Monday, 4 February 2019

Daniel Williams: Vigil held for missing Reading student

Daniel Williams
Pic--Daniel Williams, 19, was last seen in a student union bar at the University of Reading's Whiteknights campus/bbc-wp
Crime reporter(wp/bbc):::
Police and rescue services conducted searches over the weekend, but failed to find Mr Williams, who is originally from Sutton, in London.
The university's students union appealed for people to deliver flyers to "raise awareness of the search" for the 19-year-old.
Lead investigator Supt Jim Weems said searches had taken place around the campus and along potential routes he may have taken to get home.
"We are very worried about Daniel. Daniel is a very happy, popular student," he added.
Supt Weems said the snow had "not hampered" the search to find the student, but the night Mr Williams disappeared was "one of the coldest nights of the year".
Prof Robert Van de Noort, acting vice-chancellor at the University of Reading, said support was being offered to the student's housemates and friends.
Mr Williams is described as 6ft tall, slim, with short, light brown hair and blue eyes.
He was wearing jeans, black shoes and a black hooded top over a black T-shirt on the night he went missing.

Thirty-three men arrested over Halifax child sex abuse

Crime reporter(wp/bbc):::
Thirty-three men have been arrested in connection with historical child sexual abuse in West Yorkshire.
It follows allegations made by a woman about abuse she suffered as a child in Halifax, Calderdale, between 2002 and 2005.
The arrested men, aged between 30 and 40, have been released under investigation pending further inquiries.
Homes in Calderdale, Bradford and Kirklees were searched, police said.
West Yorkshire Police said the arrests were part of an "ongoing operation", which started in October last year.
Det Insp Laura Nield, of the Calderdale District Safeguarding unit, said: "We would urge anyone who has been a victim of sexual abuse, no matter when it took place, to report it to the police.
"You will be listened to, taken seriously and supported by professionals with experience of dealing with these kind of offences."
The force had specialist safeguarding units across the county and worked with local authorities and charities to "bring offenders to justice", she said.
In January, the force arrested 55 men from Dewsbury, Batley and Bradford in connection with historical child sex abuse cases in West Yorkshire.
The claims made by seven women related to abuse against them as children between 2002 and 2009.

Mother charged with murder of son in Gloucester

Crime reporter(wp/bbc):::
A mother has appeared in court charged with murdering her son.
Joy Liddell, 65, of Sandyleaze, Gloucester, is accused of the murder of Michael Liddell, 35.
He was found at a property in the Longlevens area of the city on Thursday and died shortly after paramedics treated him for serious injuries.
Mrs Liddell appeared before magistrates in Cheltenham earlier and will next appear at Bristol Crown Court on Wednesday.

Missing Libby Squire: Hull student's parents issue plea to daughter

Libby Squire
Pic---Libby Squire, from High Wycombe, was last spotted on CCTV near her student house in Hull/bbc-wp
Staff reporter(wp/bbc):::
The parents of missing Libby Squire have urged their daughter to "get in touch" in an emotional appeal to her.
Hundreds of people have been involved in a four-day search to find the 21-year-old, who was last seen in Hull on Thursday.
Her mother Lisa Squire said: "Libby, my darling pie, we just want to know that you are safe."
Police have ruled out from their inquiry three items found near Beverley Road, where she was last seen.
In a video appeal tweeted by Humberside Police, Mrs Squire urged her daughter to "get in touch with us any way you can".
"The whole family is missing you, especially me and your dad, your sisters and brother," she said.
"I miss you so much, it is breaking my heart not knowing where you are. I love you more."
Miss Squire was last seen getting into a taxi outside the Welly Club music venue in Beverley Road at about 23:00 GMT. She is believed to have been dropped off a short while later, close to where she lived in Wellesley Avenue.
She was then helped by another motorist who pulled over after seeing her sitting on a bench in the street.
He subsequently made contact with police and "really helped out" with the search, officers said.
Miss Squire, from High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, was last spotted on CCTV in Beverley Road, near the junction with Haworth Street, some 45 minutes later.
A screwdriver, hammer and lip gloss were retrieved by forensic officers close to the spot where she was last seen.
But Humberside Police said they were not "connected with the inquiry into her disappearance" and the items were "part of another investigation".
Appealing to the public earlier, her father Russell Squire said "we just want Libby home".
He added: "Libby is our kind, thoughtful, beautiful girl who is loved by so many people.
"As you can appreciate this is a very difficult time for us both."
Mr Squire thanked "everyone for their help and support" before asking anyone with information to contact the force.
Officers have been searching in drains and wheelie bins along the street, while detectives conducted door-to-door inquiries.
Nearby, officers from the police marine unit travelled along a length of the frozen Beverley and Barmston Drain in inflatable rafts, breaking the ice and searching the water.
About 200 students were also involved in a search of the university premises.
The family previously said Miss Squire's disappearance was "very out of character" and they were "broken without her".
Police are keen to speak to anyone who was on Haworth Street between 23:30 and 00:30 on the night she disappeared.
Miss Squire, who is 5ft 7in tall and has long dark brown hair, had been wearing a black leather jacket, black long-sleeved top and a black denim skirt with lace.
The University of Hull has said it was "deeply concerned" about the missing student and was working closely with police.

UK promised Nissan 80 million pounds of support for 2016 car investment: FT

Business reporter(wp/reuters):::
Britain promised about 80 million pounds ($104 million) in support to Nissan in 2016 as part of a major investment by the Japanese carmaker in its British car plant just four months after the Brexit vote, the Financial Times reported on Monday.
In a letter from business minister Greg Clark to then Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn, the British government also promised to protect the car sector as Britain leaves the European Union.
“It will be a critical priority of our negotiations to support UK car manufacturers, and ensure their ability to export to and from the EU is not adversely affected by the UK’s future relationship with the EU,” the letter read, according to the FT.
“In any circumstance, the government will ensure that the UK continues to be one of the most competitive locations for automotive and other advanced manufacturing within Europe and globally, including sites such as Sunderland.”
($1 = 0.7662 pounds)

Brexit worries put freeze on UK construction in January - PMI

Business reporter(wp/reuters):::
Growth in Britain’s construction industry ebbed in January to its weakest since icy weather beset the sector last March, as uncertainty around Brexit dragged particularly on commercial building work, a business survey showed on Monday.
The IHS Markit/CIPS UK Construction Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 50.6 from 52.8 in December, below all forecasts in a Reuters poll of economists that had pointed to a reading of 52.4.
Growth in the housebuilding and civil engineering sectors slowed sharply and activity contracted in the commercial sector for the first time since March, when construction was hit by unusually cold temperatures.
Construction firms hired staff at the slowest pace since July 2016, just after the Brexit referendum, as optimism soured ahead of Britain’s departure from the European Union, scheduled in less than two months’ time.
“Delays to client decision-making on new projects in response to Brexit uncertainty was cited as a key source of anxiety at the start of 2019,” Tim Moore, economist at survey compiler IHS Markit, said.
A similar survey of the manufacturing sector also showed a sharp slowdown underway, caused by a cooling global economy as well as Brexit uncertainty.
Prime Minister Theresa May, under pressure from her own Conservative Party, wants to reopen a Brexit treaty with the European Union to replace a contested Irish border arrangement, something Brussels has rejected.
Investors have urged the government to ensure an orderly exit from the club it joined in 1973.
The closely watched IHS Markit/CIPS survey of services companies, which accounts for the bulk of private-sector activity, is due on Tuesday.

Germany's Merkel drops hint of a 'creative' Brexit compromise

Political reporter(wp/reuters):::
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday offered a way to break the deadlock over the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union, calling for a creative compromise to allay concerns over the future of Irish border arrangements.

The United Kingdom is due under British and European law to leave the EU in just 53 days yet Prime Minister Theresa May wants last-minute changes to a divorce deal agreed with the EU last November to win over members of parliament in the British parliament.
May is seeking legally binding changes to the deal to replace the Northern Irish backstop, an insurance policy that aims to prevent the reintroduction of a hard border between EU-member Ireland and the British province of Northern Ireland.
While Merkel said she did not want the so-called Withdrawal Agreement renegotiated, she added that difficult questions could be resolved with creativity, the strongest hint to date that the EU’s most powerful leader could be prepared to compromise.
“There are definitely options for preserving the integrity of the single market even when Northern Ireland isn’t part of it because it is part of Britain while at the same time meeting the desire to have, if possible, no border controls,” Merkel said.
“To solve this point you have to be creative and listen to each other, and such discussions can and must be conducted,” Merkel said at a news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo.
Merkel said the Irish backstop issue could be solved as part of a discussion over a separate agreement on the future relationship between the European Union and the United Kingdom, offering May a potential way out of the deadlock.
Merkel’s stance on Brexit is driven by an eagerness to preserve the integrity of the EU and its internal market, which are crucial to Germany’s post-war identity and prosperity, while also keeping Britain close to the bloc even after it leaves.
Keen to avoid the economic disruption a no-deal Brexit would bring to Germany’s economy, which slowed sharply last year, Merkel also values Britain as a like-minded partner and wants to keep its security expertise close at hand.
“We can still use the time to perhaps reach an agreement if everyone shows good will,” Merkel said.
LAST-MINUTE DEAL?
The United Kingdom’s labyrinthine crisis over EU membership is approaching its finale with an array of options including no-deal Brexit, a last-minute deal, a snap election or a delay.
May said on Sunday she would seek a “pragmatic solution” when she tries to reopen talks with Brussels.
“I will be battling for Britain and Northern Ireland, I will be armed with a fresh mandate, new ideas and a renewed determination to agree a pragmatic solution that delivers the Brexit the British people voted for,” said May, who will visit Northern Ireland on Tuesday.
Brexit-supporting MPs in her Conservative Party have warned they will vote against her deal unless there are substantial changes.
While the United Kingdom is divided over EU membership, most agree the world’s fifth largest economy is at a crossroads and that Brexit will shape the country’s prosperity for generations.
Brexit supporters accept there will be some short-term economic pain but say the United Kingdom will thrive if cut loose from what they see as a doomed experiment in German-dominated unity that is falling far behind the United States and China.
Pro-Europeans fear Brexit will undermine London’s position as a global financial capital and weaken the West as it grapples with Donald Trump’s unpredictable U.S. presidency and growing assertiveness from Russia and China.
Many company chiefs are aghast at the Brexit uncertainty which they say has damaged Britain’s reputation as Europe’s pre-eminent destination for foreign investment.
Carmaker Nissan has scrapped plans to build its new X-Trail SUV in Britain and will produce it solely in Japan, warning uncertainty over Britain’s departure from the EU was making it harder to plan for the future.