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Senior health figure accuses NHS of racism over care given to dying mother

3 days ago
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A senior figure in the health service has criticised it for deep-seated racism after his mother “got a black service, not an NHS service” before she died.Victor Adebowale, the chair of the NHS Confederation, claimed his mother Grace’s lung cancer went undiagnosed because black people get “disproportionately poor” health service care.The NHS’s failure to detect her cancer while she was alive shows that patients experience “two different services”, based on the colour of their skin, Adebowale said.His mother, Grace Amoke Owuren Adebowale, a former NHS nurse, died in January aged 92.He highlighted her care and death during his speech this week at the NHS Confederation’s annual conference as an example of “persistent racial inequalities in NHS services”.

His remarks prompted fresh concern about the stark differences between the care received by those from black and other ethnic minority backgrounds and white people.“My mum, who worked for many years as a nurse, died earlier this year at the age of 92.It was difficult.It was not the dignified death that we would have wanted for her,” Adebowale told an audience of NHS bosses.“It wasn’t the death she deserved.

So it makes me clear about the need to address the inequity.I think she got a black service, not an NHS service.”He castigated the NHS for not having done enough to improve care for black patients, despite mounting evidence of their much higher risk of poorer outcomes, including dying.Referencing “the experiences that people who look like me continue to receive”, he added: “It just hasn’t got any better.It is not acceptable that someone who looks like me on average waits 20 minutes longer in A&E than white patients.

”Speaking to journalists afterwards, Adebowale said: “Why did I do it [refer to his mother’s ‘black service’]? Because I’m sick of it not changing, like everybody else.My mum, I think, God bless her, I think she would have wanted me to say it.“[I am sick of] the disproportionately poor services that too many poor people and too many black people experience – that’s what I’m sick of.“You only have to look at the stats.You just see the stats across all the major disease categories we talk about.

Black people have a worse experience and worse outcomes.We’ve known that for years.I’m not saying anything new.My mother is an episodic example of a systemic problem.”Adebowale spent six years as a non-executive director on the board of NHS England and is a former chief executive of the addiction and mental health charity Turning Point.

He and his family are still trying to find out why their mother’s cancer was only identified by an autopsy after she died after arriving “in a poor condition” at A&E at a hospital in England he did not name,Not knowing at the time why she had died made her death even harder for the family, he said,His mother – who came to work in the NHS from Nigeria – never smoked, he added,“We’ve only recently found out [about the lung cancer],It made me angry, because how can you live for that long with something that a lot of people [did not spot]?“She died of lung cancer and by definition [a diagnosis being made] anytime earlier than when she died would have been good.

She clearly wasn’t picked up by any screening as far as I know.Her medical records I’ve seen show that nothing indicated that she had cancer anywhere.That was poor care, wasn’t it?”Research has found that:Black British mothers are up to four times more likely to die during pregnancy or within six weeks of giving birth than white mothers.Those of black and African or Caribbean origin are twice as likely to have a stroke, and younger, than white counterparts.Black African patients are two and a half times more likely to be detained under the Mental Health Act than white British patients.

Kate Seymour, Macmillan Cancer Support’s head of external affairs, said: “Stories like Grace Amoke Owuren Adebowale’s highlight the heartbreaking reality for some when it comes to accessing cancer care in this country.Research shows that people from ethnically diverse backgrounds in England wait longer on average to be diagnosed for several types of cancer.“It is categorically unacceptable that some people with cancer are having worse experiences simply because of who they are or where they live.”Prof Habib Naqvi, the chief executive of the NHS Race and Health Observatory, said Adebowale’s remarks about his mother’s death should lead to change.“Sadly, black communities and families continue to experience many shortfalls in care, treatment and outcomes.

They often face additional trauma at multiple stages of the life course,” he said,“We thank Victor for the candour in sharing his personal testimony and expect these insights to lead to learning and action from healthcare providers to improve the quality of patient care,”NHS England has been approached for comment,
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UK ‘woefully’ unprepared for Chinese and Russian undersea cable sabotage, says report

China and Russia are stepping up sabotage operations targeting undersea cables and the UK is unprepared to meet the mounting threat, according to new analysis.A report by the China Strategic Risks Institute (CSRI) analysed 12 incidents in which national authorities had investigated alleged undersea cable sabotage between January 2021 and April 2025. Of the 10 cases in which a suspect vessel was identified, eight were directly linked to China or Russia through flag-state registration or company ownership.The involvement of “shadow fleet” commercial vessels in these incidents is consistent with China and Russia’s broader “grey zone” strategy – a space between war and peace – which aims to coerce adversaries while minimising opportunities for response, the report claims.The patterns of activity – such as the involvement of Chinese vessels in suspicious incidents in the Baltic Sea, and Russian vessels near Taiwan – suggest possible coordination between Moscow and Beijing on undersea cable attacks, it says

1 day ago
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Labour needs to make its priorities clear to everyone | Letters

Martin Kettle quotes a former Whitehall mandarin saying that “the government has still not made clear what kind of Britain it is trying to create” (Rachel Reeves seized her moment – whatever the future brings, Labour’s economic course is now set, 12 June). He has a point, not wholly answered by Rachel Reeves. It’s the vision thing, and the ability to communicate it. It’s about describing what Labour is for, in a general sense, beyond a list of policy deliverables. Growth is important, but only as a means, not an end

1 day ago
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Keir Starmer in diplomatic push to head off Middle East crisis before G7 summit in Canada

Keir Starmer is beginning an urgent diplomatic push to try to head off the crisis in the Middle East, as the Foreign Office warned Britons not to travel to Israel after further retaliatory attacks by Iran.Downing Street did not rule out the possibility of having to evacuate UK nationals from Israel if matters deteriorated, saying officials were keeping all contingency plans “under constant review”.The prime minister discussed the continuing clashes between Israel and Iran with the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, in Ottawa before heading to the G7 summit in Kananaskis, in the western province of Alberta.While Starmer’s programme for meetings at the summit has yet to be set out, it is likely he will hold bilateral talks with leaders such as President Donald Trump, President Emmanuel Macron of France and the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, all of whom Starmer has talked to by phone since the strikes began.“Our priorities, as we’ve repeatedly said, is de-escalation,” Starmer’s deputy spokesperson told reporters in the Canadian capital, before the prime minister met Carney for talks

1 day ago
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Rachel Reeves accused of leaving devolved nations in red after NICs rise

Rachel Reeves has been accused of shortchanging the UK’s devolved nations after leaving the Welsh, Scottish and northern Irish governments with multimillion-pound funding gaps.The chancellor said the Treasury would fully cover the 1.2% rise in national insurance contributions for employers on salaries above £5,000, which came in on 6 April.However, Reeves has calculated the amount of money needed by using the Barnett formula, which ensures funding increases proportional to England in terms of population.Cardiff, Edinburgh and Belfast – which all operate larger public sectors than England – now say they have been left in the red

1 day ago
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Rachel Reeves defends Starmer’s delay in launching grooming gangs inquiry

Rachel Reeves has defended Keir Starmer’s decision to launch a national inquiry into historic child sexual exploitation after months of pressure, saying that victims of grooming gangs have always been the government’s priority.The chancellor said the prime minister was not concerned with “grandstanding” and had instead wanted to “assure himself” that a full public inquiry was necessary. She insisted that ministers had “never dismissed the concerns of victims”, even as Labour previously resisted calls for a wide-ranging investigation.“I think Keir Starmer … has always been really focused, as he was when he was director of public prosecutions, on victims – not grandstanding,” Reeves told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg. “But actually doing the practical things to ensure that something like this never happens again

1 day ago
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China considers lifting sanctions on UK parliamentarians as relations warm

China is considering lifting the sanctions it imposed on UK parliamentarians in 2021 in the latest sign of warming relations between London and Beijing.The Chinese government is reviewing the sanctions, which it introduced four years ago, in response to what it called “lies and disinformation” about human rights abuses in Xinjiang, according to two UK government sources familiar with the conversations.Asked to comment, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in London said: “China has always attached importance to developing relations with the UK. Currently, UK-China relations are showing a positive momentum.”“Exchanges and dialogues between the UK and China at all levels and in all fields will help enhance mutual understanding and trust between the two sides, and will also help promote the continuous development of bilateral relations and practical cooperation, which benefit the two peoples

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