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Hospital bosses ‘facilitated a mass murderer’

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Hospital bosses 'facilitated a mass murderer'
Cheshire Constabulary Custody photograph of convicted serial killer Lucy Letby, who murdered seven babies and attempted to murder seven others at the Countess of Chester hospitalCheshire Constabulary

Lucy Letby was a neonatal nurse at the Countess of Chester Hospital

Hospital bosses “facilitated a mass murderer” by ignoring concerns about Lucy Letby, the mother of one of the babies killed by the neonatal nurse said.

She said her daughter’s death in October 2015 could have been prevented had “prompt and effective action” been taken after three infants died in June of that year at the Countess of Chester Hospital.

Letby murdered the baby girl, who can only be identified as Child I, by injecting air into her stomach and bloodstream.

In a statement read to the public inquiry examining how Letby was able to attack babies, Child I’s mother said: “I believe the doctors and nursing staff should have acted earlier.”

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She added: “Those in positions of authority at the hospital should have listened to them instead of trying to create their own narrative that Lucy Letby was a victim of bullying and harassment.

“Someone should have investigated the concerns fully at the time. This is what management are paid so handsomely to do. They shouldn’t have been concentrating on saving their own skins and jobs and reputations.

“Babies died because someone in an office being paid hundreds of thousands of pounds didn’t want the hospital to look bad if they shut the neonatal unit down while they investigated why so many babies were deteriorating when they should have been thriving.”

‘Blinded by self-preservation’

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She said “much more should have been done” after three babies had died within a short period of time in similar circumstances.

“Had prompt and effective action been taken at that time,” the mother said, “so many other babies would have survived or not have suffered enduring, life-changing harm.

“How many babies needed to die or be seriously harmed for action to be taken to stop Lucy Letby? Sadly, we all now know the answer.

“People paid huge salaries allowed this to happen. They made doctors apologise to Lucy Letby when she had murdered babies and continued to harm other babies.

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“The Countess of Chester Hospital was totally blinded by self-preservation that they forgot why they exist – to remain true to the Hippocratic oath.”

Cheshire Constabulary Former neonatal nurse Lucy Letby, wearing a purple hoodie, emerges from her Chester home in handcuffs after being arrested in 2018Cheshire Constabulary

Lucy Letby was first arrested at her home in Chester in 2018

Child I’s mother suggested senior managers should face sanctions if they ignore whistleblowers’ concerns.

“At the present time, there appear to be no sanctions against those who lied and kept information whilst babies were being killed and harmed by Lucy Letby.

“It was only when it became untenable to keep up the pretence that they finally opened up on the scale of concerns raised against her and the number of babies that she had harmed.

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“I honestly believe that these people should have to explain why they didn’t do something earlier.

“Why they ignored the multitude of concerns raised about Lucy Letby’s conduct. Why their actions facilitated a mass murderer.”

Recalling her experiences with Letby on the unit, Child I’s mother said: “Her face was always on the babies’ fundraising pictures.

“I remember thinking she was a bit quiet and a bit odd. She always seemed a bit of a loner. We saw her around on the odd occasion but we didn’t have much to do with her.”

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When she later received her daughter’s medical records, she said she was “absolutely shocked” at how involved Letby had been.

She said: “She is all over her notes. I have noticed a lot of the ‘care’ was when I wasn’t present.”

‘The cruelest way’

Concluding her statement, Child I’s mother said: “Our baby would have turned nine this year. We should have been watching her grow and play with her siblings and friends.

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“However, we have to somehow try to live with the fact all this has been taken away from her and us in the cruellest way possible.

“No parent should ever have to go through what we have been and continue to go through each and every day.

“To understand how easily my beautiful girl’s death could have been prevented hurts even more.

“Forever and a day, I will continue to ask ‘why?”‘

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Letby, 34, from Hereford, will spend the rest of her life in prison after being convicted of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder seven others.

The public inquiry, which is being overseen by High Court judge Lady Justice Thirlwall in Liverpool, is expected to sit until early next year.

Her findings are expected to be published by the late autumn of 2025.

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UK government borrows more than expected in August

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UK government borrowing sharply overshot expectations in August in a blow to chancellor Rachel Reeves as she prepares for her first budget next month.

The public sector borrowed £13.7bn, the highest August shortfall since 2021, according to the Office for National Statistics.

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That was £3.3bn higher than August last year, and £2.5bn higher than had been forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility, the fiscal watchdog.

Government net debt was provisionally estimated at 100 per cent of gross domestic product at the end of August 2024, the ONS added.

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Harris and Oprah hold a star-studded rally in Michigan

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Harris and Oprah hold a star-studded rally in Michigan

Vice-President Kamala Harris and television icon Oprah Winfrey held a star-studded event in Michigan, one of the seven crucial battleground states that will decide the US election on 5 November.

Winfrey, who also spoke at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in August, asked Harris about what seemed like a sudden burst in confidence, a moment where “a veil or something dropped”, after she replaced President Joe Biden as nominee.

Hollywood stars including Meryl Streep, Jennifer Lopez, Julia Roberts, Chris Rock, and Ben Stiller joined a live discussion via video chat.

Harris is hoping the A-listers can help her sway undecided voters.

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More sex attack claims against ex-Harrods boss

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More sex attack claims against ex-Harrods boss
PA Media Mohamed Al FayedPA Media

A woman has told the BBC she was subjected to a “sickening” sexual assault by former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed after being invited to his London flat for a work meeting.

The woman, who the BBC is calling Melanie, believes police were close to arresting him over her allegations just days before he died in August 2023.

A BBC investigation published on Thursday revealed that more than 20 women said they were sexually assaulted by the billionaire. Five said they were raped.

Melanie is one of a growing number of additional ex-Harrods employees to tell the BBC they were attacked since the documentary and podcast Al-Fayed: Predator at Harrods was released.

The BBC investigation gathered evidence that during Fayed’s ownership, Harrods not only failed to intervene, but helped cover up abuse allegations.

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Melanie’s testimony comes as new details emerge of failed efforts by police and prosecutors to hold Fayed to account during his life, and a legal team representing many of the women the BBC has spoken to will set out their next steps on Friday.

Warning: this story contains details some may find distressing.

‘Sleazebag… slimy’

Melanie worked at Harrods for a few years prior to 2010. She described being hired there as a 21-year-old as a “dream job”.

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She met Fayed – who was in his late seventies at the time – at work meetings on two occasions, before being summoned to his apartment on London’s Park Lane in late 2007.

Melanie says she went to the evening meeting despite the invitation “ringing the alarm bells”.

She was shown into the sitting room by a housekeeper.

Melanie continued: “He sat down next to me, talking to me for a few minutes, not very long… He had asked that I return a couple of weeks later to stay at the apartments the night before the Harrods sale, and I could go to the Harrods sale with him, and I could meet the celebrity that was opening it.

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“And he would not really let me leave until I agreed to that, so I said yes to be able to leave. I did not go back.

“As I stood to leave, that’s when he put his hands on my breast and said some pretty disgusting things. And I was in complete shock. I just turned around and walked out.”

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Melanie told the BBC she did not share the full details of the “sickening” experience with loved ones, and for years “felt it was my fault” because she was “naive enough to have gone”. She described Fayed as a “sleazebag” and “slimy”.

In January 2023 Melanie decided to go to the police. The BBC has seen emails showing the case was passed to the Met’s CID department, which investigates serious allegations.

Melanie says she was later told the Met planned to arrest Fayed that year, and officers tried to arrest him on two occasions.

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But he was too unwell to be questioned, and he died age 94 in August 2023.

PA Media HarrodsPA Media

Harrods, in London’s Knightsbridge district, has not been owned by Fayed since 2010

‘Rumours swirling’ on shop floor

Like other women the BBC has spoken to, Melanie said there were “rumours swirling” about Fayed, and described his private office as being like a “modelling agency” full of young women.

She continued: “There was definitely a knowledge, like a secret knowledge, within the company that Fayed likes to have pretty girls in his chairman’s office. And you do wonder what that means.”

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Other women who worked at Harrods have painted a picture of Fayed as a predator who abused his position to prey on staff, and used his power to deter them from speaking out.

Some former employees recounted how he would tour his department store and identify young female assistants he found attractive, before promoting them to work his private office.

Ex-staff told the BBC this abuse was an open secret at the store. One said: “We all watched each other walk through that door thinking, ‘you poor girl, it’s you today’ and feeling utterly powerless to stop it.”

As well as inside Harrods itself and his Mayfair home, women have described incidents involving Fayed on trips to Paris, St Tropez and Abu Dhabi.

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One woman described him as a “monster” who “cultivated fear” among his staff, while the store’s ex-deputy director of security revealed Fayed had phones tapped and secret cameras installed to monitor his employees’ discussions.

Suspected – but never charged

Melanie was not the only woman who tried to bring Fayed to justice.

The Metropolitan Police confirmed it was “aware of various allegations of sexual offences made over a number of years” against Fayed.

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It said each of the allegations reported to the force had been “investigated and, where appropriate, advice from the Crown Prosecution Service was sought”.

But Fayed was never charged with a crime.

The closest he came to being uncovered appears to have been in October 2008, when he was questioned over allegations made by a girl who he first met when she was 14.

Ellie – not her real name – told the BBC that Fayed personally offered to secure her a job despite her still being a teenager, and she started working at Harrods when she had just turned 15.

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She recounted how in May 2008 she was told to go to the Harrods boardroom, where she said she was attacked by Fayed.

“He started…hugging me and [getting] touchy feely, and rubbing himself against me, and then he just grabbed my face and tried to… put his tongue in my mouth.

“I mentioned that I was 15, and [said] ‘what are you doing?’, and he said I was turning into a beautiful woman and grabbed my chest.”

She said Fayed flew into a rage and started screaming at her when she pushed him off.

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Ellie went to the police and Fayed was questioned by detectives – news which became public in October 2008.

Reuters Mohamed Al FayedReuters

On Thursday, the Met confirmed it had spoken to more than one witness and analysed telephone data in Ellie’s case. The force said it handed a file of evidence to the CPS – but prosecutors decided no further action should be taken.

The Met has declined to say whether Ellie’s case was the only one where Fayed was formally questioned, though the BBC has seen no evidence he was ever quizzed over any other allegation.

The BBC understands Ellie’s case was the only time when a file of evidence was handed to the CPS, a step which has to be taken before an individual can be charged.

On four occasions, police investigations into Fayed were advanced enough for police to consult prosecutors for legal advice.

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The CPS advised the Met in 2018, 2021, and 2023 – but in those instances, police did not provide prosecutors with a full file of evidence. It is also not clear if all of those investigations relate to separate women.

It means Fayed was never forced to answer claims against him in court during his lifetime.

Melanie described the feeling of discovering Fayed had died and would never be taken in for questioning over her 2023 report as “gutting”.

But asked what she would say to Fayed if he were still alive today, Melanie told the BBC: “That you didn’t get away with it. That everybody out there knows what you’ve done… and money can’t get you out of this.”

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Hiding in plain sight

The claims against Fayed have not come out of the blue.

The Egypt-born businessman owned Harrods between 1985 and 2010 and became a well-known figure through other high-profile acquisitions, such as the Ritz hotel in Paris and Fulham Football Club.

He came to further public prominence when his son Dodi died alongside Diana, Princess of Wales – with whom Dodi was romantically involved – in a Paris car crash.

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Despite chat show appearances and his associations with celebrities and public figures, suspicions about Fayed’s predatory behaviour were investigated during his life – including by Vanity Fair in 1995, ITV in 1997 and Channel 4 in 2017.

It was only when Fayed died that many of his victims felt able to come forward.

On Friday, details of new claims are expected to emerge.

PA Media Michael Jackson and Mohamed Al FayedPA Media

Through his business ventures, Fayed became a public figure with several celebrity associations, including singer Michael Jackson

Members of the UK legal team representing many of the women featured in the BBC documentary “Al-Fayed: Predator at Harrods” are to hold a news conference on Friday morning.

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The legal team will outline the case against Harrods. They will be joined by the US women’s rights lawyer Gloria Allred, who has represented victims of high-profile offenders in the past.

Fourteen of the women the BBC has spoken to have brought civil claims against Harrods’ current owners for damages.

Harrods said it has a process available to women who say they were attacked by Fayed, adding “it has been our priority to settle claims in the quickest way possible, avoiding lengthy legal proceedings for the women involved”.

Harrods reiterated its apology to its former staff after the BBC investigation was published. A spokesperson said: “We have now had the opportunity to watch the programme and once again express our sympathy to the victims featured.”

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The Met said it was committed to investigating sexual offences and encouraged victims to speak to police.

It also said any new information about Fayed would be “assessed and investigated accordingly”.

Fayed’s family did not provide a statement when asked for comment.

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Taiwan says device parts not made on island

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Taiwan says device parts not made on island

The Taiwanese government has said components in thousands of pagers used by the armed group Hezbollah that exploded in Lebanon earlier this week were not made on the island.

The comments come after Taiwanese company Gold Apollo said it did not make the devices used in the attack.

The Lebanese government says 12 people, including two children, were killed and nearly 3,000 injured in the explosions on Tuesday.

The incident, along with another attack involving exploding walkie-talkies, was blamed on Israel and set off a geopolitical storm in the Middle East.

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“The components for Hezbollah’s pagers were not produced by us,” Taiwan’s economy minister Kuo Jyh-huei told reporters on Friday.

He added that a judicial investigation is already underway.

“I want to unearth the truth, because Taiwan has never exported this particular pager model,” Taiwan foreign minister, Lin Chia-lung said.

Earlier this week, Gold Apollo boss Hsu Ching-Kuang denied his business had anything to do with the attacks.

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He said he licensed his trade mark to a company in Hungary called BAC Consulting to use the Gold Apollo name on their own pagers.

The BBC’s attempts to contact BAC have so far been unsuccessful. Its CEO Cristiana Bársony-Arcidiacono told the US news outlet NBC that she knew nothing and denied her company made the pagers.

The Hungarian government has said BAC had “no manufacturing or operational site” in the country.

But a New York Times report said that BAC was a shell company that acted as a front for Israel, citing Israeli intelligence officers.

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In another round of blasts on Wednesday, exploding walkie-talkies killed 20 people and injured at least 450, Lebanon’s health ministry said.

Japanese handheld radio manufacturer Icom has distanced itself from the walkie-talkies that bear its logo, saying it discontinued production of the devices a decade ago.

Iran-backed Hezbollah has blamed Israel for what it called “this criminal aggression” and vowed that it would get “just retribution”.

The Israeli military has declined to comment.

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The two sides have been engaged in cross-border warfare since the Gaza conflict erupted last October.

The difficulty in identifying the makers of the devices has highlighted how complicated the global electronics supply chain has become.

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PSNI policy protects criminals, says victim

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PSNI policy protects criminals, says victim
BBC Liz and Catherine McSherry sitting on a sofa - Liz has short red hair - wearing a black top and cream blazer. Catherine has brown hair in a ponytail with a fringe - wearing a black top. BBC

Liz and Catherine McSherry said the PSNI changing its policy is a welcome step

The victim of a man convicted of voyeurism has said criminals are being protected by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) not releasing mugshots.

Catherine McSherry welcomed the force’s plans to change its policy on custody images and said it was a “positive step”.

Unlike many police forces in the UK, the PSNI does not routinely issue mugshots of serious offenders after sentencing.

Chief Constable Jon Boutcher has said the PSNI will begin releasing the images “in line with the custom and practice elsewhere”.

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The PSNI said the “logistics of how we do that are now being worked through”.

Catherine’s step-brother Christopher was found guilty of six charges of voyeurism and one of unauthorised computer access.

The 35-year-old, from Portadown in County Armagh, was sentenced to 100 hours of community service, 18 months’ probation and a sex offences prevention order.

The judge said it was one of the worst cases of voyeurism seen by the court.

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Catherine said victims felt “ignored and not taken seriously” when no mugshot was issued.

“I think it can be very validating for victims to have an actual mugshot taken of their perpetrator rather than just smiling photographs of them in their day-to-day life,” she said.

“I think it stops people being desensitised to the fact that this was a crime that was committed.”

Her sister, Liz, described the lack of custody photos as “a further failure” towards victims.

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“Why are the PSNI protecting the criminal more than the victim? The whole system feels to me set up to protect perpetrators and not victims,” she said.

In April, the PSNI announced it was reviewing its policy.

It came after families whose loved ones were killed by drunk drivers questioned why police would not release photos of the offenders.

Internal emails seen by BBC News NI showed confusion among PSNI staff over the policy.

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PA Media PSNI chief constable Jon Boutcher wearing police uniform - he has white short hair and is looking into the camera as he is speaking at a presser. PA Media

Mr Boutcher said logistics to facilitate publishing mugshots were being looked at

Mr Boutcher was asked for an update on the review at a recent Policing Board meeting.

He he said he had reviewed the policy.

“I have reviewed it. In short, we will be publishing photographs of people convicted of certain serious crimes where there is a policing purpose to do that,” Mr Boutcher said.

Catherine said the change was “definitely positive” and “a long time coming”.

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“I think I speak for many other victims when I say that it would help massively, not just sexual abuse cases – any kind of criminal activity,” she added.

Former senior PSNI officer Jon Burrows also welcomed the move as a “positive, albeit long overdue step”.

He said he hoped the change would bring the PSNI “into line with UK-wide practice”.

“It is vital that justice is seen to be done and releasing the mugshots of those convicted of certain crimes will improve confidence in the justice system, encourage victims to come forward and send a clear message to perpetrators that actions have consequences,” he said.

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“Given the epidemic of violence against women and girls, it is really important that those convicted of such crimes are included in the release of post conviction photographs.”

In a statement a PSNI spokeswoman said that the police “will be publishing photographs of people convicted of certain serious crimes where there is a policing purpose to do that”.

She emphasised logistics were being worked through but there was “no definite timeline for this at present”.

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Europe is failing to protect Ukraine’s energy grid, says IEA head

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This article is an on-site version of our Europe Express newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every weekday and Saturday morning. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters.

Good morning. A scoop to start: The EU could bar imports of coffee from a number of countries within weeks unless Brussels delays a ban on products from deforested areas, commodity companies and governments have warned.

Today, the head of the International Energy Agency tells our energy correspondent that Europe isn’t doing enough to protect Ukraine’s power infrastructure, and our competition correspondent reveals a demand from 20 EU capitals for the European Commission to cut more red tape than it has already promised.

Have a great weekend.

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Cold comfort

The head of the IEA has accused Europe of being too reticent in its support for Ukraine, calling for more generators and repair equipment for the war-torn country ahead of a difficult winter, writes Alice Hancock.

Context: Ukraine has suffered heavy attacks on its energy infrastructure by Russia, particularly in late August in retaliation for its incursion into Russia’s Kursk region. Half of all Ukraine’s energy infrastructure has been destroyed, roughly equivalent to the capacity of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.

In a report published yesterday, the IEA said Ukraine’s electricity deficit this winter could reach as much as 6GW, around a third of anticipated peak demand. The power shortfall this summer was 2.5GW when Kyiv was already enduring long blackouts.

“It’s time for everybody to understand that this winter could be consequential in Ukraine,” Fatih Birol, director-general of the IEA, told the FT. “It is the most pressing energy security issue today in the world.”

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A lack of energy supplies meant a knock-on impact on the operation of hospitals, schools, water supplies and other “major implications”, Birol added.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen will meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv today to discuss the situation. They will also talk about where to direct €100mn the EU has given Ukraine for repairs and renewable energy, which came from the profits from immobilised Russian assets in the EU.

The EU will also provide €60mn in humanitarian aid for shelters and heaters. Average winter temperatures in Ukraine vary between -4.8C and 2C, according to World Bank figures.

Birol said there were “major shortages” of many crucial parts, including transformers, grid equipment and diesel generators. He said Europe had been too “conservative” in sending electricity to Ukraine and could step up exports without jeopardising European supply.

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European consumers could help by cutting their own electricity demand, allowing more power to go to their eastern neighbour. This would be a “very decent way of showing solidarity”, Birol said.

Ukraine should have enough gas to see it through early winter, but the IEA said that once current contracts expire at the end of the year, there could be a need to increase west-to-east gas flows to Ukraine from central and eastern European neighbours.

Chart du jour: Rising tide

The Alternative for Germany looks set to win another state election in Brandenburg on Sunday, just weeks after the far-right party won its first regional poll in Germany’s postwar history. But the Social Democrats are closing in.

Cut it

If Europe wants to be globally competitive, it needs to go further than what Brussels plans to boost the single market, says a paper co-authored by 20 member states, including the Netherlands and Germany, writes Javier Espinoza.

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Context: Two recent landmark reports — by former Italian leaders Mario Draghi and Enrico Letta — spelt out the stark risks of failing to reform the single market. They highlighted the need to reduce regulatory pressure on companies and to make it easier for businesses to access funding in order for the bloc to compete with the US and China.

Ursula von der Leyen’s second term at the head of the European Commission had to “continue to cut red tape . . . going beyond the announced 25 per cent reduction of reporting requirements”, the joint document states, referring to an existing promise.

She should also back “specific digital tools” that would allow companies to focus less on regulatory reporting.

The signatories, which also include Luxembourg and the Czech Republic, called on the commission to provide “an enabling and transparent regulatory environment” — technical language for forcing capitals to align their rules.

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Lex Delles, Luxembourg’s economy minister, pointed to persistent barriers within the single market where “retailers cannot pick their suppliers in the country of their choice because of territorial supply constraints imposed by wholesalers”.

He added: “By prohibiting such practices, we would show businesses and consumers that the EU can deliver concrete results for them.”

What to watch today

  1. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen travels to Kyiv.

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