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Locked out and not allowed back in.

That was the rather extraordinary position Nigel Farage and some conservative politicians found themselves in today at a right-wing conference in Brussels.

The police’s action provoked yet again arguments around free speech and extremism – but ultimately ended up creating major news too.

Politics latest: No 10 criticises bid to shut down conference

It wasn’t meant to be that way.

The National Conservativism Conference is frankly a fringe event. Yes, it started five years ago, and previous guests have included Michael Gove and Jacob Rees-Mogg.

This year Mr Farage and Suella Braverman turned up. These are undoubtedly big voices on the right, but they weren’t expected to create much news.

In fact, most of the limited coverage was likely to focus on the former home secretary’s rather punchy attack on her old boss the prime minister and setting out a case for leaving the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

Instead, the repeated actions from several district mayors in Brussels to ensure the event didn’t have a venue took centre stage.

Explaining why he had brought in the police – the mayor Emir Kir said some of the attendees hold anti-gay and anti-abortion views.

And writing on X he claimed: “The far right is not welcome.”

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Farage anger at conference closure

This unsurprisingly provoked an angry response from those there, including Mr Farage, who told Sky News: “Have you seen the people in the room? Does this look like a bunch of yobs to you? Far, far from it.

“These are a lot of very respectable, very eminent people. I mean, we’ve got bishops here.

“We’ve got a prime minister of a country here. We’ve got a European royal family here.

“I mean, these are very respectable people. There’s also no protest outside of any significance at all. It’s about closing down an ideology.”

Irrespective of who is right and who is wrong, this latest skirmish in the constant battles around free speech was seized upon by the conference as the latest example of cancel culture.

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Cancel culture in real time as one claimed.

And the rather blunt use of the police, far from silencing those in attendance, merely seemed to amplify their arguments.

This makes it difficult to conclude that if you wanted people not to hear your views about cancel culture, the actions of the Brussels authorities only helped in that cause.

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If a 19b-4 spot Ether ETF filing be approved, analysts anticipate the SEC won’t immediately sign off on the S-1, which is required for the products to launch.

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Rishi Sunak apologises to infected blood scandal victims and says it is ‘day of shame for British state’

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Rishi Sunak apologises to infected blood scandal victims and says it is 'day of shame for British state'

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has offered a “wholehearted and unequivocal” apology to the victims of the infected blood scandal, saying it was a “day of shame for the British state”.

Mr Sunak said the findings of the Infected Blood Inquiry’s final report should “shake our nation to its core”, as he promised to pay “comprehensive compensation to those infected and those affected”, adding: “Whatever it costs to deliver this scheme, we will pay it.”

The report from the inquiry’s chair Sir Brian Langstaff blamed “successive governments, the NHS, and blood services” for failures that led to 30,000 people being “knowingly” infected with either HIV or Hepatitis C through blood products. Around 3,000 people have now died.

The prime minister said for any government apology to be “meaningful”, it had to be “accompanied by action”.

Politics live: Thatcher’s health secretary ‘disparaging’ to infected blood victims

Speaking in the Commons, Mr Sunak called it a “calamity”, saying the report showed a “decades-long moral failure at the heart of our national life”, as he condemned the actions of the NHS, civil service and ministers – “institutions in which we place our trust failed in the most harrowing and devastating way”.

The prime minister said they “failed this country”, adding: “Time and again, people in positions of power and trust had the chance to stop the transmission of those infections. Time and again, they failed to do so.

“I want to make a whole-hearted and unequivocal apology for this terrible injustice.”

Victims and campaigners outside Central Hall in Westminster.
Pic; PA
Image:
Victims and campaigners outside Central Hall in Westminster.
Pic: PA

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Pointing to key findings in the report – from the destruction of documents through to failures over screening – Mr Sunak said there had been “layer upon layer of hurt endured across decades”.

He also apologised for the “institutional refusal to face up to these failings and worse, to deny and even attempt to cover them up”, adding: “This is an apology from the state to every single person impacted by this scandal.

“It did not have to be this way. It should never have been this way. And on behalf of this and every government stretching back to the 1970s, I am truly sorry.”

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer also apologised for his party’s part in the scandal, telling the Commons: “I want to acknowledge to every single person who has suffered that in addition to all of the other failings, politics itself failed you.

“That failure applies to all parties, including my own. There is only one word, sorry.”

Read more:
100 faces of the infected blood scandal
Analysis: Report makes for difficult reading – but vindicates victims
The day as it happens as ‘chilling’ cover-up laid bare

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Infected blood victims ‘betrayed’ by NHS

In his report, released earlier on Monday, Sir Brian issued 12 recommendations – including an immediate compensation scheme and ensuring anyone who received a blood transfusion before 1996 was urgently tested for Hepatitis C.

He also called for compensation – something Mr Sunak said would come and would be outlined in the Commons on Tuesday.

But speaking to Sky News’ Sarah-Jane Mee, he warned the “disaster” of the scandal still wasn’t over, saying: “More than 3,000 have died, and deaths keep on happening week after week.

“I’d like people to take away the fact that this is not just something which happened. It is happening.”

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Inquiry chair Sir Brian Langstaff spoke to Sky’s Sarah-Jane Mee.

Sir Brian said what had happened to the victims was “no accident”, adding: People put their trust in the doctors and the government to keep them safe. That trust was betrayed.

“And then the government compounded the agony by repeatedly saying that no wrong had been done.”

But he hoped the report would ensure “these mistakes are not repeated”.

He told Sky News: “We don’t want another 30,000 people to go into hospital and come out with infections which were avoidable, which are life-shattering, which were no accident.

“And we don’t want the government to end up being defensive about them – but instead to be candid [and] forthcoming in the ways which I’ve just suggested.”

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