On 27 January 2021 the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman concluded an investigation into a Nottinghamshire County Council pursuant to the Local Government Act 1974, sections 26(1) and s26A(1). [1] [2] [3] It produced a damning report concluding that Nottinghamshire County Council had failed to have any regard for even the most basic human rights of a man living in a care home miles away for his family for 5 months.
Foreign Secretary D. RAAB: Human Rights Abuses Not a Barrier to Trade
The UK and a Commitment to Human Rights?
Since 2014 Yemen has been steeped in a complex and brutal civil war that has involved many of its Gulf neighbours. Since 2015 the UK government has been sanctioning arms exports to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Saudi coalition partners. The war has been widely decried as a humanitarian disaster with there being credible reports of war crimes and human rights abuses from all sides of the conflict.
A legal case, a symbol: Swift’s rerecording
Taylor Swift is set to release the rerecorded ‘Taylor’s version’ of her Grammy award-winning album ‘Fearless’. Swift was given the right to start rerecording her albums in November 2020 after leaving Big Machine Records and signing with a new label, a move that resulted in Swift’s masters being sold without her knowledge. [1]
Political Imprisonment or Suspended Sentence?
Alexei Navalny is an opposition politician and anti-corruption campaigner in Russia, who was arrested on returning to Russia following treatment in Germany after being poisoned. Navalny has been sentenced to serve two years and eight months prison term as a result of his suspended sentence for a fraud conviction being made custodial.
World’s largest tea producers in deep waters
For many generations, tea has been a symbol of relaxation, tradition, and pleasure. ‘Tea culture’ has been adopted in all parts of the world and is associated with different customs and rituals. Our future enjoyment of this herbal drink might be impacted by a recent decision of Kenyan tea farmworkers, to take legal action against a Scottish tea giant.
“Not All Men”: A Divisive and Counterproductive Manifestation of Whataboutism
DUP Opposes UK Intervention to Speed up NI Abortion Services
The topic of abortion has for many decades sparked controversy in Northern Ireland. In more recent years the laws have changed and now the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) is attempting to reamend them. Simultaneously, the Northern Ireland (NI) Human Rights Commission is taking legal action against the Northern Ireland secretary, the Stormont Executive and Northern Ireland’s Department of Health over the delay in commissioning abortion services.
Supreme Court judgment in FCA’s business interruption insurance test case hands down good news for policyholders
The Genocide Amendment: World Peace Meets World Trade
The High court has been looking to put forward an amendment that stops the UK signing trade deals with states that have been found guilty of committing genocide. The House of Lords All-Party genocide Amendment has recently hit the house commons and has been defeated by a small vote margin of 11.
'The UK could still sign a trade deal with a state committing genocide...This amendment puts that right'.
FCA Commences Criminal Proceedings Against NatWest Plc.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), an independent financial regulatory body, contend that National Westminster Bank PLC, commonly referred to as NatWest, failed to adhere to certain clauses of the Money Laundering Regulations Act 2007 (MLR 2007). The FCA alleges that “NatWest’s systems and controls failed to adequately monitor and scrutinise” suspicious transactional activity between November 2011 and October 2016, and so were remiss in their duty to prevent money laundering.
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill: An assault on Human Rights?
In the wake of the vigil for Sarah Everard on Clapham Common, on Tuesday the parliament voted on the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill. Its contents have been widely criticised as “draconian”. Despite opposition on both sides of the House, the Bill passed by 359 votes to 263 on Tuesday night.
Woman’s Right over her own body: Comparing Abortion Laws in India and England
Myanmar Military Coup and Attack on Democracy: History repeats itself yet again
Post-Brexit fears for the fashion industry
COVID and Convenience: The Reason for the Decline of our High Street?
Arcadia Group, the parent company of retail stores such as Topshop, Miss Guided and Dorothy Perkins, officially went into administration on 30th November 2020, affecting 13,000 jobs. Ian Grabiner, the chief executive of Arcadia Group, cited the pandemic as being the main reason for the group’s collapse