Author: Fatimah Idera

Fatimah Idera is a writer and passionate journalist who loves writing and researching.With over 4 years of reporting her stories imbibe the storytelling techniques in capturing audience attention.She covers beats around procurement/accountability,Investigative reports, fact checking, climate, education, health and developmental reports. Fatimah who is based in Lagos had attended several trainings. She also cover UK news for the new Dailyprime.

MET police

UK counter-terrorism officers have arrested three men on suspicion of assisting a Russian intelligence service, as part of an ongoing national security investigation. The suspects, aged 44, 45 and 48, were detained during coordinated operations in west and central London on Thursday morning, the Metropolitan Police said. The arrests were made under section 3 of the National Security Act, which covers assisting a foreign intelligence service. Officers carried out searches at the locations where the men were arrested, as well as at an additional address in west London. Police have not disclosed the men’s nationalities. Commander Dominic Murphy, who leads…

Read More
Ministers approve plan to lower London’s affordable housing quotas

The UK government has confirmed plans to cut affordable housing requirements in London in a bid to evive the capital’s faltering housebuilding sector. Housing Secretary, Steve Reed announced on Thursday that developers will now qualify for fast-track planning permission if their projects include just 20% affordable housing , a sharp drop from the current 35% quota. Of that 20%, at least 60% must be offered at the lowest social rent levels. The move aims to address a dramatic slowdown in construction, with developers blaming soaring interest rates, rising material costs and cumbersome planning procedures. Recent figures show private homebuilding has…

Read More
Labour MPs warn ministers of business chaos over gender guidance

Dozens of Labour MPs have warned that forthcoming gender recognition guidance could trigger confusion, legal disputes and major costs for UK businesses. This was disclosed in a private letter to Business Secretary Peter Kyle, nearly 50 Labour backbenchers said companies across the country were alarmed by the expected regulations and feared a legal and compliance minefield if the draft plans go ahead. The final guidance, prepared by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), has not yet been made public, but is understood to closely mirror interim advice issued after April’s supreme court ruling, which confirmed that sex in the…

Read More
UK resident doctors protest

Resident doctors in England will stage a five-day strike in November as tensions deepen between the British Medical Association (BMA) and the government over pay and the growing number of unemployed doctors. The industrial action, announced by the BMA recently, will run from 7am on 14 November to 7am on 19 November, marking one of the longest walkouts so far by resident doctors, who make up roughly half of the NHS medical workforce. The dispute centres on pay erosion and the rise in unemployment among newly qualified doctor is an issue the BMA says is worsening an already strained health…

Read More
Britain under siege? 1,075 migrants storm channel in 24 hours

A migrant who was removed to France under the government’s new one in, one out returns scheme has crossed back into the UK on a small boat less than a month later. Reports revealed that the man, believed to be an Iranian national, has claimed he was a victim of modern slavery in France, alleging that smuggling gangs forced him into labour, abused him and threatened his life. He said, he fled back to the UK out of fear for his safety. According to BBC, the man was first detained in the UK on 6 August and removed to France…

Read More
Methanol

The UK Foreign Office has expanded its travel guidance to warn Britons about the risk of methanol poisoning from counterfeit or contaminated alcoholic drinks in eight additional countries. Ecuador, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Peru, Russia and Uganda have now been added to the advisory, following recent incidents involving British travellers. The warning already covered Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Turkey, Costa Rica and Fiji. The update comes after a string of high-profile cases, including the deaths of six tourists in Laos last year. Officials caution that methanol poisoning can cause nausea, dizziness, blurred vision, confusion, blindness and, in severe cases,…

Read More
Violent scene

Six people have been arrested following violent scenes outside a Dublin hotel housing asylum seekers, where Irish police came under sustained attack from protesters hurling bricks, fireworks and bottles. The disorder erupted on Tuesday evening at the Citywest Hotel in Saggart. Gardaí said demonstrators tried to force their way through police lines, with some charging the cordon on horse-drawn sulkies and others wielding garden tools and makeshift weapons. A Garda vehicle was set alight, while the force’s helicopter was targeted with laser beams. One female officer suffered a foot injury and received treatment at the scene. Garda Commissioner, Justin Kelly…

Read More
Prisoners

About 6,500 offenders, including rapists, killers and child sex abusers, could be eligible for early release under Labour’s sentencing reforms, according to Conservative analysis. The government had a plan to free up around 10,000 prison spaces by allowing serious, violent and sexual offenders on fixed-term sentences of four years or more to leave prison at the halfway stage, rather than at two-thirds, if they comply with prison rules and rehabilitation programmes. The proposal is contained in Labour’s new sentencing bill, currently before Parliament. The Conservatives argue the changes would apply to 85% of serious offenders serving determinate sentences. These figures…

Read More