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The mobile network Three said it was investigating why many of its users failed to receive an emergency alert from the government, the first nationwide test for the UKs new national warning system.The alarm was scheduled to sound at 3pm on all mobile devices connected to the UKs 4G and 5G networks, but while the piercing, 10-second tone did arrive for millions of people, and up to a minute early for some, Three users reported en masse that they did not receive it. We are aware that a number of customers have not received the test alert, a Three spokesperson said. We are working closely with the government to understand why and ensure it doesnt happen when the system is in use. A government spokesperson said: We have effectively completed the test of the UK-wide emergency alerts system, the biggest public communications exercise of its kind ever done. We are working with mobile network operators to review the outcome <a href=https://www.stanleywebsite.us>stanley cup</a> and any lessons learned. A very small proportion of users on some mobile networks had not received the message, a government s <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley kaffeebecher</a> ource said, and that failure will form part of the review.The overwh <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.es>vaso stanley</a> elming majority of users who failed to receive the alert appeared to be with the Three network, but some on the O2 and Vodafone networks also reported difficulty. Users whose phones have not received a software update in more than two years, and those who were not within reach of a 4G or 5G network were not expected to successfully receive it.Some users chose to opt out Flhk Samantha Cameron under fire as fashion label breaches employment rules
Up to 拢230m has been spent needlessly holding people on remand in custody who eventually avoided jail, a penal reform charity has said.More than 35,000 people kept on remand in 2013 went on to be either acquitted or be g <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.pl>stanley termos</a> iven non-custodial sentences, according to new figures obtained by the Howard League for Penal Reform from the Ministry of Justice through a Freedom of Information request.Data from both crown and magistrates courts in England and Wales suggests the total number of people held on remand in 2013 reached 72,877, while in the 12 months to June this year there have been about 11,594 people in prison on remand at any one time.The charity condemned the figures as a misuse of the remand system but the Magistrates Association said the charitys analysis was misguided .Howard League <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley uk</a> chief executive F <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.uk>stanley cup</a> rances Crook said: Our prisons are squalid and our prisoners are idle, yet the courts are continuing to remand innocent people and people accused of petty crime at huge public expense. It is time to end this unjust system, which is costing the nation money that could be better spent. Last year, magistrates remanded 25,413 people, about 71% of the total 36,044 held, who did not eventually get jailed. With defendants held prisoner for an average of nine weeks and a prison place costing 拢37,000 a year, the charity estimated it cost the taxpayer 拢165m.Meanwhile, judges sitting in crown courts remanded 36,833 people, of which 27% or 9,844 were acquitted or avoided custody upo