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The health secretary has insisted the government “will not criminalise” homeless people, after a large backlash to its proposals for a new law.

Ministers are seeking to replace the 200-year-old Vagrancy Act from 1824 – which makes rough sleeping illegal – with its new Criminal Justice Bill, which the government says will instead target “nuisance begging”.

But the definition of a “nuisance” has led to uproar from both campaigners and MPs – including as many as 40 Tories, who are threatening to rebel over the plan – as it includes people sleeping in a doorway, those creating “excessive smell”, or someone “looking like they are intending to sleep on the streets”.

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A total of 37 housing and homelessness charities have today written to Home Secretary James Cleverly, warning the legislation “risks stigmatising people forced to sleep on the streets and pushing them away from help”, as well as seeing homeless women “penalised for seeking safety in well-lit doorways”.

And with the proposals including fines of up to £2,500, along with prison terms, it could see homeless people criminalised.

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Asked by Kay Burley on Sky News about the controversial definitions, Health Secretary Victoria Atkins claimed the government “wants to help the most vulnerable in society”, and was putting £2.4bn into eradicating rough sleeping.

She added: “We have been very, very clear. What we’re trying to target are those criminal gangs that make a living out of intimidating people.

“We want to stop some of the aggressive begging that can happen around cash points, for example.

“But we do not and will not criminalise people who don’t have a home. Absolutely not. That is not what this bill is about.”

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Asked if the wording of the definitions would be changed, Ms Atkins did not answer directly.

Instead, she said: “We are absolutely not criminalising people who… sleep on the streets because they do not have a home.

“What we want to do is support them into supportive accommodation because again, many people who are living rough have complex needs… they need mental health support.

“They may have been victims of horrendous adverse childhood experiences in their time.

“There are real vulnerabilities here that we want to support. And this is not about criminalising people who are homeless.”

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But Matt Downie, chief executive of Crisis – one of the charities that signed the letter to the home secretary – issued a warning to ministers seeking to go forward with the bill.

“The government cites a moral imperative to end rough sleeping, yet these new measures will make it more difficult to do so,” he said.

“They will punish people for having nowhere else to go and push them further away from support.

“If we focus on the solutions that work – building safe and stable social housing and investing in specialist support that helps people keep their home – we can end rough sleeping.

“But the first and easiest thing the home secretary can do is listen to the concerns of these experienced organisations and remove these cruel and counterproductive measures.”

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The most recent government study into homelessness found 3,898 people sleeping rough on one night across England – an increase of 27% on the previous year.

It is also estimated that more than 242,000 households are experiencing some form of homelessness in England, including sofa surfing, being stuck in temporary accommodation and rough sleeping.

Research from Crisis also showed nine in 10 people sleeping rough had been victims of violence or abuse.

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Czech justice minister resigns over $45M Bitcoin gift from convict

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Czech justice minister resigns over M Bitcoin gift from convict

Czech justice minister resigns over M Bitcoin gift from convict

Czech Justice Minister Pavel Blazek resigned following backlash over his ministry’s sale of Bitcoin donated by a convicted criminal.

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France charges 25 over crypto kidnapping spree in Paris

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France charges 25 over crypto kidnapping spree in Paris

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French prosecutors charged 25 people over a wave of crypto-related kidnappings. However, the masterminds remain at large.

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Farage has ‘grabbed the mic’ to dominate media agenda, says Harman

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Farage has 'grabbed the mic' to dominate media agenda, says Harman

Nigel Farage has successfully exploited the Commons recess to “grab the mic” and “dominate” the agenda, Harriet Harman has said.

Speaking on Sky News’ Electoral Dysfunction podcast, the Labour peer said that the Reform UK leader has been able to “get his voice heard” while government was not in “full swing”.

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Mr Farage used a speech this week to set himself, rather than Kemi Badenoch’s Tories, up as the main opposition to Sir Keir Starmer at the next election.

The prime minister responded on Thursday with a speech attacking the Clacton MP.

Baroness Harman said: “It’s slightly different between opposition and government because in government, the ministers have to be there the whole time.

“They’ve got to be putting legislation through and they kind of hold the mic.

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“They can dominate the news media with the announcements they’re making and with the bills they’re introducing, and it’s quite hard for the opposition to get a hearing whilst the government is in full swing.

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“What we used to do when we were in opposition before 1997 is that as soon as there was a bank holiday and the House was not sitting, as soon as the half-term or the summer recess, we would be on an absolute war footing and dominate the airwaves because that was our opportunity.

“And I think that’s a bit of what Farage has done this week,” Harman added.

“Basically, Farage can dominate the media agenda.”

She went on: “He’s kind of stepped forward, and he’s using this moment of the House not sitting in order to actually get his voice heard.

“It’s sensible for the opposition to take the opportunity of when the House is not sitting to kind of grab the mic and that is what Nigel Farage has done.”

But Baroness Harman said it “doesn’t seem to be what Kemi Badenoch’s doing”.

She explained that the embattled leader “doesn’t seem to be grabbing the mic like Nigel Farage has” during recess, and added that “there’s greater opportunity for the opposition”.

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