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Prosecutions for strangulation in England and Wales increase sixfold in three years

The number of suspects charged for strangulation and suffocation in England and Wales has increased almost sixfold in the three years since the offence was first introduced, Crown Prosecution Service data has revealed.Brought in under the Domestic Abuse Act, which came into force in 2022, the legislation closed a gap in the existing law, giving courts much greater sentencing powers.Kate Brown, the CPS’s lead prosecutor for domestic abuse, said that previously there had been “a lot of cases for which it didn’t seem like we had the right offence”, and the new legislation marked “a significant shift in recognising the serious nature of the offence”.“There were some thoughts that it might not be necessary and that the act of strangulation or suffocation could be covered by other offences,” she said, but added that the options previously open to prosecutors “didn’t really hit the mark in terms of the seriousness, because strangulation is a really serious offence”.Suffocation and strangulation carries a maximum sentence of five years’ imprisonment, whereas previously, except for the most serious cases which could be charged as grievous bodily harm or attempted murder, prosecutors were having to charge offenders with common assault, which carries a much lesser maximum sentence of six months

1 day ago
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Resident doctors say they will resume talks to avoid further strikes with ‘can-do spirit’

Resident doctors have said they will approach talks with Wes Streeting with a “can-do spirit” to avoid further strikes in the new year, as their five-day action ended on Monday morning.The British Medical Association called on the health secretary to come to the table with the same “constructive” attitude, saying the tone of 11th-hour talks before their stoppage had been encouraging but too late to avoid the strike in England.Streeting also signalled his determination to get back to the talks, saying he did “not want to see a single day of industrial action in the NHS in 2026”, and that he would “be doing everything I can to make this a reality”.“My door remains open, as it always has done, and I’m determined to resume discussions with the BMA in the new year to put an end to these damaging cycles of disruption,” he said.Streeting and Keir Starmer have taken a tough line towards the strike, with the prime minister saying it was “beyond belief” that it should go ahead when the flu-hit NHS was facing its worst crisis since Covid

2 days ago
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One in eight of 14- to 17-year-olds in Great Britain say they have used nicotine pouches

One in eight teenagers aged 14 to 17 have used nicotine pouches, a survey has found, adding to health experts’ concern about their growing popularity.Users hold the small sachets, which look like mini-teabags and are often flavoured, in their mouths to enjoy the release of the nicotine they contain. They are also known as “snus”.Unlike smoking the pouches do not raise the risk of cancer, but they have caused alarm because of the fear that users could become addicted to nicotine and suffer mouth and dental problems.A survey of 500 teenagers aged 14 to 17 in England, Scotland and Wales found that 13% have used a nicotine pouch, of whom 30% said they did so at least once a week

2 days ago
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From Charles Darwin to Noel Gallagher, here’s inspiration for young stammerers

What a great piece by Ross Coleman about embarking on his speech therapy programme for stammering (My cultural awakening: Jonathan Groff inspired me to overcome my stammer, 6 December). Coleman was inspired by the example of Jonathan Groff, who is not a stammerer, tackling something head-on.The McGuire Programme that Coleman signed up for seems to have helped many people. While Groff served as his inspiration, there are no shortage of actual stammerers who have compelling stories to motivate people as they navigate the choppy waters caused by their speech.The Stuttering Foundation’s website has an intriguing “celebrity corner” with biographical articles of famous stammerers including Marilyn Monroe, Bruce Willis, and BB King

2 days ago
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Christmas burnout: why stressed parents find it ‘harder to be emotionally honest with children’

Advent calendars, check. Tree and decorations, check. Teachers’ presents, nativity costumes and a whole new ticketing system for the PTA’s Santa’s grotto, check. But the Christmas cards remain unwritten, the to-do list keeps growing, and that Labubu doll your child desperately wants appears to have vanished from the face of the earth.If you’re feeling frayed in the final days before Christmas, you’re not alone

2 days ago
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Labour admits 60% of parents wrongly targeted in HMRC child benefit fraud crackdown

More than 60% of parents who had their child benefit stopped by HMRC using incorrect Home Office travel data were not fraudulently claiming the support from abroad, it has emerged.The scale of the government’s anti-fraud fiasco is four times higher than previously admitted, with 15,000 of the 23,500 parents targeted by HMRC now identified as legitimate beneficiaries living in the UK.It means 63% of parents targeted in the anti-fraud debacle first reported by the Detail and the Guardian were legitimate claimants.The government’s admission was revealed in a written answer to a parliamentary question tabled by the Conservative MP for Fylde, Andrew Snowden.Dan Tomlinson, the exchequer secretary to the Treasury, told Snowden in his written answer that figures revealed that, as of 30 November, 14,994 of the 23,794 cases where benefit had been suspended had since “been confirmed to be eligible to child benefit”

3 days ago
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Bitcoin’s buzz is gone. Investors chose real gold in 2025 | Nils Pratley

about 8 hours ago
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Bet365 boss receives at least £280m in pay and dividends despite profit slump

about 8 hours ago
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Elon Musk, AI and the antichrist: the biggest tech stories of 2025

about 8 hours ago
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Activist group says it has scraped 86m music files from Spotify

1 day ago
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Wounded England must salvage more than pride in MCG Boxing Day Ashes Test

about 7 hours ago
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English cricket meets Spinal Tap as Rob Key delivers latest Ashes autopsy | Barney Ronay

about 12 hours ago

Alan Milburn to review rise in youth minimum wage

4 days ago
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The future of the youth minimum wage will come under review as part of a major inquiry into rising inactivity among Britain’s young people by the former health secretary Alan Milburn,The social mobility expert said that unless the government tackled some “uncomfortable truths” about the labour market there was a risk of creating a “lost generation” of young people,In an interview with the Guardian, he said the rising overall welfare bill was “unsustainable fiscally and economically” but insisted that any reform of the system had to focus on righting social injustices first,Milburn’s intervention over the minimum wage echoes recent warnings from economists that the increase in youth rates – which the government is trying to equalise with the adult rate – could lead to some being “priced out” of entry-level jobs,But it is likely to be greeted with dismay from some Labour MPs and unions after the party pledged to end “discriminatory” lower minimum wage rates for younger workers so that all adults would be entitled to the same legal pay floor.

In a warning to Labour on Friday, Andrea Egan, the incoming general secretary of Unison, wrote in the Guardian that she would “call time on our union’s inexcusable habit of propping up politicians who act against our interests, undermine our fundamental values, and make our lives worse”.As Keir Starmer struggles against a backdrop of difficult poll ratings, Milburn, a veteran of Tony Blair’s government, suggested this one could still turn around its fortunes if it was able to generate hope for the future.He said transforming young people’s prospects could do that.But he said that without substantive action, the UK was at risk of abandoning a whole generation to a life on benefits and could push them away from mainstream parties towards rightwing populism.After launching his review of why a quarter of 16- to 24-year-olds are not in education, employment or training earlier this week, Milburn said they faced a “perfect storm” in the youth labour market after the Covid crisis, with systemic failures and policy neglect in education and welfare over decades.

“You write off a generation, you write off the country’s future,” he said.“You’ve got this sort of downward escalator: we’re plunging young people into a lifetime on benefits, rather than creating an upward escalator, with opportunities for people to learn and to earn.”The former cabinet minister is not shying away from recommending radical reform of the system in his final report, due in the summer.He said he was prepared to look at pressure on employers and the steep rise in mental health claims.Before the budget, Treasury insiders were among those who were concerned about the increase in youth rates of the minimum wage, amid fears they could be priced out of entry-level jobs.

“We’ve got to look very carefully at exactly that,” Milburn said.“We’ve got to make sure that in a fragile youth labour market, and it’s been fragile for very many years, that public policy is providing the right incentives for employers to employ more young people, rather than less.”Asked whether he thought businesses had been squeezed too much by the government, which put up national insurance at the last budget, he added: “I hear that being said.I’m going to examine the evidence, and we will reach a conclusion.”Milburn also wants to address sensitive issues around the mental health of young people, citing it as a reason for a sharp rise in sickness benefits in recent years.

“We’ve got to be careful that just because you’ve got anxiety or depression, that automatically puts you on to the downward escalator into the world of benefits,” he said.“We’re at real risk in the debate that’s taking place sometimes, of a new currency developing which says that work is bad for people’s mental health, whereas the opposite of that is true, which is good work in particular, is extremely good for people’s mental health.“When I talk about these uncomfortable truths that the review is going to have to confront, you know, this is one of them.”The health secretary, Wes Streeting, has ordered a clinical review of the diagnosis of mental health conditions in England, which will inform Milburn’s review.However, the Labour veteran said 16- to 24-year-olds were a “generation under duress”.

They faced a different world from their predecessors, who had a “social transaction” with the state that no longer existed.“It’s very easy to play the blame game...but we’ve got a job to act as custodians, to make sure that young people have got the right opportunities in front of them,” he added, saying that the government and business needed to step up.

They had a responsibility, in particular, to prepare younger generations for “tomorrow’s potential tsunami” – the advance of technology – which could send further shockwaves through the youth labour market,“You can’t simply say, King Canute-like, we’re going to resist the forward march of technology,That’s not possible,What we have got to do is equip people to be able to adapt, be agile enough, to have enough resilience, to be able to succeed in that labour market,” he said,With Labour losing support among younger voters, many of them disillusioned by a political system they feel is entrenching generational inequality, Milburn said young people were deserting the mainstream parties.

“If young people start feeling society isn’t interested in me, to this question of how they’re thinking of potentially voting in future, then there’s an obvious quid pro quo,” he said, suggesting that they could turn to Reform UK instead,“That should be something that people would want to avoid, particularly people who are concerned about progressive politics,It’s pretty obvious that that social contract is being broken”,Milburn, who is close to Streeting – regarded as a potential successor to Starmer if he stands down – urged the government to be more optimistic about what it could deliver,“The centre-left of politics only wins when it creates a sense of possibility about the future,” he said.

“So my very strong advice would be generate hope for the future.This [review] is about saying the future can be better than the present and better than the past.It is about making sure that we’re investing in the future generation.The biggest deficit in the country is the shortage of hope.”Pat McFadden, the work and pensions secretary, is planning to propose further welfare reform next year, after the government abandoned a significant part of its bill in June under pressure from Labour MPs.

Milburn, whose review is reporting to McFadden, said the government had “self-evidently” got its attempts to win MPs round on welfare badly wrong.“Framing welfare reform as a cost-out measure wasn’t a sensible approach to take, and it produced the inevitable result,” he said.“If you want to reduce welfare bills, the only way of doing that is to provide more opportunities for people to learn and to earn first.”