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On GPS: Kemi Badenoch on British immigration policy

On GPS: Kemi Badenoch on British immigration policy

CNN16 hours ago
Kemi Badenoch, British Conservative Party leader (and herself from an immigrant background), tells Fareed why she supports policies making it tougher for immigrants to get British citizenship, and why people coming to Britain must plan to assimilate.
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Six arrested after ‘thuggery' outside Essex hotel ‘housing asylum seekers'
Six arrested after ‘thuggery' outside Essex hotel ‘housing asylum seekers'

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Six arrested after ‘thuggery' outside Essex hotel ‘housing asylum seekers'

Six people have been arrested after another protest escalated 'into mindless thuggery', police said, outside an Essex hotel believed to house asylum seekers. More than 100 demonstrators assembled outside the Bell Hotel in Epping on Sunday evening, with some chanting 'save our kids'. Essex Police said six people were arrested that evening and remain in custody, including a 17-year-old male on suspicion of causing criminal damage to a police car. Four were arrested on Sunday for alleged offences during Thursday's protest, police said. A 16-year-old male from south London was arrested on suspicion of going equipped to cause criminal damage, it added At 10.15pm, Essex Police said: 'There were angry and violent scenes when a woman walked through the crowds. 'Missiles were thrown at her and a number of individuals were shouting abuse and trying to reach the woman. 'Our officers walked alongside her until she left the scene in order to keep everyone on all sides safe and ensure no-one was hurt.' It added: 'An officer from Norfolk was struck in the face by a bottle and taken to hospital.' A Section 35 dispersal order was put in place 'to prevent further crime or anti-social behaviour', and a Section 60AA was activated to give officers the power to make 'any individuals' remove their 'face coverings and balaclavas'. Epping High Road was closed for 'a number of hours' after people gathered there. Police said 'all protesters have now been dispersed' at 11.15pm. Chief Superintendent Simon Anslow said: 'Disappointingly we have seen yet another protest, which begun peacefully, escalate into mindless thuggery with individuals again hurting one of our officers and damaging a police vehicle. 'For anyone who thinks we will tolerate their thuggery – think again.' Some set off flares in blue and red, while others held signs which read 'deport foreign criminals', 'we go home when they go back' and 'defend our girls'. Bottles and smoke flares were later thrown towards police vans blocking the entrance to the hotel on the High Road. This came as a man was charged with violent disorder and criminal damage on Sunday afternoon following previous clashes outside the hotel. Eight police officers were injured after what started as a peaceful protest on Thursday evening. Keith Silk, 33, of Torrington Drive, Loughton, was arrested on Saturday, Essex Police said. The force said on Sunday that the CPS had authorised police to charge Silk with one count of violent disorder and one count of criminal damage. He was remanded into custody and will appear at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court on Monday. Thursday's demonstration was one of a series of protests outside the hotel since 38-year-old asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu was charged with sexual assault after an incident where he is alleged to have attempted to kiss a 14-year-old girl. He denied the charge when he appeared at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court on Thursday. Chief Superintendent Anslow said: 'Individuals who thought that after last Thursday, turned up this evening only to find themselves getting arrested (sic) and we have continued to arrest others throughout the evening.' He added: 'I would also like to set the record straight around misinformation that Essex Police is anything other than impartial. 'We don't take sides, we arrest criminals and we have a duty to ensure no-one is hurt – plain and simple. 'I know the people of Essex know what we're about so I know they won't believe the rubbish circulating online that is designed to do nothing more than inflame tensions and trouble. 'I think I speak for all of us – including the people of Epping – when I say we've had enough of your criminality. 'But our cells, which have been filling up throughout the evening, are ready for you, so don't be in any doubt that this is where you will be sleeping.'

UK wants to weasel out of demand for Apple encryption back door
UK wants to weasel out of demand for Apple encryption back door

The Verge

time27 minutes ago

  • The Verge

UK wants to weasel out of demand for Apple encryption back door

The UK government is reportedly set to back down from its battle with Apple to obtain back door access to secure user data protected by the company's iCloud encryption. Victory hasn't come through the courts, or government figures changing their minds on privacy matters, but thanks to ongoing pressure from the US during the two countries' trade talks. Multiple unnamed UK officials told the Financial Times that the UK government is working on a way out. 'The Home Office is basically going to have to back down,' one said, adding that vice-president JD Vance was especially opposed to the UK's demand, which may violate the Cloud Act treaty between the two countries. 'It's a big red line in the US — they don't want us messing with their tech companies.' Another official echoed that, explaining that the UK wants to avoid pushing too hard for 'anything that looks to the US vice-president like a free-speech issue.' A third official said the UK had 'its back against the wall,' and wants a way out: 'It's a problem of the Home Office's own making, and they're working on a way around it now'. The UK issued a secret order demanding Apple grant it an encryption back door in January this year, asking for access to files uploaded by users worldwide. In response Apple stopped offering its end-to-end encrypted iCloud storage, Advanced Data Protection, in the UK, and filed an appeal against the order. In April Apple won its first victory, the right to openly discuss the case, and last month WhatsApp announced that it had applied to present evidence to the court to support Apple's case.

U.K. May Drop Plans To Break Apple's Encryption To Please Trump
U.K. May Drop Plans To Break Apple's Encryption To Please Trump

Forbes

time27 minutes ago

  • Forbes

U.K. May Drop Plans To Break Apple's Encryption To Please Trump

U.K. government seeks to keep Donald Trump happy over encryption The U.K. government is reportedly backtracking on plans to force Apple to create a backdoor into encrypted communications. In January, the U.K. issued a technical capability notice to Apple, demanding that it create a backdoor in encrypted communication systems that would allow law enforcement and security services to read customers' messages. Apple resisted the move and has launched a legal challenge, as well as removing the Advanced Data Protection encryption from some of its services in the U.K. market. Apple has subsequently been joined in its legal challenge by the Meta-owned WhatsApp. Now, according to a report in the Financial Times, the U.K. government is seeking ways to avoid a confrontation with the tech companies, through fear of upsetting Donald Trump's U.S. administration. 'This is something that the vice-president is very annoyed about and which needs to be resolved,' a 'senior official' in the UK's technology department told the newspaper. 'The Home Office is basically going to have to back down.' Attack On Free Speech? The vice-president has been repeatedly critical of what he views as attacks on free speech by European governments. The officials who spoke to the Financial Times said the U.K. government is keen not to be drawn into anything that the vice-president may regard as a free-speech issue. Donald Trump has also publicly stated his opposition to breaking encrypted communications, publicly urging the prime minister Kier Starmer not to introduce such measures. Aside from being a free speech issue, it's also one of communications security. Apple and other tech companies have long argued that it's not possible to create a backdoor for the security services alone, that once encryption has been compromised it becomes a potential attack vector for anyone. 'Apple has never created a backdoor or master key to any of our products or services,' the company claims in a statement on its website regarding government security requests. 'We have also never allowed any government direct access to Apple servers. And we never will.' The company does co-operate with governments and law-enforcement agencies around the world, when legally required to hand over details of customers' devices or accounts. Apple publishes a transparency report to show how many of these requests it deals with on a country-by-country basis. For example, between January and June 2024, the company dealt with 2,925 device requests in the U.K. and 2,550 requests for details of customers' accounts. In the U.S. those figures are 12,043 and 12,812 respectively for the same period. Apple's transparency data shows that the number of such requests has grown sharply in recent years in both countries. Tech Companies Threaten To Walk It's not only the U.S. administration that the U.K. government might be mindful of upsetting, but the tech companies themselves. Aside from Apple and WhatsApp leading a legal challenge, other communications firms have threatened to leave the U.K. altogether if they are forced to break encryption. Signal president Meredith Walker told the BBC in 2023 that her company 'would absolutely, 100% walk' if it were forced to weaken the privacy of its messaging system in the U.K. Signal is, of course, the encrypted messaging system that was the center of a U.S. government security scandal earlier this year when senior members of the administration were revealed to be discussing battle plans in a conversation in which a journalist was accidentally added to the group.

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