Government is failing children who will have no place to call home this Christmas – Melanie Onn

Melanie Onn MP, Labour’s Shadow Housing Minister, responding to new figures on the number of children set to be homeless this Christmas, said:

“It is heart-breaking that 128,000 children will wake up on Christmas morning with no place to call home. The Conservative Government is failing them.

“This shames us all. Ministers must back Labour’s national plan to end this homelessness crisis.”




This announcement will really end up being more like an infrastructure pipe dream – Peter Dowd

Peter Dowd MP, Labour’s Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, responding to the Government’s announcement of an updated £600 billion for national infrastructure investment, said:

“The Government has no shame, as after a year of Tory claims that Labour would bankrupt the country with our 10 year £500 billion investment plans, they are now presenting their own as a supposed £600 billion scheme.

“However, the truth is that many of these are just re-announcements of projects the Government has previously committed itself to, and is actually not new money. With only one in five projects in the 2016 National Infrastructure Pipeline under construction, this is just another reminder of how poor their record on delivering on their investment plans has become.

“The reality is that despite all the hype from the Government, this announcement will really end up being more like an infrastructure pipe dream.”




If the Defence Secretary can’t trust the Chancellor to pay his bills, how can anyone else in the country? – Dowd

Peter Dowd MP, Labour’s Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, responding to the reports of infighting between the Defence Secretary and the Chancellor, said:

“On a day when the Chancellor is happy to see commuters face extortionate increases in their rail fares, we discover he expects others to pick up the bill for his own travel costs.

"And if the Defence Secretary cannot trust the Chancellor to pay his bills, how can anyone else in the country?”




Jeremy Corbyn presses Prime Minister on UK aid allegedly being funneled to extremist armed groups in Syria

Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn has written to the Prime Minister demanding answers to serious questions arising out of evidence that UK aid money has been funneled to extremist sectarian armed groups in Syria.

The Government has suspended a foreign aid project after the BBC’s Panorama programme reported allegations about the money paid to contractor Adam Smith International (ASI).

The letter raises six questions, including: why the Department for International Development awarded ASI this work after freezing other contracts earlier this year; when Foreign Office ministers became aware of problems with the programme and why no action was taken; whether funds were channelled to Egypt and the Myanmar military; and whether money was used to lobby UN representatives and others over human rights in Bahrain.

In the letter, Jeremy Corbyn says: “allegations of aid money ending up in the hands of an Al Qaeda affiliate and contributing to the Free Syrian Police’s work with a judicial system accused of numerous human rights abuses is yet another blow to Britain’s reputation on the world stage. It is the responsibility of your government to ensure robust scrutiny and transparency processes are in place to prevent such grotesque abuses of UK aid money.”

Full text of the letter:

Rt Hon Theresa May MP
Prime Minister
10 Downing Street
London SW1A 2AA

5 December 2017

Dear Prime Minister,

I am writing in light of the serious issues raised in the BBC Panorama programme yesterday evening concerning the Access to Justice and Community Security (AJACS) project, implemented in Syria by Adam Smith International (ASI) as part of a multi-million pound project, funded by the Conflict, Stability and Security Fund (CSSF) and overseen by Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO).

The British public is extremely proud of our country’s commitment to spend 0.7% of national income on aid to reduce global poverty. Under a Labour government, the UK was a world leader in aid effectiveness and global development. Therefore, allegations of aid money ending up in the hands of an Al Qaeda affiliate and contributing to the Free Syrian Police’s work with a judicial system accused of numerous human rights abuses is yet another blow to Britain’s reputation on the world stage. It is the responsibility of your government to ensure robust scrutiny and transparency processes are in place to prevent such grotesque abuses of UK aid money.

Given the humanitarian crisis in Syria, with millions of Syrians internally displaced and millions of Syrian refugees in neighbouring countries, it is a real concern that your government has appeared to use aid funding to support sectarian division rather than humanitarian need. As a political solution is yet to be achieved in Syria, the role of UK government aid should be to support the international efforts to end violence and reach a political solution, not providing military or security assistance and resources.

These revelations raise wider questions about the FCO’s capacity to manage aid programmes transparently and effectively, the overall operation of the CSSF, and the oversight of aid money through private contractors.

I would therefore request an urgent answer to the following questions:

1.         Can you explain why the Department for International Development (DfID) froze contracts with ASI in March 2017, yet the FCO awarded £12m contract funding to ASI between April and September 2017?

2.         Can you confirm exactly when FCO Ministers were aware of problems with the AJACS programme, why they took no action, and why the FCO’s oversight mechanisms failed?

3.         Can you confirm whether the CSSF was channelling money to juvenile detention centres in Egypt and until earlier this year was funding assistance to the Myanmar military?

4.         Can you confirm whether CSSF funding in 2015 was used to lobby representatives from the UN and other countries, arguing that human rights in Bahrain were improving?

5.         As the OBR revised growth figures down, the UK will now be spending £895 million less than expected on the intended objective of aid which is poverty reduction and tackling disease.  Are you confident that DfID has the resources it needs to deliver global development?

6.         Figures released recently show that 26.2% of funds are now spent through other departments, a considerable increase under your government. This is despite the widespread evidence of the lack of transparency and quality standards of DfID. Will you agree to urgently freeze and review all CSSF funding – with the aim of ensuring that British aid is used to alleviate poverty and disease?

I look forward to your urgent replies on these serious matters. Due to the public interest arising from the Panorama programme, I will be making this letter public.

Yours sincerely,

Jeremy Corbyn MP
Leader of the Opposition




Anneliese Dodds responds to publication by the EU of tax haven blacklist

Anneliese Dodds MP, Labour’s Shadow Treasury Minister, responding to the publication by the EU of a tax haven blacklist, said:

“It is disappointing to see UK Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies mentioned as ‘on notice’ from the EU in its tax haven blacklist. The British Government said back in April that it would require Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies to produce registers of beneficial ownership which would be accessible to HMRC.

“Although some have complied, others have not. Just as the UK’s own beneficial ownership register has been criticised for apparently missing some companies which it should include, this is a case of faulty implementation by the British Government and a lack of political will to stop tax dodging.

“The British Government has not earned itself many allies by trying to protect certain jurisdictions during this process. They have also consistently blocked European-wide initiatives for a public register of the beneficial ownership of offshore trusts.

"Ultimately it is in the interests of everyone to have more tax transparency and action against money laundering and aggressive tax avoidance.”