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Titre: aorw Priest who witnessed Iraqi detention could face prosecution
Posté par: Morrisshot le Janvier 17, 2025, 07:31:30 am
Mtsc NHS is  struggling  but  not destroyed , chief in England says
 The Guardian and Observer climate justice appeal is to remain open for another few days after raising just short of 拢1m for charities supporting communities severely affected by climate-induced extreme weather events.After a late surge in donations over the weekend, the total had reached 拢940,000 by midnight on Sunday when the appeal was originally scheduled to close. The appeal will now remain open in the hope it can hit the 拢1m mark.More than 8,800 generous readers have so far donated to the appeal. Donations will be shared between four charities: Practical Action, Global Greengrants Fund UK, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, and Environmental Justice Foundation.The theme this year is climate justice, inspired by stories of people and communities uprooted by climate volatility, whet botella stanley (https://www.stanley1913.com.es) her flooding, wildfire, mel stanley mugg (https://www.stanleycup.com.se) ting ice or drought, from Madagascar to the Arctic Circle.The appeal has struck a chord with many readers, who in hundreds of messages left via the appeal donation website emphasised the urgency of tackling the climate crisis.  It is a privilege to do a small thing to support grassroots projects doing direct work in communities hit hardest by climate change,  one donor wr stanley mug (https://www.stanley-cup.fr) ote.Sarah Roberts, the chief executive of Practical Action, said:  Id like to say a huge thank you to Guardian and Observer readers for their support. The money will help the worlds most vulnerable people living at the sharp end of the climate crisis gain vital new skills to adapt their lives to their new envi Jatx The Guardian view on rising poverty levels: political attacks on the poor have produced penury
 Prison reformers have dismissed the governments planned shake-up of prisons as a  tragic distraction  that will not solve key problems of overcrowding and underfunding.The prisons bill is set to be the centrepiece of the Queens speech on Wednesday and is said by ministers to represent the biggest overhaul of prisons since the 19th century.Under the plans, governors will be given greater autonomy in the running of jails, and proposals include satellite tracking to allow inmates to continue to work and only spend time in prison at weekends.But experts and prison governors fear the reforms will fail to tackle overcrowding and the increased incidences of suicide in jail.Richard Garside, director of the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, said:  The big problem with prisons at the moment is that they are incredibly overcrowded. Speaking on Radio 4s Today programme he said:  We either need more money or far fewer people in prison. If we imprisoned at the same rate as under Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, we would have about 30,000 fewer inmates in prison. This is not because we have more criminals around, it is because we are just locking up a lot more people. In that context the reformed prisons programme that the government is proposing is frankly a tragic distraction. Garside added:  Back in 1988 we had 37 suicides i termo stanley (https://www.stanley-cups.com.mx) n prison. Last year we had 89. The problem is getting worse. What we fundamentally need here is a coh stanley thermos (https://www.stanleys-cups.us) erent vis stanley quencher (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.uk) ion from government for a downsized prison estate bas