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The government has confirmed retailers selling knives online will require ID to purchase and also on delivery.

After it emerged Southport killer Axel Rudakubana bought the knife he used to kill three young girls from Amazon when he was just 17 years old, the government has brought forward planned changes to online knife sales.

A person buying a knife online will now have to submit a copy of their photo ID, such as a driver’s licence or passport, as well as proof of address, such as a utility bill.

They will then have to show ID again when the package is delivered.

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The Home Office said online retailers could ask for buyers to submit a current photo or video of themselves alongside their ID. However, this will not be legally required.

Delivery drivers will only be allowed to deliver a knife to the same person who purchased it.

It will also be illegal for delivery drivers to leave a package containing a bladed weapon on a doorstep when nobody is in to receive it.

Currently, the law requires sellers to operate an age verification system that is likely to prevent a person under 18 from buying a knife – but it does not stipulate the details of how those systems should be implemented.

The new requirements are set to be included in the Crime and Policing Bill, expected to be introduced to parliament by spring.

Axel Rudakubana. Pic: Merseyside police
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Axel Rudakubana used encryption software to get around Amazon’s age checks. Pic: Merseyside police

Following Rudakubana’s unexpected guilty plea this week, Amazon said it had launched an investigation.

The child murderer circumvented Amazon’s current checks, which include a name, address and birthdate being checked by credit checker Experian, by using encryption software to buy two chef’s knives with 20cm blades.

It is understood one of Rudakubana’s parents took in the parcel – addressed to him – with the Amazon delivery driver confirming they were over 25.

The world’s largest online retailer said it takes its “responsibility around the sale of all age-restricted items – including bladed products – extremely seriously”.

Currently, when purchasing a knife from Amazon the buyer has to enter their date of birth.

They are told: “Valid photographic ID with a date of birth may also be required upon delivery.

“The driver will input your year of birth into their device and may then require an ID check to complete the age verification process.”

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Alice da Silva Aguiar, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Bebe King were murdered in an attack at a Taylor Swift-themed class.
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Alice da Silva Aguiar, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Bebe King were murdered in an attack at a Taylor Swift-themed class.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “It’s a total disgrace how easy it still is for children to get dangerous weapons online.

“More than two years after Ronan Kanda was killed with a ninja sword bought by a teenager online, too many retailers still don’t have proper checks in place.

“It’s too easy to put in false birth dates, parcels are too often being dropped off at a doorstop with no questions asked.

“We cannot go on like this. We need much stronger checks – before you buy, before it’s delivered.

“The measures I am setting out today will be crucial in addressing this problem and are part of our Plan for Change and mission to make streets safer.”

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Heathrow expansion ‘won’t go ahead’ if it doesn’t meet climate targets, Ed Miliband says

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Heathrow expansion 'won't go ahead' if it doesn't meet climate targets, Ed Miliband says

Ed Miliband has said the expansion of Heathrow and other airports “won’t go ahead” if they don’t meet the UK’s emissions targets – putting him on a potential collision course with Rachel Reeves.

The chancellor has not commented directly on whether she would support a third runway at Heathrow, but she has indicated she would be prepared to overrule environmental objections to allow the project to go ahead.

Ms Reeves has been emphasising that growth is the UK’s number one priority and is expected to use a speech on Wednesday to support the expansion, as well as similar plans for Gatwick and Luton.

But appearing in front of the Commons Environmental Audit Committee, Mr Miliband – the cabinet minister responsible for pushing forward the government’s net zero agenda – struck a different tone to the chancellor.

He told MPs that any aviation expansion must take place within the UK’s carbon budgets, including the 2050 target to reduce emissions by 100% compared with 1990 levels.

Independent advisers on the government’s Climate Change Committee (CC) have called for no net airport expansion without a proper national plan to curb emissions from the aviation sector and manage passenger capacity.

The CCC is publishing its next carbon budget – the legal limit for UK net emissions of greenhouse gases from 2038 to 2042 – on 26 February.

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The energy secretary did not say whether a potential third runway could be approved before that.

Mr Miliband, who has been a vocal opponent of Heathrow expansion in the past, told MPs: “I just want to sort of provide this element of reassurance to you, which is 100% any aviation expansion must be justified within carbon budgets, and if it can’t be justified, it won’t go ahead.”

His comments put him at odds with Ms Reeves, who told Sky News at the World Economic Forum in Davos, that she would back infrastructure projects even where they are unpopular.

Asked directly if she would now put the runway, along with expansion at Gatwick and Luton ahead of the UK’s net zero commitments, Ms Reeves said: “I’m not going to comment on speculation, but what I would say is when the last government faced difficult decisions about whether to support infrastructure investment, the answer always seemed to be no.

“We can’t carry on like that, because if we do, we will miss out on crucial investment here into Britain. You’ve already seen a number of decisions, including on Stansted and City Airport, on energy projects, on transport infrastructure, because we are determined to grow the economy.”

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Why should countries invest in UK?

On Monday evening Ms Reeves addressed a meeting of the Labour Parliamentary Party (PLP) to push the case for growth – but did not mention Heathrow specifically.

She told Labour MPs her speech on Wednesday would be about “economic growth built on the platform of stability”, adding there were “no easy routes out”.

She said: “There are always reasons for government to say no.

“Over the past six months as chancellor, my experience is that government has become used to saying no. That must change. We must start saying yes.”

A spokesman for the chancellor said there had been “overwhelming support” for her as she addressed the PLP and that Ruth Cadbury, the chair of the Transport Select Committee, was the only dissenting voice.

They said Ms Reeves declined to comment on speculation about an announcement regarding the runway.

He said: “There was overwhelming support for what Rachel had to say, overwhelming support for the need to build infrastructure, overwhelming support for the government’s agenda to reform the planning system.”

Last week Mr Miliband ruled out resigning from the government if it gives the third runway the go-ahead.

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Heathrow has not yet submitted a full application for a third runway – something it has been pushing for several years.

Despite construction receiving parliamentary approval in 2018, the plans have been delayed by legal challenges and the coronavirus pandemic.

One Labour MP in London told Sky News they would only support Heathrow expansion if it met the tests Labour outlined in its manifesto around air quality, noise pollution, climate change obligations and countrywide benefits.

“Heathrow have to put their money where their mouth is and present the evidence,” they said.

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Former Premier League referee David Coote apologises over ‘cocaine video’ and comes out as gay

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Former Premier League referee David Coote apologises over 'cocaine video' and comes out as gay

David Coote has revealed he turned to drugs because he feared coming out as gay while working as a Premier League referee in his first interview since being sacked.

The 42-year-old was fired in December by the Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL) after a video emerged of him appearing to make derogatory remarks about Liverpool and their former manager Jurgen Klopp.

In an interview with The Sun, he talked about the challenges of his work schedule, the abuse he received as a referee and his “struggles dealing with hiding” his sexuality.

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Referee sacked over gross misconduct

“I don’t recognise myself in the cocaine video,” he said. “I can’t resonate with how I felt then, but that was me. I was struggling with the schedule and there was no opportunity to stop. And so I found myself in that position – escaping.”

He said: “I felt a deep sense of shame during my teenage years in particular.

“I didn’t come out to my parents until I was 21. I didn’t come out to my friends until I was 25.

“My sexuality isn’t the only reason that led me to be in that position. But I’m not telling an authentic story if I don’t say that I’m gay, and that I’ve had real struggles dealing with hiding that.

“I hid my emotions as a young ref and I hid my sexuality as well – a good quality as a referee but a terrible quality as a human being.

“And that’s led me to a whole course of behaviours.”

In a statement to Sky News, Coote said: “This has been one of the most difficult periods of my life. I take full responsibility for my actions, which fell way below what was expected of me.

“I am truly sorry for any offence caused by my actions and for the negative spotlight it put on the game that I love.

“I hope people will understand that they were private moments taken during very low times in my life. They do not reflect who I am today or what I think.

“My focus now is on continuing to prioritise my mental health and wellbeing. I hope that my experiences, both on and off the field, can be utilised in football at some point in the future.”

Coote went on to thank those who have supported him.

In November, the Football Association launched a separate investigation into allegations Coote discussed giving a yellow card ahead of a Leeds match in 2019. Coote refutes the allegations.

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Fraud suspect, 61, ‘used wigs and disguises’ to take citizenship tests for others, Home Office says

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Fraud suspect, 61, 'used wigs and disguises' to take citizenship tests for others, Home Office says

A woman in her 60s has been arrested for allegedly using an “array of wigs” and other disguises to pose as at least 14 other people to help them pass UK citizenship tests.

The 61-year-old, who has not been named, helped men and women “gain an unfair advantage” in the Life in the UK Test, the Home Office said.

She is accused of wearing various wigs and disguises to pass herself off as the true applicants, in an attempt to dishonestly obtain them leave to remain in the UK.

Pic: Home Office/PA
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Pic: Home Office/PA

Anyone seeking to stay in the country indefinitely or naturalisation as a British citizen must take the test.

She was arrested at an address in Enfield, north London on Monday where “several false documents and an array of wigs alleged to have been used in the fraudulent scheme” were seized.

It is alleged that between June 2022 and August the following year, the woman went to multiple UK test centres, disguising herself and doctoring ID documents to evade detection.

Fraudsters completing the test for others could “lead to people wrongly being granted the right to remain in the country without the proper due diligence”, the Home Office said.

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Pic: Home Office/PA
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Pic: Home Office/PA

Pic: Home Office/PA
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Pic: Home Office/PA

Immigration enforcement criminal and financial investigation inspector Phillip Parr said a “complex investigation” had “put a stop to this dangerous scheme”.

“This individual is believed to have orchestrated a pre-meditated plan to avoid detection, meticulously selecting disguises and test centre locations across the country to evade the authorities.

“As with many criminals who commit this type of crime, we believe her motive was financial gain,” he said.

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The Home Office said the woman remains in custody.

The Life in the UK Test consists of 24 questions aimed at “proving the applicant has sufficient knowledge of British values, history, and society”, the Home Office said.

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