Connect with us

Published

on

Harrods, Scottish Power and the British Museum were targeted as protesters occupied buildings across the UK as part of a campaign against rising energy bills and fuel poverty.

A series of “warm-ups” were held by members of Don’t Pay UK, Fuel Poverty Action, Just Stop Oil and dozens of other groups, in which people were invited to go to public buildings to keep warm as a group.

Protesters bedded down with blankets, sleeping bags and hot water bottles in the foyer of Scottish Power’s Glasgow headquarters at 9am.

Another group occupied the British Museum’s great hall – the largest indoor public square in Europe – to draw attention to the museum’s sponsorship links with oil firm BP.

Just Stop Oil members briefly occupied beds and sofas at Harrods department store in central London, before being escorted out of the store by around 20 security guards, the group said.

They held signs saying “Just stop oil, just start insulation”, “Just stop fuel poverty” and “oil equals death”.

Just Stop Oil protesters in Harrods. Pic: Rich Feldgate/Just Stop Oil
Image:
Just Stop Oil protesters in Harrods. Pic: Rich Feldgate/Just Stop Oil

Venues for other warm-ups included shopping centres in Stratford, Manchester, Liverpool, Brighton and Bristol, and a Barclays bank branch in Hastings where campaigners will draw attention to the bank’s investment in fossil fuels.

Cardiff, Guildford, Huddersfield, Birmingham, Norwich, Manchester, Stroud, Portsmouth, and Stoke On Trent were also among the centres expected to see warm-ups.

Analysis by End Fuel Poverty Coalition found that Stoke On Trent is one of the areas most affected by fuel poverty, and people there were offered a warm space and advice on how to deal with rising fuel costs at Fenton Town Hall.

‘The average is 90p an hour to have the heating on – how many lots of 90p can we afford?’

Laura Carter, 35, from the city’s Mothers Support Network, was in tears as she told Sky News’s Midlands correspondent Lisa Dowd that she had taken on a second job to cover her bills.

“I read the other day that the average was 90p an hour to have the heating on,” she said, adding that she and others sit at home and try to work out how many lots of 90p they can afford.

“It’s incredibly hard.

“We are so privileged – I can get extra work, my husband can do overtime, but so many families can’t.”

Artist Grega Greaves said: “I’ve not had the heating on at all yet, and it’s already double the amount I’d normally pay – just the lights, stuff like that.

“You think if you did put the heating on it’s going to be sky-high, then it’s a case of ‘do I eat or put the radiators on?’ and I’d rather eat.”

Father of two Keith Feeney, 47, said that he was having to borrow money from family and friends to keep up with his bills.

“I’ve been saving though the summer to make it last through the winter, but it’s going down that quick… and that’s not having it (the heating) on all the time – just half an hour in the morning, half an hour at night.”

What are the groups demanding?

The campaign groups are demanding the government immediately tackle the energy and cost of living crisis by introducing Energy For All – a “universal, free band of energy to cover people’s necessities”.

This would be paid for by “ending all public money subsidising fossil fuels, a more effective windfall tax on energy companies and higher tariffs on luxury household energy use”, they said.

‘We’re coming together to fight back’

Millions of households are receiving payments of hundreds of pounds from the government to help with the crisis over winter, but campaigners say this does not go far enough.

Neil Smith is a spokesperson for Don’t Pay UK, which has encouraged people to cancel their energy bill direct debits as costs rise.

He said: “No one should go cold in winter, yet what we’re seeing is a mass default on these extortionate energy bills and thousands set to freeze in their homes.

“While the government stands by, we’re coming together in our communities to fight back and keep each other warm.”

Read more:
Energy crisis activists carry out sit-down protest in parliament
Measures to help poorest this winter ‘£14bn short’
Millions of people ‘already behind with their household bills

Just Stop Oil protesters in Harrods. Pic: Just Stop Oil
Image:
Just Stop Oil protesters in Harrods. Pic: Just Stop Oil

‘Ordinary people being allowed to starve’

Stuart Bretherton, Fuel Poverty Action campaign coordinator, said: “Ordinary people cannot keep footing the bill for crises created by the wealthy, it’s time for the big polluters and profiteers to pay their share.

“Through this, we could also incentivise much needed climate action on home insulation and a transition to renewables.”

A spokesperson for Just Stop Oil said: “This government is allowing ordinary people to starve and freeze this winter as greedy energy companies squeeze every last penny out of us.

“The health service is in crisis, workers’ wages are being squeezed, and nurses are using food banks. Austerity is a political choice, and the cost of living crisis is an unprovoked attack on ordinary people.

“Worse still, rocketing energy prices are funding the companies who are torching the climate.”

Government: ‘Improving energy efficiency of homes is best long-term way of tackling fuel poverty’

A spokesperson for the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy said: “We understand this is a difficult time for families across the country.

“Improving the energy efficiency of homes is the best long-term method of tackling fuel poverty, and that is why we have committed substantial funding to upgrade housing and install measures in households who have previously not been able to access support.

“This comes in addition to an unprecedented package of government support that is helping households meet their energy costs this winter, including the Energy Price Guarantee, saving a typical household over £900, the Energy Bills Support Scheme providing a £400 discount to millions and the most vulnerable receiving £1,200 each this year.”

Continue Reading

UK

Four people arrested after aircraft vandalised at RAF Brize Norton

Published

on

By

Four people arrested after aircraft vandalised at RAF Brize Norton

Two men and a woman have been arrested on suspicion of a terror offence after two aircraft were damaged at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, police have said.

A second woman has also been arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender.

Counter Terrorism Policing South East said in a statement: “A 29-year-old woman of no fixed abode, and two men; aged 36 and 24, both from London, were arrested on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism, contrary to Section 41 of the Terrorism Act 2000.

“A 41-year-old woman, of no fixed abode, was arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender.”

Damage to planes at Brize Norton
Image:
The back of one of the engines covered in paint

Police said the arrests on Thursday in Newbury in Berkshire, and in London, “are in connection with an incident in the early hours of [last] Friday during which damage was caused to two aircraft at RAF Brize Norton”.

The four people are currently in custody while enquiries are ongoing, police added.

Palestine Action said the arrests “further demonstrate that proscription is not about enabling prosecutions under terrorism laws – it’s about cracking down on non-violent protests which disrupt the flow of arms to Israel during its genocide in Palestine”.

More on Oxfordshire

The group posted a video online claiming it was behind the vandalism at the Oxfordshire airbase last Friday, saying activists had damaged two military planes at the base.

Palestine Action – which focuses its campaigns on multinational arms dealers and has previously targeted corporate banks – said two activists “broke into the largest air force base in Britain and used electric scooters to swiftly manoeuvre towards the planes”.

Repurposed fire extinguishers were used to spray red paint into the turbine engines of two Airbus Voyagers, while further damage was made using crowbars.

“Red paint, symbolising Palestinian bloodshed was also sprayed across the runway and a Palestine flag was left on the scene,” a statement by the group said.

Brize Norton is the largest RAF station, with approximately 5,800 service personnel, 300 civilian staff and 1,200 contractors.

A security review was launched across the “whole defence estate” following the breach, which was condemned as “absolutely staggering” by Ben Obese-Jecty, a Tory MP and former Army officer.

Police remove a person taking part in the demonstration. Pic: PA
Image:
Police remove a person taking part in a Palestine Action demonstration in London on 23 June. Pic: PA

Pic: PA
Image:
A Palestine Action supporter during a march in London. Pic: PA

Sir Keir Starmer condemned the “act of vandalism” as “disgraceful”, adding: “Our Armed Forces represent the very best of Britain and put their lives on the line for us every day. It is our responsibility to support those who defend us.”

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said on Monday that Palestine Action will be proscribed as a terrorist organisation following the breach at RAF Brize Norton.

She said a draft proscription order will be laid in parliament next week, and if passed, it will make it illegal to be a member of, or invite support for, Palestine Action.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

What’s happening to Palestine Action?

Proscription can lead to prison sentences of up to 14 years for some offences, although some breaches are punishable with fines.

Read more from Sky News:
What does proscription mean?
Palestine Action supporters defiant as group faces ban
The ‘enemy within’ or non-violent protesters?

Saeed Taji Farouky, a member of the group, told Sky News the proscription was “completely irrational” and “without precedent”.

He branded it a “knee-jerk reaction from the government” because the group “was able to humiliate them and show serious flaws in the defences of the RAF base”.

Continue Reading

UK

Husband spotted ‘smiling’ on bus after stabbing wife to death found guilty of murder

Published

on

By

Husband spotted 'smiling' on bus after stabbing wife to death found guilty of murder

A man seen “smiling” on CCTV after stabbing his wife to death as she pushed their seven-month-old baby in a pram has been found guilty of murder.

Habibur Masum, 26, launched the “ferocious” attack on 27-year-old Kulsuma Akter after tracing her to a refuge where she went to escape his “violence, jealousy and controlling behaviour”, a court heard.

She suffered more than 25 knife injuries after Masum found her through her phone location and confronted her in a street in Bradford, West Yorkshire, on 6 April last year.

Kulsuma Akter, 27, was stabbed to death in Bradford. Pic: Family handout/PA
Image:
Kulsuma Akter was stabbed to death in Bradford. Pic: Family handout/PA

Habibur Masum 
Pic: West Yorkshire Police
Image:
Habibur Masum. Pic: West Yorkshire Police

After fleeing the scene, he got on a bus where CCTV footage showed him smiling, prosecutor Steve Wood KC told Bradford Crown Court.

He said the image “removed all possible doubt” about his intent and state of mind.

“There were no tears, there was no distress. Perhaps, members of the jury, the smile you can clearly see form as he gets on that bus is as a result of him thinking at that point he’s getting away. The smiling killer,” he told the court.

Habibur Masum  on a bus prior to the murder of Kulsuma Akter
Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA
Image:
Habibur Masum on a bus prior to the murder. Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA

After a four-day manhunt, Masum was arrested 150 miles away in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, where he lived when the couple first came to the UK, having met and married in Bangladesh.

He had already pleaded guilty to manslaughter and possession of a knife but denied murder, claiming he had intended to kill himself in front of his wife but “totally lost control”.

On Friday, Masum was convicted of murder, alongside one count of assault, making threats to kill, and one charge of stalking. He was cleared of another charge of assault.

He had no visible reaction as the verdicts were read out. Judge Mr Justice Cotter told him he will be sentenced on 22 July, when the minimum term for his life sentence will be decided.

Habibur Masum seen on CCTV. Pic: West Yorkshire Police
Image:
Masum seen smiling on CCTV. Pic: West Yorkshire Police

Told social worker husband ‘would kill her one day’

Mr Wood described Masum’s relationship with his wife as “abusive… characterised by his jealousy, possessiveness and controlling behaviour”.

After moving to Oldham, Greater Manchester, together in 2022, she left him – moving in first with her brother in July 2023, before being relocated to the Bradford refuge by social services in January 2024.

She left the relationship after he held a knife to her throat and threatened to kill her in response to a “completely innocuous” message she received from a male colleague in November 2023, the court was told.

Ms Atker told a social worker afterwards that she “believed that one day her husband would kill her”.

Masum denied the November incident and claimed his wife had fabricated a domestic violence case against him as a way to stay in the UK – as he wanted to return to Bangladesh.

He was subject to court bail conditions ordering him to keep away from her at the time of the murder.

The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigated both West Yorkshire and Greater Manchester Police’s prior contact with Ms Atker, saying in a statement on Friday that the probe concluded in December – but will not be made public so as not to prejudice the victim’s inquest.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

‘He walked away and left her there to die’

3pm attack in front of onlookers

During the trial, Mr Wood told the jury Masum managed to track Ms Akter to Bradford and, days before the attack, tried to lure her into leaving the refuge by pretending to be from a GP’s surgery and offering her fake appointments.

She was walking with a friend and pushing her son in a pram at 3pm on the day she died when she was confronted by Masum, who she thought was in Spain.

CCTV showed Masum walking with Ms Akter until he stopped her, spun her and the pram around, and pulled a knife from his jacket.

Police body worn camera of Habibur Masum being arrested.
Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA
Image:
Footage of Masum being arrested. Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA

“He tried to encourage Kulsuma back into the relationship,” West Yorkshire Police’s senior investigating officer Detective Chief Inspector Stacey Atkinson said outside court after the verdict.

“When she dismissed that, he repeatedly stabbed her in front of horrified onlookers. He left her there to die. He walked away and utilised public transport to facilitate his escape out of Bradford.”

Ms Akter fell to the ground after she was stabbed, in the attack described by Mr Wood as a “cold-blooded, calculated, premeditated murder”.

“As a final act of sheer gratuitous violence, he kicks Kulsuma before moving away, but not before ensuring that he disposed of the knife,” he told the court.

Ms Akter’s stab injuries included ones to her body, neck, and face, he added.

 Habibur Masum was arrested on suspicion of murder - more than 150 miles away from where the incident took place
Image:
Masum was arrested more than 150 miles away from where the incident took place

Claims he wanted to ‘kill himself in front of her’

Giving evidence through a Bengali interpreter, Masum told the jury he tracked down his wife “still optimistic” he could save his marriage, but if that did not work he thought: “I will just kill myself in front of her.”

He broke down in tears as he claimed he “totally lost control”, later saying that the next thing he could remember was walking along the road with bloodstains on his hand.

Habibur Masum walking away after he attacked his wife. Masum.
Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA
Image:
Masum walking away after the attack. Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA

But speaking after the court hearing, West Yorkshire Police’s DCI Atkinson said Masum had “realised the extent of evidence against him” so was trying to lean on “diminished responsibility”.

Describing the nature of the murder, she said it was “really unusual” to see “an event unfold on CCTV as it did”.

“Kulsuma suffered a brutal attack in broad daylight whilst her baby son was in his pram,” she said in a statement.

“Kulsuma’s family have been left absolutely devastated by her death, I hope today’s conviction will bring them a sense of justice in knowing that the man responsible for her death has been found guilty.”

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News App. You can also follow @SkyNews on X or subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news.

Continue Reading

UK

‘Atrocity not accident’: Families of pedestrians killed by drivers running red lights speak out

Published

on

By

'Atrocity not accident': Families of pedestrians killed by drivers running red lights speak out

On the wall of her family’s living room, there is a large framed photograph of Alice Williams on the day of her first communion.

It’s a short walk from that family home to Alice’s grave.

“On her headstone, we’ve put ‘joyful, creative, gentle, kind, bright, loving’ because those are the things that we want the world to know about Alice,” her mother Clare tells Sky News.

“We don’t want them to look at that headstone and think, ‘Oh, she only got to nine, I wonder why’, because then her killer has overwritten everything she was. And it’s not fair.”

Alice Williams
Image:
Alice Williams

Dashcam footage shows Alice, her mother, and brother crossing the road before she was struck
Image:
Dashcam footage shows Alice, her mother and brother crossing before she was struck

Read more from Sky News
Cancer patients prevented from going on holiday
Boy and girl sentenced over dog walker’s death
Boy, 16, dies after hit and run

Alice’s killer was 55-year-old Qadeer Hussain who, on a Saturday morning, failed to stop at a red light in Halifax, West Yorkshire, as she was crossing with her mother and brother.

“In front of our eyes he ploughed into her, massively fast, and he carried her off on his wing mirror,” she recalls.

“I’ve just got this very clear image of her being swept off her feet and then she tumbled off and, by the time I got to her, it was almost like she was gone.”

In May, Hussain was jailed for eight years for causing Alice’s death by dangerous driving.

Qadeer Hussain, 55, was jailed for eight years
Image:
Qadeer Hussain, 55, was jailed for eight years

Her parents have chosen to speak publicly to highlight the deadly consequences of drivers running red lights.

Her dad Chris says: “It seems bizarre that you would take any risks at all in breaking the law in order to get somewhere slightly faster.”

“The real risk isn’t being caught. It’s actually killing somebody,” Clare adds.

“He’s quite gratuitously killed my child. He slaughtered her in the street for nothing, for no reason at all.

“He battered her to death and any adult should know that when you speed through a pedestrian crossing, there is a risk that you could do that.”

Alice Williams's parents Clare and Chris
Image:
Alice Williams’s parents Clare and Chris

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

The real cost of running a red traffic light

A lack of red light cameras

A Sky News investigation has found that fewer than 1.5% of traffic lights in the UK have red light cameras monitoring them.

Of the 157 local authorities who responded to our request for data or who directed us to their local police forces, many reported no working red light cameras at all.

There are only five in all of Scotland. In West Northamptonshire, the cameras were switched off in 2011 and, in London and Greater Manchester, fewer than 4% of traffic lights have a red light camera.

Only 1.5% of red lights have cameras attached to them across the UK
Image:
Only 1.5% of red lights have cameras attached to them across the UK

Red lights

In Greater Manchester, we also witnessed drivers routinely running red lights at a number of junctions.

Police increasingly rely on dash cam footage submitted by other motorists to take action against drivers who run red lights. The initiative, called Operation Snap, operates nationwide.

Inspector Bradley Ormesher, of Greater Manchester Police, says: “Everyone knows police can’t be everywhere, but a lot of motorists now have dash cams, so effectively they are assisting us in delivering road safety messages. We’ve seen a big increase in submissions.

“There is a bigger picture to everything and just saving a couple seconds by jumping a red light, you’re not thinking about wider society, are you?”

Pat Grace was on her way to clean her local church in Oxfordshire when she was struck and killed by a heavy goods vehicle that failed to stop at a red light on a pedestrian crossing.

Pat Grace
Image:
Pat Grace

Dariusz Meczynski who was jailed for three years
Image:
Dariusz Meczynski who was jailed for three years

The driver Dariusz Meczynski fled the country. He was extradited back to the UK and jailed for three years for causing the 74-year-old’s death by dangerous driving.

Pat’s son Oliver says: “The driver wasn’t distracted just for a second, it was a substantial period of time while he was driving a heavy goods vehicle through a village at 9am. It couldn’t be much worse.

“It could have been a crocodile of schoolchildren crossing the road and he wouldn’t have seen them because he wasn’t looking.

“The chances of being caught are so few and far between. I think there should be cameras on all red lights so there is less chance of getting away with it.”

Pat Grace
Image:
Pat Grace

Dash cams could help

Oliver and Alice’s family are encouraging all drivers to install dash cams.

“We bought a dash cam after this happened,” says Clare. “And we’ve reported four people who went through red lights, and three of them got warnings.

“That is essential because they’re going about thinking they’re invisible and they’re not accountable but actually when they get a warning, hopefully they’ll think again.

“It’s really opened my eyes to how unprotected we are.”

She adds: “We were doing everything we could have done to stay safe. But the only thing that was keeping us safe was a red light bulb and the presumption of goodwill from drivers.

“And I feel like this is being treated dismissively as if it’s an accident when actually it was it was a pure atrocity.”

Red light cameras have since been installed at the crossing where Alice died.

“I’m glad they’re there,” Clare says. “Now they’ve got the cameras and it’s cost whatever they would have cost – plus her life, a lifetime of grief, and all the ripple effects that come from a life without Alice in it.

“She filled our lives with light. She was innocent. She was happy. She loved dancing. She loved singing. She loved us. We just can’t live without her.”

Continue Reading

Trending