UK watchdog raises competition concerns over Greencore-Bakkavor deal


Over 1,200 health leaders call for swift passage of UK tobacco and vapes bill
More than 1,200 public health leaders have called for the tobacco and vapes bill to be passed swiftly through parliament to “protect future generations”.They said in a cross-party letter that the “gamechanging” measures outlined were “far too important to let it slip off the agenda”.The House of Lords is preparing to scrutinise the bill on the first day of its committee stage. The letter notes there had been a six-month gap between the bill’s second reading and Monday’s debate.The bill would make it illegal for anyone born on or after 1 January 2009 to ever buy tobacco

NHS leaders warn of longer waiting times if demand for extra £3bn not met
NHS bosses are seeking an emergency injection of £3bn to cover unexpected costs and have warned ministers that without it patients will wait longer for treatment and hospitals will start rationing care.Their move presents a fresh problem for Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, as she tries to find ways to fill an estimated £30bn hole in the nation’s finances in her budget next month.Hospital chiefs said unless they received extra cash they would have to cancel weekend and evening sessions of surgery, which give patients who are stuck on the NHS’s massive waiting list faster care.They also threatened to stop doing procedures of “low clinical effectiveness”, such as removing painful bunions, which can restrict mobility, because they are not a good use of limited resources.The £3bn demand is needed to cover the cost of NHS staff redundancies, strike action by doctors and higher drug prices, and is likely to cause consternation inside a government that is desperately short of cash

Racist incidents against UK nurses surge by 55%
The number of reports by nurses of racist incidents at work has risen by 55% over three years, according to analysis by the nursing union.The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) expects to receive more than 1,000 calls this year from nurses seeking advice and support after racist incidents in the workplace, compared with almost 700 cases in 2022.Examples of racist abuse reported to its helpline include a nurse whose annual leave was denied being told by their manager that they should not have come to the UK, and another RCN member being told by a colleague: “I want to remind you that you’re not one of us.”Other racist incidents reported to the union include a patient and their family repeatedly refusing care from a nurse because they said they didn’t want “people like her” treating them and referring to the nurse as a “slave”. Another member was subjected to racist remarks including being told that you could only see black people’s teeth “when it’s dark”

The misery of our clocks going back | Brief letters
Your article (Looking forward to an extra hour in bed on Sunday? Time to thank a farsighted builder from Kent, 25 October) misses the main point for many people. The extra hour of darkness in the afternoons outweighs the extra morning hour of light. Psychologically, you can deal with darker mornings when you know it’s going to get light later, whereas those of us with seasonal affective disorder feel miserable at the prospect of endless hours of darkness from mid-afternoon onwards.Paul HighfieldSheffield All praise to Jonathan Liew for the first sensible words about the Aston Villa-Maccabi Tel Aviv match (Standing with Maccabi’s football hooligans against local police – is that what patriotism looks like now?, 21 October). It was never about antisemitism

Right to buy in reverse: how Brighton is tackling its social housing crisis | Richard Partington
On a windswept housing estate by the Channel, Jacob Taylor surveys the latest addition to his property empire: a mixture of one-, two- and three-bedroom flats, built on the playing fields of an old private school.They might not look like much but these neat rows of redbrick homes are an important acquisition – not for an offshore investor or a real-estate mogul, but for the Labour-run Brighton and Hove city council, where Taylor, its deputy leader, is taking a trailblazing approach.“We are essentially rapidly buying properties from private landlords,” he says, walking through the plot in the Sussex village of Rottingdean, where Rudyard Kipling once lived.In a plan agreed this month, the council is spending £50m to acquire 200 homes over the next two years, with the aim of replenishing its heavily depleted stock of social homes and temporary accommodation.This is right to buy in reverse

Met police urge Epping sex offender spotted in London to hand himself in
Police searching in London for a former asylum seeker and convicted sex offender who was released from prison in error have urged him to hand himself in.The Ethiopian national Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu was jailed for 12 months in September for sexually assaulting a woman and a 14-year-old girl and made the subject of a five-year sexual harm prevention order.Kebatu, who was released wearing a prison-issued grey tracksuit and holding a plastic bag containing his possessions, has made several train journeys across London since he was freed on Friday, according to the Metropolitan police.A senior Met police officer made a direct appeal to Kebatu to contact the force, which was handed responsibility for the investigation on Saturday morning.“We want to locate you in a safe and controlled way,” said Commander James Conway

Helen Goh’s recipe for forest floor cake | The sweet spot

Peter Hall obituary

‘Fermented in the gut’: scientists uncover clues about kopi luwak coffee’s unique taste

Leftover wine? Now we’re cooking | Hannah Crosbie on drinks

Rachel Roddy’s recipe for leftover polenta biscuits | A kitchen in Rome

Don’t chuck your parmesan rind – it is an excellent stock cube – recipe | Waste not