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Former chief whip Wendy Morton has referred an allegation that Sir Gavin Williamson sent “abusive” messages to her for an independent investigation by a parliamentary watchdog.

The Cabinet Office minister was already facing an internal Conservative Party investigation over the series of threatening messages reportedly send to Ms Morton complaining he had been excluded from the Queen’s funeral.

But now the Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme will also look at the allegations.

Sir Gavin, a backbencher at the time the messages were allegedly sent, accused Ms Morton of using the death of the monarch to “punish” senior MPs who were out of favour with Liz Truss’s government.

Labour look to force government to publish Braverman security advice – Politics latest

The messages, which were originally obtained by The Sunday Times, concluded with Sir Gavin saying: “Well let’s see how many more times you **** us all over. There is a price for everything.”

Former Conservative Party chairman Jake Berry has claimed he told Prime Minister Rishi Sunak that Ms Morton had submitted a formal complaint about Sir Gavin’s conduct the day before he entered Number 10.

More on Conservatives

On Sunday, Cabinet Office minister Oliver Dowden told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme that Mr Sunak knew there was a “difficult relationship” between Sir Gavin and Ms Morton, but “wasn’t aware” of “specific allegations”.

Yesterday, the PM told broadcasters it is “right” for an independent complaints investigation to take place into accusations of bullying made again Sir Gavin “before making any decisions about the future”.

The PM’s official spokesman added that Mr Sunak has full confidence in him.

Responding to Ms Morton having referred her complaint against Sir Gavin to Parliament’s Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme, Chair of the Labour Party, Anneliese Dodds, said: “The lack of faith in the Conservative Party complaints process shows how rotten the culture at the heart of this party goes – and the buck stops with Rishi Sunak.

“He was warned about Gavin Williamson’s behaviour and appointed him anyway. He has done grubby deal after grubby deal to become prime minister and now must take responsibility and stop putting party management before national interest.”

The Guardian has reported that Sir Gavin also allegedly told a senior civil servant to “slit your throat” while he was defence secretary.

The latest accusation comes as Mr Sunak faces mounting pressure over Sir Gavin’s position.

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Gavin Williamson and spider ‘had aura’

An ex-official from the Ministry of Defence told the Guardian that Sir Gavin also told them to “jump out of the window”, in what they felt was a sustained campaign of bullying.

According to the newspaper, the civil servant, who later left government, said Sir Gavin “deliberately demeaned and intimidated” them on a regular basis.

But in a statement, Sir Gavin said: “I strongly reject this allegation and have enjoyed good working relationships with the many brilliant officials I have worked with across government.

“No specific allegations have ever been brought to my attention.”

Read more: Gavin Williamson ‘has been bullying for most of his career’, claim senior Tory MPs

Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride told Sky News earlier today that it would be “utterly, utterly unacceptable” if Sir Gavin made the alleged remarks.

“If that is the case, that is utterly, utterly unacceptable, but at the moment it is in the realm of media speculation,” he said.

Mr Stride said he served in the Whips’ Office under Sir Gavin, and saw him as someone with “this sort of aura or mystique around him”.

“There was always this great aura of… do you remember Cronus, the spider, the tarantula etc? And the reality with Cronus is he was much touted but he never actually was released to bite anybody,” he told Kay Burley.

“So that was how I always saw Gavin – as somebody who had this sort of aura or mystique around him, but the reality was he just generally got on with his job.”

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Williamson feeling the heat over allegations

Mr Stride said he is “not going to speculate on anybody’s future”, but when probed on whether he believes Sir Gavin will still be a Cabinet Office minister by Christmas, added: “I suspect the answer to that is yes.”

While the senior civil servant who made the allegations is said to have reported the incidents informally to the MoD’s head of human resources, they decided against making a formal complaint.

However, they said a senior military aide working in the department later apologised to them for not calling out his behaviour.

A Cabinet Office spokesman said: “The Cabinet Office has not received notice of any formal complaints about Gavin Williamson’s behaviour from his time at the Ministry of Defence or any other department.”

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Speaking to reporters as he arrived at a cabinet meeting in Downing Street on Tuesday morning, Business Secretary Grant Shapps said Sir Gavin had apologised for sending abusive messages to a colleague.

Asked if Sir Gavin was a bully, Mr Shapps said: “Not in my experience. Clearly he shouldn’t have sent those (messages), he’s recognised that and he’s apologised about it.”

Speaking about the alleged “slit your throat” comments, he added: “I don’t think there was a formal complaint, so let’s wait and see what’s said about that.”

Sir Gavin served as defence secretary from November 2017 until May 2019, but was fired by then-PM Theresa May over a row around a leak from government.

He was hired back by Boris Johnson as education secretary two months later, but was again ousted in September 2021 after much criticism of his handling of the brief during the COVID pandemic.

Mr Sunak brought him back into government two weeks ago to serve as a Cabinet Office minister who also attends cabinet.

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Donald Trump urges Gaza peace talks ‘move fast’ or ‘massive bloodshed will follow’

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Donald Trump urges Gaza peace talks 'move fast' or 'massive bloodshed will follow'

Donald Trump has raised the pressure ahead of today’s peace talks, urging negotiators to “move fast” as they attempt to end the fighting in Gaza and secure the release of hostages.

The US president posted on Truth Social: “TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE OR, MASSIVE BLOODSHED WILL FOLLOW – SOMETHING THAT NOBODY WANTS TO SEE!”

Egypt has agreed to host the indirect negotiations in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. Delegations are being led by Israel’s strategic affairs minister Ron Dermer and Hamas’s exiled Gaza chief, Khalil Al-Hayya. US envoy Steve Witkoff is also expected to join.

Tuesday marks two years since the Hamas attack that sparked the war.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he hopes to announce the release of hostages being held in Gaza “in the coming days” and Hamas announced on Friday it would return all remaining hostages, dead and alive.

Speaking to Sky’s US partner network NBC, Donald Trump’s secretary of state Marco Rubio said Hamas had also agreed “in principle” to what happens after the war in Gaza is over, but he warned the second phase of the deal, which concerns Hamas’s disarmament and demobilisation, was “not going to be easy”.

Hamas has previously rejected calls for its disarmament.

“We’ll know very quickly whether Hamas is serious or not by how these technical talks go in terms of the logistics,” Mr Rubio added.

On Sunday, Mr Trump posted that there had been “very positive discussions with Hamas… to release the Hostages, end the War in Gaza but, more importantly, finally have long sought PEACE in the Middle East”.

Rising smoke after Israeli bombardment of Gaza on Sunday. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Rising smoke after Israeli bombardment of Gaza on Sunday. Pic: Reuters

Trump wants fast progress

“I am told that the first phase should be completed this week, and I am asking everyone to MOVE FAST,” he added.

The first phase deals with the release of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Hamas giving up the remaining 48 hostages, of which Israel believes 20 are still alive.

Progress in the discussions will largely depend on whether the militant group agrees to Washington’s withdrawal map, a Palestinian official close to the talks told Reuters.

Mr Trump released a map showing the areas of Gaza the Israeli Defence Forces would need to withdraw its troops from, which he said had been agreed to already by Israel.

Map showing the 'yellow line' in Gaza to which IDF troops would need to pull back to
Image:
Map showing the ‘yellow line’ in Gaza to which IDF troops would need to pull back to

Currently, the Israeli military has covered around 80% of the enclave in what it calls a “dangerous combat zone”.

If the peace plan follows the boundaries shown on the map, Israel’s initial withdrawal would leave Gaza about 55% occupied, while the second withdrawal would leave it about 40% occupied.

After the final withdrawal phase, which would create a “security buffer zone”, about 15% of Gaza would be occupied by the Israeli military.

It is this part – as well as the peace plan proposal for an international group to manage Gaza – “that is going to be a little tougher to work through,” Mr Rubio added.

Calls for ceasefire

Meanwhile, international support for an immediate ceasefire is growing.

On Friday, Mr Trump told Israel to “stop bombing Gaza”, and on Sunday Pope Leo renewed calls for a permanent ceasefire in the nearly two-year conflict.

This was followed by the foreign ministers of eight Muslim-majority countries issuing a joint statement urging steps toward a possible end to fighting.

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Relative of hostage recalls ‘horrific’ wait for reunion

In backing Hamas’s willingness to hand over the running of Gaza to a transitional committee, the ministers called for an “immediate launch of negotiations to agree on mechanisms to implement the proposal”.

They also underlined their commitment to the return of the Palestinian Authority to Gaza, unifying Gaza and the West Bank and reaching an agreement on security leading to a “full Israeli withdrawal” from Gaza.

Read more:
Why Trump accepted the Hamas peace plan response
If Hamas and Israel agree a deal, it will be Trump’s success

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Wrecked, uninhabitable and destroyed: Sky News reports from inside Gaza City

Israeli government spokeswoman Shosh Bedrosian told journalists Mr Netanyahu is in “regular contact” with Mr Trump and that the prime minister has stressed talks in Egypt “will be confined to a few days maximum, with no tolerance for manoeuvres that will delay talks by Hamas”.

Residents and local hospitals said strikes continued across the Gaza Strip over the weekend.

At least eight people were killed on Sunday in multiple strikes in Gaza City, according to the Al Shifa hospital.

Four people were also killed in a shooting near an aid distribution site in the southern city of Rafah, according to Nasser hospital.

The Israeli military said it was not involved in the shooting and did not immediately comment on the strikes.

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Hostage release could happen ‘in coming days’

When will hostages be freed?

A lawyer representing the families of Israeli hostages held in Gaza has told Sky News now feels “as good a chance as any” to finally get the remaining captives out.

Adam Wagner said hostage families were facing “a huge mix of emotions” as they awaited the latest developments in Mr Trump’s 20-point peace plan.

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“We’ve seen hopes raised and the talks fail a number of times, but this seems as good a chance as any to get those 48 remaining hostages out,” he said.

Mr Wagner also agreed that the “big question” for the talks was whether Hamas would agree to full disarmament and complete removal from the administration of Gaza.

Israel began attacking Gaza after a Hamas-led attack on 7 October 2023 in which around 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage.

Israel’s campaign has killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not differentiate between civilians or combatants.

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Crying babies dimmed by hunger fill this Afghanistan hospital – where parents fear each day might be the last

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Crying babies dimmed by hunger fill this Afghanistan hospital - where parents fear each day might be the last

You can see, feel, hear the distress in Badakhshan’s Provincial Hospital in Afghanistan.

Warning: This article contains content some readers may find distressing.

The halls are heavy with the sound of crying babies. The rooms, full of malnourished children, many two to a bed. Their frail, fragile bodies expose their wasting bones, with some so weak they’re dependent on oxygen tanks to breathe.

Afghanistan is facing an unprecedented crisis of hunger. More than 4.7 million women and children require urgent treatment for malnutrition, according to the UN. And 90% of children under the age of five are in food poverty.

The hospital team in Badakhshan, in the northeast of the country, are doing all they can to keep the children alive. But increasing numbers are dying.

In the last three months alone, roughly one baby died every three days here. Fifty-three have passed away so far this year – that’s a 50% increase on the same time last year.

Faisal is 12 months old. He’s severely malnourished and has acute diarrhoea too. But like many on this ward, he has other serious complications.

Among these is hydrocephalus, a condition that causes water to gather around his brain. His poor mother is so exhausted, she’s lying on the floor by his bed.

Baby Faisal is only 12 months old
Image:
Baby Faisal is only 12 months old

As she sits down to speak with us, she reveals she has already lost three children to malnutrition.

“I am worried about him and what might come next,” she tells me.

“I’ve already lost three of my children. My first daughter died at eight years old. Two more of my children passed away when they were two-and-a-half years old.”

The ward is full of lost-looking eyes, dimmed by hunger.

Baby Asma is malnourished
Image:
Baby Asma is malnourished

A horrifying thing to watch

Asma is 13 months old. But she weighs little over nine pounds (4kg) – less than half of what she should.

Doctors fear she might not survive the night. But she’s put on oxygen and by the morning, she thankfully starts to improve.

“I’m really afraid,” her mother Khadijah says as her eyes fill.

“Of course I’m afraid, I’ve cried so much. I’m so thankful to the doctors, they’ve kept my baby alive. I’m so grateful to them,” she says.

Asma's mother says she is really afraid for her child
Image:
Asma’s mother says she is really afraid for her child

But it’s touch and go for her daughter, and there are long periods when her chest fails to rise and fall.

It’s a horrifying thing to watch – imagine as a parent sitting day and night, wondering whether the next breath might be her last.

There is a stream of desperate cases coming through the doors here.

Masouda's family travelled 13 hours to get her help
Image:
Masouda’s family travelled 13 hours to get her help

Today, there are 20 babies to just 12 beds. Sometimes, it is even more crowded.

There are suddenly two new arrivals. One of them, little Masouda. Her family travelled 13 hours to get here – spending what little they had left.

She, too, has to be quickly placed on oxygen and she’s painfully thin. Doctors tell us they fear she won’t make it.

The team are doing an incredible job during a hugely demanding time. But they need more staff, more medicine, more equipment.

Hospitals and health clinics across Afghanistan have suffered major funding cuts. The US, which was Afghanistan’s biggest aid donor, this year pulled almost all of its funding to the country. And the Taliban’s restrictions on women and girls have proved a major barrier for many international donors.

Women gather in Badakhshan Provincial Hospital in Afghanistan
Image:
Women gather in Badakhshan Provincial Hospital in Afghanistan

It’s having a direct impact on children’s chances of survival.

Daniel Timme, chief of communication at UNICEF, said: “The nutrition situation for children in Afghanistan is very serious and the numbers speak for themselves. Over 3.5 million children under five are acutely malnourished, including 1.4 million suffering life-threatening forms of wasting.

“It must be clear to everyone: when funding drops as we are seeing it now in a context with such high levels of malnutrition, preventable child deaths rise.”

A vital lifeline

In rural areas, poverty is as extreme as the landscape, and help for families with malnourished children is getting harder to reach.

Layaba Health Clinic is a vital lifeline.

The waiting room is full of mothers looking for medical assistance for their babies. Some women here tell us the Taliban’s restrictions on them working and earning money have also played a part, making it harder for them to feed their families.

“They are to blame,” one woman says with surprising candor.

“Every girl had her own dreams. I wanted to be a doctor. I took my responsibility for my children seriously. And I wanted to support my husband too.”

A baby looks up at her mother at Badakhshan Provincial Hospital
Image:
A baby looks up at her mother at Badakhshan Provincial Hospital

Another woman tells us she earned more than her husband as a teacher, but now finds herself unable to contribute financially.

The Taliban’s response

In an exclusive interview with Sky News, the Taliban’s spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said the malnutrition crisis was the product of decades of conflict.

“We have had to start from zero to rebuild and restore our national resources. The Islamic Emirate is making every possible effort to address these challenges.”

Mr Mujahid said his government had a five-year plan to “tackle malnutrition, unemployment, and other pressing social issues”.

In response to the complaints of the women we spoke to, he said that men in the “vast majority” of Afghan families were the breadwinners and claimed the Islamic Emirate had made “significant efforts to promote vocational opportunities for women”.

Community health worker Harira
Image:
Community health worker Harira

But under the Taliban, women can no longer train to be doctors, nurses and midwives. And in remote villages, community workers like Harira are often the only lifeline – a project part-funded by UNICEF.

She goes door-to-door carrying baby scales, carrying out check-ups, trying to teach families about what to feed their children and when needed, get them to clinics and hospitals for treatment.

It saved Ramzia’s son’s life.

She had measles when she was pregnant and her son Faisal was very underweight.

“His legs and hands were as small as my fingers. Now he’s much better,” Harira says – beaming as she delights in the weight he has now put on.

“I was afraid I’d lose him,” Ramzia says. “He was so weak. But Harira came here and taught me how to feed him and give him milk when he needed it.”

Read more:
Families fear months ahead after earthquake wiped out entire villages
Taliban internet blackout has created an extreme scenario

Reeling from death, fighting for life

Keeping children alive in this climate is a battle.

Nasrullah and Jamilah, who live on the outskirts of Fayzabad, are holding their two-month-old twins.

Nasrullah and Jamilah at the grave of their daughter, Shukriya
Image:
Nasrullah and Jamilah at the grave of their daughter, Shukriya

But they’re also in the throes of grief – on a journey to the grave of the baby they lost only a month ago. Her name was Shukriya. She was 18 months old.

“She was our child, we loved her. I will never forget her, so long as I’m alive. We really tried, we went to the doctors for check-ups, for ultrasounds, for blood work – we tried our very best. But none of it could save her.”

Both parents say they feared their twins could also face the same fate. Shukriya’s grave is covered with one of her babygrows. It is haunting to see. And there are other little graves next to hers.

Deaths aren’t documented in a lot of these communities. But locals tell us more and more children are dying because of malnutrition. A silent, searing loss that is spreading.

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Hostage release talks imminent to kickstart Gaza peace deal

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Hostage release talks imminent to kickstart Gaza peace deal

Talks aimed at starting the process of releasing Israeli hostages look set to begin on Monday.

Egypt has agreed to host delegations from Israel and Hamas tomorrow. An Israeli delegation led by Strategic
Affairs Minister Ron Dermer will attend the indirect negotiations in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

US envoy Steve Witkoff is also expected to join.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he hopes to announce the release of hostages being held in Gaza “in the coming days” and Hamas announced on Friday it would return all remaining hostages in Gaza, dead and alive.

The group also said in a statement that it wants to engage in negotiations to discuss further points in the US president’s peace plan.

Speaking to our US partner network NBC, Donald Trump‘s Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Hamas had also agreed “in principle” to what happens after the war in Gaza is over, but he warned the second phase of the deal, which concerns Hamas’s disarmament and demobilisation, was “not going to be easy”.

“We’ll know very quickly whether Hamas is serious or not by how these technical talks go in terms of the logistics,” Mr Rubio added.

More on Benjamin Netanyahu

On his way to a US Navy event on Sunday, Mr Trump told journalists he was looking forward to “peace in the Middle East for the first time in about 3,000 years”.

He said the peace plan was “a great deal for Israel” and that “people are very happy about it”.

Progress in the discussions in Cairo will largely depend on whether the militant group agrees to Washington’s withdrawal map, a Palestinian official close to the talks told Reuters.

Mr Trump released a map showing the areas of Gaza the Israeli Defence Forces would need to withdraw its troops from, which he said had been agreed to already by Israel.

Map showing the 'yellow line' in Gaza to which IDF troops would need to pull back to
Image:
Map showing the ‘yellow line’ in Gaza to which IDF troops would need to pull back to

Currently, the Israeli military has covered around 80% of the enclave in what it calls a “dangerous combat zone”.

If the peace plan follows the boundaries shown on the map, Israel’s initial withdrawal would leave Gaza about 55% occupied, while the second withdrawal would leave it about 40% occupied.

After the final withdrawal phase, which would create a “security buffer zone”, about 15% of Gaza would be occupied by the Israeli military.

It is this part – as well as the peace plan proposal for an international group to manage Gaza – “that is going to be a little tougher to work through,” Mr Rubio added.

Calls for ceasefire

Meanwhile, international support for an immediate ceasefire is growing.

On Friday, Mr Trump told Israel to “stop bombing Gaza”, and on Sunday Pope Leo renewed calls for a permanent ceasefire in the nearly two-year conflict.

Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters

This was followed by the foreign ministers of eight Muslim-majority countries issuing a joint statement urging steps toward a possible end to fighting.

In backing Hamas’ willingness to hand over the running of Gaza to a transitional committee, the ministers called for an “immediate launch of negotiations to agree on mechanisms to implement the proposal”.

They also underlined their commitment to the return of the Palestinian Authority to Gaza, unifying Gaza and the West Bank, and reaching an agreement on security leading to a “full Israeli withdrawal” from Gaza.

Read more:
Why Trump accepted the Hamas peace plan response
If Hamas and Israel agree a deal, it will be Trump’s success

Israeli government spokeswoman Shosh Bedrosian told journalists: “While certain bombings have actually stopped inside of the Gaza Strip, there’s no ceasefire in place at this point in time.”

She said Mr Netanyahu is in “regular contact” with Mr Trump and that the prime minister has stressed talks in Egypt “will be confined to a few days maximum, with no tolerance for manoeuvres that will delay talks by Hamas”.

Residents and local hospitals said strikes continued across the Gaza Strip over the weekend.

At least eight people were killed on Sunday in multiple strikes in the city, according to the Shifa hospital, which received the casualties.

Half of them were killed in a strike that hit a group of people in Gaza City, the hospital said.

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Wrecked, uninhabitable and destroyed: Sky News reports from inside Gaza City

Four people also were killed in a shooting near an aid distribution site in the southern city of Rafah, according to Nasser hospital.

The Israeli military said it was not involved in the shooting and did not immediately comment on the strikes.

“We’re on the brink, and we don’t know whether one will die of a strike or starvation,” said Mahmoud Hashem, a Palestinian father of five, who is forced to shelter in a tent in the center of Gaza City.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he hopes to announce the release of all hostages from Gaza

When will hostages be freed?

A lawyer representing the families of Israeli hostages held in Gaza has told Sky News now feels “as good a chance as any” to finally get the remaining captives out.

Adam Wagner said hostage families were facing “a huge mix of emotions” as they awaited the latest developments in Mr Trump’s 20-point peace plan.

👉Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim on your podcast app👈

“We’ve seen hopes raised and the talks fail a number of times, but this seems as good a chance as any to get those 48 remaining hostages out,” he said.

Wagner also agreed the “big question” for the talks was whether Hamas would agree to full disarmament and complete removal from the administration of Gaza.

Israel estimates 48 hostages remain in Gaza, 20 of whom are alive.

Watch Yalda Hakim’s The World at 9pm on Sky News.

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