Connect with us

Published

on

Labour is calling for an independent inquiry into how a prisoner was able to escape from a London jail while awaiting trial for terror offences.

Daniel Abed Khalife, 21, is alleged to have escaped from Wandsworth prison – one of the UK’s largest – under a food truck.

Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said the government “has grave questions to answer” regarding staffing and national security arrangements.

Fears grow over escaped terror suspect – live updates

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Labour’s Yvette Cooper has called for a ‘full investigation’

She told Sky News that an internal prison service inquiry “is not sufficient” – and Alex Chalk, the justice secretary, should launch an independent investigation.

Ms Cooper said the government needed to explain “issues around staffing and the arrangements for the national security prisoners and where they are being held”.

Most UK terror suspects are kept in southeast London’s HMP Belmarsh – a Category A prison that is considered the UK’s most secure.

More from Politics

Pressed on how the government could be responsible for the escape, Ms Cooper pointed to court delays and a backlog that still remains after the COVID pandemic.

She said this had resulted in the number of prisoners on remand awaiting trial reaching a 50-year high, leading to overcrowding and “a risk that prisoners are being moved around”.

Khalife went missing in his cook’s uniform from HMP Wandsworth on Wednesday, prompting extra security checks at major transport hubs.

There are fears the fugitive – who has been missing since 8am on Wednesday – might try to flee the country.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

‘Why wasn’t terror suspect in category A prison?’

In media rounds this morning, science secretary Michelle Donelan was pressed on whether there is a link between an over-capacity and understaffed prison system and this recent escape.

She told ITV’s Good Morning Britain: “We can’t say why this happened until we’ve got the results of that investigation.

“I don’t think it’s helpful to get into a hypothetical of what was the cause, or what allowed this individual to evade the system and manage to escape.”

But Rosena Allin-Khan, the Labour MP for the area, told Sky News earlier there was an “ongoing issue with staffing levels” at Wandsworth Prison.

She said: “There was one shift last December where on a night shift there were only seven staff members to look after 1,500 prison inmates.

“So what they had to do in order to make up the numbers was to actually ask people to stay and do a double shift to make up the shortfall.

“Ultimately, where you have a prison service which is woefully understaffed, under-resourced, when you have crumbling buildings, when you have people not able to stay in sanitary conditions and you have staff off with their mental health, staff off with exhaustion, you are going to be more open to incidents like this.”

Read more:
Why wasn’t he banged up in Belmarsh?
Escape piles pressure on embattled PM

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Prisoner escaped dressed as chef

Khalife, who was awaiting trial after allegedly planting a fake bomb at an RAF base and gathering information that might be useful to terrorists or enemies of the UK, was discharged from the Army in May 2023.

He has denied the three charges against him.

He was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, red and white chequered trousers and brown, steel toe-cap boots, the Metropolitan Police said. He is slim and 6ft 2in tall, with short brown hair.

The jail was put on lockdown after he fled.

Continue Reading

Politics

Plan to tackle rough sleeping unveiled – but charities say it doesn’t go far enough

Published

on

By

Plan to tackle rough sleeping unveiled - but charities say it doesn't go far enough

Homelessness charities have warned that ministers are “falling short of what is desperately needed to end Britain’s homelessness crisis”.

It comes as the government published its new plan to tackle rough sleeping in Britain, which pledges £3.5bn of funding to crackdown on the issue.

But charities have said Labour’s National Plan to End Homelessness “falls short” and contains “important gaps”, meaning the party will not be able to achieve their stated goal of halving the number of homeless people by 2029/30.

Politics latest – follow live

Crisis, an organisation that supports the homeless, also argues that only £100m of the funding announced in the strategy is new.

Meanwhile, Labour MP Paula Barker, who co-chairs the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for ending homelessness, has told Sky News that the strategy has a “depressing lack of meat on the bone”, looks like it has been “rushed out”, and has left her “disappointed”.

It comes as Shelter warns that 382,618 people in England – including a record 175,025 children – will be homeless this Christmas, equivalent to one in every 153 people.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Working but homeless: Daniel’s story

What does the government’s plan to reduce rough sleeping involve?

The government has made three key pledges in its new plan, unveiled on Wednesday evening.

It says that it is aiming to halve the number of long-term rough sleepers by the end of the parliament, reduce the time families spend living in bed and breakfasts (B&Bs), and prevent more people from becoming homeless in the first place.

To achieve this, the party has set out numerous new measures, schemes and extra funding.

The main measures in the strategy are:

  • Getting prisons, hospitals and social care services to work together better by passing a “duty to collaborate”;
  • Halving the number of people made homeless on their first night out of prison;
  • Preventing people being discharged from hospital straight to the street;
  • Helping the 2,070 households currently living for more than six weeks in B&Bs;
  • Giving councils an extra £50m – with the demand they create tailored actions plans.

A new £124m supported housing scheme is also being established, and the government hopes that it will help get 2,500 people in England off the streets.

Housing Secretary Steve Reed said homelessness is “one of the most profound challenges we face”, and suggested that the strategy will build “a future where homelessness is rare, brief, and not repeated”.

How has the plan been received?

Ms Barker told Sky News she welcomes “the scale of investment”, but is “disappointed by what I have seen”.

The Labour MP explained: “From what I have seen so far, it leaves more questions than it answers – where are the clear measures around prevention? Where is the accommodation for people sleeping rough coming from – has it already been built? What about specialised provision for those fleeing domestic abuse?

“We needed this strategy to be bold.”

MP Paula Barker is 'disappointed' by what she has seen
Image:
MP Paula Barker is ‘disappointed’ by what she has seen

Meanwhile, organisations working to support those on the streets have welcomed the plan for its focus on the issue, but warn it leaves it “almost impossible” for many families to avoid homelessness.

Matt Downie, the chief executive of Crisis, said: “Housing benefit remains frozen until at least 2030; there is no coherent approach for supporting refugees and stopping them becoming homeless; and we hear no assurances that the new homes government has pledged to build will be allocated to households experiencing homelessness at the scale required.

“There is a long way to go. Ministers are taking steps in the right direction, but falling short of what’s desperately needed to end Britain’s homelessness crisis.”

An exhibit organised to highlight the contrast between the Christmas period and an estimated 23,500 young people who will homeless. Pic: PA
Image:
An exhibit organised to highlight the contrast between the Christmas period and an estimated 23,500 young people who will homeless. Pic: PA

Sarah Elliott, head of Shelter, also warned the proposals do not go far enough, saying: “Until a lot more of these social homes are built, one of the only ways to escape homelessness is if you can afford to pay a private rent.

“We know from our frontline services this is almost impossible to do when housing benefit remains frozen, and that is where the homelessness strategy falls short.”

Centrepoint, a charity that supports young people facing homelessness, said that the strategy is “an important step”, and could be “transformative”. But it added that “gaps in the government’s approach remain”, and said increases in funding “don’t face up to the scale of homelessness”.

The Conservatives have said that the strategy means Labour “has completely failed on homelessness”.

Paul Holmes, shadow housing minister, said the number of households and children in temporary accommodation has risen to “record levels”, and pointed to the government’s “abysmal record on house-building” and tackling immigration.

Continue Reading

Politics

Australian regulator eases rules for stablecoins and wrapped tokens

Published

on

By

Australian regulator eases rules for stablecoins and wrapped tokens

Australia’s securities regulator has finalized exemptions that will make it easier for businesses to distribute stablecoins and wrapped tokens.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) on Tuesday announced the new measures, aimed at fostering innovation and growth in the digital assets and payment sectors. 

It stated that it was “granting class relief” for intermediaries engaging in the secondary distribution of certain stablecoins and wrapped tokens.

This means that companies no longer need separate, and often expensive, licenses to act as intermediaries in these markets, and they can now use “omnibus accounts” with proper record-keeping.

The new exemptions extend the earlier stablecoin relief by removing the requirement for intermediaries to hold separate Australian Financial Services (AFS) licenses when providing services related to stablecoins or wrapped tokens.

Leveling the playing field for stablecoin issuers

The regulator stated that these omnibus structures were widely used in the industry, offering efficiencies in speed and transaction costs, and helping some entities manage risk and cybersecurity.

“ASIC’s announcement helps level the playing field for stablecoin innovation in Australia,” said Drew Bradford, CEO of Australian stablecoin issuer Macropod.

“By giving both new and established players a clearer, more flexible framework, particularly around reserve and asset-management requirements, it removes friction and gives the sector confidence to build,” he continued. 

Related: Australia risks ‘missed opportunity’ by shirking tokenization: top regulator

The old licensing requirements were costly and created compliance headaches, particularly for an industry awaiting broader digital asset reforms.

“This kind of measured clarity is essential for scaling real-world use cases, payments, treasury management, cross-border flows, and onchain settlement,” added Bradford.

“It signals that Australia intends to be competitive globally, while still maintaining the regulatory guardrails that institutions and consumers expect.”

Angela Ang, head of policy and strategic partnerships at TRM Labs, also welcomed the development, stating, “Things are looking up for Australia, and we look forward to digital assets regulation crystallizing further in the coming year — bringing greater clarity to the sector and driving growth and innovation.”

Global stablecoin growth surges 

Total stablecoin market capitalization is at a record high of just over $300 billion, according to RWA.xyz. 

It has grown by 48% since the beginning of this year, and Tether remains the dominant issuer with a 63% market share.

Stablecoin markets have surged in 2025, and Tether remains dominant. Source: RWA.xyz 

Magazine: XRP’s ‘now or never’ moment, Kalshi taps Solana: Hodler’s Digest