Zack Polanski calls for UK to withdraw trade agreement with Israel after strikes on Lebanon

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Zack Polanski has called on the government to tear up the UK-Israel trade agreement after the Israeli strikes on Lebanon.Polanski also called for Keir Starmer to ban the US using UK airspace and said sanctions should be imposed on Israel, which he accused of “behaving in a completely uncontrolled way”.“What is it going to take for this government to actually put robust sanctions on Israel?” he said at the launch of the Green party local election campaign in London.“It is outrageous that Israel is still enjoying diplomatic and trade privileges from the international community.As a Green party, we are calling on this government to make much more robust sanctions, to withdraw the UK-Israel trade agreement and to end the genocide.

”Polanski said the prime minister’s insistence that the UK was “not involved” in the conflict with Iran was not “entirely truthful”, because its bases had been used to aid US bombers attacking Iran.“What we need to do is disentangle the UK military and the US military, ban the US from using our airspaces,” he said.Asked about the economic cost of ending the trade deal with Israel, Polanski said the UK should not put “a cost on people’s lives”.Polanski called Trump an “increasingly unpredictable and dangerous man”, and said recent events had “vindicated” his position on the US president.“Just a couple of days ago, he said he was willing to wipe out a civilisation,” he said.

The Green leader used the launch to criticise Labour on housing, saying Green-run councils would focus on building new council houses and “stand up” to property developers who resist building affordable homes.Labour has promised to build 1.5m new homes in England by the end of the decade, but developers have said the target is too optimistic.Steve Reed, the housing secretary, has admitted there would need to be a sharp increase to meet it.“We do have a housing crisis, but what we also have is an affordability crisis,” said Polanski.

“And actually it’s about making sure we build the right homes at the right price at the right place.And what we see far too often with Labour councils is that building of luxury, unaffordable buildings that no one’s ever going to live in.”Labour responded by accusing Green party councillors of trying to block 42,000 homes across the country since 2018 and said they were not delivering social rented housing in areas where they were in power.Reed said: “There is nothing progressive about keeping London families in temporary accommodation.If you’re not willing to build the homes Londoners need, you are choosing to keep them there.

”Polanski said it was “an absolute nonsense” figure, but added: “If a development is being blocked because it’s an unaffordable luxury development, then I’m proud of any Green party council that does that,”The Green party’s Hackney mayoral candidate, Zoë Garbett, said she would push the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to impose rent controls,When Polanski was asked how this could happen, because local authorities cannot impose rent controls, he said it was not “some radical, wild policy”,“What’s wild is that we’ve spent over £70bn in the last five years on welfare, which has been money going straight from the government into the pockets of private landlords, as opposed to building social, social homes or council homes that could be rent-capped or rent-controlled straight away,” Polanski said,
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Doctors’ strike timed to cause havoc over Easter break, says NHS England chief

The latest strike by resident doctors in England has been “deliberately timed to cause havoc” by coinciding with hospital staff’s Easter holidays, the head of the NHS has claimed.Hospitals have struggled to find enough doctors to replace those who have refused to work during the six-day walkout, Sir Jim Mackey, the chief executive of NHS England, said.Many thousands of resident doctors belonging to the British Medical Association were on strike on Wednesday, the second day of a six-day walkout – that is the longest yet in their long-running dispute with the government over pay and jobs. It is the union’s 15th strike since March 2023.In a letter to NHS bosses on Monday night, Mackey said that the doctors’ stoppage risked setting back the health service’s recent progress at improving waiting times for care and the public’s satisfaction with it

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Landlords evicting tenants before law to prevent practice comes into force in England

Increasing numbers of landlords are evicting tenants at the last minute before the law changes to outlaw the practice in next month, charities have said.The renters’ union Acorn told the Guardian that no-fault evictions made up one in five of the reports they received from members in October, rising to nearly one in three by January.The Renters’ Rights Act, which was in development last year and will come into effect on 1 May 2026, will abolish section 21 of the existing Housing Act, which allows landlord to evict without providing a justification to the court.“This isn’t a coincidence. Landlords are clearly rushing to force through last-minute evictions before the ban comes into force

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‘People are so judgmental’: the growing cohort of over-55s facing homelessness

Richard Hewett, who was forced to sleep in his car when his relationship broke down, is one of many in the UK hit by rising costs and a lack of social housingWhen Richard Hewett’s relationship broke down, he was forced to leave his partner’s council house – but found his disability benefits didn’t stretch far enough to get him his own flat in his Essex home town. He resorted to the next best option: sleeping in his car.It wasn’t what he had expected, aged 59. At 6ft 2in, he squeezed into a Ford Focus and struggled to sleep. When he broke his ankle, he couldn’t look after it properly, contracted sepsis and had his leg amputated

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World held hostage by reliance on fossil fuels, Christiana Figueres warns – and climate health impacts are ‘mother of all injustices’

Countries are being “held hostage” by their reliance on fossil fuels, a former UN climate chief has warned, describing the health impacts of climate change as “the mother of all injustices”.Christiana Figueres, an international climate negotiator who helped deliver the Paris agreement signed in 2016, made the comments as she was announced on Wednesday as co-chair of a Lancet Commission examining how sea-level rise is reshaping health, wellbeing and inequality.Lancet Commissions are international collaborations that analyse major global health issues and influence policy. This commission will examine legal frameworks to hold countries accountable for the health harms of sea-level rise. It will report by September 2027

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What are the health impacts of sea-level rise, and who should pay?

In November in Solomon Islands, the former Tongan health minister Dr Saia Ma’u Piukala stood outside the main hospital in Honiara and “watched seawater lapping at its outer walls”.“The facility is now under threat, with plans under way to relocate it to higher ground – a massive and costly undertaking,” Saia, a surgeon and now the World Health Organization’s regional director for the western Pacific, tells the Guardian.“It should never have come to this.”The impact on patients and health services is just one part of a growing health burden driven by sea-level rise, including water contamination, infectious disease, food insecurity, displacement and worsening mental health.In 2024, at the inaugural UN general assembly meeting on sea-level rise, representatives of small island developing states and low-lying countries described the issue as a global crisis threatening 1 billion people worldwide, urging governments globally to act to protect their health and lives

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Charity cleared after false claims online over migrant welcome project

A refugee charity subjected to vicious social media attacks over a migrant welcome project in schools has been cleared of wrongdoing after watchdogs found allegations it encouraged pupils to send Valentine’s Day cards to asylum seekers were misleading and false.City of Sanctuary UK came under fire last year after rumours spread online that under its schools programme, children were being “forced” to write heart-shaped welcome cards to adult migrants, including cards addressed to “my fiance”.The Tory MP Gavin Williamson made a formal complaint against City of Sanctuary last August in the wake of the online attacks, claiming the charity had acted inappropriately and breached the law by acting in a “highly politicised” manner.However, in a finding published on Tuesday, the regulator rejected Williamson’s complaint and said the charity had been the victim of a baseless misinformation campaign that resulted in its staff and trustees receiving threats.Helen Earner, the director of regulatory services at the Charity Commission, said: “In this case, concerns about the charity’s work were fuelled by online misinformation, something charities are increasingly subject to and a concern for us as regulator