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UK complicit in desecration of international law in Gaza, says Corbyn-led tribunal

1 day ago
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The Labour government has been complicit in crimes committed by Israel in Gaza and in the desecration of international law, according to an unoffical tribunal on Gaza chaired by the former party leader Jeremy Corbyn and two specialists in international law.The tribunal’s findings to be published on Monday are likely to be cited in May’s local elections, in which Labour faces a rearguard action to beat off challenges from the Greens and Your Party, in part driven by anger that the government has not done enough to back the Palestinian cause.The tribunal took evidence from lawyers, medical professionals, former Foreign Office officials and Palestinians, and focused largely on whether the UK should have done more to end its cooperation with Israel to avoid being accused of failing to meet its duty to prevent a genocide.It finds that the government should have ended all arms exports to Israel, stopped sharing intelligence and reviewed its trade relations with the country, especially after the international court of justice (ICJ) said in a July 2024 advisory opinion that Israel was occupying Palestine unlawfully.The tribunal’s report reads: “Britain’s failure to meet its legal obligations has contributed to the mass killing of Palestinian civilians and the wholesale destruction of civilian objects, the desecration of international law and the further erosion of Britain’s status as a nation committed to the rule of law in the international arena.

”It says the UK not only failed to meet its duty to seek to prevent a genocide, but in some instances actively participated in such acts.The Foreign Office says it has imposed three sets of sanctions in response to settler violence in the West Bank and opposes all forms of forced displacement.The Middle East minister, Hamish Falconer, told MPs earlier this month that the government “was due to update parliament on the wider issues posed by the ICJ advisory opinion”.“There must be accountability and justice for all crimes committed right across Palestinian and Israeli territory,” he said.The ICJ has not yet had a full hearing on whether a genocide was committed in Gaza, but it said in January 2024 that there was a real and imminent risk of irreparable prejudice to Palestinians’ rights to be protected from acts of genocide.

The two co-chairs of the tribunal were Dr Shahd Hammouri, a lecturer in international law at the University of Kent, and Neve Gordon, a professor of human rights law at Queen Mary University of London.Much of the report focuses on the legal duties that the ICJ rulings placed on the government.It concludes that the January 2024 finding placed all states on clear notice that their duty under the Geneva conventions to prevent genocide had been engaged, and doing so required “more than expressions of concern”.The fundamental duty should not be superseded by contractual obligations to US arms manufacturers, or by stating that no definitive conclusion had been reached by international courts, it says.The 112-page report also claims the ICJ advisory opinion on the unlawfulness of the Israeli occupation of Palestine placed a legal duty on the UK and other states to abstain from entering into trade dealings with Israel concerning the occupied territories, especially if the trade might entrench its “unlawful presence”.

In his preface, Corbyn says the report “will help cement Labour’s legacy as an active participant in one of the great crimes of our time”.The tribunal, drawing on evidence compiled in a UN domestic court case brought by the Global Legal Action Network, found the government had imposed a requirement on itself to ask Israel for justification of specific attacks in Gaza, leading it to conclude that a breach of international humanitarian law had definitively occurred in only one of the 413 cases examined.The report says its perverse self-imposed methodology “required the government to examine the impact of an individual strike on a hospital, but not the lawfulness of the decimation of the whole healthcare system”.In evidence cited by the tribunal, Falconer told MPs that reaching a conclusion about individual incidents required specific sensitive information “such as the intended targets, anticipated military advantage and anticipated civilian harm, which is often not available to us”.The tribunal recommends the government release all licensing data, publish all legal advice concerning its obligation to prevent genocide, set up a full public inquiry and provide the ICJ with all the surveillance footage it compiled during RAF overflights of Gaza.

The tribunal’s findings are likely to be used by the left to attack Labour in the local elections.A Vote Palestine 2026 campaign backed by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) is calling for Gaza to be on the ballot paper given that local councils invest billions in Israel.So far 1,200 council candidates have signed the PSC’s commitment to Palestine.Local pacts are being encouraged in which independents and local Green parties cooperate to target Labour councillors.Your Party, of which Corbyn is the parliamentary leader, said it would be “campaigning loudly on Gaza and Palestine including by calling on councils to divest from Israel”.

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Fewer Britons giving to charity, study says, with donations down by £1.4bn

Britain is rapidly losing the charity habit, with public donations to good causes plummeting by more than £1.4bn last year and millions of people saying they can no longer afford – or do not want – to give, according to an analysis.The Charities Aid Foundation (Caf) said in its annual report that, while the British remained generous at heart, society was witnessing a big transformation in attitudes towards charitable giving. Just half of people gave to charity in 2025, down from 61% a decade earlier.Charity giving was no longer a “deeply embedded cultural norm” amid rising living cost pressures, and a more sceptical society, said the Caf managing director, Mark Greer: “Charities can no longer depend solely on habitual generosity or goodwill from the public,” he said

about 15 hours ago
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Care leavers given one-off £2,000 more likely to find housing, UK pilot finds

The first UK trial to test the impact of unconditional cash payments on homelessness found people given £2,000 were more likely to be happier, in stable housing and had stronger relationships six months later.The landmark study by the Policy Institute at King’s College London found that young people leaving care who were given a one-off £2,000 cash lump sum, with no strings attached, were less likely to be sofa-surfing than their peers and had a better quality of life.Young people who received the cash transfer also reported they spent 12% less on alcohol, tobacco or drugs than they had previously.“It shows that there are some people for whom a payment of that amount at the right time changes their trajectory in life,” said Prof Michael Sanders, director of the experimental government team at the Policy Institute. “It enables them to secure a standard of housing and make sure they’re comfortable there

about 16 hours ago
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Three-quarters of nine-month-olds in England have ‘daily screen time’

Three-quarters of nine-month-old babies in England are allowed daily screen time, while a small “heavy use” group watch more than three hours a day, according to a study.Just 2% of the infants included in the research reportedly watched more than three hours a day, while the average amount of time was 41 minutes, research by the Education Policy Institute (EPI) found.Parents across different income levels made similar choices for their nine-month-olds, researchers found, and they concluded that screen time and a healthy, active childhood “are not necessarily mutually exclusive”.Instead of “demonising” screens and trying to cut exposure, they said, policymakers should support parents to use digital devices to enhance child development and parent-baby bonding.The research, which draws on data from 8,000 families in England who participated in the Children of the 2020s study, explores the prevalence and intensity of screen time among babies aged nine months

about 16 hours ago
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Little liars: babies younger than one practise deceit, study suggests

They may be yet to take their first step or say their first word, but some babies have already grasped the basics of deception before their first birthday, according to research.The study, based on interviews with 750 parents, suggested that by 10 months about a quarter of children were practising some rudimentary form of deceit such as pretending not to hear their parents, hiding toys or eating forbidden foods out of view. By the age of three, children were more proficient, creative and frequent fabricators, according to the parents’ responses.“It was fascinating to uncover how children’s understanding and usage of deception evolves from a surprisingly young age and builds in their first years,” said Elena Hoicka, a professor of education at the University of Bristol and lead author of the research.Until now, Hoicka said, there had been little research about the earliest forms of deceptive behaviour

about 20 hours ago
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Two dead and 11 seriously ill in meningitis outbreak at University of Kent

Two people have died and 11 are reportedly seriously ill in hospital after an outbreak of a rare form of invasive meningitis at the University of Kent.The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said it had provided antibiotics to students in the Canterbury area after it detected 13 cases of invasive meningococcal disease, a combination of meningitis and septicaemia.The fast-acting disease is caused by meningococcal bacteria spreading to the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord, which causes meningitis, and infecting the bloodstream, which causes sepsis.The UKHSA said anyone with meningitis and septicaemia symptoms should seek medical help urgently, which could help save lives.Symptoms include rashes, a sudden fever, severe headaches, a stiff neck, vomiting and diarrhoea, joint and muscle pain, sensitivity to bright lights, cold hands and feet, seizures, confusion and extreme sleepiness

about 22 hours ago
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Sharp rise in young Britons saying ill health is reason they are jobless, study finds

There has been a sharp rise in the number of jobless young people in the UK citing health problems as the reason they are not working, according to analysis.The share of 16- to 24-year-olds not in education, employment or training – known as Neets – who reported a work-limiting condition has surged by 70% in a decade, a charity thinktank found.The trend is potentially putting the generation “at even greater risk of harm to their future opportunities”, the Health Foundation said.The findings are published as the government announces a youth employment drive and overhaul of apprenticeships.Among the initiatives to be rolled out by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) are a youth jobs grant, through which UK businesses will receive £3,000 for every young person they hire aged 18 to 24 who has been on universal credit and looking for work for six months, and an apprenticeship incentive of £2,000 for each new employee aged 16 to 24 taken on by a small- and medium-sized enterprise

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