Connect with us

Published

on

Sir Keir Starmer has criticised Rishi Sunak for failing to address the rising cost of living in his party conference speech after Sky News revealed how families are struggling to afford baby formula.

The Labour leader was asked if he would commit to more support for struggling families after the report, which found that formula milk was being rationed by baby banks to cope with a surge in demand.

Sir Keir said the development was a “terrible story” in the ongoing crisis, which he described as the “single most pressing issue of our time”.

He criticised the prime minister for failing to adequately mention the impact that the cost of living crisis has had on households across the UK.

“I’m pretty astonished that in an hour-long address yesterday, the prime minister didn’t address the cost of living crisis,” Sir Keir told reporters.

“He says that the last 30 years have been a failure and that we need change.

Sunak in Spain for summit after dodging questions on Braverman – politics latest

More on Cost Of Living

“He’s right about that, but he can’t be the change because he’s been the nodding dog nodding through the decisions that he now says were part of that failure.

“The change we need is a change from the Tories, not more Tories.”

Data from First Steps Nutrition shows average prices of baby formula have risen 24% over the past two years.

The issue has become so severe that there have been calls for a price cap to help families who are struggling to feed their children.

In May, Sky News revealed the desperate measures parents are taking to feed their babies due to the rising costs – including stealing formula or watering down milk or substituting condensed milk for formula.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

A baby milk crisis in the UK?

One mother, 23-year-old Kayla from Swindon, told Sky News “it is literally a milk crisis” as she accused the government of “not listening”.

A government spokesperson said: “We recognise the impact that rising prices are having at home, which is why halving inflation is our top priority and why we are providing significant support worth on average £3,300 per household.

“This includes uplifting benefits and delivering direct cash payments, while also delivering a record cash increase to the National Minimum Wage.”

Read more:
Inside the baby banks rationing formula milk to one tin per family each week
Fuel retailers deny profiteering as pump prices shoot up

They said the value of Health Start – a programme that entitles women who are 10 weeks pregnant or have a child under four to help to buy healthy food and milk – had risen from £3.10 to £4.25 per week.

“Eligible children aged under one can each receive £8.50 in total per week, a rise from £6.20 a week,” they added.

In his conference speech, Mr Sunak made reference to the rising cost of living in the context of his desire to halve inflation.

Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper also criticised the prime minister’s conference speech, saying he had “nothing new to say on the big issues facing families, from the cost of living crisis to local health services that have been run into the ground”.

Continue Reading

Politics

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov free to leave France as travel ban lifted: Report

Published

on

By

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov free to leave France as travel ban lifted: Report

French authorities have reportedly lifted Telegram CEO Pavel Durov’s travel ban amid an ongoing investigation into the messaging platform.

Durov had been ordered to remain in France following his arrest in Paris in August last year, facing multiple charges related to his operation of Telegram.

Durov was previously granted temporary exemptions, and French authorities have now fully lifted restrictions on his travel, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.

As part of the latest decision, dated Monday, officials also removed the requirement for Durov to regularly check in at a local police station, the report said, citing a person familiar with the matter.

Investigation still ongoing

The report did not mention any details regarding the French investigation into Telegram, hinting that the case is still active.

According to a statement on preliminary charges by France’s Prosecutor’s Office, Durov was last year accused of facilitating a platform that enables illicit transactions. The prosecutors said the Telegram CEO is facing up to 10 years in prison, in addition to a fine of $550,000.

France, Telegram, Messaging App, Court, Pavel Durov
Pavel Durov met with Kazakhstan’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev at the Digital Bridge 2025 forum in October. Source: Press office of the President of Kazakhstan (Aqorda)

Telegram and Durov have repeatedly denied the accusations, highlighting the messenger’s compliance with industry standards and the laws of the European Union.

While denying the accusations, Durov has consistently criticized the French government, including French President Emmanuel Macron, regarding what Durov has described as the country’s political trajectory around censorship.

“Emmanuel Macron isn’t making the right choices. I’m very disappointed. France is getting weaker and weaker,” Durov said in an interview with French outlet Le Point in June.

Related: Telegram’s Pavel Durov unveils decentralized AI network built on TON

In October, Durov warned of the potential consequences of the EU’s Chat Control proposal, urging the world to fight against the “dystopian” measures proposed by the EU.

“Germany is persecuting anyone who dares to criticize officials on the Internet. The UK is imprisoning thousands for their tweets. France is criminally investigating tech leaders who defend freedom and privacy,” Durov wrote in an X post on Oct. 9.