
Church in Wales urged to share full reports as Archbishop retires
On Friday, Mr John confirmed he would retire as the Archbishop of Wales with immediate effect and would also retire as Bishop of Bangor on 31 August.His decision follows the publication last month of the summaries of two reports into failures at Bangor Cathedral.Declining to publish the reports in full, the Church in Wales set up an implementation group and oversight board to make improvements and implement recommendations.At the time, Mr John had offered his "most heartfelt apology to any members of the cathedral community who have been hurt or who feel I have let them down" as he faced calls from some quarters to resign.
Jones, the MP for Newport West and Islwyn and co-chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Safeguarding in Faith Communities, said there was "a problem" with not having "full sight" of the reports."Because we don't know the full extent of the situation or the problems in Bangor, and everybody wants to make sure that Bangor and the rest of Wales, the Church in Wales, goes forward," she said."It's things like making sure safeguarding principles are in place, procedures and protocols, and that staff and congregations feel safe."We need to know what's gone wrong, because unless you know what's gone wrong, how can you put it right?"A spokesperson for the Church in Wales said the reports into the situation at Bangor Cathedral were commissioned by the church and the summaries of those reports were made public. "We will remain in dialogue with the parties involved at Bangor as we seek to resolve the issues and to inform the wider public, while respecting our obligations to those who contributed to the reports on conditions of confidentiality," they added.
Public review
Senedd member Sian Gwenllian, whose Arfon constituency includes Bangor, has called for an independent "review" into "what went wrong" at the cathedral.The Plaid Cymru MS said: "We now urgently require a fully independent, public review - not a closed-door process - to examine what went wrong at Bangor Cathedral."Ms Gwenllian said transparency was "absolutely essential" as "the public deserve to know how safeguarding failures were allowed to persist" and "how finances were handled"."Only with openness and an honest reckoning can public trust be restored," she said.Responding to the MS, a spokesperson for the Church in Wales said: "We are in contact with Sian Gwenllian and have offered a meeting to discuss her concerns and whatever next steps would be appropriate."
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Daily Mail
7 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Neo-Nazi group is quietly buying up land across the UK in a bid to create white-only enclaves
A neo-Nazi group is quietly buying up land across the UK in a bid to create white-only enclaves, The Mail on Sunday can reveal. The Woodlander Initiative (TWI) has already purchased more than 20 acres of land in four different locations and plans to buy up plots in every county in the UK to establish 'white heartlands'. The fascist land-buying scheme owns a large plot of land near a secluded village in rural Wales that has been used by Britain's largest fascist group to host 'camping' and training weekends. The group has raised more than £160,000 from far-Right donors and recently bought a section of woodland near Rye in an attempt to establish a white-only enclave in the East Sussex town. Experts say that owning large swathes of land has been a longstanding ambition of the British far-Right and described it as 'concerning' that Woodlander has been able to do so under the radar. TWI is run by former BNP and National Front member Simon Birkett who is now linked to Britain's largest neo-Nazi group - Patriotic Alternative (PA) - and was a speaker at its last annual conference. In a recent article for TWI members Birkett invoked conspiracy theories including the 'Great Replacement' and said that Woodlander is part of attempts to 'create an elite, a vanguard, an alternative group who will actively do what's best for us'. PA leader Mark Collett - a former British National Party official - has repeatedly championed the land-buying scheme and his activists have camped on the TWI land in Wales. Writing in the neo-Nazi magazine Heritage and Destiny, Collett described TWI as 'a fantastic initiative that allows nationalists to pool their money in order to purchase land and property'. 'This is a long-term plan that will hopefully catch on and turn into the establishment of indigenous heartlands; places for our people,' he wrote. Dr William Allchorn, a senior research fellow at Anglia Ruskin University who is an expert on the British far-Right, said that buying land is part of a broader strategy for fascist groups. 'It's the idea of creating a separate white heartland or parallel society where they can be completely off grid,' he said. 'This is worrying because while these camps can look fairly innocuous they involve things like paramilitary training or training in martial arts.' Dr Allchorn said it was concerning that TWI appears to have 'progressed fairly far' and that it has parallels with groups in the United States, East Germany and South Africa where 'neo-Nazis have been buying up land in order to create white-exclusive towns or communities that live in the style of the Nazi past'. He said that British far-Right groups had previously 'flirted' with buying land but had largely been focussed on trying to enter electoral politics, but their focus has shifted since the pandemic. 'They view this as a key moment,' Dr Allchorn said. 'If they can find land or they can find a place to build this enclave, it fits neatly with the broader ideological vision which all far-Right groups are aiming towards, which is the erasure and exclusion of minorities and migrants.' Woodlander has purchased land near the village of Llanafan Fawr, in mid Wales, and recently bought three and a half acres of woodland near the village of Beckley, East Sussex. It is also planning to buy land near Alston, Cumbria, and advertised this to PA members in an attempt to raise cash to build 'villages' exclusively for white Britons. In a video posted earlier this month Birkett spoke of 'building a village' for TWI members and on its website TWI says its plan is to 'take back control of our land, our freedoms and our future' for 'British people as a distinct group comprising of the English, Welsh, Scots and Irish'.


Telegraph
9 hours ago
- Telegraph
‘We knocked £100k off our second home but locals don't want to buy it'
The second home council tax premium has 'decimated' local property markets, with house prices falling and the number of homes for sale soaring. The policy was supposed to make homes more affordable for those living there by encouraging second home owners to sell up. But sellers in tourist hotspots have told Telegraph Money that this isn't working: they argue that properties being sold as a result of the changes aren't suitable for first-time buyers, and few are being bought by local residents. More than 200 local authorities across England introduced a 100pc council tax premium on second homes in April, and many in Wales had also raised it previously. The Telegraph is calling for the surcharge, which was introduced by the Tories, to be cut or abolished. Property prices in the Cotswolds have fallen 4pc this year, according to analysis by estate agency Hamptons, while in holiday home hotspot the South Hams in Devon, prices have fallen 2.6pc. Meanwhile, second homes have flooded the market. In King's Lynn and West Norfolk, which includes Burnham Market, there are 52pc more homes for sale than there were last year. In North Norfolk, there are 30pc more properties than in 2024. Jamie Jamieson, of Jamieson Property Search in Norfolk, says second homes are sitting on the market as they are 'far too expensive' for locals. 'I think the prices should come down 30pc in order to sell.' There are very few second home buyers, he adds. 'I think they're all worried about what ' Rachel from accounts ' [the Chancellor] is coming back with in October. The market has been completely decimated.' In Cornwall, the second home capital of the country, these properties have flooded the market. Jo Ashby, of John Bray Estate Agents, says that successive government policies, such as stamp duty changes and council tax premiums, meant 'there are more second homes on the market than we've seen in a long time'. Property markets across the country are being clogged up with a huge amount of unwanted second homes and not many buyers. Sellers are being forced to slash asking prices, and are frustrated that their homes will not be bought by locals, as the initial policy intended. Alan Godfrey, 79, a retired surgeon, and his wife Hilary, 75, a retired dietician, from Witney, Oxfordshire, bought their second home, Anchor Cottage in Dale, Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, 23 years ago. They fell in love with 'the beautiful great big blue hydrangeas outside, looking glorious, and hearing in the background, the curlews, the oyster catchers,' Alan recalls. They are both Welsh: Alan was born in Cardiff and brought up in Penarth; Hilary grew up in Maesteg, Bridgend, in the Welsh Valleys. They feel very connected to their Welsh home, coming regularly year-round, spending every August there, sharing Anchor Cottage with their three children and five grandchildren, and are involved with the local church and community. But now, faced with an annual council tax bill of more than £8,000, they have regretfully put their four-bedroom detached cottage overlooking the Gann Estuary on the market. They initially listed it for £850,000, but have since reduced the price by £100,000 to encourage buyers. 'The justification of the council tax rises is to encourage people to sell to young folk, but they're not in the market for homes like ours,' he says. 'We understand this, we have three quarters of an acre of sloping land. We even looked into the possibility of building a pair of semi-detached properties or a little row of three houses to help provide local homes. But we're in a National Park so planning would have been an issue.' Properties popular as second homes are typically unsuitable for first-time buyers or young families, says Carol Peett, of buying agent West Wales Property Finders. 'Often they are 'chocolate box cottages' which look beautiful and are ideal for a few weeks' holiday in summer but in reality are cold, damp and dark in winter. Or they have very little storage, no family-friendly garden or no parking, or are in remote areas away from local amenities like shops, schools and workplaces.' In Salcombe, Devon, the council charges a 100pc council tax premium on second homes, with the aim of making homes easier for locals to buy. However, with property prices starting at around £750,000 and rising to as much as £1.2m or more, Nigel Bishop, of Recoco Property Search, argues anyone local 'on a reasonable salary of £40,000 to £50,000 is going to really struggle to buy one, even with a hefty deposit'. In Scarborough, North Yorkshire, second home owner Paul Harris agrees that tax rises are damaging. He's selling two apartments in The Crescent, a prestigious row of early Victorian properties in South Bay. These two-bedroom properties will likely sell to downsizers or retirees, rather than first-time buyers, he believes. Harris, 62, owns a construction company in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, and his wife, Heather, 55, a graphic designer, have been prompted to sell up after the council brought in a 100pc premium for second homes in April. 'My wife is gutted to be selling the flat because we love going there,' says Harris, who describes the policy as 'a blunt instrument'. He adds: 'Scarborough is built on second home ownership, in fact the whole of The Crescent was built all those years ago by families from Sheffield. I don't think it's going to help families moving into Scarborough.' The reasoning, that the second home tax was supposed to help young families buy homes in their local area, is totally flawed, agrees Peett. 'Most second homes are either far too expensive for young local families even if prices drop. [In our area of Wales], most second homes cost over £500,000 and therefore are never going to drop down to an affordable level. The average price for a property in Pembrokeshire is circa £245,000 which is the level locals can afford.' In Wales, councils were given the power to increase second home owners' bills by as much as 300pc in 2023. In the pretty harbour town of Tenby, Pembrokeshire, second home owners pay a council tax premium of 150pc. It was set at 200pc in April 2024, but only six months later, the council dropped it back due to 'the devastating consequences on the local economy,' Peett says. The consequences have hit hard as offloading second home owners flood the market; Tenby's current average sale price of £275,068 is 21pc down on the previous year, according to Rightmove. Harris argues that targeting second home owners has a highly detrimental knock-on effect on businesses such as restaurants, cafes and shops, which will of course employ local people, many of them younger seasonal workers. 'The fact is, people coming here to stay in their own properties spend their money locally; they go out for dinner. Also, they don't need doctors, or dentists or put any pressure on local services.' A spokesman for the Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government said: 'There is a desperate need for more housing, and having too many second homes in an area can exacerbate this crisis by driving up housing costs for local people and damaging public services. 'That's why councils can choose to add up to 100pc extra on the council tax bills of second homes to help local leaders protect their communities. This is not a mandatory requirement, and it is for councils to decide whether to do this and take account of local circumstances.'


The Guardian
10 hours ago
- The Guardian
The Guardian view on statues: new monuments reflect changing values and reinvigorate the public realm
Efforts to ensure that modern values are reflected in public sculpture began well before the Black Lives Matter protests five years ago. Those demonstrations saw the statue of the Bristol slave trader Edward Colston dragged from its pedestal and dumped in the harbour, while multiple Confederate monuments were removed from cities in the southern US. Statues in Britain have gradually reflected evolving social values. A statue of the suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst was unveiled in Westminster in 1930, two years after women were finally granted the vote on equal terms to men. Nelson Mandela joined Winston Churchill in Parliament Square in 2007. The nurse Mary Seacole became the first named black, Caribbean woman to be honoured with a UK statue in 2016. In the same year, the Monumental Welsh Women campaign was established. It set itself a target of five statues, and has only one to go. But are statues of individuals out of step with democratic sensibilities? Rather than raise subscriptions to cast models of great men and women from the past, contemporary backers of public art often opt for different styles and forms – for example, the giant statue of an anonymous black woman that was recently displayed in New York's Times Square. Called Grounded in the Stars, this was the work of a British artist, Thomas J Price. In other cases, enthusiasts continue to fundraise for traditional, lifesize statues of individuals. While the vast majority of such statues in Britain represent men (many of them aristocrats), the highest-profile recent campaigns have been for memorials of women. According to the Public Statues and Sculpture Association, there are currently 147 statues of named, non-royal women. Among them is Jane Taylor, who wrote the lullaby Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star, and since last year has stood with her sister Ann on the high street in Colchester, Essex. Another is Mary Anning, the pioneering fossil hunter, who can be seen striding towards the seafront with her dog in Lyme Regis, Dorset. In Brighton, the Mary Clarke statue appeal aims to erect a statue of this overlooked women's suffrage campaigner by the same sculptor, Denise Dutton. Clarke, who was Mrs Pankhurst's sister, died on Christmas Day 1910 after being force-fed in prison and has no memorial anywhere. Permanence can be problematic: statues erected in one era may celebrate traits later condemned. But it is refreshing to see the achievements of women celebrated, and municipal statuary become more representative of a diverse nation – and less dominated by the aristocratic and imperialist values of the past. Campaigns for new outdoor monuments are generally spearheaded by those with a strong commitment to a place as well as a person. When they succeed, these projects can boost confidence in the local public realm. Amid a tortuous debate about the statue of Cecil Rhodes in Oxford – which remains in place in spite of a lengthy campaign to remove it – Bristol's anti-Colston protesters proved that direct action can decisively alter the built environment. It also sparked an unprecedented public reckoning with the legacies of slavery in Britain in the months after – with the removal or alteration of almost 70 tributes to enslavers and colonialists. One that went was a statue of slaveholder Robert Milligan in east London. Next year, its spot will be filled with a sculpture by the artist Khaleb Brooks. Called The Wake, the bronze shell will stand as a memorial to transatlantic slavery's millions of victims. Symbolic change isn't a substitute for tackling today's inequalities. But it's still meaningful. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.