Tbgu Sajid Javid wants high court hearing into MI5 failures to be secret
Wes Streeting has held urgent talks with NHS leaders in England about how the service will cope with an impending winter crisis, amid signs that it is already under intense pressure.At the meeting on Monday, the health secretary told the chief executive of NHS England, Amanda Pritchard, and the bosses of large hospital trusts to prioritise patient safety over trying to meet waiting time targets.He convened the meeting days after NHS England said hospitals faced being overwhelmed by a potential quad-demic of flu, Covid, respiratory syncytial virus RSV and the diarrhoea and vomiting bug norovirus .There is mounting alarm that more than 2,000 of the services 100,000 beds are already filled with people with Covid 1,390 or norovirus 756 , another 142 oc <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cup</a> cupied by children with RSV and that ambulance services are struggling to cope with the number of 999 calls they are receiving.Streeting said: We inherited a broken NHS that saw annual winter crisis as the norm. This year, were seeing record pressures on servi <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup</a> ces as we move into winter. This winter I want to see patient safety prioritised as we brace ourselves for the coming months. He has asked local NHS leaders to make it a priority to ge <a href=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx>stanley tazas</a> t patients out of ambulances and into their hospitals as soon as possible, so crews can get back on the road to attend other incidents, and also to ensure that patients do not wait too long for care in AE units.Pritchard said the service would face even greater pressures in the comin Obsu Human rights: from Europe to the UK
A secret interrogation centre in Pakistan where British terrorism suspects are a <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.fr>stanley france</a> lleged to have been tortured after UK au <a href=https://www.stanleycups.cz>stanley cup</a> thorities had them arrested has been found by the Guardian.The centre, run by the country s Inter-Services Intelligence agency ISI , is in the Saddar district of Rawalpindi. It is surrounded by high walls and watchtowers, and bristling with surveillance cameras.So notorious is the ISI that local photographers are reluctant to take pictures of the centre, although satellite images are readily available.A British citizen says he was driven there in 2004, held for 10 months and tortured. Salahuddin Amin, now aged 33, had moved to Pakistan three year <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.us>stanley usa</a> s earlier from Luton, Bedfordshire.Amin was eventually returned to the UK and successfully prosecuted. His trial heard that he was interviewed by officers from the British security service MI5 several times during his detention. His lawyers allege ISI officers beat and whipped him, and threatened him with an electric drill, in between the MI5 interviews, and that the British officers must have known he was being mistreated.A second British citizen, aged 33 and from Manchester, who was arrested at the request of British authorities, is thought to have been held at the same place. The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has described being hooded and driven to a detention centre that resembles Amin s account. He was deprived of sleep and whipped, the man says, and an ISI officer used pliers to pull out three f