Connect with us

Business

Why the pandemic couldn’t kill the 100-hour week

Published

on

This is an audio transcript of the Working It podcast episode: ‘Why the pandemic couldn’t kill the 100-hour week’

Craig Coben
There’s a lot of inefficiency in the way investment banks work. Bear in mind, most of the time, you’re pitching and chasing business. And so, by definition, 90 per cent of your time is wasted. Unfortunately, you don’t know which 10 per cent of your time is well spent.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Bethan Staton
Hello and welcome to Working It from the Financial Times. I’m Bethan Staton, filling in this week for Isabel Berwick.

Advertisement

In some sectors, long hours are part of the job. Bankers and lawyers have historically worked for 90, 100 or even 120 hours a week in the run-up to big deals and been paid handsomely for their time. Since the pandemic, changes like flexible working and more focus on employee wellbeing have made life a little easier for most workers.

Are things changing in law and high finance? To find out, I’m joined by two people who’ve spent many years immersed in those worlds. Craig Coben is a retired investment banker who held senior roles at Bank of America and Deutsche Bank during a 25-year career. He’s also a contributing writer for FT Alphaville. Craig, welcome to Working It.

Craig Coben
Good morning.

Bethan Staton
I’m also joined by Suzi Ring, the FT’s legal correspondent who covers a wide range of topics here, including London law firms. Suzi, welcome.

Advertisement

Suzi Ring
Hi, Bethan.

Bethan Staton
Let’s get started.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Just to put some of these working hours in perspective, an 80-hour week will mean working about 7am to 7pm seven days a week; 120 hours, you might work 7am till midnight every day of the week. Craig, you’ve worked as a banker and you’ve worked as a lawyer. What are people in these jobs actually doing that takes all these hours?

Advertisement

Craig Coben
Look, they’re not working the whole time. People do step out to eat. They go to the gym. And in fact, in many cases, people try to make sure that they stay late enough to be able to eat at work and take a car home. It’s not continuous work the whole time in most cases, unless a deal is incredibly hot and just a million things are going on at once. But people are expected to get in relatively early at a bank, somewhat later at a law firm, and in many cases, they’re expected to stay late because work arises on an irregular basis. But it’s not continuous work the whole time. Those are office hours, not work hours.

Bethan Staton
Suzi, you’re covering law. So when we’re looking at the legal sector where there’s really similarly long hours in some cases, are we talking about kind of high-pressure work that’s ongoing for the whole time? Or is it, you know, a bit more back and forth? Can you paint us a picture?

Suzi Ring
Yeah. So I think the thing to think about is that obviously within law there are different practice areas. And I’m sure, you know, Craig would speak to this as well, talking about investment banking versus maybe, you know, sales and trading, which is more kind of market hours.

But when you’re talking about corporate law and you are advising on an M&A deal or an IPO or something that is time-sensitive, high-pressured, that’s when you get the really crazy hours of, you know, junior associates staying up all night to complete contracts and make sure the deal is done. And so it’s really those kind of transactional practices where you see the long hours and the real kind of pressure on the legal industry.

Advertisement

Bethan Staton
So, Craig, you survived a long career in investment banking. You’ve written about it for the FT. Why do you think you lasted as long as you did in that career?

Craig Coben
That’s a hard question. Look, it’s not because I worked the longest hours, but you have to have resilience, or people sometimes call grit to survive in the business. You don’t actually have to be particularly intelligent. You have to have a minimum level of competence and smarts, but it isn’t a business that rewards extreme genius.

A lot of what investment banking involves is salesmanship. And I think a lot of even what junior bankers are doing are preparing what are effectively sales materials, in most cases, pitch books.

Bethan Staton
Do you think that’s tied to the culture of long hours that people are expected to be present, to be around? There’s an understanding among workers that they need to sell themselves as well?

Advertisement

Craig Coben
I think the long hours are a byproduct of the way in which investment banking operates. In particular, there is a constant pressure to originate business and to bring in new business. And because investment banking is so competitive, because the clients are demanding, you end up having to spend a lot of time in the office working on presentations, revising presentations, updating presentations, coming up ideas for new presentations. And that’s really where the proverbial hamster wheel arises from.

Bethan Staton
Suzi, in law, how common is it that client satisfaction and the drive for that and pressure from clients are leading to especially junior staff having to work super long hours?

Suzi Ring
I think it’s totally driven by that. I think it’s all driven by client demand and obviously similar to what Craig is saying in banking, the model inherently demands long hours because a lot of things are done by the billable hour. So your success is measured, at least in part, on the number of hours that you bill. That is how much you are bringing in for the firm. And that ultimately is what clients are demanding of you.

Bethan Staton
One of the things that’s happened in the world of work more broadly now is that the pandemic has kind of ushered in a greater focus on wellbeing. We’ve been thinking more obviously about working from home, remote work, flexibility. Is this filtering through at all to these industries? And if so, how?

Advertisement

Suzi Ring
Yes, it definitely is filtering through to legal industry, not least because we’ve obviously got a new generation of people coming through who perhaps are valuing work-life balance more than generations past. And I think that it’s a non-starter these days to not have any flexibility around working from home or remote working. And also, there’s an understanding that firms need to respond if they want to have a diverse workforce, to open up the industry to more people.

I think still law lends itself to presenteeism. For example, we’ve seen in London a number of firms have moved from a kind of three-day-a-week mandate to be in the office to a four-day-a-week. And the kind of conversations I have privately with managing partners is that they would like everybody to be in five days a week, but they just can’t demand that because that would lead to a loss of talent because that’s not what young people coming through these days want.

But I think in an ideal world, if you asked management of most law firms in the city, to be honest, they would prefer people were still in the office five days a week.

Bethan Staton
But the talent and the workers still have a bit of leverage there that they’re able to work.

Advertisement

Suzi Ring
Definitely. And if anything, even more so at the moment because there’s been such a competition for young talent in London, which is reflective of the fact that a lot of US firms have been coming into London, heavily investing here and throwing lots of money at junior associates. So it’s more important than ever for firms to make sure they’re being competitive in terms of their offering for young people.

Bethan Staton
Absolutely. Craig, do you think since the pandemic, 100-hour weeks are now a thing of the past?

Craig Coben
I think it’s easy to overstate the situation in the first place. I don’t think 100-hour weeks have ever been particularly normal; 60-, 70-, 80-hour weeks are probably more normal for junior staff. And it’s not week in, week out. You will have periods in which you’re busy and periods in which you are a lot less busy.

And as I said, you know, in many cases, especially for junior staff who are single, who don’t have anything in the fridge, they’ll kind of go to the gym from 5 to 7 in the afternoon, in the evening and eat at work and take a taxi either to home or to a night spot where they’re meeting their friends.

Advertisement

So it’s not quite the Dickensian workload portrayed in the media. And also there’s a wide variation in terms of junior performance and junior commitment. Some juniors have an absolutely Stakhanovite work ethic. In fact, they probably work more than they need to just because they wanna feel like they’re part of Wall Street or the city, or because they just get slightly obsessive, whilst others coast. And I’ve seen the full spectrum of work ethic in my career.

So I think what you’re now seeing is, you know, banks are gonna be tracking how many hours people work. They’re gonna be looking at it more closely. Some juniors will take advantage of the system and game it. Don’t underestimate that. But most won’t and most will probably continue to work more or less as before.

Bethan Staton
The picture you’ve painted there, Craig, is I guess a bit more nuanced than this really punishing work schedule. And in some ways it seems like there’s a little bit of flexibility, perhaps, built in. Do you think that the way of working in these banks at the moment is logical and sort of effective? Is it making the best use of young bankers and senior bankers’ time? And are there ways that you would change it if you could kind of design it in the best way?

Craig Coben
You know, that’s a tough question. There’s a lot of inefficiency in the way investment banks work. Bear in mind, most of the time you’re pitching and chasing business. And so by definition, 90 per cent of your time is wasted. Unfortunately, you don’t know which 10 per cent of your time is well spent in many cases. But yes, there are tremendous inefficiencies, but it’s not that easy to resolve them. It’s a bit like trying to reform the public sector. Everyone cites waste and fraud and inefficiency, but nobody can really fix it, even though everyone seems to have a smart idea.

Advertisement

Investment banks, first of all, they have to have certain controls in place, and that requires a kind of command and control hierarchy, and that itself introduces all sorts of other inefficiencies, as you can imagine. But you can’t have the work decentralised, you know, for all sorts of regulatory reasons. It just, it . . . or even client servicing reasons, it wouldn’t work. And second of all, you know, deals are unpredictable. The work is non-linear. You can’t plan the work like you would in a factory. And I think that creates a lot of inefficiencies and people quite naturally get frustrated, but we get frustrated because they see with hindsight how it could have been done. It’s not that easy to know how it should be done ex ante.

Bethan Staton
Suzi, what kind of harm does it do to someone when they regularly work a really, really long week like this?

Suzi Ring
I think the harm is both in terms of your immediate wellbeing, but also can be around some of your long-term decision making. So I was speaking to a very senior partner in the city recently who was saying to me that they’re feeling increasingly concerned having conversations with associates and senior associates around them, that people are making decisions, for example, maybe not to have children or not to pursue things in their personal life because they don’t see a way of doing that and maintaining the jobs that they have.

And this person was saying to me that actually concerns them. And that’s one of the things that they’re really thinking about at the moment, because obviously these jobs consume a large part of people’s lives, but hopefully people don’t want that to be impacting other decisions they might have made in their personal life.

Advertisement

Bethan Staton
Craig, I’ve read about long hours at the beginning of people’s careers as something of a rite of passage. Where does it end? Or do people just generally continue to work these long hours long into their career?

Craig Coben
I think for investment bankers, the hours start to taper off, or at least you get more independence, but you’re always on call. I mean, even as a senior banker, and I would be on holiday, I would have to do conference calls late at night or on the weekends. You’re always on call as a senior, as a senior banker. And you do . . . And you do work. You have to review the books that people are putting together, but you have a little bit more freedom and independence. And this is even before the pandemic, you could work a lot more remotely.

I would be travelling three days a week anyway. And so, you know, I’ve done conference calls from ski slopes and, you know, I can still remember one time being on the top of a mountain. It was snowing in France and I had my snowboard on, I’ll have to sit in the snow for like 45 minutes, freezing cold, taking this call, which was fairly urgent. So I think that’s really what happens with a lot of bankers is that, you know, even at the senior level, you’re still there for the client. You have to be on the phone and sometimes you have to interrupt your holiday to go to a meeting.

Bethan Staton
So one argument and I guess one thing that I struggle to kind of get my head around a bit is that with both banks and law firms, you could maybe hire twice as many people on half the pay and work them half as hard. Suzi, why isn’t that an option?

Advertisement

Suzi Ring
So it’s a very interesting point, and this is something that gets discussed a lot, and particularly, again, recently with junior associate salaries climbing so much. I do speak to a number of general counsels at companies and this came up recently where people were saying, you know, we would rather that a law firm put two associates working 10 hours a day on a matter than one working, like, an 18-hour day. Again, I think that is all very well in theory, and I’m sure that some of those people do mean that. However, the client demands don’t change and sometimes this stuff is said, but ultimately they just want their law firm to get on and do the job.

So I don’t know if that follow-up is going on in terms of kind of holding law firms accountable. If GCs are trying to put some pressure on that aspect of things. But yeah, I think that, you know, ultimately it comes down to these are businesses and they want to be profitable and you’re not looking to add overheads where you think you might not need to.

Bethan Staton
Do you think that the increased salaries that we’ve seen in law recently do bring with them an additional worry really that young lawyers are gonna have to be worked really hard, working really long hours?

Suzi Ring
They definitely do. Speaking to a number of senior managers privately, even some who have implemented these changes when this all sort of kicked off earlier this year, that was exactly the response that they were getting from some of these young associates saying to management, we’re concerned that these pay rises that are sort of seemingly slightly come out of the blue are in effect a way of you telling us you want us to work more.

Advertisement

Now, people tell me that they are trying to put those fears aside and tell them that’s not the case. It’s purely us just being competitive. We know you work really hard, but it can’t do anything, surely, other than signal that message or make people feel beholden to work as hard as they possibly can to feel deserving of those kind of salaries.

Bethan Staton
Yeah. Is there a possibility that AI is gonna lighten the load?

Suzi Ring
There’s definitely a sense that AI is gonna remove some of the drudgery. So you won’t have necessarily junior associates spending hours and hours just going through documents and doing stuff that, you know, really doesn’t require someone who’s trained as a lawyer to do. But the way people talk about it to me is that just allows kind of an increase in efficiency.

It means that those junior associates can be put to work in other ways. It doesn’t mean that they’re gonna be working less. And I mean, the corollary of that is obviously law firms don’t want AI to mean that their billable hours are suddenly going down and clients are paying them less. They want to show they’re being more efficient, but they still want to bring in that revenue. So they’re just gonna try and find ways to utilise those people in other ways for clients, not necessarily that they’re working any less hours.

Advertisement

Bethan Staton
Craig, now that you’re out of the business, do you miss it?

Craig Coben
Well, I spent 27 years in investment banking. And so I think I had my fill of the business. I miss a lot of the people and I miss the camaraderie of working with the people. It’s actually a good workplace in general. It’s a tough business, but I work with some great people. And when you’re working hard on a project together, you forge a bond that is not easily broken.

Bethan Staton
Well, thanks very much, both.

Craig Coben
Thank you very much.

Advertisement

Suzi Ring
Thanks very much for having me.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Bethan Staton
This episode of Working It was produced by Mischa Frankl-Duval and mixed by Simon Panayi. The executive producer is Manuela Saragosa, and Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s global head of audio. Thanks for listening.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Trump hawks merchandise as White House race enters final stretch

Published

on

Donald Trump is selling relics from the suit he wore during his June debate against US President Joe Biden

Unlock the US Election Countdown newsletter for free

Donald Trump is using the final stretch of the White House race to sell everything from crypto tokens to watches, books and jewellery to millions of fans, boosting his family’s finances on the back of his political appeal.

Between campaign stops in the swing states this week, Trump posted a video on Truth Social, his social media channel, to celebrate the launch of a new token on World Liberty Financial, a cryptocurrency platform linked to him and his sons.

Advertisement

“Crypto is the future! Let’s embrace this incredible technology and lead the world in the digital economy,” he told his 7.9mn followers on the social media site, speaking as a seasoned television salesman.

Last weekend, Trump sought to help his wife Melania boost sales of her newly released book — called Melania — by reposting her own callout on Truth Social for people to purchase various versions of the memoir, including the $250 signed collector’s edition with bonus photographs.

“This book is a piece of history, art, & elegance all in one,” Melania Trump wrote, linking to a website where the former and possibly future first lady is also selling jewellery including a $600 “vote freedom” charm and a $90 star-shaped Christmas ornament with USA printed across it.

The universe of the Republican presidential nominee’s side-hustles is far more vast than the items he has been touting over the past week. Earlier this year, as he emerged victorious from his party’s presidential primary contest, Trump began selling a copy of the Bible for $59.99. Last month on Truth Social he was busy promoting the “official Trump watch collection” including a $100,000 “Trump victory Tourbillon” — saying there were only 147 left.

Advertisement
Donald Trump is selling relics from the suit he wore during his June debate against US President Joe Biden
Donald Trump is selling with his trading cards pieces from the suit he wore during his June debate against US President Joe Biden © https://collecttrumpcards.com/

Big events have provided more fodder for merchandise linked to the former president. Trump last year sold scraps cut from the suit he wore when he was indicted for a scheme to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia, and is still selling relics from the outfit he wore during his June debate against Joe Biden. Meanwhile, Trump is selling cologne with a picture of him raising his fist and shouting “Fight fight fight” after being nearly killed in an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in July.

Back in February, Trump made an appearance at a footwear trade show in Philadelphia to promote his $399 golden high-top sneakers, which got a mixed reaction from the audience. “There’s a lot of emotion in this room,” he said. “This is something that I’ve been talking about for 12 years, 13 years. And I think it’s going to be a big success,” he said.

The Trump campaign says the merchandise sales are separate from his political fundraising. “These are not campaign-related. They are outside business ventures,” said Karoline Leavitt, the national press secretary for the Trump campaign. She did not say how much Trump had earned from his side-businesses since launching his bid for a second White House term.

the ‘official Trump watch collection’
On Truth Social he has been promoting the ‘official Trump watch collection’ including a $100,000 ‘Trump victory Tourbillon’ © getrumpwatches.com

However, any additional financial gains would come on top of the revenues earned from Trump’s properties, including his resorts, during this election cycle. According to ProPublica’s estimate, these have earned $4.9mn since early 2023 from political spending, of which the vast majority — $4.1mn — has come from the Trump campaign.

Trump’s efforts to generate additional cash for himself and his family come as he has faced high legal bills connected to civil and criminal cases over the past two years at both the federal and state level, including a conviction in New York on falsifying business records.

But there is scant information on the deals Trump has made in connection with his private business ventures, including the licensing agreements connected to them, and the influence he holds over their governance.

Advertisement
Trump trading cards
Trump trading cards © https://collecttrumpcards.com/

On the website of World Liberty Financial, Trump is listed and pictured as “chief crypto advocate”, while his sons Don Jr, Eric and Barron are each a “web3 ambassador”. Steven Witkoff, a real estate investor, is co-founder of the group. The contact for the watch business connected to Trump is listed on its website as TheBestWatchesonEarth LLC, based in the small western town of Sheridan, Wyoming, but there is no further information about it such as a telephone number.

The Harris campaign did not respond to a request for comment on Trump’s side businesses. But while the former president’s commercial activities could fuel some admiration for his business acumen and entrepreneurialism, it could also draw accusations that he is taking advantage of Americans for his own gain.

Source link

Continue Reading

Money

Ryan Lizza Alleges Toxic Relationship Between Nuzzi and RFK Jr.

Published

on

What is the Average Credit Score in the UK

In a whirlwind of allegations and revelations, Ryan Lizza, the former fiancé of journalist Olivia Nuzzi, has made startling claims about her purported year-long relationship with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.The 31-year-old reporter for New York Magazine stands at the center of a storm involving accusations of blackmail, harassment, and intense emotional manipulation.

The Allegations

According to recent court documents obtained by major news outlets, including CNN, The Daily Beast, and the Wall Street Journal, Nuzzi accuses Lizza of leaking details about her alleged relationship with the 70-year-old former presidential candidate following an interview she conducted with him last November. Nuzzi further claims that Lizza attempted to blackmail her in a bid to reconcile, intensifying the already fraught dynamic between the two.

Lizza, currently the Chief Washington Correspondent for Politico, refuted these claims in his legal filing, stating that he discovered Nuzzi had been involved with a married man for nearly a year. Kennedy has been married to actress Cheryl Hines since 2014. Lizza’s court filing alleges that Nuzzi expressed fears regarding Kennedy’s desire to “control,” “possess,” and even “impregnate” her, painting a picture of a toxic and manipulative relationship.

A Toxic Dynamic

In his court documents, Lizza detailed Nuzzi’s own characterization of her relationship with Kennedy, which she described as “toxic,” “unhealthy,” “stupid,” “psychotic,” “crazy,” and “indefensible.” He noted that Nuzzi acknowledged the significant power imbalance between herself and Kennedy, which led to what Lizza described as “catastrophically reckless behavior” on her part. He suggested that Kennedy had manipulated her throughout their relationship, further complicating her emotional state.

Advertisement

Despite Lizza’s promises to help Nuzzi navigate her troubled situation, he expressed doubts about the possibility of a future together. “Ms. Nuzzi resisted any efforts to formally end our relationship and continually asked for more time to consider our future,” Lizza stated. “This was her position right up until our final conversation on September 15th.”

Denying Harassment and Blackmail Claims

Lizza vehemently denied Nuzzi’s accusations of harassment and blackmail, stating, “Everything I know about her affair comes directly from Ms. Nuzzi herself.” He also rejected claims that he hacked into her devices or threatened her with physical violence, labeling those allegations as “defamatory lies.” Instead, he claimed he merely encouraged her to repay an advance related to a book deal, stating this was “the second presidential cycle in a row where Ms. Nuzzi’s personal indiscretions have sabotaged our book project.”

A representative for Kennedy responded to Lizza’s allegations, asserting that Lizza’s portrayal of the relationship is “not true.” They previously denied any meaningful relationship between Kennedy and Nuzzi, emphasizing that “Mr. Kennedy only met Olivia Nuzzi once in his life for an interview she requested, which resulted in a hit piece.”

The Fallout

In his filing, Lizza also mentioned that he was not the source for the reporter who initially revealed Nuzzi’s alleged affair, referencing Oliver Darcy from New York Magazine. “Ms. Nuzzi is aware of this because the reporter informed her,” he stated. Furthermore, Lizza characterized Nuzzi’s claim that he attempted to blackmail her as “a shameful falsehood that contradicts the simplest facts.”

Advertisement

According to CNN, both Lizza and Nuzzi have been placed on leave from their respective positions as the drama unfolds. A court hearing involving the two is set for next month, with both individuals bracing for what promises to be a contentious legal battle. As the world watches, the intersection of personal relationships and professional lives remains under intense scrutiny.

Source link

Continue Reading

Travel

Ryanair launches new flights from regional UK airport to Christmas market hotspot

Published

on

Ryanair has launched a new flight between Belfast Airport and Kaunas in Lithuania

BUDGET airline Ryanair has launched a new route from Belfast to Kaunas in Lithuania.

Last year, the budget carrier started operating from Belfast Airport following a 17-month hiatus.

Ryanair has launched a new flight between Belfast Airport and Kaunas in Lithuania

3

Ryanair has launched a new flight between Belfast Airport and Kaunas in LithuaniaCredit: Getty
Kaunas is an ideal winter destination thanks to its Christmas market

3

Advertisement
Kaunas is an ideal winter destination thanks to its Christmas marketCredit: Alamy

Following on from its success, the no-frills airline has added a new winter service to Kaunas.

The twice-weekly service will operate every Wednesday and Sunday throughout the winter.

Wednesday afternoon flights will depart at 4pm before touching down in Lithuania at 8.55pm.

Return flights will then leave Kaunas at 9.25pm, landing back in the UK at 10.30pm.

Advertisement

Sunday afternoon flights will leave the UK five minutes later at 4.05pm, landing at 9pm local time.

The Sunday return flight will operate at the same time as the Wednesday service.

Sun Online Travel have found return fares for £45.81 in November, with flights operating from October 27, 2024.

Located in southern Lithuania, Kaunas has an old town with charming streets and a 14th century castle.

Advertisement

Kaunas Castle was built to defend the city against crusaders, making it one of the oldest stone castles in the country.

The city is also home to Kaunas Christmas Market, which dates back to the 16th century.

Nowadays, the market is a maze of wooden stalls selling homemade souvenirs and gifts.

Local delicacies like kūčiukai (small sweet pastries) and Cepelinai (potato dumplings stuffed with meat or cheese) will also be sold at the Christmas Market.

Advertisement

The Christmas market runs from the end of November until Christmas Eve.

It’s been praised by visitors online with one person writing: “It’s a winter wonderland with a beautiful old town and even more magical town square just in time for Christmas!”

Kaunas is just over an hour away from Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital.

Lithuania’s capital city is a real winter wonderland and one of the most affordable Christmas market destinations in Europe, with flights from as little as £15 and mugs of mulled wine for less than £3.50.

Advertisement

The no-thrills airline also added additional winter flights to Alicante, Krakow and London.

Ryanair chief marketing officer Dara Brady said: “Since reopening Ryanair’s base in 2023, we have grown and invested heavily in the region with two based aircraft and support of over 850 local jobs, as well as driving important inbound tourism year-round. 

“Through our ongoing investment, we have grown our Belfast operation by 64 per cent verses pre-Covid levels, and we will continue to grow at Belfast, have recently switched over 50,000 winter seats from Dublin due to the 2007 traffic cap rendering Dublin airport closed for business.”

Advice for flying with Ryanair

Advertisement
  • All Ryanair passengers can bring a small personal bag on board but this must fit under the seat in front of you, but it must be no bigger than 40cm x 20cm x 25cm
  • Any over-sized cabin bags will be refused at the boarding gate and put in the hold for a fee
  • Ryanair also charges passengers up to £55 check-in at the airport
  • Anyone who loses their card at the airport will have to pay a £20 reissue fee
  • Book to sit in the front five rows if you want to head off the plane first
  • Extra legroom seats can be found in rows 1 A, B, C or 2 D, E, F as well as row 16 and 17 near the emergency exit
  • The worst seat on Ryanair’s Boeing 737-800 aircraft is also 11A because of its lack of window.

Other new Ryanair routes include Newcastle to Marrakech in October.

Earlier this year, Jet2 confirmed that a new route will operate between Manchester Airport and Porto.

Flights from Belfast to Kaunas will start operating on October 27, 2024

3

Flights from Belfast to Kaunas will start operating on October 27, 2024Credit: Alamy

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

the ‘sociopathic’ architect of Hamas’s October 7 attack

Published

on

Palestinians transport a captured Israeli civilian from Kfar Azza kibbutz into the Gaza Strip on Oct 7 2023

For more than a year, Israel’s most wanted man proved elusive as the weight of the Israeli military hunted him through the ruins of Gaza. But Israel’s relentless search for Yahya Sinwar finally ended in a bombed-out building in the besieged strip’s south.

On Thursday, Israel’s foreign minister Israel Katz said Sinwar had been killed by Israeli soldiers in what he called a “great military and moral achievement”. Hamas has not confirmed the death of its leader, the architect of the group’s October 7 2023 attack on Israel.

From the moment just over a year ago when Hamas militants broke out of Gaza and rampaged through southern Israel, Sinwar was catapulted to the top of Israel’s hit list.

The 61-year-old, the leader of Hamas in the coastal territory since 2017, was swiftly identified by Israel as the instigator of the cross-border assault, during which, according to Israeli authorities, militants killed about 1,200 people and seized 250 hostages.

Advertisement
Palestinians transport a captured Israeli civilian from Kfar Azza kibbutz into the Gaza Strip on Oct 7 2023
A captured Israeli is taken from a kibbutz into Gaza on October 7 2023 © Hatem Ali/AP

As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu launched Israel’s ferocious retaliatory offensive on Gaza, he described Sinwar as a “dead man walking”. His assassination became a prime objective of the Israeli leader’s pledge to eradicate Hamas.

Yet as tens of thousands of Israeli troops poured into Gaza, Sinwar evaded capture. While he has not been seen in public since Hamas’s 2023 attack, he was believed to be hiding out in its vast tunnel network, using it to move from location to location even as Israel pummelled the besieged strip from the air, land and sea.

Swaths of the enclave were turned into rubble-strewn wastelands during an offensive that killed more than 42,000 people, according to Palestinian health officials. But still, there were no signs of Sinwar.

In February, the IDF released a grainy video that purported to show him and his family in the darkness of a tunnel under Khan Younis, the southern Gazan city where he was born in a refugee camp. But he remained at large, even as his key commanders Mohammed Deif and Marwan Issa were killed in Israeli air strikes.

He emerged last month to issue a series of rare “letters” and statements, including one to Algeria’s president congratulating him on his re-election; another to Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Lebanese militant movement Hizbollah shortly before his assassination; and a third to their Houthi rebel allies in Yemen.

Advertisement

He also praised the Palestinian “resistance” and said it was preparing itself for a battle of attrition against Israel.

In recent weeks, Israel has shifted its focus to Hizbollah in Lebanon, but it has continued to pound Gaza, and search for Sinwar.

IDF soldiers carry the body of what is thought to be Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar from the building where he was killed in Rafah, Gaza on October 17, 2024
A body the IDF said was Sinwar is carried by Israeli soldiers © IDF

Sinwar rose to prominence in Hamas shortly after the Islamist movement was formed during the first Palestinian uprising, or intifada, in the 1980s, initially as an adviser to Hamas’s wheelchair-bound founder, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.

He helped build the group’s military wing, the Qassam Brigades, the force that has been decimated by Israel’s year-long offensive. He also led Hamas’s notorious internal security division, which was tasked with hunting down Palestinians suspected of collaborating with Israel.

Sinwar’s ruthlessness earned him the nickname the “butcher of Khan Younis”, and in the late 1980s — when Israel occupied Gaza — he was arrested by Israel for murdering collaborators and was handed multiple life sentences.

Advertisement

During more than 22 years in an Israeli prison, he became leader of the members of Hamas in detention and studied Hebrew, as well as his enemy.

An Israeli intelligence assessment of Sinwar during this time attempted to capture his character. It described him as “cruel . . . authoritative, influential, accepted by his friends and with unusual abilities of endurance, cunning and manipulative, content with little . . . keeps secrets even inside prison among other prisoners . . . has the ability to carry crowds.”

He was eventually released as part of a 2011 prisoner swap in which more than 1,000 Palestinians were freed in exchange for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was held by Hamas in Gaza.

Israel officials who spent time with Sinwar described him as a charismatic man of few words, a quick temper and a commanding presence. He gained near mythical status among Palestinians as the feared — but also respected — leader of the “resistance” against Israel.

Advertisement

By the time of his release, Hamas was in full control of Gaza. Israel had pulled out in 2005, and the following year Hamas, which has a political as well as a military wing, won Palestinian elections.

It seized control of the strip in 2007 after an internal civil war with the rival Fatah faction.

A decade later, Hamas selected him as its leader in Gaza, with Sinwar replacing Ismail Haniyeh, a move seen as a sign of hardliners from the military wing taking over from more pragmatic factions within the group.

He led Hamas in Gaza during an 11-day conflict with Israel in 2021, but Israel assessed that the group had been deterred from triggering a full-blown conflict and was more interested in reaching a broader agreement with Israel. In the weeks before October 7 2023, Israel was in talks that would allow more work permits for Gazans to enter Israel.

Advertisement

But October 7 revealed that Sinwar had been long plotting what would become the deadliest assault inside Israel in the state’s 75-year history.

As the Gaza war ground on, Sinwar and Haniyeh, the group’s political leader living in exile in Doha, became integral to the diplomatic efforts to secure the release of hostages and end the war in Gaza.

Haniyeh acted as Hamas’s chief negotiator with Qatari and Egyptian mediators, passing messages through a secret channel of communications to Sinwar, who had the final say, in Gaza.

But in July, Haniyeh was killed in a suspected Israeli attack in Tehran, and Sinwar took over the role as political leader. That cemented his hold over the group even as he hid out in the devastated strip, his forces under constant barrage and ever more depleted.

Advertisement

The US and Israel repeatedly blamed Sinwar for the failure of the talks. Others blamed Netanyahu, who vowed to continue the military offensive until Israel achieved “total victory”.

“This was the inevitable end. One way or another [Sinwar] was done, and he knew it,” said a western diplomat. “He sacrificed his own nation for his own obsessive, sociopathic nature.”

Gazans will hope that, if confirmed by Hamas, the death of Sinwar would be sufficient grounds for Israel to end its devastating offensive that has triggered a catastrophic humanitarian crisis.

“I thought I would feel happy if Sinwar was killed. [But] it feels mixed and weird,” said Mohammed Nafiz, a 28-year-old in Khan Younis.

Advertisement

“He started the whole thing. If his death doesn’t lead to the end of the war then there’s nothing to be happy for.”

Additional reporting by Mai Khaled in London

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

The tech sector should brace for further turbulence

Published

on

The tech sector should brace for further turbulence

Whatever the long term shifts that are making its products more central to everyday life, chips remain highly cyclical 

Source link

Continue Reading

Money

Just hours left for Tesco shoppers to get a Christmas bonus payment

Published

on

Just hours left for Tesco shoppers to get a Christmas bonus payment

TESCO shoppers on a savings scheme have just hours left to get a cash bonus in time for Christmas.

The deadline to add money to your Tesco Clubcard Christmas Saver account and get another payment on top is 11.59pm today.

Tesco shoppers have just hours left to get a bonus via their Christmas Saver accounts

1

Tesco shoppers have just hours left to get a bonus via their Christmas Saver accountsCredit: Alamy

Members will have to be quick if they want to top up their accounts and earn free money worth up to £12.

Advertisement

If you add £25 to your account, you will get a £1.50 bonus voucher while those adding £50 will get £3 back.

Anyone adding over £100 will get a £6 bonus voucher and to get the full £12 on top you have to add over £200 to your account.

Any vouchers built up throughout the year and bonus will be sent to you in November to spend ahead of Christmas.

Previously, you had to top up your Christmas Saver account in-store but you can’t do this anymore.

Advertisement

However, you can top up your account online via the Christmas Savers section on the Tesco website.

You can also top up your account on the Tesco app as long as you’re logged into your Clubcard account.

It comes after shoppers were left fearing Tesco had permanently axed the bonus payments on its Clubcard Christmas Saver scheme.

In April, the retailer stopped customers from being able to make any cash top ups.

Advertisement

Tesco said at the time the scheme wasn’t being stopped but that it had paused the feature temporarily.

Inside Tesco’s Christmas Showcase

Then in August, the retailer confirmed exclusively to The Sun that the top up bonus feature was back for good.

How does Tesco’s Christmas Savers scheme work?

Tesco looks after the vouchers you collect when shopping at the supermarket throughout the year and then sends them all in November.

In addition to collecting points, you can top up your Christmas Saver account with up to £360 in cash.

Advertisement

This is optional but can help you save even more and you’ll be rewarded with a bonus voucher worth up to £12.

The supermarket sends statements throughout the year to allow customers to keep track of their savings.

To sign up for the scheme, you need to create a Tesco account and access the Vouchers Scheme by visiting www.secure.tesco.com/clubcard/christmas-savers.

You’ll then need to scan your Clubcard at the checkout whenever you shop, and Tesco will hoard your vouchers until the yearly deadline.

Advertisement

In November, you will receive all your saved vouchers, including any bonus vouchers, in one go.

This lump sum can help cover the cost of Christmas shopping, making the holiday season more affordable.

However, it’s important to note that Clubcard and top-up vouchers are valid for two years, and bonus vouchers are valid for three months.

Other supermarket Christmas savings schemes

Asda customers can save money through the supermarket’s Christmas Savings Card.

Advertisement

You are rewarded with a cash bonus depending on your balance on the “Bonus Day” which is November 11 this year.

You have to top up your card by 5pm on November 10 and Asda will top it up the following day by 9am.

Shoppers get a bonus of £1 for saving between £30 and £79.99, £3 for £80-£129.99 and £6 for £130-£179.99.

Those who have stashed away £180 to £229.99 get £9, while you receive £12 for £230 to £279.99 and £15 for £280 or more.

Advertisement

Sainsbury’s has a Christmas Club Card that pays out a 5% cash bonus when you save throughout the year.

The minimum value you can load is £1 and the maximum £1,975.

However, to receive any bonus, you need to have a minimum of £50 in your account.

You can save from January to November 1 to get your bonus in time for Christmas.

Advertisement

The card can be used at Sainsbury’s and Argos, both in-store and online.

How to save money on Christmas shopping

Consumer reporter Sam Walker reveals how you can save money on your Christmas shopping.

Limit the amount of presents – buying presents for all your family and friends can cost a bomb.

Advertisement

Instead, why not organise a Secret Santa between your inner circles so you’re not having to buy multiple presents.

Plan ahead – if you’ve got the stamina and budget, it’s worth buying your Christmas presents for the following year in the January sales.

Make sure you shop around for the best deals by using price comparison sites so you’re not forking out more than you should though.

Buy in Boxing Day sales – some retailers start their main Christmas sales early so you can actually snap up a bargain before December 25.

Advertisement

Delivery may cost you a bit more, but it can be worth it if the savings are decent.

Shop via outlet stores – you can save loads of money shopping via outlet stores like Amazon Warehouse or Office Offcuts.

They work by selling returned or slightly damaged products at a discounted rate, but usually any wear and tear is minor.

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

Advertisement

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 WordupNews.com