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Matt Hancock has talked about the “injustice” he faced during the COVID pandemic in the latest episode of Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins.

The former health secretary resigned from government in June 2021 after it emerged he had broken his own guidance by kissing and embracing his aide, Gina Coladangelo, in his office.

In the penultimate episode of the series, which airs on Sunday, the 45-year-old is made to strip down to his boxers in an interrogation that sees him accused of having an “attitude”.

Early in the episode, Hancock is interviewed by Jason Fox and Chris Oliver about the pandemic and is asked about how he dealt with being “vilified”.

“I feel a sense of injustice at being made to be essentially accused of corruption,” he said.

“Because that is what, if you boil it down, the accusation is, when I’ve essentially given my professional life so far in public service, and I know for a fact we did the right thing.

“And I didn’t benefit a drop from it and it’s just this sense of injustice that, hold on, I was doing the best I could in difficult circumstances and now I get a load of s*** for it.

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“[Of] course it has an impact on me professionally that I have to deal with, but it doesn’t matter here [pointing to chest].

“What matters here is what I think of myself and also what the people I love and care about think of me and what people I respect think of me.”

Asked if he sees the course as a chance of redemption, he adds: “Well, I don’t know about redemption… the thing about this course is, as you say, it strips you back and you’ve got to leave it all on the line.”

Read more:
Hancock says TV stint – banking him £45,000 – sees him ‘push limits’
Hancock says UK approach to pandemic planning was ‘completely wrong’

Last year, the MP appeared on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! – pocketing £320,000 in the process.

He said £10,000 from that total was donated to charity, a figure he said was more than the MPs’ salary he still received while appearing on the reality TV show.

“I didn’t primarily do it [go on the reality show] for the money, I primarily did it to try to show who I am,” Hancock told ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme in January this year.

“I think £10,000 is actually a decent sum.”

Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins continues on Channel 4.

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Specialist teams and online investigators deployed across England and Wales to tackle ‘national emergency’ of violence against women and girls

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Specialist teams and online investigators deployed across England and Wales to tackle 'national emergency' of violence against women and girls

Specialist investigation teams for rape and sexual offences are to be created across England and Wales as the home secretary declares violence against women and girls a “national emergency”.

Shabana Mahmood said the dedicated units will be in place across every force by 2029 as part of Labour’s violence against women and girls (VAWG) strategy due to be launched later this week.

The use of Domestic Abuse Protection Orders (DAPOs), which had been trialled in several areas, will also be rolled out across England and Wales. They are designed to target abusers by imposing curfews, electronic tags and exclusion zones.

The orders cover all forms of domestic abuse, including economic abuse, coercive and controlling behaviour, stalking and ‘honour’-based abuse. Breaching the terms can carry a prison term of up to five years.

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Govt ‘thinking again’ on abuse strategy

Nearly £2m will also be spent funding a network of officers to target offenders operating within the online space.

Teams will use covert and intelligence techniques to tackle violence against women and girls via apps and websites.

A similar undercover network funded by the Home Office to examine child sexual abuse has arrested over 1,700 perpetrators.

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Abuse is ‘national emergency’

Ms Mahmood said in a statement: “This government has declared violence against women and girls a national emergency.

“For too long, these crimes have been considered a fact of life. That’s not good enough. We will halve it in a decade.

“Today, we announce a range of measures to bear down on abusers, stopping them in their tracks. Rapists, sex offenders and abusers will have nowhere to hide.”

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Angiolini Inquiry: Recommendations are ‘not difficult’

The target to halve violence against women and girls in a decade is a Labour manifesto pledge.

The government said the measures build on existing policy, including facial recognition technology to identify offenders, improving protections for stalking victims, making strangulation a criminal offence and establishing domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms.

Read more from Sky News:
Demands for violence and abuse reforms
Women still feel unsafe on streets
Minister ‘clarifies’ violence strategy

Labour has ‘failed women’

But the Conservatives said Labour had “failed women” and “broken its promises” by delaying the publication of the violence against women and girls strategy.

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp said that Labour “shrinks from uncomfortable truths, voting against tougher sentences and presiding over falling sex-offender convictions. At every turn, Labour has failed women”.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood will be on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips on Sky News this morning from 8.30am.

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The Securities and Exchange Commission publishes crypto custody guide

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The Securities and Exchange Commission publishes crypto custody guide

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) published a crypto wallet and custody guide investor bulletin on Friday, outlining best practices and common risks of different forms of crypto storage for the investing public.

The SEC’s bulletin lists the benefits and risks of different methods of crypto custody, including self-custody versus allowing a third-party to hold digital assets on behalf of the investor.

If investors choose third-party custody, they should understand the custodian’s policies, including whether it “rehypothecates” the assets held in custody by lending them out or if the service provider is commingling client assets in a single pool instead of holding the crypto in segregated customer accounts.

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The Bitcoin supply broken down by the type of custodial arrangement. Source: River

Crypto wallet types were also outlined in the SEC guide, which broke down the pros and cons of hot wallets, which are connected to the internet, and offline storage in cold wallets.

Hot wallets carry the risk of hacking and other cybersecurity threats, according to the SEC, while cold wallets carry the risk of permanent loss if the offline storage fails, a storage device is stolen, or the private keys are compromised. 

The SEC’s crypto custody guide highlights the sweeping regulatory change at the agency, which was hostile to digital assets and the crypto industry under former SEC Chairman Gary Gensler’s leadership.