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Glasgow police attacked over five times during TRNSMT 2025

Glasgow police attacked over five times during TRNSMT 2025

Glasgow Times3 days ago
According to a Freedom of Information request there were eight incidents of officers being assaulted during the festival which took place from Friday, July 11 to July 13.
Cops also attended 43 drug-related incidents including misuse of Class A, B and C substances, and 12 assaults over the course of the weekend.
READ NEXT: Pair kick off at Glasgow's four corners challenging people to fight
The Glasgow Times previously reported police had confirmed a total of 19 arrests were made at this year's TRNSMT.
Alleged offences include possession of weapons, sexual assault, assault, hate crime and culpable and reckless behaviour.
A man was also charged in connection with terror offences for wearing a T-shirt allegedly showing support for the proscribed group Palestine Action.
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Children's author Michael Rosen attacks Palestine Action ban
Children's author Michael Rosen attacks Palestine Action ban

Telegraph

timea few seconds ago

  • Telegraph

Children's author Michael Rosen attacks Palestine Action ban

Michael Rosen is among a group of 300 Jewish figures who have condemned the ban on Palestine Action as 'illegitimate and unethical'. The children's author has signed a letter which will be delivered to Sir Keir Starmer and Yvette Cooper on Tuesday, calling for them to 'proscribe genocide, not protest'. The delegation, organised by Jewish Voice for Labour and also made up of Sir Geoffrey Bindman KC, director Mike Leigh and playwright Gillian Slovo, is calling for the state of Palestine to be recognised immediately as well as a trade embargo with Israel. The move comes after Palestine Action was proscribed by Ms Cooper, the Home Secretary, on July 5 after a group of its members allegedly entered RAF Brize Norton and damaged two military aircraft. The Metropolitan Police said it would arrest anyone who protested in support of the now-banned group. However, in the letter to be delivered to No 10, the group said: 'Opposing the brutality of genocide, apartheid, and ethnic cleansing taking place in Gaza and the West Bank, including taking direct action, is not anti-Semitic. Nor is it terrorism. 'We consider the proscription of Palestine Action to be illegitimate and unethical. 'It is time to end the Government's hand-wringing over the level of slaughter and suffering in Gaza and the West Bank, mixed with tacit support to the Israeli state. 'We oppose genocide as human beings. We oppose it because we are Jews who have learnt from our history to be vigilant against injustice and stand up for justice for all people, everywhere.' They continued: 'The actions of the UK Government expand on a disturbing trend of attempts by successive governments to restrict peaceful protests intended to save lives. 'Lengthy prison sentences have been given to climate protesters as well as those opposed to arms sales to Israel. It has made the UK among the most repressive countries in Europe according to UN representatives, especially since the proscription of Palestine Action.' Publicly declaring support for a proscribed organisation is an offence under the Terrorism Act 2000, punishable by up to 14-years in prison. However, under plans revealed by the Telegraph, organisers are seeking to challenge the Government's proscription of Palestine Action by gathering on such a scale that it overwhelms the police and renders the law unenforceable. The events, which are being coordinated by the campaign group Defend Our Juries, are expected to see at least 500 people gather in London and other cities on Saturday, with the intention of deliberately flouting terror laws by publicly declaring their support for the group. Those taking part have been asked to hold up signs saying: 'I Oppose Genocide, I Support Palestine Action.' The Metropolitan Police said it was 'aware' of the planned protest, in which organisers were 'encouraging hundreds of people to turn out with the intention of placing a strain on the police and the wider criminal justice system'. The force warned that anyone showing support for the group 'can expect to be arrested'. The police have also been urged to investigate a former Guantanamo Bay detainee after he called on Muslims to attend protests to declare their support for Palestine Action. Speaking at a meeting in Birmingham, Moazzam Begg urged members of the Muslim community to take part in the planned mass demonstration this weekend. Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, said that 'without a doubt' the police should launch a probe into the comments made by Mr Begg. He told The Telegraph: 'Given the threats we are facing from Palestine Action, if the state does not impose its authority now, it will lose it completely.' He added: 'This is a proscribed organisation, a virtual terrorist organisation. Without a doubt, the police should investigate him [Begg]. 'This sort of organisation with its Islamist agenda is one of the most frightening things I have seen in my life.' Last week the co-founder of the group won the right to bring a legal challenge against proscription, arguing that the ban breached the right to freedom of expression and protest. A judicial review over the legality of the group is due to be heard in the autumn and could see the ban lifted.

Palestine Action's future plans are disturbing, Yvette Cooper claims as she urges protesters to stay away
Palestine Action's future plans are disturbing, Yvette Cooper claims as she urges protesters to stay away

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Palestine Action's future plans are disturbing, Yvette Cooper claims as she urges protesters to stay away

Yvette Cooper has said she has seen some 'disturbing information' relating to the future plans of proscribed terror group Palestine Action, urging people not to protest in support of the organisation. Speaking ahead of a major demonstration to protest the decision to ban the group, the home secretary warned the public that 'this is not a non-violent organisation', adding that more information about the group is likely to be revealed in future court cases. It comes after Downing Street on Monday warned: 'Those who seek to support this group may yet not know the true nature of this organisation'. The move to ban Palestine Action came after two Voyager aircraft were damaged at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire on June 20, an incident it subsequently claimed, which police said caused about £7 million worth of damage. Speaking to Sky News on Tuesday, Ms Cooper said: 'The proscribing process is based on detailed security assessments and security advice to me as home secretary, and I have to take that immensely seriously. 'It's based on violent action and injuries that this group has taken, including on national security targets, but also injuries to people, and also some disturbing information referring to future planning as well. 'So that's the information that I have to take immensely seriously when making those proscribing decisions.' Speaking ahead of a planned mass protest in support of the group taking place on Saturday, Ms Cooper said: 'I do understand there will be people who do not know, who are wanting to protest, what the nature of this group is. 'Let's be clear: this is not about Palestine or protesting about Palestine. This is about a particular, narrow, specific group that has both a violent record and information and about future planning as well. 'More of that information is likely to be really revealed once court cases come through, and can't be in advance. But I would say to people, this is not a non violent organisation.' The Metropolitan Police and other forces nationwide have warned anyone found to be expressing support for Palestine Action will be arrested, following the government's decision to ban the organisation last month. Defend Our Juries said it planned to bring together at least 500 people for its planned demonstration against the ban on Saturday with organisers 'very confident' they have recruited enough participants, a spokesperson for the campaign group said. But they have denied that its planned mass protest will try to overwhelm the police and justice system. A High Court ruling on Wednesday decided that Palestine Action's co-founder Huda Ammori had several 'reasonably arguable' beliefs in her challenge over the group's ban that would be heard at a three-day hearing in November, but a bid to pause the ban temporarily was refused. The ban means that membership of, or support for, Palestine Action is now a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison, under the Terrorism Act 2000. More than 200 people were arrested at a wave of protests across the UK in response to the proscription last month, as part of the campaign co-ordinated by Defend Our Juries. Many of the protesters were detained after writing and holding up the message 'I oppose genocide I support Palestine Action' on placards or pieces of cardboard.

Tuesday briefing: What the fraught talks to reach a ‘Paris agreement for plastic pollution' could bring
Tuesday briefing: What the fraught talks to reach a ‘Paris agreement for plastic pollution' could bring

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Tuesday briefing: What the fraught talks to reach a ‘Paris agreement for plastic pollution' could bring

Good morning. Not only does plastic waste clog up waterways, beaches and strangle sea life, it also causes havoc inside the human body. Tiny fragments – invisible to the human eye – are probably swimming around your lungs, blood and liver right now. This represents a 'growing and underrecognised danger' to human health, the latest report in the Lancet warns, as 10 days of tense talks kick off in Geneva today, with 179 countries due to hash out a kind of 'Paris agreement for plastic pollution'. These talks – which have been going on since 2022 – have been dogged by deep disagreements. More than 100 nations want a legally binding cap on plastic production, while petrostates want to keep things vague, and maybe promise to, errrrr, do some more recycling, perhaps? It's possible talks will collapse with no reference to cuts to plastic production. I spoke to the Guardian's environment correspondent Sandra Laville about why the sixth (and hopefully final) round of talks are likely to be so fraught and what a good deal could look like. Weather | Gusts of more than 100mph from Storm Floris have brought travel disruption, power cuts and the widespread cancellation of events across large parts of the UK. Disruption to the rail network in Scotland is expected until around 4pm on Tuesday, ScotRail has said. UK news | A member of the House of Lords urged ministers to crack down on Palestine Action at the request of a US defence company that employs him as an adviser. Police are planning to arrest anyone demonstrating in support of Palestine Action this weekend. Politics | The Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, is not telling the truth about the 'real failures of 14 years of Conservative government', the former Conservative prime minister Liz Truss has said. Tommy Robinson | The far-right activist known as Tommy Robinson has been arrested by British police on suspicion of grievous bodily harm after a man was allegedly assaulted at a London railway station. Gaza | More than 100 critically ill and injured children in Gaza hope to come to the UK as soon as possible after the government announced a scheme to provide those in severe need with NHS care. The United Nations agreed to create a treaty on plastic in 2022. Since then, five separate negotiations have failed to secure an agreement. Initially, the idea was for the treaty to address the whole life cycle of plastics, but plans have since been watered down. The last round of talks – held in Busan, South Korea – broke down at the end of last year. 'There was some concern we wouldn't even get another meeting,' says Sandra Laville. Country representatives are resuming today for 10 days of talks in Switzerland. Although plastic is often seen as a cheap material, it's expensive when you factor in the cost of cleaning up the damage it causes – the latest report found it is responsible for at least $1.5tn (£1.1tn) a year in health-related damages. And almost all plastic is made from fossil oil and gas. Producing all of this plastic results in greater emissions than those produced by Russia – the world's fourth-largest polluter. According to the University of Oxford's Our World in Data, plastic production has increased sharply over the past 70 years. In 1950, the world was producing two million tonnes of plastic to more than 450m tonnes today. Less than 10% of the world's plastic is recycled, and more than 40% is stuck in landfill. 'Single-use plastic is the big earner for lots of companies and the petrochemical industry,' says Sandra. There were a record 220 fossil fuel and chemic industry lobbyists at the December talks in Busan. That was far more than even the host nation's delegation of 140 and was three times the number of independent scientists. Hotel and flight costs make the treaty negotiations expensive to attend, which is why rich industrial interests can flood the talks with lobbyists while smaller countries, scientists and NGOs struggle to find the funds. Why is this such a pressing problem for human health? Plastic is, in many ways, a wonder material, but the most rapid increase in production is for single-use plastics, things such as drinks bottles and fast-food packaging, which we sometimes use for a matter of minutes before chucking away. This sort of plastic may be a big earner for companies, but it is not essential for human wellbeing, and the drawbacks are significant. The latest review, published in the leading medical journal the Lancet, was carried out by leading health researchers and doctors. They found plastics cause disease and death from infancy to old age because they are laced in more than 16,000 chemicals such as fillers, dyes, flame retardants and stabilisers which have been known to damage human health. The most vulnerable in society are the most at risk. The analysis found that foetuses and infants were subject to harms such as increased risks of miscarriage, stillbirth, birth defects, impaired lung growth, childhood cancer and fertility problems later in life. What are delegates going to achieve? There are two groups battling it out in Geneva. One is comprised of more than 100 countries – including the EU – which support legally binding global reductions in plastic production and the phasing out of single-use plastic products. The other camp are countries with large fossil fuel industries, such as Saudi Arabia, Russia and Iran, who say they don't want any suggestion of tackling plastic production. The latter group want the agreement to focus on better management and recycling of waste, and for countries to implement voluntary or national measures. 'Countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iran, and China have moved the discussion away from production towards, 'Oh we just need to manage the waste better, oh we just need to recycle more',' says Sandra. Since 2022, these divisions have become more entrenched. Countries such as Egypt and Malaysia have plastic industry representatives in their national delegations. Meanwhile, the 100 high-ambition countries are not going to fold – the evidence shows we have to reduce plastic production to reduce pollution. 'That's why it all collapsed in Busan in December,' says Sandra. The nature of any agreement is still up the air – it's possible a meaningful treaty will be agreed, or they have further meetings, or some countries agree to pursue a 'coalition of the willing' treaty outside the UN. Greenpeace is calling for at least a 75% reduction in plastic production by 2040. But if an agreement can be reached, it would be the equivalent of getting the Paris agreement for climate negotiations. 'You can argue the Paris agreement hasn't done much, but there has been an agreement, and we just haven't had one on plastic pollution. So this is the kind of vacuum that needs to be filled,' says Sandra. What does this say about international environmental diplomacy? 'I think there was this real optimism in 2022 when the idea of a treaty was agreed,' says Sandra. Scientists were saying that getting a good agreement could be a gamechanger for cutting plastic pollution. But the winds appear to have changed. 'By last November that optimism had all gone.' The US – which is the world's second-largest producer of plastic after China – has flip-flopped positions during negotiations, but now appears to be aligned with other major fossil fuel producers and is supporting the least ambitious option. China and Iran are also among the countries looking for less ambition, an option they describe as 'realistic'. It comes as the Trump administration in the US rolls back environmental policies, including a longstanding finding on greenhouse gas emissions endangering health. Andrés del Castillo, senior attorney at the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL), a non profit providing legal counsel to some countries attending the talks, said oil states were questioning even basic facts about the harm to health caused by plastics. 'We are in a moment of revisionism, where even science is highly politicised,' he says. Hopes for a 'last-chance' ambitious global treaty to curb plastic pollution are looking dim – but a weaker agreement still shows international diplomacy functions. 'It doesn't feel as if the world is ready to address any of this,' says Sandra. 'I do think that any treaty – as long as it's not really weak – is a good thing to hold up.' Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Nels Abbey is compelling in this column on Kemi Badenoch's 'comedic, but sadly revealing' rejection of her Nigerian heritage – not least, he writes, because her life 'hardly describes the general Black experience'. Charlie Lindlar, acting deputy editor, newsletters Someone in Teesside has (or had) been sharing their house with a rat the length of a carry-on luggage bag. Rats are getting bigger and bolder as cash-strapped local authorities can't deal with pest control. Quite a memorable read – if only for the picture at the top. Phoebe Some strong takes here in Michael Hogan's list of TV characters so bad they ruined shows. Emily from Friends ('unfunny wet blanket') gets a rough go of it, but Ted Lasso's Nate Shelley deserves even deeper condemnation. Charlie Millions of people are in line for payouts after the launch of a compensation scheme for those affected by the car finance scandal. This is a useful explainer on who is eligible and what you need to do. Phoebe Forget something to read, how about something to cook? Rukmini Iyer's baked feta tacos with pink onion and pineapple salsa is a fun, fuss-free dinner that, she promises, 'comes together in minutes'. Charlie Football | Everton have raised their bid for Tyler Dibling to about £40m and opened talks with Chelsea over signing Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall (pictured above) as they attempt to ease David Moyes's transfer frustrations. Formula One | Lewis Hamilton gave a remarkably downbeat response after a 12th place finish in the Hungarian Grand Prix on Sunday, prompting questions about his future. The former world champion suggested he was in turmoil and that he would 'hopefully' return when F1 resumes after the summer break. Football | Fifa is facing a multibillion-pound claim for compensation from a group of former players after last year's ruling by the European court of justice that its transfer rules are unlawful. The Guardian leads with 'Police warn of mass arrests at Palestine Action protest'. The Mirror reports on Nigel Farage under the headline 'Fanning the flames'. The i reports 'Home Office to detain small boat migrants for deportation to France in days'. The Times has 'PM and police at odds over migrant suspects'. The Telegraph reports 'Parents pay £500m to beat school VAT raid'. The Financial Times says 'Tesla awards Musk $30bn of stock to keep billionaire focused on business'. How the Trump administration made a sewage crisis 'woke' How did the Trump administration upend a landmark civil rights victory for environmental justice? Nina Lakhani reports. A bit of good news to remind you that the world's not all bad Last year, Chiara Wilkinson (pictured above) felt increasing guilt about getting to the end of a week and facing a fridge full of wilted ingredients. A long commute and grand ideas about what she had the time and energy to cook meant that a lot of food got chucked in the compost bin. But last summer, while auditing her overall spending, she also started growing a few vegetables. 'It was as if a switch had been flicked in my mind – as if it had taken the idea of growing my own food to truly understand the value and timescale of food production,' she writes. She committed to using up every scrap of uneaten food and became more flexible about following recipes. Apples in a curry? Yes, please. Leftover roast potatoes with spaghetti? Delicious. It hasn't been without what she terms 'flavour disasters', but she has found the challenge has made her less ambitious but more creative. 'Best of all,' Wilkinson writes, 'I've rediscovered what I loved about cooking in the first place: the joy of making something delicious out of almost nothing.' Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday And finally, the Guardian's puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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