Britain Formally Recognizes Yazidi Genocide by IS
After years of waiting, the UK government has finally recognized the acts of genocide against the Yazidi people by the Islamic State terror group in Iraq, citing a German court ruling.
After years of waiting, the UK government has finally recognized the acts of genocide against the Yazidi people by the Islamic State terror group in Iraq, citing a German court ruling.
The prime minister made it clear these licences are not intended to disrupt his drive towards carbon ‘net zero.’
MPs insist that the government must “learn from the Huawei experience.”
Tens of thousands of people are set to arrive in the next three months, but the government is adamant that it will clear the asylum backlog by the end of the year.
Rishi Sunak has signalled that he wants to “soften” his green policies, but it is unclear whether any changes to rhetoric will do anything to substantively alter the drive towards net zero.
Despite constant warnings of the impact of the lockdown on children, the government is said to be only just “beginning an attendance drive over the summer.”
The case has been brought forward by a professor of competition policy who said Apple’s charges for developers are “excessive and only possible due to its monopoly on the distribution of apps.”
Labour has acknowledged that it is doing something “very wrong” on the expansion of London’s green policy, though Mayor Sadiq Khan appears keen to push ahead.
The BBC have apologised to the former UKIP leader for inaccurate reporting, but Natwest has come under a lot of pressure for bringing politics into banking.
One of Britain’s most notorious Islamic hate preachers, Anjem Choudary, faces new terror-related charges after being convicted of terror offences in 2016 and serving just two years in prison.
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