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Immigration staff at busiest UK airports to strike over Christmas

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Immigration staff at busiest UK airports to strike over Christmas

In a dispute over pay, employees in passport cubicles would stroll out on eight days from December 23 to 31, union says.

UK Border Power employees plan to go on strike at airports throughout the nation throughout the busy Christmas interval in a dispute over pay, one of many United Kingdom’s greatest commerce unions mentioned, because it warned that travellers will face extreme disruptions.

Border Power staff at a number of main British airports – together with the nation’s busiest, London’s Heathrow – will stroll off the job for eight days, from December 23 to 31, the Public and Industrial Providers (PCS) union mentioned on Wednesday.

The union’s basic secretary, Mark Serwotka, mentioned about 2,000-3,000 staff can be on strike.

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The union mentioned employees employed by the UK’s inside ministry, the Dwelling Workplace, in passport cubicles would take motion on the nation’s busiest airports – Heathrow and Gatwick – in addition to Birmingham Airport, Cardiff Airport, Glasgow Airport, Manchester Airport and the Port of Newhaven.

“It’s actually going to jeopardise the getaway plans for a whole lot of 1000’s of individuals due to the width and breadth of the strike motion that the PCS union are planning,” mentioned Al Jazeera’s Paul Brennan, reporting from London.

“The dates we’re speaking about are basically the height instances that individuals will probably be eager to both get away for a little bit of winter solar or maybe return to their house nations to see their households after having frolicked working right here within the UK.”

PCS members working in different authorities departments, together with the Highways Company and the Division for Work and Pensions, have already introduced walkouts over pay and situations.

Serwotka mentioned staff had been struggling to deal with the hovering price of dwelling, attributable to double-digit inflation and sky-high power costs on the again of the battle in Ukraine.

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“The federal government can cease these strikes tomorrow if it places cash on the desk,” he mentioned, telling a London information convention the walkout would have “extreme” results.

PCS members had been “determined” and a proposed 2-percent pay enhance was not sufficient when inflation had crossed 11 %, he added, promising to escalate motion within the new yr except the impasse was damaged.

He mentioned, “PCS members come to me, typically in tears, saying they’ll’t afford to place meals on the desk.”

 

Passengers queue contained in the departures terminal of Terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport in London [File: Henry Nicholls/Reuters]

The strikes are a part of spiralling cases of business motion by railway staff, nurses, ambulance drivers and academics.

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The seaport of Newhaven, in southeastern England, will even be affected.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hit out earlier on Wednesday at “unreasonable” union leaders and warned of “new powerful legal guidelines” to guard the lives and livelihoods of the British public.

He didn’t elaborate however gave the impression to be referring to proposals first put ahead in 2019 for a minimal degree of service throughout strikes.

Sunak’s spokesman later mentioned work on the plan was going down “at velocity”.

“We are going to contemplate all methods of curbing additional motion together with laws,” he informed reporters.

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A Heathrow spokesperson mentioned the airport was working with airways and Border Power on plans to mitigate disruptions.

“The Dwelling Workplace advises that immigration and customs checks might take longer throughout peak instances on strike days, and Heathrow will help Border Power to minimise these impacts with the intention of processing passengers by the border as effectively as potential,” the spokesperson mentioned.

Gatwick mentioned it anticipated flights to function as regular and it might additionally make additional airport employees out there to assist passengers on strike days.

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US military conducts successful airstrikes on Houthi rebel forces in Yemen

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US military conducts successful airstrikes on Houthi rebel forces in Yemen

The U.S. military confirmed it conducted airstrikes in Yemen, saying it targeted a missile storage site and a command-and-control center operated by Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) announced the successful strikes in a release Saturday, saying they were meant to “disrupt and degrade” Houthi operations.

“CENTCOM forces conducted the deliberate strikes to disrupt and degrade Houthi operations, such as attacks against U.S. Navy warships and merchant vessels in the Southern Red Sea, Bab al-Mandeb and Gulf of Aden,” CENTCOM said in a news release.

DISAPPROVAL MOUNTS BOTH AT HOME AND ABROAD AS US AVOIDS DIRECT ACTION AGAINST HOUTHI REBELS

The U.S. military successfully conducted airstrikes in Yemen, saying it targeted a missile storage site and a command-and-control site operated by Iran-backed Houthi rebels. (CENTCOM via X)

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Footage from CENTCOM showed F/A-18’s taking off. The agency said it also used assets from the Navy and the Air Force.

US NAVY SHIPS REPEL ATTACK FROM HOUTHIS IN GULF OF ADEN 

“The strike reflects CENTCOM’s ongoing commitment to protect U.S. and coalition personnel, regional partners and international shipping,” it said.

Houthi rebels

Houthi followers burn the Israeli and American flags on the outskirts of Sana’a, Yemen. (Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images)

The attacks against shipping are ongoing, and Houthi militants have vowed to continue until Israel ends its campaign in Gaza.

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The terrorist group has targeted more than 100 merchant vessels since the start of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023.

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Fact check: How deadly was 2024 for journalists?

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Fact check: How deadly was 2024 for journalists?

An estimated 104 journalists lost their lives in 2024, with Palestine the most dangerous territory.

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An estimated 104 journalists were killed worldwide over the past year, according to data shared earlier this month by the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ).

Another report by NGO Reporters Without Borders (RSF) puts the figure at 54, but its methodology means it only includes killings that are considered “directly related” to journalists’ professional activity.

Both organisations say that Palestine is the deadliest place on earth for journalists. More than half (55) of the 104 killings reported by IFJ were Palestinian media professionals in Gaza, while a further six were killed in Lebanon.

At least 138 journalists have been killed in Gaza since the war between Israel and Hamas broke out on 7 October 2023, making the country one of the “most dangerous in the history of modern journalism, behind Iraq, the Philippines and Mexico,” according to the IFJ.

Reporters without Borders has described the number of killings in Gaza as “an unprecedented bloodbath”.

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Israel firmly denies it has intentionally targeted any journalists, but has recognised some that have been killed in its airstrikes on Gaza.

The 104 total killings reported by the IFJ is a slight decrease on the 129 they reported on in 2023, which is considered the bloodiest year for journalists since 1990.

How do other world regions fare?

Asia Pacific is the world’s second most dangerous region for journalists, after the Middle East, according to the IFJ.

It recorded 20 deaths in the region in 2024, of which 70% happened in the southern Asian countries of Pakistan, Bangladesh and India.

The region has seen an “upsurge” in violence, according to the IFJ, with deaths increasing sharply from the 12 recorded in 2023.

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Africa was the third most dangerous region for journalists at eight deaths, five of them in war-torn Sudan.

The number of journalists killed in south, central and north America has dropped sharply over the past two years, from 30 in 2022 to six in 2023, and another six in 2024. Mexico, considered to be one of the deadliest places in the world to do journalism, continues to see “threats, intimidation, kidnappings and murders” against journalists, particularly due to reporting on drug trafficking.

Number of journalists behind bars on the rise

According to IFJ estimates on 10 December, there were 520 journalists in prison across the world, considerably more than in 2023 (427) and 2022 (375).

China, including Hong Kong, accounts for most of journalists behind bars, followed by Israel and Myanmar.

The IFJ says the figures show how “fragile” the independent press is and how “risky and dangerous” the profession of journalism has become.

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Italian state railways plans 1.3 bln euro investment in solar plant

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Italian state railways plans 1.3 bln euro investment in solar plant
Italian state railways Ferrovie dello Stato plans to invest 1.3 billion euros ($1.36 billion) in a photovoltaic plant with an initial 1 gigawatt (GW) capacity that would cover 19% of its energy needs by 2029, the CEO said in a newspaper interview.
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