Met police agreed to say they believed VIP abuse claims, report finds

Publication also reveals extent of deputy Labour leader’s role in failed Operation Midland

Scotland Yard officers agreed to publicly say they believed the key witness in a multi-million pound investigation into an alleged Westminster VIP paedophile ring, according to a damning report which lays bare a series of police failings.

The revelation was omitted three years ago when the Metropolitan police released a heavily redacted version of the high court judge’s report on its handling of the £2.5m Operation Midland, which ended without a single arrest.

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Rory Stewart leaves Tory party to run for London mayor

Former leadership candidate announces plan to stand down as MP at next election

The former Conservative leadership candidate Rory Stewart has resigned from the party, and announced plans to run for mayor of London as an independent.

Stewart, who was among 21 Tories who lost the whip for rebelling over a no-deal Brexit, announced in a tweet on Friday that he would stand down as an MP. He later told the Evening Standard newspaper he was sick of the “madhouse of mutual insults in the Gothic shouting chamber of Westminster”.

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Jason Donovan a good neighbour as he goes out in pants to fight fire

Australian soap star pressed his fire extinguisher into action to tackle blaze near his UK home

Everybody needs good neighbours and they do not come much better than Jason Donovan, who leapt into action to help when a house near his London home was on fire.

Firefighters attending a blaze in Notting Hill just after 4am on Sunday were surprised to find the former star of the Australian soap Neighbours already on the scene.

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Mother of drowned girl ‘told friend not to let daughter go in water’

Inquest into death of six-year-old Dajahnel Young, who died during beach trip to Margate

The mother of a six-year-old girl who drowned at a seaside resort has said she told the woman looking after the child she did not want her daughter to go in the water.

Dajahnel Young, from Erith in south-east London, was seen lifeless in the sea off Margate, Kent, on 28 July last year, after being reported missing during a trip with friends from her local church.

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Art that survived Isis and Saddam regimes to go on display in London

Emotionally powerful exhibition of Iraqi Kurdish artists will include paintings peppered by bullets

Kurdish artworks that survived Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical weapons as well as Islamic State’s cultural vandalism will go on display at a London gallery this week.

Iraqi Kurdish artists have made paintings and art installations from artefacts including Assyrian reliefs from 700 BC peppered by Isis bullet holes and the farewell “death” notes of a charity worker smuggling aid to Isis-controlled Mosul.

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Two men in critical condition after east London shooting

The pair, both believed to be in their 20s, were found at an address in Ilford

Two men are in a critical condition following a shooting incident in east London.

Police were called to reports of shots fired in Courtland Avenue, in Ilford, at 12.06am on Saturday. Armed officers and ambulance crews found two men suffering from gunshot injuries, Scotland Yard said.

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PM Boris Johnson referred to police watchdog over Jennifer Arcuri allegations

Case involves possible conflict of interest when Boris Johnson was mayor of London

Boris Johnson has been formally referred for potential investigation into whether he committed the criminal offence of misconduct in public office, over allegations about a conflict of interest with a US businesswoman while he was mayor of London.

An official from the Greater London Authority, the city’s devolved government, has written to the prime minister noting claims he had “on more than one occasion” used his position as mayor to “benefit and reward” Jennifer Arcuri, a tech entrepreneur.

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Rise in number of world’s rich buying UK ‘golden visas’

Increase comes despite clampdown on scheme after Skripal novichok poisoning

The number of wealthy foreigners investing at least £2m in the UK in exchange for a “golden visa” has risen to a five-year high, despite a clampdown on the scheme in the aftermath of the Skripal novichok poisoning attack.

The Home Office granted 255 people tier-1 investor visas in the first half of 2019, allowing them to live and work in the UK for five years. This was the most in a six-month period since 2014, according to the department’s data.

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Uber granted two-month extension to London licence

Transport for London again rejects ride-hailing firm’s application for a full licence

Uber’s application to renew its private hire operating licence in London has been rebuffed again by regulators.

Transport for London has instead given the ride-hailing firm only a two-month extension to its licence, which is due to expire on Wednesday night.

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Reports of sexual assaults on London Underground soar

Campaigners say incidents are still underreported and more must be done to stop attackers

Sexual assaults reported on the tube have soared by 42% in the last four years, new figures show.

Attacks recorded on the London Underground leapt from 844 in 2015-16 to 1,206 in 2018-19, according to analysis by the PA news agency.

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Boris Johnson urged to justify ‘awarding public funds to close friend’

Sir Alastair Graham, former standards watchdog chief, says there is prima facie case of PM having broken code of conduct

Boris Johnson is under growing pressure to explain why he allegedly failed to declare an interest in the allocation of public money to a close friend while he was mayor of London.

The Sunday Times reported that a company run by Jennifer Arcuri, an American technology entrepreneur and friend of Johnson, was given tens of thousands of pounds in public funds and access to overseas trade missions led by Johnson during the prime minister’s time as mayor.

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UK deportation of three men halted after detention centre death

Court rules deportees may have evidence about death of Oscar Okwurime in Harmondsworth

The deportation of three men from the UK to Nigeria on Tuesday night was halted by the high court because they may be able to provide evidence about the death of a man in a detention centre.

Oscar Okwurime died in Harmondsworth detention centre next to Heathrow airport last Thursday. In an order made in the high court on Tuesday preventing the three men flying, Mr Justice Butler said: “There is a serious issue that there should not be a removal of persons for whom there are grounds to believe that they may have material evidence to give in relation to the death of Oscar Okwurime.”

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London Stock Exchange rejects approach by Hong Kong counterpart

‘Fundamental flaws’ in £32bn takeover proposal mean LSE board sees no merit in it

The board of the London Stock Exchange has “unanimously rejected” an approach by its Hong Kong rival after the Asian bourse made a surprise £32bn bid to take over the 321-year-old City institution earlier this week.

In an uncompromising response to the approach, which the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) described as a “significant backward step”, the UK firm said it saw “no merit in further engagement” with Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX).

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Hong Kong Stock Exchange makes £32bn move for London counterpart

Proposal to LSE board will only proceed if deal for Refinitiv is terminated or voted down

The Hong Kong Stock Exchange has made a surprise £32bn bid approach to take over the London Stock Exchange Group.

It comes weeks after LSE agreed a $27bn (£22bn) all-share deal to take control of Refinitiv, a move the company said would transform it into a UK-headquartered, global rival to Michael Bloomberg’s financial news and data business.

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Senior officer suggests austerity fuelled surge in violent crime

Superintendent Darius Hemmatpour said that taking 20,000 police of the streets created a void

Funding cuts to police and public services that previously helped stop people, especially the young, from offending has helped fuel the surge in violent crime, a police chief has said.

Supt Darius Hemmatpour of Scotland Yard’s violent crime task force, said stabbings and other life-threatening attacks in London spiked after 2017, and suggested that austerity was a factor.

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Worcester Park fire: four-storey block of flats destroyed

More than 100 firefighters were called to tackle blaze in building in south-west London

A four-storey residential block has been destroyed after a fire ripped through the building in the early hours of Monday.

A charred shell is almost all that remains of the partially collapsed development in Worcester Park, Sutton, south-west London, as firefighters continue to work at the scene. The London ambulance service said no injuries had been reported.

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Terry Gilliam says he disagrees with John Cleese’s worldview

Director says Brexit makes him ‘terminally depressed’ while fellow Python Cleese backs it

Terry Gilliam has said he disagrees with the way his friend and fellow Monty Python member John Cleese sees the world, following comments from the latter endorsing Brexit and criticising the makeup of London.

The Python animator and Hollywood director despairs of Donald Trump and Brexit, both of which make him “terminally depressed”. Cleese has previously faced a backlash for voicing support for the UK leaving the EU, and for saying London was no longer an English city.

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From Bodmin to Berlin, crowds vent their fury at Boris Johnson’s ‘coup’

Protesters ranged from students at the prime minister’s old Oxford college to retired teachers, children and activists

In Cambridge’s Market Square, a crowd of families, young people and silver-haired academics listened as Percy Bysshe Shelley’s The Masque of Anarchy was read out. Many joined in, from memory, making a collective appeal for non-violent resistance: “Rise, like lions after slumber... Ye are many – they are few.” There were moments of more garrulous protest too. During a speech criticising Boris Johnson, someone shouted: “Off with his head!”

From Bodmin to Berlin, Bristol to Oxford, tens of thousands of people took to the streets in towns and cities across England, Scotland and Wales on Saturday to vent their fury at Johnson’s plan to suspend parliament. Around 1,200 people attended the rally in Cambridge, where they booed the prime minister and his adviser Dominic Cummings as though they were pantomime villains.

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Revolutionary poster designs from cold-war Cuba – in pictures

An upcoming exhibition at London’s House of Illustration collects 185 posters and magazines from Cuba’s golden age of design, from the 1960s to the early 90s.

“The posters tell us that Cuba sees supporting the struggles of liberation movements internationally as an integral part of its own revolution,” says curator Olivia Ahmad.

Designed in Cuba: Cold War Graphics is at House of Illustration, London N1 from 27 Sept to 19 Jan

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Teenager dies in east London after being stabbed

The 18-year-old was found with stab wounds in Newham at about 3.30pm on Monday

An 18-year-old male has died after being stabbed in east London, police have said.

Officers found the teenager with critical injuries to the south of West Ham Park in Newham at about 3.30pm on Monday. The London ambulance service was called but he was pronounced dead about an hour later.

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