Connect with us

News

Neil Foden may have abused pupils for over 40 years in Gwynedd

Published

on

Neil Foden may have abused pupils for over 40 years in Gwynedd
BBC Neil Foden on a BBC TV programme in the 1990sBBC

Neil Foden’s offending may have started decades earlier than first thought

A paedophile head teacher may have abused pupils for more than 40 years, with four times as many victims than previously thought.

Neil Foden was jailed for 17 years for sexually abusing four children in north Wales between 2019 and 2023.

But a BBC Wales investigation has heard allegations going back to 1979, and from two women who say police told them there were up to 20 potential victims.

Serious concerns have been raised about a review designed to “learn lessons” from Foden’s case, despite local authority Cyngor Gwynedd vowing a panel overseeing this will be “given all the information it needs”.

Advertisement

One former pupil, Jo – not her real name- said Foden continued to message her until the day he was arrested.

Warning: This article contains details and images that some readers may find disturbing.

She said she was groomed by her head teacher for five years, starting when she would meet with him on a daily basis in his office while a pupil at Ysgol Friars in Gwynedd, north Wales.

Foden would also message her from his personal email account and mobile phone.

Advertisement

“There’s roughly 400, 500 [messages] on his personal email to my personal email account,” she said.

“It was back and forth every day, in school, out of school, morning, night, any time.

“He made me feel like I was special.”

Foden sent messages to Jo* while she was a pupil which continued after she left school, right up until the day of his arrest.

Neil Foden was jailed after a number of children went to the police
Jo (not her real name) pictured with her back to the camera

Jo has now moved away from north Wales, and says she only realised she had been groomed by Foden when he was arrested in 2023

Jo was in the care system, known to be a vulnerable child, and said she was targeted by Foden.

Advertisement

“My mental health was at its lowest, I was self-harming… having panic attacks daily. I didn’t have anyone around me, any support system,” she said.

“He’d give me hugs and I didn’t always want them so I’d pull back, then he’d pull me in stronger… just without reason, his hands would go under my jumper.

“He often checked my arms and my legs to see if I’d self-harmed. I often wore a skirt, so he’d lift the skirt up to have a look.”

North Wales Police A police mugshot of Neil FodenNorth Wales Police

Neil Foden was jailed for 17 years in July 2024

Jo said other teachers and staff would see her getting into Foden’s car alone.

Advertisement

She added: “They’d make comments on how lucky I was to have him drive me home, or to drive me to appointments.

“He’d place his hand on my thigh… there was so many things that shouldn’t have happened.”

Jo was made aware of the extent of Foden’s abuse after his arrest at his school in September 2023.

“The police came to me… they said that there were over 20 other people who were in similar situations as myself,” she said.

Advertisement

During Foden’s trial, it emerged that concerns about his closeness to certain teenage girls had been raised in 2019.

The concern was passed to Cyngor Gwynedd, but it was decided there would be no formal investigation as no specific allegations had been made.

iPlayer title picture - my teacher the paedophile
BBC iPlayer logo

My Headteacher the Paedophile – BBC Wales Investigates

Watch the full programme on BBC iPlayer.

iPlayer line
Buchanan & Co Limited Former head teacher Neil Foden pictured in a school photograph in the 1980s.Buchanan & Co Limited

One victim has told BBC Wales she was abused by Neil Foden as far back as 1979

‘Going on for decades’

Advertisement

Nia, not her real name, was one of the first pupils Foden taught at Ysgol Dyffryn Ogwen in 1979. She said Foden would target her when they were both alone in his classroom.

“He’d come to the desk, stand behind me… usually his right arm would be rubbing up against my breast and I felt I couldn’t move,” she said.

“As a 13-year-old, I didn’t realise exactly what was going on. I was petrified of him, I was vulnerable at that age and naïve, and he knew it.”

Nia (left) told BBC Wales Investigates’ Elen Wyn that Foden abused her for two years, when no-one else was in the classroom

Nia (left) told BBC Wales Investigates’ Elen Wyn that Foden abused her for two years, when no-one else was in the classroom

Nia didn’t report Foden at the time because she didn’t think anyone would believe her, but did speak to police after his arrest in 2023.

Advertisement

“This abuse has been going on for decades… you don’t suddenly wake up in 2019 and decide to become a paedophile,” she said.

Nia said what happened to her has had a lasting impact.

“The older I’ve got, the more I recognise what’s going on for me in relationships, with partners. I can never trust anybody… that’s a lifelong thing.”

AP Neil foden being led from a prison van into courtAP

Foden denied any wrongdoing at his trial, but the judge said he’d been living a lie and he was jailed for 17 years

The local authority, Cyngor Gwynedd, said an independent review would “identify what lessons are to be learned” to prevent similar cases in the future.

Advertisement

But Jo and Nia say they have not been contacted by anyone involved in the review.

“They definitely need to do something stronger, hold everyone who was accountable,” Jo told the BBC Wales Investigates programme. “It’s not just enough to say they need to do better, they need to be forced to do better.”

A child practice review board said it is “fully aware there may be many other victims or survivors” and it would like to hear from them.

Solicitor Kathryn Yates at her desk

Solicitor Kathryn Yates says if successful, legal action could cost Gwynedd’s council “millions” in compensation for Foden’s crimes

Katherine Yates, a solicitor representing a dozen people who say they have suffered because of Foden, is taking legal action against Cyngor Gwynedd on their behalf.

Advertisement

“There is a mixture of serious sexual abuse, physical abuse and emotional abuse,” she said.

“The first client is now in her 50s, my youngest is 14… the council are vicariously liable for the actions of their employees.

“His actions have impacted on so many lives, that of children, their families, staff… I think he could and should have been stopped a lot sooner.”

While Foden was abusing girls in 2019, Cyngor Gwynedd’s attention was focused on bullying allegations made against him by staff.

Advertisement

BBC Wales Investigates has seen a copy of a confidential report which raised concerns about his behaviour, warning that action should be taken.

Foden was then reprimanded by the teaching regulator and kicked out of his union in 2020.

Yet, a year later, in 2021, he was given more responsibility as a “strategic super-head” overseeing two different schools in north Wales.

One staff member, Rose, not her real name, said she approached Foden in his office in December 2022 about a personal issue.

Advertisement

“I had explained the situation to him… and then he asked a very off kilter question about sex, which kind of threw me a little bit,” she said.

“Your employer wouldn’t normally ask you about sex. It’s not a normal thing, is it?”

She said he then gave her a hug, which “moved into sexual assault”.

“Basically…. he just put his hand down my pants,” she said.

Advertisement

Rose said she didn’t report Foden at the time, although she did speak to police after his arrest, which led to him being charged, but the case did not make it to trial.

Cyngor Gwynedd has repeatedly been asked for an interview by BBC Wales, but has declined.

In a statement, it said it will “leave no stone unturned” to ensure the child practice review is provided with “all relevant information held by the council regarding all concerns raised”.

“It would not be appropriate for Cyngor Gwynedd to comment on this specific matter until the panel has concluded its work,” a spokesperson added.

Advertisement

* Names have been changed to protect the identities of the women involved

Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

News

Greenwashing Genocide in Armenia & Targeting Truth Palestine

Published

on

The Project Censored Show

The Official Project Censored Show

Greenwashing Genocide in Armenia & Targeting the Truth in Palestine



Loading




Advertisement


/

Advertisement
Advertisement

In the first half of the show, international human rights lawyer Karnig Kerkonian joins the show to discuss Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of the Artsakh Armenians from the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Karnig outlines the genocidal intent of President Ilham Aliyev, what the US knew and didn’t do to stop it, and how the international community should respond, not least of all as this year’s climate summit, COP29, is being held— ironically—in what Karnig calls the petrol-dictatorship of Azerbaijan. Next up, journalist, researcher, and Policy Director at Defending Rights and Dissent Chip Gibbons joins the show to discuss Israel’s targeted and mass killing of journalists on the ground in Gaza. Chip highlights the vehement hypocrisy with which the US pretends to uphold freedom of the press while not only ignoring the murder of journalists but also pushing for a media blackout and censorship of reports from Gaza.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

UK launches regulator in push to speed up approvals for new technology

Published

on

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The UK government has launched a Regulatory Innovation Office aimed at helping speed up approvals for new technologies in fields such as biotechnology and autonomous vehicles.

Science secretary Peter Kyle said the new body in the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology would take innovation in areas including space, self-driving cars and lab-grown meats “by the scruff of its neck” and drive them through the regulatory process. 

Advertisement

“I’m sure there will be a bit of kicking and screaming, but if we get this right, we could be the seed that starts to change the culture of regulation in our country,” he told the Financial Times.

But investors and industry experts in novel foods warned that in order to be effective, RIO would need to be matched with substantial new investment in the UK’s under-resourced regulators in the Budget and next Spending Review.

Since Britain took back responsibility for regulation from Brussels after leaving the EU, its regulators have been forced to take on significant extra work in areas such as medical devices, food safety and artificial intelligence.

The National Audit Office, the public spending watchdog, has reported on the difficulties faced by regulators, such as the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and the Health and Safety Executive, in recruiting new staff to meet their expanded post-Brexit roles.

Advertisement

In its election manifesto, Labour said RIO would help co-ordinate the UK’s regulatory landscape, “update regulation, speed up approval timelines and co-ordinate issues that span existing boundaries”.

Peter Kyle (Left) at the White City Innovation District on Monday
Peter Kyle, left, visits the White City Innovation District © Charlie Bibby/FT

On a visit to inspect start-ups at the Translation & Innovation Hub at Imperial College London, Kyle said RIO would initially concentrate on four key areas: autonomous vehicles; digital healthcare; space; and biotechnology, including pest-resistant crops and cultivated meats.

The remit has seemingly narrowed from before the election, when Tulip Siddiq, now City minister, said RIO would “promote innovation in regulation across sectors”. Kyle said financial services would potentially be “in scope” as RIO’s remit expanded.

The government said on Monday it had started the search for someone to act as RIO chair but gave no details of its future budget or staffing levels.

Kyle said the body was likely to win more funding and staff if it proved to be effective in driving growth. He added: “The Budget is coming up and Spending Review is going to be in spring; these will address the fundamental and underlying funding settlements for all areas of the public sector.”

Advertisement

Investors and industry experts in novel foods welcomed the announcement of RIO alongside £1.6mn for a “sandbox” at the FSA as a test bed in which to explore how to better regulate novel food technologies.

Businesses in the sector have complained about a lack of resources at the FSA, saying it is much harder to deal with than rival agencies in the US and Singapore.

Cai Linton, co-founder and chief executive of Multus Biotechnology, which develops nutrients for the lab-grown meat industry, told Kyle on the visit that “companies have failed” because of regulators taking too long to grant approvals.

“US or Singapore regulators will talk you through the regulatory process, tell you what data they will need. With the FSA, they say: ‘We can’t give you answers until you submit a full dossier.’ That can kill a company,” he said.

Advertisement

Ed Steele, founder of Hoxton Farms, a start-up making lab-grown animal fat that has previously criticised the FSA, welcomed the new sandbox. “It’s a big sign of intent and I hope is the start of regulatory reform,” he said. 

Andrew Bennett, policy lead at Form Ventures, a venture capital fund specialising in start-ups in areas with novel regulations, also welcomed both RIO and the FSA sandbox as “much-needed institutions” to support growth.

But he warned that they would need support, adding: “It’s critical RIO doesn’t just become merely the next well-intentioned regulatory initiative to fall short; it must be backed — politically in DSIT and financially by the Treasury — to deliver a genuine step-change in urgency and outcomes.”

Linus Pardoe, UK policy manager at the Good Food Institute Europe, said the FSA sandbox sent “a clear message” on the government’s commitment to monetising innovation, but added the regulator still required adequate resourcing.

In a report last year the non-profit think-tank calculated that the FSA would need a £30mn increase in its budget, which has stood at roughly £140mn since 2021, just to make up for recent budget freezes.

“To fully realise the potential of cultivated meat, ministers must also provide a long-term boost to the FSA’s budget, enabling regulators to complete robust risk assessments within statutory timeframes,” he said.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Money

When is Amazon Prime Day 2024? Exact date of October Big Deal Days revealed

Published

on

When is Amazon Prime Day 2024? Exact date of October Big Deal Days revealed

THE second Amazon Prime Day event for 2024 has just begun.

For the next 48 hours, Prime subscribers can get their hands on thousands of exclusive deals.

2

Sign up to Amazon Prime

Advertisement

The exact date the event falls on this autumn is the 8th and 9th October – in other words, right now.

The 48-hour sale event will be exclusively available for Prime members, offering deep discounts on everything from Fire TVs and Echo devices to the best anti-wrinkle face creams and Dyson Airwrap dupes.

Bargain hunters will be able to score big savings on thousands of items, ranging from tech gadgets and beauty buys to home appliances and toys.

Of course, the timing of the event makes it ideal for organised Christmas shoppers to stock up on gifts, decorations and more for a fraction of the normal cost.

Advertisement

When is Prime Day 2024?

The next Prime Day event will be the Big Deal Days sale event in October.

The sale will kick off at midnight on 8th October and run to midnight on 9th October.

While the annual sale event has traditionally taken place every July, in 2022 Amazon also hosted two Prime Day events in July and October.

The double whammy gave bargain-hunters even more opportunities to shop for discounts as a Prime member.

Advertisement

The last Prime Day event for 2024 took place on 16-17 July and Prime members enjoyed thousands of discount across all categories.

How do I get access to Amazon Prime Day deals?

If you don’t want to miss out on the Amazon Big Deal Days event you will need to become a Prime member.

Signing up for a Prime membership is easy and comes with lots of perks including next-day delivery and access to Prime Video and Amazon Music.

The Prime membership comes with lots of additional perks, including free next-day delivery (and even same-day delivery in certain postcodes).

Advertisement

Amazon Prime costs £8.99 a month, or £95 for an annual membership.

But if you are brand-new to Prime you can sign up for a 30-day free trial, giving you free access to the sale when it launches next month.

However, you will need to cancel your membership before the 30-day trial ends to avoid the ongoing £8.99 monthly fee.

How long will Prime Day 2024 last?

Prime Day events normally take place over two days and this is something that has been in place since the event was launched in 2015.

Advertisement

Deals normally kick off from midnight on the first day to midnight on the second day, with a combination of ‘lightning’ offers, appearing while stock lasts, and longer deals running for the duration of the sale. 

We recommend keeping a very close eye on the Prime Day deals hub on Amazon’s website, which will highlight the best offers as they go live.

You can also check out the Best Prime Day deals according to our team of Sun Shopping experts.

Amazon Prime vs Black Friday: which is best?

Prime Day was originally launched in 2015 to celebrate Amazon’s 20th birthday but has since evolved into an annual mega sale that is similar to Black Friday or Cyber Monday.

Advertisement

But in terms of length, scale and discount quality, Black Friday is the reigning deals period of the year.

You’ll find terrific price drops during both sales – and it’s not impossible that some Prime Day offers may well match those you find during Black Friday in November.

A great way to check whether the deals are as good as they appear over Prime Day is by using price tracking sites like camelcamelcamel which allows you to search the price history for any items sold on Amazon.

Other price comparison sites such as Idealo and PriceSpy are also helpful and allow you to compare and track across multiple retailers.

Advertisement

What were the best Prime Day deals in July?

2

Sign up to Amazon Prime

Amazon teased shoppers with early exclusive deals that primarily focused on Amazon’s branded devices.

One of the hottest was the ‘seriously impressive’ 55-inch Fire TV slashed from £549.99 to £329.99.

Advertisement

Other highlights in the July Prime Day event included deep discounts on the Shark Cordless Stick Vacuum Cleaner, which was reduced from £279.99 to £159.99, and the Philips L’OR Barista Sublime Capsule Coffee Machine, which was slashed from £109.99 to £49.99.

Amazon Prime Day: Our 10 best deals

Amazon Prime Day runs until midnight on Wednesday (9th October). Here’s our pick of the best deals for Prime subscribers.

*If you click on a link in this boxout we will earn affiliate revenue

  1. Amazon Fire TV Stick, £16.99 (was £44.99) – buy here
  2. Xinwld Wireless Earbuds, £24.99 (was £99.99) – buy here
  3. Apple AirPods Pro (2nd generation), £179 (was £229) – buy here
  4. Ring Battery Video Doorbell, £59.99 (£99.99) – buy here
  5. Maybelline Lash Sensational Mascara, £7.79 (was £12.99) – buy here
  6. Silentnight Comfort Control Electric Blanket, £35.99 (was £42.99) – buy here
  7. COSRX Advanced Snail 96 Mucin Skin Serum, £12.15 (was £23.99) – buy here
  8. Philips OneBlade 360, £34.99 (was £54.99) – buy here
  9. Olay Regenerist Collagen Peptide 24 Eye Cream Without Fragrance, £17.33 (was £38) – buy here
  10. Remington Keratin Protect Hair Straighteners, £52.76 (was £119.99) – buy here

We’ll be keeping a close eye out for some of the best deals so remember to check back to snag these deals

We’ve rounded up more great offers here:

Advertisement

Amazon Prime Day dates through the years

Here’s a run-down of the dates that Amazon Prime Day has taken place since its inception in 2015:

  • 2015: 15 July
  • 2016: 12 July
  • 2017: 11 July
  • 2018: 16-17 July
  • 2019: 15-16 July
  • 2020: 13-14 October
  • 2021: 21-22 June
  • 2022: 12-13 July
  • 2022: 11-12 October
  • 2023: 11-12 July
  • 2023: 10-11 October
  • 2024: 16-17 July

Want to find more savings on your online shopping? Then head to Sun Vouchers where you can get discounts and voucher codes from hundreds of top retailers including B&Q, Boots, Iceland, Lookfantastic, Dunelm, Adidas, Marks & Spencer and more.

Source link

Continue Reading

Travel

Three decades of Italian flair: La Piazza marks milestone anniversary

Published

on

Three decades of Italian flair: La Piazza marks milestone anniversary

To mark its milestone, La Piazza launches a Nostalgia Menu featuring beloved dishes from the past three decades. Highlights include Pumpkin Panna Cotta, Grilled Garlic Prawn Salad, and Mozzarella and Eggplant Ravioli.

Continue reading Three decades of Italian flair: La Piazza marks milestone anniversary at Business Traveller.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Journalists With Hamas Ties: A Running List of HonestReporting’s Top Exposures Since Oct. 7

Published

on

Journalists With Hamas Ties: A Running List of HonestReporting’s Top Exposures Since Oct. 7

As the Israel-Hamas war reaches its 12-month milestone, HonestReporting looks back at the Gazan journalists we’ve exposed during the year over their ties to Hamas and other terrorist groups.

There were many others we exposed: some for infiltrating into Israel on October 7, others for their antisemitism or praise of the massacre. But we believe those connected to terrorist organizations deserve special attention.

Their close personal and professional links to the terrorists go beyond unethical journalism.

As the following list shows, such links are not a bug in the Gaza media system but a feature of it.

Advertisement

Hassan Eslaiah

Freelance journalist Hassan Eslaiah’s cozy photo with Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, and an apparent video of him holding a grenade on October 7 made waves last November, after HonestReporting exposed him for infiltrating into Israel.

Subsequently, AP and CNN cut ties with the veteran Gaza journalist.

 

Eslaiah was there as Hamas terrorists invaded Israeli communities, he was there as they killed and kidnapped hundreds of innocent civilians.

He was taking photos, undisturbed, side by side with the terrorists:

 

Advertisement

 

Inexplicably, AP removed Eslaiah’s name from his October 7 photos of Hamas atrocities, but the agency’s database still displays them for sale. Eslaiah also continues to update a widely followed Telegram channel.

But the fact he no longer has an active foothold in the international media is a testament to the success of our exposé.

Related Reading: Broken Borders: AP & Reuters Pictures of Hamas Atrocities Raise Ethical Questions

Advertisement

Ashraf Amra

Freelance photojournalist Ashraf Amra had been working for AP and Reuters until HonestReporting’s exposé last January that former Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh had kissed and honored him.

Our investigation also found that Amra hosted an Instagram Live on October 7, in which another journalist who worked for international media called on Gazans to infiltrate Israel.

 

While the top wire services didn’t make an official statement about Amra, they have stopped using his work. Which only shows that Reuters and AP, despite failing to admit it publicly, have probably realized they can’t continue working with an apparent friend of a terror group.

Advertisement

Related Reading: EXPOSED: Gaza Photojournalists Shared Call to Infiltrate Israel on Oct. 7

Abdel Qader Sabbah

Last July, CNN announced that it would no longer work with Abdel Qader Sabbah, a Gaza freelancer whose ties to Hamas were exposed by HonestReporting.

Sabbah photographed himself with a senior Hamas leader, served in a Hamas-run body to which he also provided work, praised terrorists, and shared anti-Israeli propaganda online, our investigation revealed.

In 2018, he posted a selfie taken with none other than senior Hamas leader Mahmoud A-Zahar, who had called for world domination with “no Zionists” and was sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department.

Advertisement

 

 

Sabbah also posted a photo of himself wearing the uniform of the “General Training Directorate,” a government agency which in Gaza is run by Hamas:

 

Advertisement

 

Our exposure revealed that, throughout the Israel-Hamas war, CNN had given a prominent platform to “news reports” by Sabbah, whose Hamas ties have been hidden in plain sight.

While CNN did the right thing in cutting ties with him, the revelation casts a long shadow over the network’s vetting procedures and journalistic standards.

Related Reading: SUCCESS: CNN Fires Hamas-linked Gaza Freelancer Exposed by HonestReporting

Advertisement

Marwan Al-Ghoul

The case of Marwan Al-Ghoul, CBS News journalist in Gaza, still awaits the network’s official comment.

It’s unclear why it hasn’t yet provided explanations for our exposure of Al-Ghoul’s praise for terrorists at an official event of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a proscribed terror group.

 

Screenshot of Marwan Al-Ghoul addressing PFLP event.

 

Al-Ghoul has also had contacts with terrorists as a member of the Gaza City municipal council, our investigation revealed:

Advertisement

 

 

But instead of facing the embarrassing truth — that the network employs a terror-affiliated journalist — CBS has so far chosen silence. Perhaps it has no other sources in Gaza, perhaps it’s easier to ignore the facts.

Whatever the reason, we use this opportunity to remind CBS editors and their audience that Al-Ghoul cannot be considered a professional journalist.

Advertisement

Related Reading: EXPOSED: The Terror Ties of CBS News Journalist in Gaza

Duty to Truth

We don’t believe this list is final, and perhaps it never will be.

Hamas’ sway over local and international journalists in Gaza is all-encompassing, whether they cooperate with it or not.

Those among them who have no qualms about working side by side with the terrorists, taking photos with them, participating in their events, and sharing it all online — should be treated as activists and propagandists rather than journalists.

Advertisement

It’s also alarming that their penetration into mainstream international media has been so vast and unchecked. That’s because their biased reporting not only warps the truth but has real-life ramifications for the safety of Israelis and Jews worldwide.

We must make sure that news outlets weed out such terror allies in their midst.

Liked this article? Follow HonestReporting on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok to see even more posts and videos debunking news bias and smears, as well as other content explaining what’s really going on in Israel and the region.

 

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Money

Axed TGI Friday’s workers set to miss out on redundancy pay and tips after chain goes into administration

Published

on

Axed TGI Friday's workers set to miss out on redundancy pay and tips after chain goes into administration

TGI FRIDAY’S rescue deal has left a bad taste — for hundreds of restaurant workers who will miss out on redundancy pay and hard-earned tips.

A total of 1,012 jobs have gone after administrators said the sale to Breal Capital and Calveton would cause 35 eateries to close.

Axed TGI Friday's workers are to miss out on redundancy pay and tips

4

Axed TGI Friday’s workers are to miss out on redundancy pay and tipsCredit: Alamy

Impacted staff were also told the firm would not be responsible for redundancy pay, accrued holiday or tips.

Advertisement

The burden will instead go to the taxpayer, via the Insolvency Service.

The majority were on zero hours contracts.

One employee said anonymously: “I did 35 hours last week and earnt tips because I was telling customers we were fine and going to be saved.

“Now I’m not getting paid for any of it.”

Advertisement

The turmoil and anger has come just days before the Government is to unveil its Employment Rights Bill on Thursday, which will reform workers’ rights.

Labour is also planning to ban “exploitative” zero hours contracts — although the details of this will still be consulted on.

Under current law a zero hours worker who has not been with a firm for more than two years cannot claim redundancy pay.

Staff should be able to claim 100 per cent of tips earned, under a law passed last week.

Advertisement

But restructuring sources said that it would be up to workers applying to The Insolvency Service — with their claims and ­evidence of tips earned — suggesting that it will be difficult to recoup the cash.

TGI Fridays abruptly closes 36 locations in 12 states – CEO says shutting ‘underperforming stores’ helps build growth

The union Unite said last night: “The way in which workers have been treated across TGI Fridays is a ­national disgrace.

“Our members are being told that they may not even be paid wages for work done.”

The deal by the firm that owns Byron Burger, will keep open 51 locations across the UK and save more than 2,000 jobs.

Advertisement

GET A PORTER

LUXURY online fashion site Yoox Net-A-Porter has been offloaded to a German rival.

The sale by Swiss firm Richemont, the owner of Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels jewellery, to Mytheresa comes after years of heavy losses.

Yoox Net-A-Porter has been offloaded to a German rival

4

Yoox Net-A-Porter has been offloaded to a German rivalCredit: Net A Porter

Net-a-Porter, set up by Dame Natalie Massenet, was a jewel in the British fashion scene before an ill-fated merger with Italian rival Yoox.

Advertisement

Luxury online groups boomed in lockdowns but have been undone by the market’s slowdown.

Farfetch almost went bust last December while Matches Fahion folded in March.

THAMES MUDDIES WATERS

WORRIES around the future of Thames Water threaten to dampen the big splash Labour hopes to make at its investment summit next Monday.

Global investors, tech tycoons and City bigwigs including Aviva boss Amanda Blanc; Octopus Energy founder Greg Jackson and Google’s Eric Schmidt will be at the event at London’s Guildhall, held two weeks before the Chancellor delivers her growth-focused Budget.

Advertisement
Global investors, tech tycoons and City bigwigs will be at London’s Guildhall next week

4

Global investors, tech tycoons and City bigwigs will be at London’s Guildhall next weekCredit: CC-BY-SA 3.0

Thames Water is scrambling to raise cash and refinance debt from investors, who require the regulator to sign off their plan to hike customer bills.

Behind the scenes investors are lobbying the Government to warn of a “domino effect” if water companies are deemed uninvestable by the pension funds and infrastructure investors the Chancellor is looking to win over.

A spokesperson for the Global Infrastructure Investor Association said: “It’s essential to ensure this country is an attractive investment destination.”

Advertisement

PUB group Amber Taverns, which has 178 sites across England, Scotland and Wales, has been sold to a private equity firm.

Epiris already owns Big Table Group, which includes Cafe Rouge and Las Iguanas restaurant chains.


CHANGE OF BOSS AT LEWIS

THERE is more change at the top of John Lewis just three weeks after Tesco veteran Jason Tarry arrived as chairman.

The department store to grocery chain yesterday revealed chief executive Nish Kankiwala will be stepping down by March next year.

Advertisement

Mr Kankiwala, former boss of Hovis, was brought in on a two-year contract to boost the boardroom’s retail experience when Dame Sharon White, former Ofcom regulator, had the top job at John Lewis.

By contrast Mr Tarry spent 33 years working at Tesco, including the last six as boss of Britain’s biggest retailer.

John Lewis said that the “role of chief executive will not be directly replaced and Jason will chair the executive team as well as the partnership board”.

PADS ON THE RISE

HOUSE prices rose for the third month in a row in September — going up by 0.3 per cent.

Advertisement

Average property prices cost 4.7 per cent more than a year ago after rising to £293,399, according to Halifax stats.

It is £108 shy of the £293,507 record set in June 2022, when the market was boosted by a post-pandemic surge and before the mini-budget provoked mortgage mayhem.

Property experts said hopes of interest rate cuts are fuelling the market revival.

RIO GOES MINING IN NEW YORK

LONDON-listed mining giant Rio Tinto is exploring a trans-Atlantic takeover of a New York-listed lithium miner.

Advertisement

The approach for Arcadium Lithium marks a welcome step-change from British miners being snapped up by their overseas rivals.

New York-listed lithium miner, Arcadium Lithium

4

New York-listed lithium miner, Arcadium Lithium

Lithium, a silvery white metal, is of increasing importance in the global push for greener energy, as it is needed in electric vehicles and battery storage.

Arcadium Lithium, which has mining operations in Argentina, China, Canada and Australia, counts car giants Telsa, BMW and Toyota as clients.

Advertisement

Shares in Arcadium Lithium bounced by a third yesterday.
It valued the company at £3.3billion — a marked improvement for a company which had slumped by 60 per cent since the start of the year amid weakening demand in China.

Some of its investors are viewing Rio Tinto’s approach as opportunistic and have signalled they will reject a lowball bid.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 WordupNews.com