Labour MPs urge UK ministers not to meet Israeli president

Labour MPs urge UK ministers not to meet Israeli president
London has indicated that it will detain Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he enters the UK. (AFP)
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Updated 12 sec ago

Labour MPs urge UK ministers not to meet Israeli president

Labour MPs urge UK ministers not to meet Israeli president
  • John McDonnell MP ‘appalled’ at decision to allow Isaac Herzog to visit Britain
  • Trade minister: ‘Diplomacy involves meeting people with whom you disagree’

LONDON: MPs from the UK’s ruling Labour Party have urged government ministers not to meet with Israel’s president during his visit to London next week.

Isaac Herzog will spend two days in the UK, but there has been no confirmation from Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office if there will be a meeting between the two.

Relations between the UK and Israel are strained after Starmer pledged to recognize a Palestinian state later this month if a ceasefire cannot be agreed in Gaza, amongst other criteria.

London has indicated that it will detain Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he enters the UK, after the International Criminal Court issued a warrant for his arrest over allegations of war crimes.

Britain has also imposed sanctions on two extremist Israeli politicians, and Foreign Secretary David Lammy suspended around 30 arms export licenses to Israel last year amid fears that the equipment would be used to commit war crimes in Gaza.

Sarah Champion MP, chair of the Commons’ International Development Committee, posted on X: “The UK has recognised the ‘real risk’ of genocide perpetuated by Israel, so unless this meeting is about peace, what message are we sending?”

John McDonnell MP, former Labour shadow chancellor, said: “I am appalled at the decision to allow this representative of a government that is systematically killing Palestinian children on a daily basis to visit our country.

“The prime minister is proving to be absolutely tone deaf to the desperate plight of the Palestinian people and the overwhelming feelings of revulsion of the British people at the brutality of the government Herzog represents.”

Clive Lewis MP said: “Dialogue is one thing, but there are times when the act of meeting itself becomes a political statement.

“Clearly Herzog is not Netanyahu, their politics on many issues are at variance. But that said, the president’s own words have helped legitimise the collective punishment of Palestinians, language that international jurists have warned could fall foul of the genocide convention.”

The visit has also drawn criticism from politicians outside Labour. Calum Miller, the Liberal Democrats’ foreign affairs spokesperson, said Starmer needs to “seize this chance to state unequivocally to President Herzog that there must be an end to the suffering in Gaza through an immediate ceasefire.”

Former Labour MP Zarah Sultana posted on X: “Beyond disgusted that Israeli President Herzog is set to visit London next week to meet Labour ministers. The Labour Party is living up to its reputation as The Genocide Party.” She added: “Herzog should be arrested for war crimes the moment he sets foot on UK soil.”

However, Trade Minister Douglas Alexander told Sky News: “Diplomacy involves meeting people with whom you disagree, and the British government has very strong views in terms of the present conduct of the government of Israel.

“It is right that we are engaging with politicians from across the region, because the suffering is incalculable and it needs to stop … In order to get to a path to that two-state solution, of course you’re going to have to be talking not just to the Palestinians but also to the Israelis.”

His views were echoed by Emily Thornberry MP, chair of the Commons’ Foreign Affairs Committee, who told The Guardian that “efforts should be made to engage” with Herzog.

“The only solution to this (war) is through politics, through discussion. Herzog is easier to talk to than many in the extreme rightwing government in Israel. But we mustn’t pull our punches,” she said.


Three Britons among dead in Lisbon funicular crash as wreckage removed

Updated 3 sec ago

Three Britons among dead in Lisbon funicular crash as wreckage removed

Three Britons among dead in Lisbon funicular crash as wreckage removed
Fatalities now includes five Portuguese citizens, three Britons, two South Koreans, two Canadians, and one from each of France, Switzerland, Ukraine and the US
Police released no names or other details

LISBON: Portuguese police said on Friday that three Britons were among the 16 killed in a funicular railway crash in Lisbon, as the mangled wreckage was removed for further analysis to establish the cause of the accident.
Portugal is reeling from a tragedy that Prime Minister Luis Montenegro described as one of the greatest in its recent history and that threatens to dent confidence in the tourism industry, which in Lisbon depends on vintage attractions such as the 140-year-old Gloria railway.
After coroners identified more bodies, police updated the list of fatalities that now includes five Portuguese citizens, three Britons, two South Koreans, two Canadians, and one from each of France, Switzerland, Ukraine and the United States.
They released no names or other details. More than 20 people were injured.
Police said that a German citizen who had been presumed dead was in fact alive in a hospital. Local media had said that a German father had died and a mother was seriously hurt while their 3-year-old child suffered minor injuries.
The German foreign ministry said at least three German nationals were in hospital.
A preliminary report on the accident will take six weeks to complete, according to Portuguese authorities. While they do not rule out any possible cause, police sources told the Publico daily there were no signs of foul play.
The crashed car’s twin at the bottom of the steep 265-meter slope was also removed and will be studied by experts.
The two cars, each capable of carrying around 40 people, alternately climb the slope and descend, one helping to pull the other up, as electric motors drive the cable linking them.
That traction cable snapped, apparently at or near the connection to the bottom of the upper car, according to two experts consulted by Reuters who pored over the video footage.
Seemingly unable to check its descent, the carriage entered a sharp bend in the street too fast, plowing into the cobblestone pavement and crashing into a building.
The municipal transport company Carris has said “all maintenance protocols have been carried out,” including monthly and weekly maintenance and daily inspections, the latest just hours before the incident with no faults detected.
“We cannot assume that the problem was with the cable,” Carris CEO Pedro Bogas said on Thursday.
The line connects Lisbon’s downtown area near the Restauradores Square with the Bairro Alto and transports around 3 million people a year.

Japan, Australia to deepen defense ties

Japan, Australia to deepen defense ties
Updated 36 min 42 sec ago

Japan, Australia to deepen defense ties

Japan, Australia to deepen defense ties

TOKYO: apanese and Australian ministers met Friday in Tokyo and agreed to deepen defense ties, days after Beijing hosted a massive military parade.
Japan is strengthening cooperation with US allies in the Asia-Pacific region that, like Tokyo, are involved in territorial disputes with China.
The bilateral meeting of foreign and defense ministers follows the Beijing military parade which was attended by leaders including Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.
Analysts say the line-up was Chinese President Xi Jinping’s vision of a new world order, sidelining the United States.
“Reaffirming the importance of working together to prevent unilateral changes to the status quo by force, we agreed to strengthen cooperation,” Japanese defense minister Gen Nakatani said after the Tokyo talks.
“Additionally, we reconfirmed the strengthening of cooperation with the Philippines, India, South Korea, ASEAN, Pacific countries, and others,” Nakatani told journalists.
Public broadcaster NHK said the two countries agreed to conduct advanced training between their militaries, and enhance collaboration in economic security areas such as critical minerals and energy.
Friday’s meeting comes after Canberra announced a $6 billion deal in August to buy 11 advanced warships built by Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, in what has been billed as one of Japan’s biggest defense export deals since World War II.
Australia is in the midst of a major military restructure, bolstering its navy with long-range firepower in an effort to deter China.
Beijing and Tokyo are embroiled in a row over Japan-controlled islets in the East China Sea, and Japanese officials regularly protest the presence of the Chinese coast guard and other vessels in the waters surrounding the remote islands.
China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, locking it into disputes with several Southeast Asian neighbors.
“We’ve also expressed concerns over destabilising activities in the East and South China seas and reaffirmed our long-standing position to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo,” Australia’s Foreign Minister Penny Wong similarly told reporters.
“We need to work together to build resilience and respond to emerging threats,” Wong said.


UK deputy prime minister resigns after inquiry into her tax payment on home purchase

UK deputy prime minister resigns after inquiry into her tax payment on home purchase
Updated 16 min 22 sec ago

UK deputy prime minister resigns after inquiry into her tax payment on home purchase

UK deputy prime minister resigns after inquiry into her tax payment on home purchase
  • “I take full responsibility for this error,” she said in her resignation letter
  • “I would like to take this opportunity to repeat that it was never my intention to do anything other than pay the right amount“

LONDON: The UK’s deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, resigned Friday after an independent inquiry found that she did not meet the ethical standards required for government ministers over a recent home purchase.
Rayner, who admitted on Wednesday that she did not pay enough tax on her purchase of an apartment in Hove, on England’s south coast, earlier this summer, said the report found that she acted in good faith, but that, crucially, she should have sought more specific tax advice.
“I take full responsibility for this error,” she said in her resignation letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer. “I would like to take this opportunity to repeat that it was never my intention to do anything other than pay the right amount.”
In response, Starmer voiced his sadness but said Rayner had made the right decision.
“I have nothing but admiration for you and huge respect for your achievements in politics,” Starmer wrote. The handwritten letter signed off “with very best wishes and with real sadness.”
Rayner referred herself to the independent adviser on ministerial standards, Laurie Magnus, on Wednesday, who delivered his report to Starmer on Friday.
Though Magnus concluded that Rayner had “acted with integrity and with a dedicated and exemplary commitment to public service,” he said that “with deep regret” she had breached the ministers’ code of conduct. She said in her resignation letter that she also had to “consider the significant toll that the ongoing pressure of the media is taking on my family.”
In the UK, levies are charged on property purchases, with higher charges due on more expensive homes and secondary residences. Reports have suggested that Rayner saved 40,000 pounds by not paying the appropriate levy, known as a stamp duty, on her 800,000-pound ($1 million) purchase.
Rayner, 45, had sought to explain that her “complex living arrangements” related to her divorce in 2023 and the fact that her son has “lifelong disabilities” underlay her failure to pay the appropriate tax.
Rayner’s journey from teenage single mother to trade union official to lawmaker and deputy prime minister is a rarity in British politics.
Her no-nonsense attitude and plain-speaking manner have been a distinct — and politically useful — contrast to the more pragmatic, lawyerly Starmer and she will be hard to replace. She had the ability to connect with sections of the public that Starmer had struggled with since he became prime minister.
Rayner, who held the housing brief in the Labour government, had often railed against those who deliberately underpay tax, particularly those in the preceding Conservative administration, which Labour replaced in July 2024.
Her previous comments had opened her up to charges of hypocrisy, particularly from current Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who said Rayner’s position had been “untenable for days.”
“The truth is simple, she dodged tax,” she said in a video posted on social media. “She lied about it.”
Rayner is a hugely popular member of the Labour Party and was widely tipped to be a potential successor to Starmer. In addition to resigning as deputy prime minister, Rayner quit as deputy leader of the party, meaning that members will have to select someone new.
Starmer is undertaking a shuffle of his Cabinet following Rayner’s resignation. He will be hoping that the political agenda can now move on after days of speculation surrounding Rayner’s future.
His Labour government has seen its support fall sharply since it won last year’s election following a string of mis-steps, particularly on welfare reform, and ongoing concerns about the scale of immigration into the UK, both legal and illegal.


Finland to sign declaration on two-state solution for Israel, Palestinians

Finland to sign declaration on two-state solution for Israel, Palestinians
Updated 05 September 2025

Finland to sign declaration on two-state solution for Israel, Palestinians

Finland to sign declaration on two-state solution for Israel, Palestinians
  • Numerous countries, including France and Britain, have vowed to recognize Palestinian statehood on the sidelines of the 80th UN General Assembly in September
  • Finland’s right wing coalition government is split on the question of recognizing Palestinian statehood, with the far right Finns Party and the Christian Democrats both opposed

HELSINKI: Finland said Friday it would sign a French-Saudi declaration on a two-state solution between Israelis and the Palestinians but stopped short of announcing a date for recognizing Palestinian statehood.
“The process led by France and is the most significant international effort in years to create the conditions for a two-state solution,” Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen wrote on X.
Finland’s right-wing coalition government is split on the question of recognizing Palestinian statehood, with the far-right Finns Party and the Christian Democrats both opposed.
“Finland is committed to recognizing the state of Palestine at some point in the future,” Valtonen told reporters, without elaborating about a possible date.
Finnish President Alexander Stubb announced in early August that he was ready to recognize Palestinian statehood if the government were to present him with a proposal.
The head of state has limited powers but coordinates foreign policy in close cooperation with the government.
Numerous countries, including France and Britain, have vowed to recognize Palestinian statehood on the sidelines of the 80th UN General Assembly in September.
The adoption of the French-Saudi declaration is “consistent with Finland’s government report on Finnish foreign and security policy, which was unanimously adopted by parliament,” Valtonen said.
The head of the Christian Democrats, Agriculture and Forestry Minister Sari Essayah, said on X that she had expressed her dissenting opinion to Finland’s foreign policy and security committee.
The committee includes the president, prime minister and members of the cabinet.


Seoul says ‘multiple’ South Koreans detained in US factory raid

Seoul says ‘multiple’ South Koreans detained in US factory raid
Updated 05 September 2025

Seoul says ‘multiple’ South Koreans detained in US factory raid

Seoul says ‘multiple’ South Koreans detained in US factory raid
  • Seoul said Friday that US immigration authorities detained a number of South Koreans during a major raid on a battery plant in Georgia

SEOUL: Seoul said Friday that US immigration authorities detained a number of South Koreans during a major raid on a battery plant in Georgia, urging Washington not to infringe on its citizens’ “legitimate rights.”
On Thursday local time, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE raided the “site of a (South Korean) company’s battery plant in Georgia,” ministry spokesperson Lee Jae-woong told reporters.
“Multiple Korean nationals were detained,” he said.
The Atlanta office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said on X it had detained around 450 “unlawful aliens” during an enforcement at the battery site, a joint venture between Hyundai and LG
Yonhap said more than 300 South Korean nationals were detained at the plant, citing a diplomatic source.
Lee said that for South Korea “the economic activities of our investors and the legitimate rights and interests of our nationals must not be unjustly infringed in the course of US law enforcement.”
Seoul said it had sent diplomatic staff to the site and ordered them to establish a task force to address the situation.
It had also “conveyed our concern and regret” over the incident to the US Embassy in Seoul.
Hyundai Motor Group told AFP it had no comment on the raid.
LG Energy Solution told AFP it was “closely monitoring the situation and gathering all relevant details.”
“Our top priority is always ensuring the safety and well-being of our employees and partners. We will fully cooperate with the relevant authorities,” it added.
South Korea, Asia’s fourth biggest economy, is a key automaker and electronics producer with multiple plants in the US.
In July, Seoul pledged $350 billion in US investment to ease President Donald Trump’s tariff threats.
South Korean companies have invested billions of dollars into building factories in America in a bid to access the US market and avoid tariffs.