H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Fears for UK security as Foreign Office moves to scrap unit on conflict and refugee crises

about 9 hours ago
A picture


The Foreign Office has been warned that a plan to axe its dedicated unit on emerging conflicts and refugee crises is a “real error” that “undermines UK security” as the department grapples with swingeing cuts.The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office’s (FCDO) migration and conflict directorate, which employs about 100 civil servants, is being abolished at the end of this year and its work subsumed by the rest of the department.The directorate provides advice and technical support to governments and civil society groups in trouble spots, including Syria, South Sudan, Ethiopia, Yemen and the Philippines.It is slated to close despite Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, writing last week that the FCDO was “stepping up efforts” to support peace-building.The move is part of a wider restructuring that threatens 2,000 jobs – about a quarter of the workforce – and has damaged morale among diplomats.

During a select committee hearing in July, Oliver Robbins, the FCDO permanent secretary, told MPs his department was experiencing a real-terms budget cut and was affected by the decision to cut international aid spending to 0.3%.Sarah Champion, the Labour chair of the international development committee, said: “We already know the UK’s aid cuts will be devastating, but FCDO will make the impact even worse if it removes expert teams in vital areas such as conflict prevention – before it’s even decided where the cuts will fall.”Champion called for an immediate pause to the staffing cuts and restructure last week, saying that if ministers push ahead without proper planning “lives will be put at risk”, and prized FCDO expertise will be “lost for good”.Alex Ballinger and Lord McConnell, the chairs of the all-party parliamentary group on conflict prevention, have written to Matthew Collins, the deputy national security adviser, urging a rethink of the decision to close the conflict directorate.

Ballinger, who is the Labour MP for Halesowen, said: “Conflict undermines the UK’s own security when it escalates and spills over borders, which means it would be a real error to lose the expertise this unit provides.“Without it, the UK will be less equipped to reduce the enormous human suffering we are seeing in places like Sudan, leading to huge numbers of people fleeing to Europe.We’ll be less able to tackle conflict-driven disruption in places like the Red Sea, affecting prices on people’s grocery bills.”McConnell, a former Scottish Labour leader, said: “The UK has played an important role supporting peace agreements, bringing an end to conflict between armed groups and central governments in Ethiopia and in the Philippines, for example, as well as enabling dialogue to defuse tensions between India and Pakistan and in other locations.Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotion“Conflict prevention and resolution must be an explicit goal of UK national security policy – and that will require dedicated funding and expertise for mediation support and peace-building work.

”The Public and Commercial Services union wrote to the FCDO earlier this month to lodge a dispute over a lack of consultation with the union about the staff cuts.An FCDO spokesperson said: “The FCDO is going through a modernisation and restructuring process to ensure it is more agile, technically enabled, and focused on the UK’s key strategic priorities, including our core objectives to tackle illegal migration and prevent conflict.“It is utter nonsense to suggest that changes to directorate structures mean those objectives will be downgraded; in fact, the exact opposite is true.“Tackling illegal migration is one of our highest priorities and will in future be covered by its own directorate; while the prevention and resolution of conflict remain more critical to the department’s work than ever, with hundreds of staff in the UK and overseas striving to achieve peace in the Middle East, Ukraine and Sudan.”
sportSee all
A picture

Kangaroos stare down brave Lions to prove even the loftiest AFLW dreams can come true

A foregone conclusion, it was said.North Melbourne had already done the impossible. They’d won last year’s flag after an undefeated season, and then followed it up with an astonishing second season of the same in 2025. On paper, a gaping chasm seemed to separate them from the rest of the competition. They were untouchable, unbeatable, and going back-to-back was the only possible outcome

about 22 hours ago
A picture

Piastri claims Qatar GP pole with Norris alongside: F1 qualifying – as it happened

And here it is. Will Giles be reporting on an 11th British driver becoming world champion tomorrow? Or will it all go down to Abu Dhabi? Good night.Join us tomorrow, for a race that starts at 4pm GMT. Giles Richards’ qualifying report from Qatar will arrive shortly.So there we are

1 day ago
A picture

Piastri pips Norris to Qatar GP pole after victory in sprint race closes title gap

Oscar Piastri knew going into the weekend of the Qatar Grand Prix he would have to be at his best to keep his world championship ambitions alive and, with a battling performance, he did exactly that, by claiming victory in the sprint race and then pole position for the grand prix at the Lusail circuit.Both were significant but pole was crucial in the tense title fight with his McLaren teammate Lando Norris, who lines up alongside him on the front row of the grid, and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, who starts from third, with the three contenders set to go head to head into turn one on Sunday.Piastri has been under the cosh, reeling as his strong lead in the championship was whittled down and then surpassed by Norris and under enormous pressure simply to keep the fight alive to the final round in Abu Dhabi next week. The Australian responded well in Qatar and delivered an impressive run to take the top spot with his final lap, one that had to be inch-perfect after Norris had laid down a strong marker in a tightly fought qualifying contest.It was as good a day behind the wheel as Piastri has enjoyed since he last won, at the Dutch GP in August, which was also the last time he claimed pole

1 day ago
A picture

Wales 0-73 South Africa: Autumn Nations Series rugby union – as it happened

Thanks all for your company and comments. That’s the end of the Autumn fixtures, see you back here for the Six Nations.Siya Kolisi is offering thoughts“We had to fight, we respected them, we didn’t play in our half and made sure we played. I’m sure [Etzebeth] didn’t mean to do that [eye gouge] on purpose and I don’t want that to be the highlight of the game. The only way a team can get better is play the best, so next year after facing this they will be better

1 day ago
A picture

Etzebeth red mars South Africa romp as Wales slump to record home defeat

Every bit as dispiriting as expected. Worse, was it pointless? Well, it certainly had more points to it than Wales would have liked. But, worse again, was it actively alienating? A record defeat, 11 tries conceded, the first time since 1967 Wales have failed to score a point in Cardiff. The opposition on that day 58 years ago, Ireland, scored 70 fewer than the Springboks here.“It’s quite a raw, emotional dressing room,” said Dewi Lake, Wales’s captain

1 day ago
A picture

Constitution Hill falls again as Golden Ace storms to Fighting Fifth Hurdle win

There was another twist to what is becoming a sorry tale here on Saturday as Constitution Hill, whose first two seasons over jumps led him to being ranked among the finest hurdlers of all time, fell for the third time in his past four starts in the early stages of a much-anticipated Fighting Fifth Hurdle.The New Lion, unbeaten in five starts, also fell in the closing stages, leaving Golden Ace to pick up the pieces at long odds, just as she had in a similarly dramatic Champion Hurdle in March after Constitution Hill suffered the first fall of his career.Golden Ace was a 25-1 chance at Cheltenham and a 22-1 shot here. While her odds were trimmed slightly for next year’s festival, the 16-1 still on offer for a successful defence of her crown is a fair reflection of her place in the pecking order over hurdles. She will never be rated within 20lb of Constitution Hill at his peak, but that Constitution Hill seems to be gone for good, replaced by an impostor whose confidence at the hurdles is shot to bits

1 day ago
trendingSee all
A picture

Is gen Z’s love of fried chicken pushing Britain to ‘peak pizza’?

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Net migration is plummeting. Why can’t Labour say so? | Heather Stewart

about 10 hours ago
A picture

How big tech is creating its own friendly media bubble to ‘win the narrative battle online’

1 day ago
A picture

More than 1,000 Amazon workers warn rapid AI rollout threatens jobs and climate

2 days ago
A picture

Head ready to open again in second Ashes Test and says flexible batters will be key

about 13 hours ago
A picture

Eli Katoa hopeful of NRL return as he pays tribute to partner and Storm after brain surgery

about 18 hours ago