Author: LoveWorld UK

Police federation chiefs have blasted Boris Johnson’s new rules as ‘absurd’ and ‘a nonsense’ as small business owners say they will go bust if workers stay home again. The Prime Minister faced fire from all sides as he U-turned on his push to reopen workplaces after just a few weeks to tell office staff to work from home if they can. He was barbed for introducing new measures including a 10pm pub curfew and £200 fines for mask rule-breakers among new restrictions on social settings in England. The PM also announced he is making the British Army available to help the police…

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Dean Henderson’s bid to replace David de Gea as Manchester United’s first-choice goalkeeper got off to a solid start as he made a key save in his belated debut for the club in their 3-0 win at Luton Town in the League Cup on Tuesday. Henderson was one of 10 changes to the United team after a disappointing 3-1 home defeat to Crystal Palace on Saturday in their opening game of the new Premier League campaign. The 23-year-old, returning to the club after a loan spell at Sheffield United, made a crucial stop to deny Tom Lockyer as United went…

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Germany’s Europe Minister Michael Roth urged Britain on Tuesday to drop plans for a bill that would break the country’s obligations to the European Union under its withdrawal treaty as time was running out to clinch an EU-Britain trade deal. Speaking to reporters ahead of a meeting of EU ministers in Brussels that is to prepare a summit of EU leaders later this week, Roth said he was “extremely worried” by London’s plans to pass an internal market bill that would break international law. “Please, dear friends in London, stop the games, time is running out, what we really need…

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Claims against Danske Bank DANSKE.CO in a lawsuit about one of the world’s biggest money laundering investigations have topped $1 billion, according to a Danish law firm. Denmark’s biggest lender is under investigation in several countries including the United States over 200 billion euros ($235 billion) in payments made via its small branch in Estonia between 2007 and 2015, many of which the bank has said were suspicious. Danish law firm Klar Advokater said it had filed a final round of complaints against the bank on behalf of 55 pension funds and other investors. U.S. law firms Grant & Eisenhofer and DRRT…

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The British government postponed plans for the controlled return of fans into sports stadiums as part of new restrictions announced on Tuesday to tackle a second wave of COVID-19. The government had been planning to allow 25-33% capacities from Oct. 1, giving sports a funding boost after months of empty stadiums. “We have to acknowledge that the spread of the virus is now affecting our ability to reopen business conferences, exhibitions and large sporting events,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson told parliament. “So we will not be able to do this from the first of October. “I recognise the implications for…

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Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) on Tuesday proposed stopping insurers from charging existing car and home insurance customers more than new ones in the latest crackdown on an industry grappling with costly COVID-19 claims. One week after the FCA successfully brought a test case against eight insurers over their denial of business interruption claims, it said customers who renewed home or motor insurance policies should pay no more than new clients using the same sales channel. “The FCA estimates that its proposals will save consumers 3.7 billion pounds ($4.74 billion) over 10 years,” FCA interim chief executive Christopher Woolard said.…

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German’s Angela Merkel embarks this week on her third bold attempt to reshape European migration, but she faces an uphill task convincing other EU leaders to host refugees, even if her plan contains generous incentives. Having taken in a million refugees in 2015 and struck a deal with Turkey to cut Mediterranean arrivals a year later, Merkel is the driving force behind a new European Union migration pact to be unveiled on Wednesday. It seeks to share the task of accepting the hundreds and sometimes thousands of refugees arriving by boat every week – an idea that one EU official…

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Democrats are thinking about taking extreme measures to block President Trump or undo his plans to nominate a new Supreme Court justice following the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The president announced on Saturday that he will nominate a woman in the next week to succeed the late justice. But Democrats say they not only want to prevent the nomination, they’re open to impeaching Trump after the election and then packing the court with new justices if they’re able to take over the White House. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced his desire to expand the Supreme Court from nine to 13 members to…

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The Abu Dhabi Film Commission, the Israel Film Fund and the Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film and Television School have signed a cooperation agreement for training and production, a joint statement said on Monday. The agreement includes plans for an annual regional film festival rotating between Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, and Israel. The move comes after the countries agreed to establish bilateral diplomatic and trade ties, which officials have said will create significant economic opportunities. The two sides will develop training programs for film-makers from the two countries over a period of several months, which could…

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Shares in HSBC HSBA.L and Standard Chartered STAN.L fell on Monday to their lowest since 1998 after media reports that they and other banks, including Barclays BARC.L and Deutsche Bank, moved large sums of allegedly illicit funds over nearly two decades despite red flags about the origins of the money. The BuzzFeed and other media articles were based on leaked suspicious activity reports (SARs) filed by banks and other financial firms with the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCen). HSBC shares in London HSBA.L fell as much as 3.6% to their lowest since the Asian currency crisis of 1998. The stock has now nearly halved…

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