Refugees Fear Racist Attacks On The Streets
A Young refugee has claimed racist abuse was hurled at him as he was beaten up on Swansea’s High Street.Al Haji Kamara alleges he was punched and kicked to the ground in the violent attack.
Read MoreA Young refugee has claimed racist abuse was hurled at him as he was beaten up on Swansea’s High Street.Al Haji Kamara alleges he was punched and kicked to the ground in the violent attack.
Read MoreEmployees who also care for a sick relative will be allowed to ask their bosses for flexible working hours. It is estimated that one in eight people working in Wales are also looking after a disabled or chronically sick friend or relative.
Read MoreToday marks an amazing new start for the health of everyone living in Wales. At 6am this morning all public places in Wales became smoke-free and everyone in the country will also now benefit from free prescriptions.
Read MoreA man who delivers an innovative, highly successful project to improve patients’ heart health in Wales has been awarded with a British Heart Foundation (BHF) Excellence Award.
Read MoreNearly 100 schoolchildren are being hospitalised every week as a result of self-harm due to mental health problems, official figures have revealed.
Read MoreMore than 50 UK paediatricians today launch an unprecedented attack on the General Medical Council, accusing their regulatory body of deterring doctors from speaking out, and arguing that the stance could increase the risk of child abuse.
Read MoreA £700 million body to streamline police communications and underpin improvements has been launched and the budget is already extremely tight, its head admitted.
Read MoreA British research team led by the world’s leading heart surgeon has grown part of a human heart from stem cells for the first time. If animal trials scheduled for later this year prove successful, replacement tissue could be used in transplants for the hundreds of thousands of people suffering from heart disease within three years.
Read MoreMore than 200,000 failed asylum seekers may stay in Britain indefinitely because they cannot be traced. Officials have conceded that nearly half of the 450,000 “legacy cases” in which the applicants are left in limbo may never be cleared.
{mosimage}Ministers have flatly ruled out an amnesty and have pledged to remove everyone not entitled to be here within five years. Some “legacy” cases date back 15 years and experts believe the Government will not be able to fulfil its pledge to clear the backlog by July 2011. Officials attending a recent meeting to discuss the legacy policy were told that half of the 450,000 are “untraceable”. They were also told that 18,000 foreign nationals who have committed crimes in Britain were earmarked for deportation, the first time an official figure has been given.
Damian Green, the Conservative immigration spokesman, said: “It is concerning that there may be such a large number of foreign criminals possibly at large and that the Government is admitting defeat by writing off up to 200,000 lost asylum seekers.”
Read MoreParents are being asked to stay alert after a batch of potentially fatal prescription drugs shaped like lollipops were stolen. Officers are particularly concerned in case the drugs, stolen from a house on Salisbury Street, Southport, end up in the hands of children.
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