Corona Virus outbreak: Flights from China

Due to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak, the Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) advise against all travel to Hubei Province and all but essential travel to the rest of mainland China (not including Hong Kong and Macao).

If you are in China and able to leave, you should do so. The elderly and those with pre-existing medical conditions may be at heightened risk.

Second evacuation plane to depart Wuhan on Sunday

The FCO will charter a second civilian aircraft to help British nationals and their dependants leave Wuhan for the UK. The charter flight is expected to leave in the early hours of Sunday morning local time (9 February) to land at RAF Brize Norton.

If you are a British national in Hubei province and want to leave on the flight, contact our 24/7 number +86 (0) 10 8529 6600, or the FCO in London on (+44) (0)207 008 1500.

Scheduled flights

If you are a British national living elsewhere in mainland China, there are a number of airlines operating scheduled flights.

At the time of publication, the following airlines are operating flights to the UK.

  • Air China from Chengdu and Beijing Capital to Heathrow and Shanghai Pudong to Gatwick
  • China Southern Airlines from Guangzhou, Zhengzhou, Sanya, and Chongqing to Heathrow
  • Tianjin Airlines from Chongqing and Xi’an Xianyang to Heathrow
  • Hainan Airlines from Changsha to Heathrow
  • Beijing Capital Airlines from Qingdao to Heathrow
  • China Eastern Airlines from Shanghai to Heathrow and Gatwick
  • Shenzhen Airlines from Shenzhen to Heathrow

It may become harder to access departure options over the coming weeks.

FCO travel advice remains under constant review to ensure it reflects our latest assessment of risks to British people. Find more information about how we put FCO travel advice together and make decisions on advising against travel in our travel advice guidance.




Tackling the illicit spread of small arms and light weapons

Thank you very much, Mr. President. And thank you very much also to our two briefers this morning.

Mr. President, millions of people around the world are impacted directly or indirectly by the diversion of arms and illicit arms transfers. While small arms and light weapons have a legitimate role in ensuring defence and security, their diversion and misuse cost hundreds of thousands of lives every year, undermine security and sustainable development and fuel conflict, crime and terrorism.

The UN has an important role to play in supporting efforts to address illicit flows of small arms. There is no one size fits all solution, and to achieve real progress in this area, it is crucial that we bring on board all stakeholders, including the full and active participation of women in the disarmament community.

As the High Representative has set out this morning, the UN is carrying out considerable work to tackle the illicit spread of small arms and light weapons. I’d like to take this opportunity to commend the work of ODA and join the High Representative, in underlining the importance of the role of peacekeeping missions and SPMs in this area in line with their mandates. In his work, the UN must take into account existing guidance. For example, the ‘Modular Small Arms Control Implementation Compendium’ and the ‘International Ammunition Technical Guidelines’ provide international best practice in physical security and stockpile management, and should be considered a consistently in UN. field work.

Mr. President, international cooperation in this area is vital. The UN Programme of Action is a key forum for international action and policy coordination. And we look forward to fruitful discussions through the course of the Seventh Biennial Meeting of States later this year.

The UK is also proud to participate this year in the Group of Governmental Experts on ‘Problems arising from the accumulation of conventional ammunition stockpiles in surplus’. We hope that this GGE will achieve tangible results addressing a long neglected problem in conventional arms control.

There is also important work to be done elsewhere. We reiterate our full support for the Arms Trade Treaty, a key multilateral tool in addressing the illicit trade and small arms and light weapons through its object and purpose: to create a well-regulated, legal trade in conventional arms.

Universalisation of the treaty, coupled with full implementation of its robust provisions, remains a priority for the UK. We continue to encourage all States that have not yet done so to make ratification an accession a national priority.

Mr President, we welcome the language in the SG report on Arms embargoes, which are a crucial tool in tackling the illicit spread of small arms and light weapons to many of the complex on this council’s agenda.

I would like to take this opportunity to underline the importance of respect for and implementation of the arms embargoes that this council has agreed.

We welcome the emphasis on the SG’s report on the need for flexibility and agree that arms embargoes should respond to changing contexts. However, the UK is concerned that arms embargoes are often lifted for political reasons. Without sufficient consideration being given to efficient management of small arms and light weapons and associated ammunition is the harm caused by their mismanagement.

The challenge for illicit small arms and light weapons, is a global one which requires international cooperation and action but we must also recognise that different regions face different challenges.The UK has been a consistent supporter of regional approaches in this area.

The Western Balkans roadmap, which is currently being implemented, is an excellent plan of action for that region and highlighted transferable lessons to be taken forward.

The UK would also like to take this moment to commend the African Union’s goal of Silencing the Guns by 2020. It is vital that we seek to translate it into initiatives that will make a direct difference to the lives of ordinary people across Africa. Public buy-in and ownership of security sector reforms and policy will be crucial to this objective.

In addition, success in Silencing the Guns will require; a strong and effective partnerships to maximise results; effective preventative diplomacy and mediation; strengthening the role of women and youth in conflict resolution and prevention; and genuine and lasting security sector reform-on which the United Kingdom has a renewed focus in partnership with the African Union.

The UK remains committed to supporting African efforts in that regard through cooperation on initiatives for disarmament, surplus destruction, regulation of arms transfers, weapons marking, stockpile management and law enforcement cooperation across continents. This is a key strand of work for the British Armies Peace Support Team based in Nairobi. Through them, we provide technical advice and training on this issue to, amongst many others, the African Union Commission, AMISOM and its troop contributing countries.

Mr President, the UK continues to prioritise support to work on small arms, and provided technical and financial support bilaterally and through regional and multilateral organizations. Through this support, we are helping countries to strengthen arms control frameworks through national legislation, to implement better stockpile management procedures, and to tackle the grave challenges recognized in the SG’s report. The drivers of terrorism, crime, poverty and exclusion which fuel the demand for illicit weapons.

Thank you very much.




Vice Chief of the Defence Staff signs future force development charter to reaffirm UK/US defence relationship

As this was his first visit to the UK in his current appointment, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General John Hyten was formally greeted by Admiral Fraser at the Ministry of Defence in London.

The two leaders discussed upcoming operational activity, next generation capabilities and how the two nations will look to deepen their cooperation to address the ever-changing threat environment.

The military leaders committed to strengthening their defence relationship by signing the Future Force Development Cooperation Charter. This forward-looking agreement will allow our two nations to work closer together and achieve optimum future force collaboration.

Admiral Fraser said:

“Today, we reaffirm our commitment to the UK-US defence co-operation. For over 100 years, we have worked together to build and maintain international peace and stability, based on the interests and values that we share.

“We continue to have military and civilian personnel stationed in each other’s countries as part of our collective commitment to NATO, to ensure we are able to train and operate alongside each other when required.

“The strength of our combined efforts is demonstrated through the daily work of our military personnel working side by side around the world.”

General Hyten said:

I set it as a priority to visit the United Kingdom early in my tenure because the strength of this relationship is critical for both our nations’ security. Our alliance with the UK is one of the most successful in history. We share common goals of preventing conflict, and preserving peace and freedom for our people. By signing this agreement with our UK allies, we reaffirm our commitment to our long-standing relationship of mutual support and cooperation. Our effectiveness, security and stability are enhanced by working with our allies.




Change to policy when accounting for balances of estates

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BVD will no longer account for the balances of estates under indemnity if Letters of Administration were previously granted to the Treasury Solicitor.

This policy will apply with immediate effect and to any estate, irrespective of its value.

If the money BVD holds is less than £15,000 and Letters of Administration were not granted to the Treasury Solicitor, BVD will continue to account for the balance of the estate under indemnity.

Further details can be found in the ‘Make a claim to a deceased person’s estate’ section of this website.

Published 5 February 2020




New appointments to Innovate UK’s council

UK Research and Innovation has appointed two new members to Innovate UK’s council – Isabel Fox, a General Partner and manager of an early stage deep-tech fund and Matt Clifford MBE, cofounder and CEO of Entrepreneur First, the leading global talent investor.

Innovate UK’s council is responsible both for advising Innovate UK’s executive chair and making decisions, as delegated to it by the UKRI Board and sets overall objectives and direction.

The council meets 6 times a year. Members have a range of expertise in research and innovation that is drawn across business, entrepreneurship, investment, technology, economics and business impact evaluation, and have different characteristics and professional backgrounds.

Dr Ian Campbell, Innovate UK’s interim executive chair, welcomed the appointments saying:

Isabel and Matt bring amazing experience and expertise to their new roles at Innovate UK.

Their insight, along with that of the other members of the council, will support Innovate UK mission to drive economic growth by backing the best of British innovation.

Today’s announcement is one of a number of council appointments made by UKRI.

Isabel Fox

Isabel Fox is one of just a handful of female General Partners in the UK, who has raised and manages an early stage deep-tech fund.

With a portfolio of ground-breaking founders who are daring to disrupt the status quo and improve the world we live in across human health (healthcare, life sciences, agriculture, food and wellness).

At Luminous Ventures, Isabel has the opportunity to indulge her passion for innovation, investing in visionary founders with breakthrough technologies and backing deep-tech and science that matters.

The portfolio includes: Synthace, Hadean, Optellum, Ellipsis, Vital Health, BioBeats, OxfordVR and many more.

Before venture capital, Isabel founded two corporate PR firms focused on the venture ecosystem (two exits), co-founded two software start-ups (one exit) and been an active angel investor in the UK and US.

Matt Clifford

Matt Clifford MBE is cofounder and CEO of Entrepreneur First, the leading global talent investor.

Entrepreneur First invests in ambitious technical individuals to help them build world-class deep technology start-ups from scratch in London, Berlin, Paris, Singapore, Bangalore and Toronto.

Since 2011, Entrepreneur First has funded over 150 companies valued at almost $2bn. Matt sits on the board of Code First Girls, the technical education non-profit, which he co-founded.

Before starting Entrepreneur First, Matt worked at McKinsey & Co and earned degrees from Cambridge and MIT, where he was a Kennedy Scholar. He was awarded an MBE for services to business in the 2016 Queen’s Birthday Honours.