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Strikes by NHS staff will go ahead this month after a meeting between union bosses and the health secretary broke down.

Steve Barclay failed to avert further walkouts by nurses, ambulance workers and auxiliary NHS staff during a short meeting on Monday.

Union leaders reacted in anger over the meeting, which had been seen as a breakthrough in relations after the government initially said it would not talk about pay with unions.

‘No tangible offer’ for health workers – live politics updates

Onay Kasab, Unite’s national lead, said the government “only wanted to talk about productivity” and there was no detailed discussion on a pay settlement as he confirmed strikes by Unite ambulance workers will go ahead on 23 January.

Mr Kasab said it was “absolutely ludicrous” and “outrageous” the government only wanted to talk about NHS staff being more productive in exchange for a pay rise.

“It’s an insult,” he said. “Productivity when our members are working 18-hour shifts. Quite how you become more productive, I don’t know. I’m very angry on behalf of our members.”

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Members of the RCN pictured on the picket line outside St Thomas' Hospital, central London, on 20 December
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RCN nurses will go on strike next week

‘No resolution in sight’

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said ministers “have a distance to travel” to avert its second-ever set of strikes on 18 and 19 January.

Joanne Galbraith-Marten, director of employment relations and legal services at the RCN, said: “There is no resolution to our dispute yet in sight.

“Today’s meeting was bitterly disappointing – nothing for the current year and repeating that ‘the budget is already set’ for next year. This intransigence is letting patients down.”

‘No concrete offer’

The GMB union said no cash offer was made and there was nothing “concrete” offered on pay for the next financial year, which starts in April.

Rachel Harrison, GMB national secretary, confirmed strikes by its members who are ambulance workers will go ahead on Wednesday.

“Today’s talks fell well short of anything substantial that could stop this week’s strikes,” she said.

“There was some engagement on pay – but not a concrete offer that could help resolve this dispute and make significant progress on the recruitment and retention crisis.

“The public expects the government to treat these talks seriously – it’s time they got on with it.”

Sara Gorton
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Unison’s Sara Gorton said the talks were more positive than before but nothing has been achieved

Sara Gorten, head of health at Unison, said strikes by ambulance workers who are members will go ahead on both Wednesday and 23 January.

She said it was a step forward to hold discussions with the health secretary and there was a “positive tone”, but there was no “tangible” offer from the government.

“For us to call the strikes off will require a firm commitment the Treasury will fix pay for this year as well as next,” she told Sky News.

Teachers and rail unions meetings

Teachers’ unions also held meetings with the education secretary on Monday, ahead of strike ballot results this week.

Kevin Courtney, joint general secretary of the National Education Union, was slightly more optimistic than the NHS unions but said there was “no sense of concrete progress”.

Rail unions had meetings with the transport secretary too, but they all remained tight-lipped.

Mr Barclay is set to talk to the House of Commons on Monday about the government funding an extra £200m to pay for care home beds so people can be discharged from hospital quicker to free-up beds.

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Former priest Chris Brain found guilty of 17 counts of indecent assault

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Former priest Chris Brain found guilty of 17 counts of indecent assault

A former Church of England priest who ran a rave-inspired “cult” group has been found guilty of indecently assaulting nine women.

Chris Brain, 68, led the Nine O’Clock Service (NOS) in the 1980s and 1990s in Sheffield, with services aimed at 18 to 30-year-olds featuring multimedia, scantily-dressed women, and a live band.

The movement was initially seen by the church as a “ground-breaking” success story and attracted between 500 to 600 people to worship at 9pm on Sundays after NOS moved from St Thomas Church to The Rotunda in Ponds Forge.

Brain, from Wilmslow, Cheshire, denied committing sexual offences against 13 women, including one count of rape and 36 counts of indecent assault between 1981 and 1995.

Today he was found guilty of 17 counts of indecent assault relating to nine women and acquitted of 15 similar charges.

The jury is still deliberating on five outstanding counts, including the rape charge.

Brain led NOS. Pic: BBC/EVRYMAN/BREACH OF FAITH
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Brain led NOS. Pic: BBC/EVRYMAN/BREACH OF FAITH

Inner London Crown Court heard Brain’s ordination was “fast-tracked”, including claims he cheated in his exams, and he wore the same cassock as Robert De Niro in The Mission for the ceremony in 1991.

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But prosecutors said NOS became a “closed and controlled group”, in which Brain “dominated and abused his position” to sexually assault a “staggering number of women from his congregation”.

NOS started at St Thomas Church in Sheffield
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NOS started at St Thomas Church in Sheffield

NOS collapsed in 1994 after women made allegations about Brain, who resigned from his holy orders in 1995 amid “enormous media interest”, the court heard.

Brain was accused of one count of rape and 36 counts of indecent assault between 1981 and 1995. Pic: Elizabeth Cook/PA
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Brain was accused of one count of rape and 36 counts of indecent assault between 1981 and 1995. Pic: Elizabeth Cook/PA

‘Allegations destroyed my life’

Giving evidence, Brain admitted receiving back massages from some NOS members, which he said started as a way to relieve tension headaches, but would “very rarely” lead to sexual activity.

“With some of my closest friends, it would be kissing sometimes, occasionally massaging, stroking. Anything more than that, we would back off,” he said.

He told the jury any touching was done with “100%” consent, and he would’ve “instantly stopped” if anyone had indicated they were uncomfortable.

Brain said the allegations had “basically destroyed my life” and suggested the women had “to exaggerate these things to make it either sexual or controlling” in order “to make a criminal case”.

Brain said he became involved in the dotcom boom in the late 1990s before setting up a business helping smaller firms transition into big companies, which folded once he was charged.

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Police officer describes moment he was shot with crossbow – as attacker jailed

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Police officer describes moment he was shot with crossbow - as attacker jailed

A police officer has described the moment he was shot with a crossbow – as his “extremely dangerous” attacker was sentenced to nine years in jail.

Jason King, 54, fired the weapon at PC Curtis Foster after stabbing a neighbour, a man in his 60s, following an altercation in Downley, Wycombe, on 10 May last year.

PC Foster was struck in the leg by a crossbow bolt while King chased after him and his fellow unarmed officer.

Jason King armed with the crossbow chases the officer. Pic: Thames Valley Police
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Jason King armed with the crossbow chases the officer. Pic: Thames Valley Police

King stabbed his neighbour in the stomach following an altercation. Pic: Thames Valley Police
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King stabbed his neighbour in the stomach following an altercation. Pic: Thames Valley Police

“I knew something had impacted me, but my adrenaline was so high that the pain wasn’t really there,” PC Foster said.

“I first realised I was bleeding quite a lot when I could feel it running down my leg, and then I touched my leg with above my trousers, and my whole hand was red where it’d gone through my trousers already.”

PC Foster and his colleague cleared the area of civilians, while armed officers chased King to a local park.

King also fired the crossbow at a police dog but missed.

He was ordered to drop the weapon, but instead started running with it in hand towards the exit of the park to where PC Foster had escaped.

An armed officer fired one shot at King, striking him in the abdomen, to stop him.

PC Curtis Foster was hit in the leg by a crossbow bolt shot by King. Pic: Thames Valley Police
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PC Curtis Foster was hit in the leg by a crossbow bolt shot by King. Pic: Thames Valley Police

PC Foster.  Pic: Thames Valley Police
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PC Foster. Pic: Thames Valley Police

‘Covered in my blood’

As King was apprehended, paramedics and his fellow officers treated the seriously injured PC Foster.

“There was a lot of blood. My two colleagues that turned up initially on scene were covered in my blood – that’s how much blood I’d lost,” PC Foster said.

“When we got to the hospital, the doctor had a feel of it and said that I was really lucky it didn’t strike an artery. It was a couple of centimetres away from hitting an artery in the back of my leg.”

PC Foster has since made a full recovery, as did the neighbour King stabbed.

King himself was taken to hospital under police supervision with potentially life-changing injuries and was discharged 10 days later, when he was arrested and taken into police custody.

King was apprehended by armed police officers in a nearby park. Pic: Thames Valley Police
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King was apprehended by armed police officers in a nearby park. Pic: Thames Valley Police

On Wednesday, King was jailed at Aylesbury Crown Court for nine years with a further three years on extended licence having previously pleaded guilty to unlawful wounding, having an article with a blade or point, having an offensive weapon, wounding with intent and affray regarding the incident.

“Jason King will now serve a substantial prison sentence as a result of his violent actions on 10 May 2024. The community and residents of Downley are much safer for it,” said senior investigating officer Detective Inspector Nick Hind.

He added: “The courage of our officers in dealing with this incident was second to none.”

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‘Significant threat to police’

DI Hind explained that the impact the incident had in the local community couldn’t be underestimated as King was “an extremely dangerous man, who posed a significant threat to police, other emergency services and members of the community”.

A mandatory referral to the Independent Office for Police Conduct was made after the police shooting of King.

The IOPC, which concluded its investigation in November, commended “everybody involved in this incident”, according to DI Hind.

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Husband’s tribute to mother-of-two killed by falling tree branch in Blackburn

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Husband's tribute to mother-of-two killed by falling tree branch in Blackburn

A mother-of-two who died after being hit by a falling tree branch on the way home from a family outing would do “everything she could for anyone”, her husband has said.

Madia Kauser, 32, was walking with her family in Witton Park in Blackburn, Lancashire, on 11 August when the incident happened.

She is reported to have pushed her young daughter to safety.

A joint investigation is being carried out by Lancashire Police and the Health and Safety Executive and any witnesses are being asked to come forward.

In a tribute issued by police, her husband Wasim Khan described her as the “most beautiful woman in the world” and said he feels “completely lost without her”.

He said: “My wife, a mother-of-two, a daughter, sister and a friend we lost to a tragic event that came on the way home from a family day out in the park.

“She was the most beautiful woman in the world, she did everything for our two children, she did everything she could for anyone and would bring smiles whenever she entered the room.

“She was my comfort, my partner in life and the love of my life.

“We have so many great memories, went through pain together and started a family together.

“Honestly, I feel completely lost without her and I do not know how to put into words how much I miss her face, her character and her presence. My one and only.”

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Detective Inspector Iain Czapowski said: “This is an absolutely tragic incident which has cost a young woman her life and my thoughts are with her loved ones.

“We are working closely with our colleagues from the Health and Safety Executive and with the co-operation of the council to try and establish the full circumstances of what happened, and I would like to speak to anyone with information which could assist with that.

“I am especially keen to speak to anyone who actually saw what happened on that fateful night and I would urge them to contact us.”

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