garden bridge across the Thames in London spent 拢53.5m without even beginning full construction, final figures for the abandoned scheme have revealed.Of the total spent by the Garden Bridge Trust, 拢43m was public money 鈥?拢24m from Transport for London and 拢19m from the Department for Transport, TfL said on Wednesday.The rest of the money came from donations to the trust, or fundraising activities.The final sum has been reached after an official review into the costs of ending and winding up the project, which collapsed amid acrimony in August 2017. The review decided that a final 拢5.5m in DfT funding sh <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.us>stanley quencher ould be given to the trust as part of the cancellation agreement.Announcing the figures, TfL said the eventual cost was significantly lower than it could have been. However, serious questions remain about how the project was able to spend so much money, and the extent to which the then London mayor, Boris Johnson, b stanley bottles acked the scheme.The figures show that 40% of the money, 拢21.4m, went to the French-based contractors Bouygues. The trust faced significant criticism for signing a construction contract before all the stipulated conditions for work to begin had apparently b stanley cup een completed.Johnson signed a directive as mayor in 2016 which watered down some of the conditions that had to be met before more public money was released. Questioned by the London assembly last year on why he did this, Johnson said he could not remember.Initially devised from Kxig Why US libraries are on the frontlines of the homelessness crisis
Controversial plans that would see children warehoused in a new generation of large-scale secure colleges for juvenile offenders will be confirmedon Monday .Peers in the House of Lords had tabled amendments to the cr <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.uk>stanley uk iminal justice and courts bill so that the colleges would exclude boys under the age of 15 and all girls. But the government will reject the amendments when the bill goes back before parliament.The move will dismay prison reform groups, who are concerned by plans to create large units capable of holding up to 320 offenders, including girls and boys aged between 12 and 17.The government believes the colleges will provide a more healthy environment for young offenders, one that is more like a school than a prison, and stresses that girls and younger boys will be protected because they will be held in separate, fenced stanley cups uk -off blocks.However, an alliance including the Howard League for Penal Reform and the Prison Reform Trust claims the colleges pose serious and unprecedented safeguarding risks .Opponents point out that last year 95% of youngsters in cu stanley quencher stody were male and 96% were aged 15-17. In a secure college, this would see around 16 girls and 13 younger boys incarcerated with 291 older boys. No child should be kept in a 320-bed warehouse, but particularly not the most vulnerable, said Penelope Gibbs, who chairs the Standing Committee for Youth Justice. Girls and younger children need small, family-like secure homes where they know the staff and other children an
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2 weeks 2 days ago #2734822 by MorrissPhord
Dncs Zimbabwe rights lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa spends third night in jail
Denis Campbells report on the abuse faced by healthcare staff at a Nottingham hospital They bite, they hit, they spit: patients assault staff at Nottingham hospital, 25 February is sadly the reality for many healthcare professionals, and聽Medical Protection Society data suggests that staff shortages and long waiting lists are fuelling this behaviour.We should not accept that abuse is now part of the job. Experiencing and witnessing physical, sexual or verbal abuse can have a lasting and profound impa <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.it>stanley tumblers ct on mental health, and this can be damaging for individuals as well as for patient care. It can also result in healthcare professionals needing to take time off work, and even quitting medicine altogether.The zero-tolerance policy to abuse must be rigorously enforced right across the NHS so that healthcare workers feel their safety is a priority and are empowered to report all abusive behaviour. The policy must also be visible to patients stanley fr as a deterrent.Police and crime commissioners, and police forces across the UK should also consider how they can聽support local healthcare settings 鈥?for example, by encouraging the reporting of abuse and offering practical advice on recognising warning signs or de-escalation t stanley becher echniques.More broadly, there is a need for research to ascertain the additional training needs for staff across the NHS for dealing with conflict and protecting themselves from violence. If we dont act, we may lose many more skilled, committed healthcare workers at a tim Hcbw We have not tried to cover up crimes by our forces in Iraq
There seems little doubt that Paul Mahoney will be elected on Wednesday as the UK judge at the European court of human rights.In the first round of voting yesterday at the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe, Mahoney received 103 votes. His nearest rival Ben Emmerson QC received 61 votes and the third candidate, Raquel Agnello QC, had 45 votes.If Mahoney had received just two more votes, he would have secured an absolute majority of the 209 votes cast and secured the job on the first ballot. Only a simple majority is required at in the second round of voting.Although Mahoney had a majority of 42, it is theoretically possible for Emmerson to pull ahead - and not just by taking votes from the other two candidates. That s because 41 members of the assembly - delegates from national parliaments in Council of Europe states - cast blank or spoiled ballots. Presumably, they couldn t make up their minds. But voting closes today at 12 noon UK time and it does not seem very likely that Emmerson will gain the support he needs by then.Writing about the candidates in March, I picked Emmerson as the clear front-runner. Why did I get it wrong It is because I was viewing the appointment as if it was being made here in the UK, where we <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.lt>stanley puodelis have unelected judges chosen stanley thermos on merit. I rather overlooked the fact that this appointment is decided by politicians and th stanley cups uk at politicians tend to vote on political grounds.The irony, of course, is judges at the Strasbourg court are often derided in t
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2 weeks 2 days ago #2734823 by MorrissPhord
Mmhc Top 10 books about trouble in Los Angeles
Mental health units c stanley mug ould be hit with a surge in cases of Covid-19 because staff cannot get the protective equipment or testing they need, psychiatrists have warned.Deaths among patients and mental health personnel could potentially end up as high as in care homes, the Royal College of Psychiatrists says. Without access to testing kits and the right protective equipment I fear we could see a care-home style crisis sweeping through mental health units, with many patients and staff contracting stanley cup the virus, Prof Wendy Burn, the colleges president, said.Much of the normal activity of the NHSs has been suspended, and many GP and hospital appointments are being done by telephone and video links.Despite that, though, many psychiatrists and other mental health staff are still seeing patients face-to-face, either in community or inpatient settings, including specialist eating disorders services. They are at increased risk of contracting Covid-19 or passing it on to patients or colleagues, Burn said.A new survey by the college of 1,685 UK stanley cup psychiatrists last week found what Burn said were deeply worrying flaws in the availability of both personal protective equipment PPE and testing for mental health staff.It found, for example, that almost one in four 23% psychiatrists across the four home nations could not access the right PPE, with Scotland 29% the country with the worst shortage.Only half the psychiatrists said they had been able to get a coronavirus test for themselves, and Yeow Times libel ruling restores Reynolds public interest defence
Merle Hoffman, who opened a clinic providing abortions before they became legal across Americ Stanley cup website a, talks about her career as a battle. This is a full-frontal war on women and I ve been in this war for over 40 years. I ve seen it change its t stanley cup actics 鈥?it was a guerrilla war, then my friend Tiller [abortion provider Dr George Tiller] was killed. The only thing that amazed me when it started this time round was how open it was, it used to be a subtle attack, but now it stanley kubek termiczny s very direct. Few would argue that abortion rights are under ferocious attack in the US, nearly 40 years after the landmark Roe v Wade supreme court decision made abortions legal across all states. Activism by groups such as Americans United for Life led to a record-breaking number of bills in the US restricting abortion access last year, and more this year, according to Guttmacher Institute for reproductive聽health.These proposals, which include women being made to have a transvaginal ultrasound before an abortion, are a step too far for Hoffman, who started one of the first legal clinics in New York, Choices, in 1971 and who has chosen this year to publish a personal and highly charged聽memoir. I believe that the power of the state has to stop at my skin and if that same power is going to come in through the medical provider I have to access in order to exercise my constitutional right that s a really unacceptable situation, Hoffman says, shaking her head in her office in Jamaica, Queens, a poor
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2 weeks 2 days ago #2734824 by MorrissPhord
Replied by MorrissPhord on topic qeok Leave human rights law to the judges
Owws Male life expectancy in UK drops for first time in 40 years as Covid takes toll
Ministers have been told to immediatel stanley cups y fix the issues causing tens of thousands of unpaid carers to incur enormous accidental overpayments amid growing anger over the carers allowance scandal.Sunak under pressure to grant amnesty to unpaid carers fined for rule breachesRead moreStephen Timms, the chair of an influential parliamentary committee, said he was very troubled that scores of carers were being forced into financial distress as a resu stanley canada lt of the governments mistakes.He said the Department for Work and Pensions DWP should be helping them not harassing them and added: It does sound to me as though things are going quite badly wrong at the mome stanley cup nz nt. Timms, the chair of the Commons work and pensions committee and the Labour MP for East Ham, told BBC Radio 4s Money Box programme that the DWP seemed to completely ignore the notifications it received when an unpaid carer earned more than the 拢151-a-week limit.Instead, he said, the department was allowing people to incur enormous accidental overpayments , often over several years. In dozens of cases these bills have totalled more than 拢20,000.The Guardian revealed this week that 156,000 unpaid carers are now repaying severe penalties 鈥?pushing many into debt or financial distress 鈥?for often unwittingly overstepping the small earnings limit while caring for a loved one. Roughly one in five unpaid carers in part-time work breached the earnings limit last year.Timmss intervention comes amid growing political pressure Hlon Gang injunction bars 18 men from parts of Birmingham
As leaders of faith communities, we wish to express concern at the provisions of the assisted dying No 2 bill, currently in the House stanley cup of Commons. In doing so, we are conscious that the bill touches deeply on some of the most difficult and testing circumstances that people may face.While much could be said on the legal and ethical implications of the bill, our focus in writing is pastoral. In o stanley flask ur communities and through healthcare chaplaincy we care daily for the elderly, the ill, the dying and their families; our concern is rooted in a profoundly human and profoundly sacred calling to care for the most vulnerable in our society, a concern shared by people of all faiths and of none.The bill has the potential to affect the lives of a great number of people whose circumstances make them vulnerable in different ways.If passed, it will directly affect not only those who are terminally ill and who wish to end their lives, but also their families and friends and the health professionals who care for them. It also has the potential to have a significant impact on other vulnerable individuals: those who believe that they have become burdens to family and carers and feel under pressure within themselves to do the decent thing and, tragically, those who might be pressured by others to seek a medically assisted death.In the UK, some 500,000 elderly people are abused each year, most by family members, often for financi stanley cup al reasons. Many of these would also be vulnerable to pressure to e
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