Up to 100,000 nurses will go on strike next month in a dispute over pay.
Members of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will stage their biggest-ever walkout on 15 and 20 December after voting in favour in a ballot.
Nurses and other nursing staff will take action at half of the locations in England where the legal mandate for strikes was secured in November, while there will be strike action at every NHS employer in Wales except one and throughout Northern Ireland.
The RCN said the number of NHS employers affected would increase in January unless negotiations were held.
The Scottish government has made a separate pay offer.
The union said it had repeatedly called on the UK government to accept its request for negotiations to resolve the dispute over pay and patient safety.
RCN general secretary and chief executive Pat Cullen said: “Ministers have declined my offer of formal pay negotiations and instead chosen strike action.
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“It has left us with no choice but to announce where our members will be going on strike in December.
“Nursing is standing up for the profession and their patients. We’ve had enough of being taken for granted and being unable to provide the care patients deserve.
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“Ministers still have the power and the means to stop this by opening negotiations that address our dispute.”
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‘Nurses driven to strike by the government’
Nurses 20% worse off in real terms
The RCN said despite this year’s pay award of £1,400, experienced nurses were 20% worse off in real terms due to successive below-inflation awards since 2010.
It is calling for a pay rise of 5% above RPI inflation, saying the economic argument for paying nursing staff fairly is clear when billions of pounds is being spent on agency staff to plug workforce gaps.
The RCN said in the last year 25,000 nursing staff around the UK left the Nursing and Midwifery Council register, with 47,000 unfilled registered nurse posts in England’s NHS alone.
Workers from several different industries are set to walk out over pay and conditions this winter, while unions representing ambulance crews, midwives and hospital cleaners are also balloting their members on strikes.
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Here is where the strikes on 15 and 20 December will take place:
England
East Midlands: • Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust • NHS Nottingham and Nottinghamshire ICB • Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust • Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust • Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
Eastern: • Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust • Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust • Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS Trust • Hertfordshire Community NHS Trust • NHS Hertfordshire and West Essex ICB • Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
London: • Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust • Guys and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust • Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust • NHS North Central London ICB • Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust
North West: • Alder Hey Children’s NHS Foundation Trust • Health Education England • Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Found Trust • Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust • Liverpool Women’s NHS Foundation Trust • Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust • The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Found Trust • The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust
Northern: • Gateshead Health NHS Foundation Trust • Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust • The Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
South East: • Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust • Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust • Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust
South West: • Devon Partnership NHS Trust • Gloucestershire Health and Care NHS Foundation Trust • Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust • Great Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust • NHS Bath, North East Somerset, Swindon and Wiltshire ICB (BSW Together) • NHS Devon ICB (One Devon) • NHS Gloucestershire ICB (One Gloucestershire) • North Bristol NHS Trust • Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust • Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust • Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust • University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust • University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust
West Midlands: • Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust • Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health and Care NHS Trust • NHS Birmingham and Solihull ICB (BSol ICB) • The Royal Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Trust • University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust • Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust
Yorkshire and the Humber: • Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust • Leeds Community Healthcare NHS Trust • Yorkshire & Humber NHS England • The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Wales
• Cardiff and Vale University Health Board • Powys Teaching Local Health Board • Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust Headquarters • Hywel Dda University Health Board • Swansea Bay University Health Board • Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board • Betsi Cadwaladr University Local Health Board • Velindre NHS Trust • Public Health Wales • Health Education and Improvement Wales Health Authority • NHS Wales Shared Services Partnership • Digital Health and Care Wales
Northern Ireland
• Northern Ireland Practice and Education Council • Southern Health and Social Care Trust • Western Health and Social Care Trust • Belfast Health and Social Care Trust • Business Services Organisation • Regulation & Quality Improvement Authority • Northern Ireland Blood Transfusion Service • Public Health Agency • Northern Health and Social Care Trust • South Eastern Health and Social Care Trust • Northern Ireland Ambulance Service
“When will it end, when will it stop?” It’s the question that Jay Slater’s mother still can’t answer.
The constant stream of vitriol, misinformation, and abuse online has continued every day for the past 18 months.
“I’ve just been absolutely crucified and ripped to pieces,” Debbie Duncan told us, as she read out the online comments that have hurt the most:
• “Debbie deserved to lose her son” • “How can you possibly respect a mother grifting off her own son’s death?” • “How do you know it’s Jay in that coffin – he needs digging up.”
“Just scroll, scroll and scroll, and they are still there,” Debbie said. “Jay’s just been dehumanised.”
Image: Families of Jay Slater (left) and Andrew Gosden (right) have spoken of horrific online abuse following the disappearance of their loved ones
There are hundreds of millions of pieces of Jay Slater content online, and it’s constantly being created – even after a coroner ruled his fall in a remote ravine in Tenerife was a tragic accident.
“I don’t think I’d be here if I sat every day and read everything that was being said,” Jay’s mum told us.
Image: Conspiracy theories about Jay have persisted online
This is why she is campaigning – in her son’s name.
She has tried and failed many times to get misinformation and the worst abuse taken down from online platforms.
“We just want to have some legislation around content,” she said.
“It’s about the [social media] platforms having that responsibility to take down the misinformation, the harassment, bullying.”
Image: Jay’s family has become a victim of a surge in online sleuthing
New levels of tragedy trolling
Jay’s case took the febrile world of online sleuthing and tragedy trolling to new levels.
Her campaign to give a degree of control back to families suffering this abuse is backed by the charity Missing People.
They work with a growing number of relatives being attacked online and trying to tackle callous misinformation.
“It feels quite out of control,” Josie Allan from the charity told us.
“We know with the development of AI, there’s going to be even more complicated issues.
“People creating fake news about missing cases, potentially making fake content using missing people’s faces or voices.
“We know that that would just be horrendous for families to have to see and could really misdirect police resources and investigations.”
Image: Josie Allan from the charity Missing People
Bogus posts of missing people
Malicious content like this is appearing more regularly.
Anonymous accounts create bogus missing people posts – often it sits in front of a fake advert or has a link to a scam website.
It exploits the natural goodwill people feel towards missing person cases.
In Australia, the search for a missing boy, Gus Lamont, was recently disrupted by a fake AI image of a man carrying what appeared to be the four-year-old.
It wasn’t real.
It is an emerging and disturbing problem for people searching for a loved one.
Kevin Gosden’s son was 14 years old when he disappeared in 2007.
Andrew caught a train to London from his hometown of Doncaster, South Yorkshire.
His family has never given up hope of him returning.
Image: Andrew Gosden’s family have never given up hope of finding him
Father close to breakdown
“Just before the 18th anniversary of Andrew’s disappearance… we suddenly became aware that there were articles online circulating and being shared,” his father told us.
“Claiming that Andrew’s body had been found, that his DNA had been found somewhere… the police have been concealing some CCTV footage with him.
“Utter nonsense. None of that’s true.
“If you’ve got a lot of false information out there, it just doesn’t help find the lad we love.
“We need to know that Andrew is still being looked for.
“I have been very close to what I know is going to be a breakdown, again with it a number of times.”
Image: Kevin Gosden
Clicks are driving content
The monetisation of clicks online is one of the driving forces behind this constant stream of content.
At the CrimeCon conference in Manchester, we spoke to true crime content creators and fans of this growing genre about where the moral boundaries lie.
Andy Hobbs, who sells murder mystery games, told us: “Unfortunately, views means more money. And until that gets looked at, I don’t think any regulation will come in.
“It’s in the interest of social media networks to get more views, more hits.”
Image: Andy Hobbs speaks to Sky’s Tom Parmenter
Ruth Berry, a true-crime fan, pointed out that online investigators can, in some instances, turn up new information: “They’ve helped solve in some cases, haven’t they?
“They’ve helped to unpick things that maybe authorities haven’t had the resources to do, and they’ve had the time and the resources to do.
“But also is it their jurisdiction and is that evidence actually valid and reliable? Because how did they get hold of it, who knows?”
Annie Robinson and Beth Kent host the Grave Secrets true-crime podcast.
“It’s not something you can control, is it really?” Annie said.
Image: True crime podcasters Annie Robinson and Beth Kent
Beth added: “Everyone obviously deserves to have their say, I think I would just be mindful and cautious that you are having an opinion knowing that nobody has all the facts.
“It’s sort of easy to talk about it, as in like, it’s not a real person you’ve got to remember these are still victims and victims’ families,” Annie added.
Some sleuths ‘very dangerous’
“Some amateur sleuths are very dangerous,” forensic psychologist Kerry Daynes told Sky News.
“Because people want their 15 minutes of fame on social media we can’t do things that knowingly hamper police investigations.
“You know, in any other world that would result in a prosecution.
“So I think that we do need to clamp down on those small number of people who do actually cause a great amount of carnage and damage.”
Image: Forensic psychologist Kerry Daynes
Some content creators have turned up to insert themselves into active police searches but the wider problem of misinformation online is also hindering officers.
Assistant Chief Constable Damien Miller, the national policing lead for missing persons, told us: “It takes policing away from those inquiries that we need to be following, because it’s fake, it’s false information.
“It’s hurtful, it is harmful to the families, but it’s also then misdirecting police investigations.
“People have freedom of speech, but there is a line and what I would say to those members of the public is please do not cross that line.
Image: Assistant Chief Constable Damien Miller
He, too, would like to see social media companies helping remove misleading content sooner.
‘I wouldn’t wish it on anyone’
“I think what we need to do is work with those providers to make sure that when mis or disinformation is put on social media, that it’s removed at its earliest opportunity because otherwise it gains momentum,” he said.
That incessant flow of content is what Jay’s mum, Debbie Duncan has been hit by. She is determined to do all she can so that other families don’t have to go through the same ordeal.
“I wouldn’t wish it on anybody what we have been through,” she said while contemplating everything that’s happened.
She has kept boxes of cards and gifts in Jay’s bedroom at home in Lancashire – reminders of all the compassion and support they have received as well as the online hatred.
“It’s torture,” she said while looking at the many photos of her son.
“I just look at his picture and if it’s the last thing I can do for you Jay – I’ll try my blimmin’ hardest.”
Around £80,000 worth of suspected stolen power tools have been seized by police at a car boot sale in west London.
The Metropolitan Police recovered 400 items in the operation on 11 December.
Two men, aged 55 and 54, and two 15-year-old boys have been arrested on suspicion of handling stolen goods.
The objects seized by officers at the Hounslow Heath car boot sale included power drills, nail guns, electric saws, and a concrete mixer.
Image: Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick
It comes after shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick visited the sale last month and posted a social media video highlighting concerns about the sale of suspected stolen goods.
The Met said its operation was in response to worries about tool theft and was working to identify the tools and trace their original owners.
Superintendent James Rawlinson, of Hounslow’s local neighbourhood policing team, said: “We are listening to Londoner’s concerns about tool theft because we understand the significant impact it has on tradespeople and their livelihoods.
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“We are targeting the prolific offenders and organised criminal groups that drive this trade in stolen tools through proactive, intelligence-led operations.”
The force said tool theft between April and December was down 20.3%, compared with the same period last year as a result of Met operations targeting tool thieves.
Officers seized more than £500,000 worth of stolen tools during operations at two large-scale boot sales and associated premises in Romford and Rainham and made several arrests earlier this year.
Police have advised power tool owners to mark and take photographs of their property, and record the items’ serial numbers, to increase the chance of returning them if stolen.
Christian Turner is a mandarin’s mandarin. His appointment to the most glamorous posting in the UK diplomatic service is a victory for the Sir Humphreys over the politicians.
After the disaster and humiliation of Peter Mandelson‘s demise over his links to Jeffrey Epstein, it always made sense to appoint a scandal-free career diplomat as his successor.
Father-of-two Dr Turner is 53 but looks half his age. But his youthful appearance hides a long experience as a diplomat and civil servant serving prime ministers dating back to Tony Blair.
Image: Christian Turner during a G7 foreign ministers’ meeting in Italy in 2024. Pic: Reuters
The Foreign Office announcement of his appointment describes him as “one of the UK’s most experienced diplomats”. And the top mandarins at the FCDO will be delighted they’ve got their man.
When Lord Mandelson was appointed last year, the senior cabinet minister Peter Kyle told Sky News the government had decided that he was “worth the risk”.
And what a risk it turned out to be. Will they never learn? “Mandy” – as he’s always been known in Westminster – had previously been forced to resign from the cabinet not once, but twice.
Image: Lord Peter Mandelson and Sir Keir Starmer. File pic: PA
He declared in an angry and defiant victory speech when he held his Commons seat in Hartlepool: “I’m a fighter, not a quitter.” But not long after that, he quit to become a Brussels commissioner.
Dr Turner, on the other hand, has enjoyed a stellar and unblemished career as a diplomat. His most high-profile international post so far was high commissioner to Pakistan, where he was said to be immensely popular.
One of his earlier diplomatic posts was high commissioner in Kenya, when he had to lead the UK’s response to the Westgate Mall terrorist attack, in which 71 people were killed.
Image: UK high commissioner to Kenya Christian Turner, right, and US ambassador to Kenya Robert F. Godec, centre, in 2012. File pic: AP
So he’s seen as a safe pair of hands and is unlikely to attract scandal and controversy in the way that his predecessor did, with his relationships with colourful tycoons and oligarchs as well as love of the high life.
Nevertheless, the Washington posting comes with some of the best perks in the diplomatic world, notably the luxurious Lutyens mansion that serves as the ambassador’s residence on Massachusetts Avenue.
Dr Turner saw off some distinguished rivals for the top job in the diplomatic service, including chief Varun Chandra, Sir Keir Starmer‘s business adviser, who is credited with being the architect of recent trade agreements with President Trump.
Image: Varun Chandra. File pic: AP
Until this week, he was seen as the frontrunner for the job, and as a sop for not getting the Washington post, he will now have an expanded role, including taking a lead role in trade talks with the US.
A late entry in what became a three-horse race was Nigel Casey, Britain’s ambassador in Moscow.
But ultimately, he was seen as indispensable in his current role, given the volatile relations with Vladimir Putin and the continuing war in Ukraine.
Image: British Ambassador to Russia Nigel Casey. File pic: Reuters
The PM interviewed all three candidates last week and his choice of Dr Turner is seen as a victory for Sir Olly Robbins, the Foreign Office’s top diplomat, whose career has prospered despite criticism of his role as the UK’s post-Brexit negotiator, over government ministers.
Insiders claim there will be champagne corks popping in the Foreign Office’s King Charles Street HQ because Dr Turner is their man and will report back to the FCDO rather than No 10.
If Lord Mandelson – the “prince of darkness” in his days as a Labour spin doctor – was seen as Sir Keir’s “Trump whisperer”, Dr Turner will be the PM’s – and, more importantly, the Foreign Office’s – eyes and ears.