Snwp Letters: cities are so last century
Good morning. Before the newsletter, an update on the news that broke last night that King Charles has been diagnosed with cancer. Buckingham Palace says that Charles is already undergoing treatment;
stanley cup spain it did not specify the type of the disease, other than to say its not prostate cancer. You can read Rajeev Syals analysis of the impact of
vaso stanley the news on how the king carries out his role, and Andrew Gregorys cancer explainer.Today, were covering online safety for children, starting with a grimly familiar feature of the age: a devastated parent, granted a platform they never wanted, and using it to demand greater guardrails on smartphones to protect others from the fate that befell their child. At the weekend, Brianna Gheys mother Esther gave an interview to the BBC in which she called for social media apps to be banned on smartphones for under-16s. Esther Ghey said her daughter might have been saved if the searches being made by her eventual killers had been flagged to their parents.The whole interview is deeply moving 鈥?and it presented an immediate challenge to the
stanley cup usa government. Yesterday, Rishi Sunak declined to back the idea of a ban on social media on childrens smartphones, but pointed to new powers for the regulator Ofcom granted by the Online Safety Act. For Ghey and many other parents, that is unlikely to seem like enough.Is there anything that could For todays newsletter, I spoke to Alex Hern, the Guardians UK technology editor, about the protections that exist, whether the Qndl To be recognised nationally was incredible : how it feels to win a Guardian public service award
Police and prosecutors are failing to tackle an epidemic of hate crime against disabled people, the head of the Crown Prosecution Service in England and Wales said last night.Sir Ken Macdonald, the director of public prosecutions, said that too many disabled people live in fear because the criminal justice system is letting them down. He told the Bar Council: Disability hate cri
stanley cup me is widespread. At the lower end of the scale there is a vast amount not being picked up. The more serious offences are not always being prosecuted as they should be. Macdonald said examples of hate crimes included stones, yoghurt and bad eggs being thrown at the windows of disabled people. They were subjected to offensive remarks, including that they should have been put down at birth .There had also been serious assaults in which disabled people were treated like
kubki stanley animals [and] subjected to sustained, violent and viciously degrading treatment .Macdonald said that police and prosecutors must stop thinking of disabled people as inherently weak and easy targets. This approach is wrong. It means that the opportunity to condemn the prejudice and hostility of the offender is missed. He added: Where there is evidence of hostility, police and prosecutors must ensure it is put before the court. It is our duty to give effect to the law which supports the struggle for disabled peop
stanley cup website le to live as full and valued members of society. These offences represent a crud