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the Palestinian neighbourhood subject to ethnic cleansing

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the Palestinian neighbourhood subject to ethnic cleansing

Jawad Siam is an activist and a resident of Silwan, a Palestinian neighbourhood in occupied East Jerusalem next to the old city. As we sit drinking coffee, he points to a plot of land adjacent to his home.

No justice within the Israeli ‘legal’ system

He tells the Canary:

Settlers took this in June 2017. My father, grandmother and grandfather all lived here in this house. According to my family tree, my family came here at least 400 years ago. We tried to do something. We went to court, but it’s an Israeli court and an Israeli judge. It’s not possible to win any cases today. I had to pay approximately 800,000 Israeli Shekels (£200,000). The Israelis do this with many families in East Jerusalem, not only in Silwan. They claim this land belonged to them in biblical times, 3000 years ago. They create stories, saying that for 100 years Jews have been living in the area, and things like that.

Since ‘Israel’ occupied East Jerusalem, in 1967, Jewish organisations have aimed to establish a Jewish presence in the neighbourhood. In an attempt to get Palestinians to leave their homes, Siam explains that settlers offer Silwan residents large sums of money to sell up. But although people do not have much money, they still do not sell their homes. Siam says he was offered $3m, and his neighbours were offered more, but they refused.

He says:

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Any person in Silwan, in a minute, can be a millionaire and leave. But the people are stubborn. An old man here was offered $8m but he wouldn’t sell.

Illegal Jewish settlers call Silwan “Ir David”- the City of David

These settlers are all armed. They are supported by the occupation’s government and belong to the Ir David Foundation-  known as Elad.

Elad operates in East Jerusalem, and calls Silwan “Ir David’ , meaning City of David in Hebrew. As well as trying to acquire Palestinian homes, Elad also runs the City of David Archaeological Park.

Silwan

This major tourist attraction has been built by the occupation in the middle of a residential area in Silwan. It aims to promote the Jewish link to the area, while intentionally erasing Palestinian history, culture, and identity, and the community fabric of Silwan. Many Palestinian homes are being demolished for this park, and international tourism is allowing this to happen.

According to Siam, most houses taken by settlers in Silwan are left empty. Their real project is not about bringing settlers into the neighbourhood, but ethnically cleansing the area of its Palestinian population. He says the occupation dreams of having Jerusalem empty of Palestinians, and are doing their best to connect East and West Jerusalem, while only showing and talking about Jewish heritage.

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As well as offering to pay vast sums of money for Palestinian homes, there are also other mechanisms in place, to ensure the population’s displacement from Silwan and other East Jerusalem neighbourhoods. Palestinians have their land confiscated and are also evicted from their homes.

Many mechanisms to ‘legally’ displace Palestinians

In 1881 Yemeni Jews came to Palestine. Siam says they were promised they could live in West Jerusalem, but when they arrived they were not welcome. Instead, the people of Silwan, in the Batn al- Hawa area of the neighbourhood, welcomed them.

When the Jews left in 1928, they left the people of Silwan a letter, thanking them for their hospitality. But thanks to an Israeli occupation law, passed in 1970, any property that belonged to Jews before 1948 can now be claimed by settlers. 34 families, around 130 people, are now expecting imminent eviction after the Supreme Court’s  recent decision on a decades long legal case, to dismiss an appeal by residents against their forcible displacement.

The Absentee Property Law, enacted by the occupation in 1950,  is also used to transfer Palestinian homes to settlers. The occupation’s discriminatory planning policies are also used to drive Palestinians from Silwan. They are denied building permits, and so live with the constant threat of having their homes demolished.

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Sari Kronish is an architect and urban planner. She is also Director of the East Jerusalem department of Bimkom, an organisation which works at the intersection of urban planning and human rights.

Planning system used for political gains, to ensure a Palestinian minority and the Judaisation of Jerusalem

She says as a result of ongoing neglect by the Israeli regime, since 1967, there is a drastic need for improvement in East Jerusalem neighbourhoods. The planning system is being used as a tool for political ends, to ensure Jerusalem is a Jewish city, the Jewish capital.

The urban planning policy is being used in a way that discriminates to achieve the political ends- to restrict when it comes to Palestinian communities, and provide when it comes to Jewish Israeli communities.

Kronish tells the Canary:

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Planning should be free of that, but here there is a demographic driver to the planning policy. That’s what creates the discrimination. And the legal structures and laws in place that have been set up by Israel are allowing for this to happen. It’s completely in contradiction to international law, but in terms of Israeli law there are legal cover ups to everything that’s going on. Nothing is in favour of the Palestinians.

But Siam does not believe the occupation has been successful in its project so far. There are still around 60,000 Palestinians in historic Silwan, and there are a total of 1500 settlers.

He says:

We were supposed to be the minority by now, and Jews the majority. They have everything- the army, the power, and the weapons. Although we’ve tried our best, we haven’t been able to stop them. So the way for us to do this is to stay here. They thought they can easily force Palestinians to leave their land, if not using power, by using money. But this hasn’t happened.

Siam, like most Palestinians, sees the double standards of the West. Hamas is labelled a terrorist movement, But Ben Gvir, and the right-wing in Israel are not.  who kill and imprison innocent Palestinians on a daily basis. But while he does not believe in Western governments, be still trusts in the various Western movements that could bring about change.

Siam: “It’s a Western project here”

It’s a Western project here, and we know what kind of democracy Western countries want. We saw it when they talked about the Palestinian free election,  which they said was democratic, and was watched  by the whole world. But when the results came out, they said it wasn’t the democracy they wanted to see, because Hamas had won.

Palestinians have paid a high price in order to open eyes. It’s not only about the Palestinian cause. A lot of injustice is hidden by the Western governments, inside their countries. We saw it in places such as the UK, with Palestine Action. You cannot express what you want to say. And all the time they’re talking about human rights. But what about the eight million Palestinian refugees all over the world?

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Siam helps run Silwan’s Wadi Hilweh Information Centre, which informs about the problems faced by the residents. It also documents the occupation’s human rights violations in the surrounding area. But this centre now has demolition orders, which are expected to be carried out any day now.

Most Palestinians demolish their own buildings to save a demolition fee, which can total the equivalent of £25,000. But Siam has refused.

Silwan

Another way the occupation makes life as difficult as possible for Palestinians in East Jerusalem is through education. Siam argues the school system for Palestinians here is the worst, not only inside Palestine but also in the Palestinian refugee camps in Syria and Lebanon.

This is because Palestinian education in Jerusalem is completely controlled by the Israeli occupation. Palestinians are not allowed to teach their own history or literature to children at school. If schools do not teach the Israeli system, they are closed down.

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The Israeli occupation uses education as a tool of oppression in Silwan

Siam says:

Palestinians are the most educated society in the Arabic world. Before the education system was destroyed, Gaza’s school system was much better than here. But Israel does its best to stop Palestinians going to school, and tries to make Palestinians uneducated in East Jerusalem. This is one of the tools they use to turn Palestinians into simple workers, for example, working for them in the Israeli factories.

The occupation has now shut down all UNRWA facilities in the occupied Palestinian territory, and Silwan’s UNRWA school closed in June 2025. Most children in Silwan do not have a long term place in a school. Parents struggle to provide education , and around 40% of children have to leave the village to attend school.

Despite the relentless pressure, Siam and those in his community remains defiant. They continue their lives in Silwan, heavily surveillance, threatened with dispossession by settlers, and demolition orders by the occupation. Children go to overcrowded classrooms, not knowing if it will be standing the following day.

Existence is resistance in Palestine, and Silwan is no exception.

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Featured image and additional images via the Canary

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Rep. Dan Crenshaw ousted by primary challenger to his right

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Rep. Dan Crenshaw ousted by primary challenger to his right

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) was ousted by a primary challenger who successfully cast the four-term incumbent as anti-Trump and capitalized on a redrawn district.

State Rep. Steve Toth — who had the backing of Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) — beat Crenshaw on Tuesday night, all but assuring his seat in Congress given the district’s safe-red bend.

Crenshaw was the only incumbent GOP representative in Texas without President Donald Trump’s support and had at times split with the president, including in his criticism of Trump’s refusal to accept his 2020 election loss.

And Toth, with Cruz’s help, focused his campaign on casting Crenshaw as insufficiently conservative for the district, which was redrawn in the GOP’s recent Texas redistricting push.

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“You deserve an unwavering fighter, a Republican who walks the walk,” Cruz said in a recent ad for Toth.

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Cornyn, Paxton head to runoff in Texas Senate GOP race

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Cornyn, Paxton head to runoff in Texas Senate GOP race

Texas Sen. John Cornyn and Attorney General Ken Paxton advanced to a runoff in the Senate GOP primary, extending an already-bruising fight into late May that some Republicans worry could hurt their chances of holding onto the seat — and the Senate.

Tuesday night’s result showed some surprising strength for Cornyn, who had trailed Paxton in most public polls and whose allies were worried might finish far behind the MAGA firebrand. And it indicates the four-term senator still has a real chance to retain his seat in late May.

National Republicans widely expected the runoff when Rep. Wesley Hunt, who finished third, jumped into the race last fall. But while Cornyn is still in the battle, saving him will continue to be an expensive endeavor — and one that risks further damaging Paxton, who could still be their nominee.

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Rep. Chip Roy headed to runoff in Texas AG race

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Rep. Chip Roy headed to runoff in Texas AG race

Rep. Chip Roy will advance to a runoff in the race to replace Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

He will face state Sen. Mayes Middleton in late May.

The competitive primary turned into a fealty test to President Donald Trump. Former DOJ attorney Aaron Reitz and Middleton slammed Roy for breaking with Trump in the past and calling for Attorney General Ken Paxton to resign after he faced charges of bribery and abuse, while brandishing their own MAGA bona fides.

Trump made no endorsement in the race.

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Roy — the House Freedom Caucus policy chair who has represented Texas’ 21st congressional district since 2019 — earned a reputation in Congress as a true conservative ideologue. He has led in polling and fundraising, and has been endorsed by well-known conservatives like Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and fellow Freedom Caucus representatives.

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NHS Humber Health Partnership moved into special measures

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NHS Humber Health Partnership moved into special measures

NHS Humber Health Partnership (HHP) is being moved into special measures due to repeated and worsening failures. The partnership is now in Segment 5 of the National Oversight Framework (NOF), the lowest grade, indicating significant performance or governance challenges.

The partnership is responsible for five East Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire hospitals, including those in Hull, Cottingham, Goole, Grimsby and Scunthorpe. Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust (NLG) and Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (HUTH) also fall under the HHP’s watch.

Unions representing the hospital workers have voiced severe criticisms of HHP leadership. Peta Clark, Royal College of Nursing head of operations, stated that within the partnership’s hospitals:

Staff morale is extremely low. Many feel undervalued, unheard, and under relentless pressure, despite working tirelessly to keep services running.

Likewise, Brendan Cafferty — Unison regional organiser — said:

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Frontline NHS staff want to deliver the best patient care possible to the people of Hull and beyond. They’re proud to work for the organisation.

But they deserve a senior leadership team that supports them to do that.

NHS — ‘Very challenging financial climate’

HHP revealed that 13 serious, preventable accidents — ‘Never Events’ — had happened to patients in its care between June 2024 and August 2025. For context, only 19 Never Events have occurred in total since August 2023 — the creation of the partnership. As such, last year’s accidents mark a serious escalation of safety worries.

The partnership stated that:

Patient safety  is an absolute priority for our partnership and must be central to every service and way of working.

We have launched a new Learning Improvement and Safety Academy to address safety issues, learn from incidents and educate and train our workforce better to prevent incidents from happening again.

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On the subject of HHP’s relegation to Segment 5, the partnership said:

This reflects the scale of challenges which the organisation has been managing for some time. These issues are not new and include long-term challenges around access to care, including A&E and waits for surgery.

All NHS organisations and other public sector organisations, including ours, are working to deliver services in a very challenging financial climate.

That ‘challenging financial climate’ is, in part, a consequence of the government underfunding our NHS. In January 2026, the Canary reported that:

according to the British Medical Association (BMA), there has been a real terms cumulative underspend of £425bn in public health spending since 2009/10.

Following that, Labour has pledged a 2.2% increase in health spending until 2028/29. But that’s completely undermined by the governing party mandating 4% ‘efficiency savings’. That actually represents a 1.8% cut, putting staff working long hours under increased pressure.

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Improvement team

However, the money that is going into the NHS isn’t necessarily being put to best use either.

Back in July 2025, Lyn Simpson was appointed as interim chief executive of the partnership – for an annual salary of almost £280,000. In August, HHP also brought in five other senior staff and an external contractor to form an ‘improvement team’.

The improvement team costs an average of £78,000 a month to run. However, the hospitals under HHP’s aegis haven’t yet shown consistent improvement.

For example, Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust climbed from 125th to 115th in the NHS league tables. Meanwhile, HUTH dropped seven places — from 123rd to 130th — between September and December.

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These league tables measure access to services, patient safety and financial management. There are just 134 positions within the rankings.

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Israel’s bombing of Iran means more restrictions and tighter control for Palestinians

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Israel's bombing of Iran means more restrictions and tighter control for Palestinians

The Israeli occupation consistently uses the pretext of ‘security’ needs to implement policies designed for permanent control, domination, and de facto annexation of the Palestinian territory. And very soon after it initiated its first attacks on Iran, on 28 February, the military acted swiftly to tighten its grip on Palestinians in the West Bank even further.

Israeli occupation using its attacks on Iran to increase its control over Palestinians in West Bank

A Palestinian resident of Birzeit told the Canary that these flyers, from the Israeli occupation forces (IOF), have been scattered everywhere on the roads around Birzeit, and also in other areas of the West Bank.

Translated, it reads as follows:

Statement to the people of Judea and Samaria:

During this escalating security situation the IDF [ Israeli ‘Defense’ Forces] has made the whole area of Judea and Samaria [West Bank] into a security area, to maintain the security and stability of the region.

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It is prohibited completely to move between places, from the moment of this publication until further updates.

Terrorism and terrorists bring death and destruction

The IDF is working with large enhanced forces to maintain security, stability, and public order.

You must follow these instructions.

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Anyone who tries to harm the Israelis, or the IDF will be shot or jailed.

The closure of al-Aqsa mosque during Ramadan — under pretext of security concerns — is also an attempt to tighten control over Palestinian population

The Israeli occupation also lost no time in  preventing Palestinians from entering and praying at al-Aqsa Mosque, Islam’s third holiest site, during this holy month of Ramadan. On the morning of 2 March, Israeli occupation forces (IOF) forced worshippers from the mosque and its compound, in occupied East Jerusalem. They have been unable to access or pray at the site for four consecutive days now, and it remains closed until further notice.

On the morning of 28 February, just hours after ‘Israel’ and the US first launched their strikes against Iran, the occupation’s authorities forced Palestinians to leave the mosque, citing ‘a state of emergency’. This has happened during the Muslims’ holiest month, Ramadan.

2014 was the first year since 1967 that the Israeli occupation had closed al-Aqsa. But since then, restrictions have tightened significantly for Palestinians. Traditionally, hundreds of thousands of Muslim worshippers gather at al-Aqsa to pray. But in recent years the Israeli occupation has been clamping down on Palestinians’ religious freedom, preventing many from accessing Islam’s third holiest site.

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This year, at the beginning of Ramadan, the occupation had already decided to limit the number of Palestinian worshippers at al-Aqsa’s Friday prayers to 10,000. These Palestinians need to obtain a daily permit for each prayer, but only men over 55, women over 50, and children under 12 are eligible. But now, the Israeli occupation is further exploiting ’emergency’ pretexts to advance its control over the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the Palestinians that live there. And this is why Israel completely shuts al-Aqsa mosque and its compound in the face of Muslims.

Judaisation of Jerusalem, while ‘Israel’ aims to make Palestinians invisible — there is also an imposed media blackout

‘Israel’ has also banned thousands of Palestinian citizens of Jerusalem from visiting al-Aqsa, for reasons unknown to them, and issued at least 12 arbitrary ban orders, during and before this Ramadan, against Palestinian journalists. This is to prevent them from reaching al-Aqsa, and censor their coverage of Zionist crimes there. The IOF claim, without any evidence, that they “pose threats to public order”. The occupation has also recently outlawed five digital news sites that cover Jerusalem, in its attempt to control the information flow from the media. Arrests have increased, and authorities have also banned Palestinian residents of Jerusalem from putting up decorations and festive lights for Ramadan. The Zionist regime wants to consolidate control over holy sites in the occupied territory such as al-Aqsa and the Ibrahimi mosque in Hebron. It also aims to make Palestinians invisible, hide their culture, heritage and identity, and Judaise Jerusalem. These measures come as the occupation’s police have for the first time, extended the hours of Jewish worshippers at al-Aqsa.

Throughout the occupied West Bank, ‘Israel’ is imposing policies to further its control over the Palestinian population. Its ultimate aim is the same, irrespective of the place. To make life as difficult and uncomfortable as possible for Palestinians, so they give up and leave their land.

Most recently, the Knesset approved new land registration rules that make it easier to steal Palestinian land, and expand illegal settlements. The occupation has also conducted large-scale military raids in the Northern occupied West Bank refugee camps, forcibly displacing all their residents — more than 40,000 people. Violent raids by the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) also take place in Palestinian homes throughout the West Bank, on a daily basis, for no reason except to control and intimidate the population.

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Israeli occupation continuing to add more roadblocks and checkpoints in the West Bank

After October 2023, the IOF tightened its restrictions on freedom of movement even further in the West Bank. There are now more than 1180 military checkpoints, metal detector gates, earth mounds, and cement blocks which can be used at any time to close a road. Many are permanent. These not only block Palestinian access to villages and towns, sealing off these areas, but also prevent access to services and land. Now, with the Israeli occupation’s attacks on Iran, new checkpoints are being set up throughout the occupied West Bank under the guise of security, while others remain closed, restricting movement even further.

The Israeli occupation frames many of these measures as temporary responses to specific security threats. And it claims that checkpoints, permit systems, and expanded military authority are necessary to prevent attacks and protect civilians. But these ‘temporary’ measures have become entrenched. Restrictions on movement and land access have reshaped daily life for Palestinians. They go way beyond security needs, systematically undermining Palestinian life — limiting movement, access to land, and economic opportunity — while expanding Israeli occupation control over the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

What is called “security” is increasingly a pretext for occupation. Checkpoints, roadblocks, and permit systems fragment communities, make everyday life unpredictable, and entrench the Zionist regime’s control over territory Palestinians claim for a future state.

These measures are not a form of protection, but are tools to tighten control and make the possibility of Palestinian self-determination more remote than ever.

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Featured image via TRT

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Iran Targets US Consulate In Dubai

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Iran Targets US Consulate In Dubai

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Palantir continue to hide meeting notes with several PMs

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Palantir continue to hide meeting notes with several PMs

In 2019 at Downing Street Boris Johnson, Dominic Cummings, and Peter Thiel – Palantir’s billionaire co-founder and chairman, met for an hour. There were no notes from this meeting. Palantir being awarded Covid contracts followed.

Liberal Democrat MP Martin Wrigley has been chasing these notes ever since, following up with multiple Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, appeals, and parliamentary questions. All have been denied. Even the documents explaining why the FOI was denied have also been denied – he told Politics Joe this week.

Starmer has continued this pattern of secret meetings. A February 2025 Washington meeting between  Starmer, Peter Mandelson, and Palantir CEO Alex Karp has no notes and preceded the £240 million December 2025 contract between the Ministry of Defence and Palantir.

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Palantir, named after the all-seeing orb from the Lord of the Rings, wants to see everything. But when it comes to its own meetings, it seems they prefer the lights off.

However, Labour have recently said they will answer Wrigley’s questions about Starmer’s secret meeting with Palantir, pointing to previous statements and promising “further details.”

The UK Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee could begin releasing documents relating to Lord Mandelson’s appointment and role as US ambassador soon. A UK government spokesperson said officials were “proceeding at pace to publish the first tranche of documents in early March” and “working closely” with the ISC to fulfil their requests.

Successful lobbying by Palantir

Wrigley said the sales and marketing operations of AI companies like Palantir were so slick that “you’re probably buying the brochure, not the product.” He pointed to their accounts: vast sums on lobbying and sales, while the core business barely breaks even.

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Palantir… put an awful lot of money into lobbying and sales efforts,” Wrigley noted; he wasn’t invited to a lavish Palantir party thrown recently, adding dryly: “I wonder why.”

The Mayfair drinks reception saw CEO Louis Mosley confronted outside by Declassified UK journalists asking whether Palantir technology used in Gaza was now being sold to the British army. Mosley declined to answer and hurried inside.

From Epstein’s Island to the UK government

Thiel exchanged over 2,000 messages with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein from 2014 until Epstein’s final arrest in 2019. Novara Media reported that:

During this period, Epstein was a significant limited partner investor in Thiel’s venture capital firm Valar Ventures – to the tune of approximately $40m.

Also central to this picture is Mandelson, whose lobbying firm Global Counsel worked for Palantir. It was Mandelson who introduced Starmer to Palantir CEO Alex Karp at that February 2025 Washington meeting,  the one with no notes that preceded the £241 million MOD contract.

Mandelson’s own extensive contacts with Epstein are now the subject of a police investigation. Global Counsel no longer exists.

Total UK government contracts now exceed £670 million – spanning the NHS, the Ministry of Defence, police forces, the Cabinet Office, and even the navy’s nuclear-powered submarines. The NHS contract alone is worth £330 million over seven years, giving one US company access to the health data of 67 million Britons.

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As the ISC prepares to release documents, the question is whether sunlight will finally reach Palantir’s dealings. The 2019 meeting produced no notes. The 2025 meeting produced no notes. The documents coming may not mention Palantir at all – but maybe they will lift the veil completely.

Featured image via the Canary

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Israel and US kill hundreds in Iran, striking hospitals and schools

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Israel and US kill hundreds in Iran, striking hospitals and schools

Rogue nuclear powers Israel and the US have illegally attacked Iran, killing at least 787 people there so far since Saturday 28 February. They have also killed 40 people in Lebanon and two in Iraq.

As the US-Israeli genocide continues in Gaza, this latest offensive looks set to continue despite increasing disruption to a region that plays a key role in the global energy industry.

US and Israel hit hospitals and schools, wounding thousands

The Iranian ambassador to the UN has said his country’s retaliations will continue until the US-Israeli attacks stop. And he clarified that:

If any base in a neighbouring country is used to attack and invade other countries, that would be a legitimate target.

Iran’s response has killed six US soldiers so far, along with 11 people in the apartheid state of Israel. With Iran targeting US assets in authoritarian Gulf states, a further eight people have also died in Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Oman. Temporary closures to gas and oil facilities as a result, meanwhile, have sent prices soaring.

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Al Jazeera has reported that US-Israeli attacks have:

The US and Israel have nuclear weapons. Iran doesn’t.

One official excuse for the unprovoked, illegal attack on Iran is its nuclear ambitions. However, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency has told NBC News the organisation does not believe Iran has nuclear weapons and had not “seen elements of a systematic and structured program to manufacture nuclear weapons” there.

Israel, on the other hand, has had such weapons of mass destruction for decades now. As the Canary reported previously:

Israel is the only country in the Middle East which has nuclear weapons. But it has not signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) and refuses to place its nuclear facilities under the watch of UN inspectors. This is unlike Iran, whose facilities are monitored constantly and which, as a non nuclear-weapon state which is a signatory to the NPT, has also agreed not to seek or acquire these weapons…

Israel is not only believed to possess 90 nuclear warheads, but also to have produced enough plutonium to produce 100 to 200 more nuclear weapons. And according to new research from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), it is actively modernising its nuclear arsenal.

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The US, meanwhile, has over 5,000 nuclear warheads.

The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) has clarified that:

A single nuclear warhead could kill hundreds of thousands of people, with lasting and devastating humanitarian and environmental consequences.

This perhaps explains why the US and Israel are happy to attack Iran but not countries like Russia, China, or North Korea, which actually do have nuclear weapons. It also helps to explain why the US and Israel feel they can get away with committing war crimes against countless nations which don’t have nuclear weapons.

Featured image via the Canary

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NHS Humber moved into special measures

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NHS Humber moved into special measures

NHS Humber Health Partnership (HHP) is being moved into special measures due to repeated and worsening failures. The partnership is now in Segment 5 of the National Oversight Framework (NOF), the lowest grade, indicating significant performance or governance challenges.

The partnership is responsible for five East Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire hospitals, including those in Hull, Cottingham, Goole, Grimsby and Scunthorpe. Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust (NLG) and Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (HUTH) also fall under the HHP’s watch.

Unions representing the hospital workers have voiced severe criticisms of HHP leadership. Peta Clark, Royal College of Nursing head of operations, stated that within the partnership’s hospitals:

Staff morale is extremely low. Many feel undervalued, unheard, and under relentless pressure, despite working tirelessly to keep services running.

Likewise, Brendan Cafferty – Unison regional organiser – said:

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Frontline NHS staff want to deliver the best patient care possible to the people of Hull and beyond. They’re proud to work for the organisation.

But they deserve a senior leadership team that supports them to do that.

NHS: ‘Very challenging financial climate’

HHP revealed that 13 serious, preventable accidents – ‘Never Events’ – had happened to patients in its care between June 2024 and August 2025. For context, only 19 Never Events have occurred in total since August 2023 – the creation of the partnership. As such, last year’s accidents mark a serious escalation of safety worries.

The partnership stated that:

Patient safety is an absolute priority for our partnership and must be central to every service and way of working.

We have launched a new Learning Improvement and Safety Academy to address safety issues, learn from incidents and educate and train our workforce better to prevent incidents from happening again.

Advertisement

On the subject of HHP’s relegation to Segment 5, the partnership said:

This reflects the scale of challenges which the organisation has been managing for some time. These issues are not new and include long-term challenges around access to care, including A&E and waits for surgery.

All NHS organisations and other public sector organisations, including ours, are working to deliver services in a very challenging financial climate.

That ‘challenging financial climate’ is, in part, a consequence of the government underfunding our NHS. In January 2026, the Canary reported that:

according to the British Medical Association (BMA), there has been a real terms cumulative underspend of £425bn in public health spending since 2009/10.

Following that, Labour has pledged a 2.2% increase in health spending until 2028/29. But that’s completely undermined by the governing party mandating 4% ‘efficiency savings’. That’s actually represents a 1.8% cut, putting staff working long hours under increased pressure.

Advertisement

Improvement team

However, the money that is going into the NHS isn’t necessarily being put to best use either.

Back in July 2025, Lyn Simpson was appointed as interim chief executive of the partnership – for an annual salary of almost £280,000. In August, HHP also brought in five other senior staff and an external contractor to form an ‘improvement team’.

The improvement team costs an average of £78,000 a month to run. However, the hospitals under HHP haven’t yet shown consistent improvement.

For example, Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust climbed from 125th to 115th in the NHS league tables. Meanwhile, HUTH dropped seven places – from 123rd to 130th – between September and December.

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There league tables measure access to services, patient safety and financial management. There are just 134 positions within the rankings.

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Met Police Chief admits he ‘can see why women don’t trust police’

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Met Police Chief admits he 'can see why women don't trust police'

Met Police Chief Sir Mark Rowley has told the BBC that he ‘can see why women don’t trust the police’. His interview comes as we mark the fifth anniversary of the murder of Sarah Everard, murdered in 2021 by a serving police officer in the Met. Referring to ‘several ghastly cases of police officers committing awful offences against women’, Rowley agrees they were undoubtedly intrinsic in the flailing public trust in the Metropolitan Police.

Women and girls face increasing levels of sexual abuse driven by the entitlement, misogyny, and harmful attitudes held by too many men in Western societies. That trauma often damages their ability to feel safe or to trust others.

However, Rowley actually appears to minimise the scale and diversity of abuse that women experience. After all, for marginalised women that threat can be even greater. Black and brown women not only endure sexual violence but also face racist abuse that compounds and deepens the trauma they must navigate in their daily lives. We also have our LGBTQ+ community who we must also not forget in this critical issue.

All women matter, not just white women

In March 2021, Met police officer Wayne Couzens identified himself to Sarah Everard before making a false arrest. He then proceeded to kidnap, rape and murder Everard, even using police handcuffs to make her submissive. He had also been found to have indecently exposed himself on two recorded incidents.

Since her murder, officials have conducted reports and inquiries into the institution. Campaigners have also made widespread calls for reform to address the terrifying risks women face when interacting with police officers.  Nevertheless, it hasn’t escaped our attention that Sir Rowley’s interview today makes no mention or reference to the other institutional issues that we know are rife within the UK’s biggest police force.

After all, we mustn’t forget the report in 2023 conducted after Everard’s murder at the hands of a Met police officer, which found the force are institutionally racist, misogynistic and homophobic. Given how these behaviours often interplay for abusers, Rowley’s lack of acknowledgement suggests they have learned little respect for the experience of women.

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Our own Alex/Rose Cocker wrote in October about racist and misogynistic attitudes in the Met, after a BBC Panorama revealed an apparently ‘hidden culture’. As Cocker astutely pointed out, there is nothing ‘hidden’ about it:

Rory Bibb, the Panorama reporter, spent seven months in the custody suite of Charing Cross police station as a designated detention officer. In that time, Bibb recorded a vast array of truly heinous and discriminatory remarks and actions from the officers around him. His sterling work resulted in the suspensions of eight bigot cops and one other staff member.

adding:

The Met’s bigotry has only been driven underground if you have the luxury of never having to deal with an officer whilst you yourself are marginalised in any way. Its discrimination can only be considered hidden if we automatically discount the Met’s victims as credible witnesses.

‘The Met Police’s problems extend beyond a systemic hatred of women’

Joe Glenton wrote for the Canary later that month about a Met police officer who avoided a custodial sentence despite spying on a 14-year-old girl. Instead, his conviction of voyeurism and making indecent images of a child was given a suspended sentence of 13 months. He wrote:

The Met’s problem’s extend beyond a systemic hatred of women. On 2 October a BBC Panorama documentary showed how racism and far-right ideas thrived in the force.

The BBC reported:

The evidence of misogyny and racism challenges the Met’s promise to have tackled what it calls “toxic behaviours” after the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving police officer.

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Panorama’s secret filming shows officers making sexualised comments to colleagues and sharing racist views about immigrants and Muslims.

What sort of deterrent is this when pretty much every abuser wants to believe they won’t get found out? The lack of a serious sentence when he was in a position of trust in his community speaks to a woeful underappreciation by the Met for the long-term harm these abuses inflict on those victimised.

Met Police — little sign of change or progress for women

Former victims’ commissioner Dame Vera Baird added her voice this morning. She argued on Sky News that women’s safety and confidence haven’t improved much at all since Everard’s horrifying murder. Alarmingly, she also pointed out that applicants to the Met with a caution on their record seem to be perfectly acceptable:

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The Angiolini inquiry referenced by Baird was released in December last year, and highlighted ‘massive and continuing failures’ in the Met’s handling of violence against women and girls (VAWG). We wrote at the time:

Racism and misogyny shouldn’t be conflated here. However, last month’s report illustrates the ways in which the police can work directly counter to efforts at reform, both within and without their organisation. The solution to VAWG cannot, and must not, be built around the expectation that the police can resolve this issue.

Time and again, we have seen that the police are part of the problem.

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I mean, it’s hard to argue against an independent third party stepping in to fix this serious issue within the force. Especially when they were clearly more than happy to ignore Prince Andrew’s abuse:

Deal with the root issue, not just the inevitable abuse

If the Epstein Files teach us anything, it is that sexual abuse often follows where powerful men go. Therefore, it isn’t a stretch to imagine that men attracted to the Met are doing so because they want to feel powerful. That is why it is essential that the scrutiny they receive is far reaching and cannot ignore cautions or any indication that abuse is possible as Dame Vera Baird underscored.

The harm that men have the potential to inflict is far reaching and life-changing for victims and survivors. The greater good and preventing that harm should always be the priority but evidently hasn’t been for far too long.

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That might lead to a recruitment issue as there aren’t the number of suitable applicants. On the other hand, it might finally prompt the long overdue national conversation about harmful male attitudes in the UK.

Featured image via MyNewsDesk

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