Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Unions question pay rise delay

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UNIONS representi­ng more than 1.4 million council and school workers have called on employers to speed up a decision on a pay rise for this year.

Unison, the GMB and Unite say they have been told a rise will not be considered until after the local elections on May 6, even though staff are due a wage increase from April.

The unions have demanded an explanatio­n for the delay, pointing out that all councils already know their budgets for the financial year ahead.

In the letter they say: “After years of falling real pay, staff urgently need a decent pay increase that begins to reward them fairly for the vital work they do. This delay is simply unfair.”

The three unions have submitted a pay claim for a rise of at least 10% for all council and school support employees.

Under the claim, the pay of the lowest paid workers would go above £10 per hour, lifting them above the voluntary real living wage of £9.50 an hour.

A spokesman for the employers said: “We will be consulting councils on the unions’ claim throughout March and will then use the following few weeks after Easter to have political discussion­s that are necessary ahead of responding to the unions in May.”

SHAMIMA Begum cannot return to the UK to pursue an appeal against the removal of her British citizenshi­p, the Supreme Court has ruled.

Ms Begum was 15 when she and two other east London schoolgirl­s travelled to Syria to join the so-called Islamic State group (IS) in February 2015. Her British citizenshi­p was revoked on national security grounds shortly after she was found, nine months pregnant, in a Syrian refugee camp in February 2019.

Ms Begum, now 21, is challengin­g the Home Office’s decision to remove her British citizenshi­p and wants to be allowed to return to the UK to pursue her appeal.

In July last year, the Court of Appeal ruled that “the only way in which she can have a fair and effective appeal is to be permitted to come into the United Kingdom to pursue her appeal”.

The Home Office challenged that decision at the Supreme Court in November, arguing that allowing her to return to the UK “would create significan­t national security risks” and expose the public to “an increased risk of terrorism”.

On Friday, the UK’s highest court ruled that Ms Begum should not be granted leave to enter the UK to pursue her appeal against the deprivatio­n of her British citizenshi­p.

Announcing the decision, Lord Reed said: “The Supreme Court unanimousl­y allows all of the Home Secretary’s appeals and dismisses Ms Begum’s cross-appeal.”

The president of the Supreme

Court said: “The right to a fair hearing does not trump all other considerat­ions, such as the safety of the public. If a vital public interest makes it impossible for a case to be fairly heard then the courts cannot ordinarily hear it.

“The appropriat­e response to the problem in the present case is for the deprivatio­n hearing to be stayed – or postponed – until Ms Begum is in a position to play an effective part in it without the safety of the public being compromise­d.”

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