Foreign Office cuts will weaken oversight of international law, MPs warn

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MPs have expressed alarm at the closure of the Foreign Office’s international humanitarian law unit, warning it “will impair the UK’s ability to anticipate, assess and respond to serious violations of international law across multiple contexts”.News of the closure, revealed by the Guardian, was raised with Keir Starmer at prime minister’s questions this week by the independent MP for Dewsbury and Batley, Iqbal Mohamed.Starmer said the work would be undertaken by another team as part of a restructuring.However, he made no reference to the ending of the Foreign Office contract with the Conflict and Security Monitoring Project, run by the Centre forInformation Resilience, which monitors incidents of concern in Gaza, the West Bank and, more recently, Lebanon.In a letter to the foreign secretary, Yvettte Cooper, the cross-party group of MPs asked how the closure aligned with the government’s stated commitment to upholding international law and ensuring rigorous compliance with the UK’s arms export licensing criteria.

The letter is signed by Labour, Green, independent and Scottish National MPs,They also questioned what steps the Foreign Office would take to retain access to the database of 26,000 incidents dating to 7 October 2023, when Hamas launched its attack on Israel, prompting Israel’s military response in Gaza,Mohamed said: “This looks to me less like routine restructuring and more like a deliberate weakening of scrutiny,It could also be seen as the deliberate destruction of evidence of war crimes and genocide,”The MPs asked what other data sources the department intended to use to monitor breaches of international humanitarian law.

The cuts come as part of a restructuring programme, known as FCDO 2030, overseen by the now-dismissed permanent secretary, Olly Robbins.The trade union representing Foreign Office staff, the PCS, also challenged Starmer’s claim that the work of the unit could be absorbed elsewhere, stating that senior leadership had predicted job cuts of 15-20%.The union said it “has not been provided with detailed plans setting out what work will continue, what will cease or how the remaining staff could absorb highly specialised areas”.It added that it had seen no evidence that ministers fully understood the impact of the cuts or whether they aligned with the priorities of the public.Polling published on Friday by Medical Aid for Palestinians and conducted by YouGov found that 54% of the public would like to see the UK end all arms exports to Israel, compared with 22% who supported weapons sales.

Robbins had been overseeing the restructuring of the Foreign Office, and in effect had required some diplomats to prove their suitability for their job after the decision in February 2025 to reduce Official Development Assistance spending.Estimates published by the Foreign Office this week show projected spending of £6.28bn in 2026-27, a £2.39bn (27%) reduction on the previous year.Robbins’s cuts included a requirement that Foreign Office staff write essays outlining the skills they possessed that made them useful to the department.

One aim was to tilt the Foreign Office expertise towards economics.The restructuring programme has been taken on by Nick Dyer, the department’s other permanent secretary.He told a select committee last week that the Foreign Office was too bureaucratic, too big, too slow and insufficiently nimble.
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‘I am invoking Martha’s rule’: how a woman saved her father from near death in hospital

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Martha’s rule may have saved more than 500 lives in England since 2024

More than 500 people have received potentially life-saving care thanks to Martha’s rule, which gives hospital patients the right to seek a second opinion about their health.They were moved to intensive care or a specialist unit after they, a loved one or a member of NHS staff triggered the patient safety mechanism, which the NHS in England began using in 2024.Martha’s rule lets patients, relatives and staff call a helpline run by the hospital if they are worried about the person’s condition or treatment and ask for a “rapid review” of their care.In the 18 months between September 2024 and February 2026, a total of 524 adults and children about whom concerns had been raised were moved to an intensive care or high-dependency unit, a specialist hospital or a specialist ward at the hospital where they were already an inpatient.Wes Streeting, the health secretary, said the figures proved that Martha’s rule is “already having a life-saving impact”

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Solicitors report late flood of no-fault evictions before ban in England

Solicitors say they have been inundated with requests to serve last-minute section 21 no-fault eviction notices before they are banned when the Renters’ Rights Act comes into force in England on Friday.The legislation, which has been hailed as the biggest change to renting in a generation, bans no-fault evictions, limits rent increases and abolishes fixed-term tenancies.On the eve of the new rules, solicitors said they were working long hours to keep up with the sudden demand for eviction notices, while Citizens Advice said thousands of people facing a no-fault eviction had approached it for help in the last month.In March, the service helped 2,335 people dealing with a no-fault eviction, up 16% on the same time last year, as well as more than 1,800 people dealing with disrepair such as damp and mould, and more than 1,000 with rent increases.Thackray Williams, a London- and Kent-based law firm, said it had received a wave of last-minute instructions from landlords looking to evict their tenants and sell their properties because of the legislation

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Austerity to blame for the fall in healthy life expectancy | Letters

A major cause of the fall in healthy life expectancy (People in UK spend fewer years in good health than a decade ago, study finds, 27 April) is austerity and the continued cuts to social and health spending. In our report Still Digging Deeper: The Impact of Austerity on Inequalities and Deprivation in the Coalfield Areas, which covers Scotland, England and Wales for the period 1984-2024, we highlight how public expenditure cuts since 1984 have disproportionately impacted coalfield areas of the UK.Since 2010, austerity has been stepped up, and we have calculated that welfare reforms and benefit cuts amounted to £32.6bn over the period of 2010-21. Furthermore, in 2025-26 coalfield local authorities had a combined funding gap of £447m

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Why routine cancer tests have age limits | Brief letters

Jane Ghosh asks why the NHS’s routine screening for bowel and breast cancer has upper age limits (Letters, 28 April). Screening – testing because of risk, not symptoms – stops when the chance of helping you drops below the chance of harming you. Diagnostic testing is done at any age.Dr John Doherty Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire Re Jane Ghosh’s letter about the NHS stopping routine bowel and breast cancer testing after the early 70s, it’s important to know that people over the age thresholds can request a bowel cancer test every two years or breast cancer screening every three years. Remembering to do so is a different story

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UK researchers develop tool to identify people most at risk of obesity-related diseases

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