Vivek Mishra works as an Assistant Editor with Eastern Eye and has over 13 years of experience in journalism. His areas of interest include politics, international affairs, current events, and sports. With a background in newsroom operations and editorial planning, he has reported and edited stories on major national and global developments.
Farage accuses Starmer of endangering Reform supporters with racism claims
Starmer urges voters to reject Reform and back Labour’s plan to “renew Britain”
Labour leader vows to act on illegal immigration while opposing racism
Starmer and chancellor Rachel Reeves warn of tough fiscal choices ahead
NIGEL FARAGE has rejected prime minister Keir Starmer’s criticism of Reform UK, saying accusations of racism were a “very, very low blow” that put his party’s supporters and campaigners at risk.
“To accuse countless millions of being racist is a very, very low blow,” Farage said on Tuesday. “It directly threatens the safety of our elected officials and our campaigners.”
Farage was responding after Starmer used Labour’s annual conference in Liverpool to attack Reform, accusing it of promoting “snake oil” and division.
Starmer calls for unity
Starmer urged working-class voters to reject Reform and instead back his vision of “a Britain built for all.” He appealed for patience with his Labour government, saying it was taking its first steps to “renew Britain.”
“No matter how many people tell me it can’t be done, I believe Britain can come together,” Starmer told delegates.
“We can all see our country faces a choice, a defining choice. Britain stands at a fork in the road. We can choose decency, or we can choose division. Renewal or decline,” he said.
Starmer also sought to claim patriotism for Labour, with Union flags waved in the hall. “For me, patriotism is about love and pride, about serving an interest that is more than yourself, a common good,” he said.
“And the question I ask seriously of Nigel Farage and Reform is, do they love our country … or do they just want to stir the pot of division, because that’s worked in their interests?”
Immigration and racism
Starmer said his government would act against illegal immigration but would also oppose racism and those “who say or imply the people cannot be English or British because of the colour of their skin.”
His remarks drew support from Labour members. “Farage doesn’t care about normal people, and it was important we get that message out,” said Shabaan Saleem, a 21-year-old Labour councillor.
Fiscal challenges ahead
Starmer also acknowledged tough economic choices. He said tax rises last year, the biggest in more than three decades, had been a one-off, but further increases could be needed to address a fiscal shortfall.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves warned against easing fiscal rules to allow more spending, saying those who pressed her to do so were “wrong, dangerously so,” leaving the option of tax rises on the table.
Starmer said Labour must be ready for difficult decisions. “It is a test. A fight for the soul of our country, every bit as big as rebuilding Britain after the war,” he said.
“And yet we need to be clear that our path, the path of renewal, it’s long, it’s difficult, it requires decisions that are not cost-free or easy. Decisions that will not always be comfortable for our party.”
Starmer begins first India visit as prime minister with 125-member business delegation
UK-India trade deal signed in July set to increase bilateral trade by £25.5bn by 2040
Starmer urges speedy implementation but rules out expanded visa access for Indian professionals
Meetings planned with Narendra Modi and major business leaders in Mumbai
PRIME MINISTER Keir Starmer said he wanted the new trade deal with India to be implemented as soon as "humanly possible" as he began a two-day visit on Wednesday, accompanied by more than a hundred leaders from the business, culture and university sectors.
The deal aims to cut tariffs on goods such as textiles, whisky, and cars, and open greater market access for businesses. Talks concluded in May after three years of negotiations. Both sides have said they plan to ratify the deal and bring it into effect within the next year.
I'm flying the flag for British business in Mumbai, because growth in India for British businesses means more jobs for people at home. pic.twitter.com/H4TnuTEjQe — Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) October 8, 2025
The agreement between the world’s fifth- and sixth-largest economies aims to increase bilateral trade by 25.5 billion pounds by 2040. Current trade between the two countries is worth around $54.8 billion, with investments supporting more than 600,000 jobs across both nations.
‘Implement it quickly’
Speaking to delegates on arrival in Mumbai, Starmer said, “It provides huge opportunities,” adding that he had asked his team to implement the deal as “quickly as humanly possible.”
“I think the opportunities are already opening up... Our job is to make it easier for you to seize the opportunities,” he told the trade mission, which includes executives from BP, Rolls-Royce and BT.
The visit, which includes a 125-member delegation led by business and academic leaders such as British Airways chief executive Sean Doyle, is focused on maximising the benefits of what is Britain’s biggest post-Brexit trade deal.
Meetings with Modi and business outreach
Starmer will hold bilateral talks with Modi on Thursday and address a fintech conference in Mumbai alongside him. India’s foreign ministry said the visit “will provide a valuable opportunity to reaffirm the shared vision of India and the United Kingdom to build a forward-looking partnership.”
Under the new deal, India will reduce tariffs on imports of British goods such as whisky, cosmetics and medical devices, while the UK will lower duties on clothing, footwear and food products, including frozen prawns from India.
However, Starmer ruled out expanding visa access for Indian professionals despite calls from industry. “That isn’t part of the plan,” he said en route to Mumbai. “We’re here now to take advantage of the free trade agreement that we’ve already struck. We’ve got to implement it.”
Trade priorities and economic outlook
Growth remains a key priority for Starmer as he seeks to strengthen Labour’s position ahead of a November fiscal budget expected to show a challenging economic picture.
Shevaun Haviland, Director General of the British Chambers of Commerce, said Starmer should avoid increasing business taxes in the upcoming budget and instead focus on building trade links with countries such as India and the Gulf.
“We’ve got partners all over the world, and that should be our role,” she told reporters, adding that Britain could pursue free trade deals while also managing the effects of a global trade war and seeking to lower US tariffs. “I think that the government is big enough to do both.”
Rights concerns raised
Rights groups have urged Starmer to raise the case of Scottish Sikh blogger Jagtar Singh Johal, who has been detained in India since 2017 over an alleged plot to kill right-wing Hindu leaders.
Johal has not been convicted, and one of the nine charges against him was dismissed in March.
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A medical student aiming to become a doctor like her parents, Grace was also a keen sportsperson who represented England at under-18 level in hockey and played cricket. (Photo credit: X/@SouthgateHC)
GRACE O’MALLEY-KUMAR, the British-Indian teenager who was stabbed to death while trying to protect her friend during a knife attack in Nottingham in 2023, has been posthumously awarded the George Medal, one of Britain’s highest civilian honours for acts of bravery.
Grace, aged 19, was walking back to her University of Nottingham accommodation with her friend Barnaby Webber, also 19, when they were attacked by knife-wielding Valdo Calocane in June 2023. Both students were killed. Calocane was later sentenced to a mental health order and detained in a high-security hospital.
Tributes had followed the attack, with many calling for recognition of Grace’s courage. A medical student aiming to become a doctor like her parents, Dr Sanjoy Kumar and Dr Sinead O’Malley, Grace was also a keen sportsperson who represented England at under-18 level in hockey and played cricket.
“I want to pay tribute to all of the recipients, including Grace O’Malley-Kumar, who made the ultimate sacrifice to protect her friend. Her legacy will live on as a powerful example of heroism,” prime minister Keir Starmer said in a statement announcing the George Medal, which will be presented to her family.
“Grace O’Malley-Kumar, who has received the George Medal for intervening in an armed attack in Nottingham on 13th June 2023,” reads the official citation.
The George Medal, a silver disc on a ribbon, is Britain’s second-highest civilian bravery award after the George Cross. It is given for “conspicuous gallantry not in the presence of the enemy.”
“The bravery she showed was incredible for a young girl,” her father, Sanjoy Kumar, has previously said.
Her family has since set up the Grace O’Malley-Kumar Foundation to support young people and communities through sport, mental health, and education.
“She was simply walking home after a night out with her friend, Barnaby, after celebrating end-of-year medical school exams, when Barnaby was attacked with a dagger from behind,” reads the foundation’s mission statement.
“Grace tried to fight off the attacker when he turned his attention to her and went about attacking her in the same brutal manner as he did to Barnaby. Grace’s character would never leave a friend, so she did her very best and fought the attacker in a fight she would never win. Grace died a hero,” it states.
Grace O’Malley-Kumar is among 20 people recognised this week for acts of courage, receiving one of three honours – the George Medal, the King’s Gallantry Medal, or the King’s Commendation for Bravery.
“This is what true courage looks like. In moments of unimaginable danger, these extraordinary people acted with selflessness and bravery that speaks to the very best of who we are as a nation. We owe each of them – and their families – our deepest thanks. Their actions remind us of the strength and compassion that run through our communities,” said Starmer.
The 20 awards recognise acts of courage in recent years, from intervening in armed attacks to rescuing people in danger.
(With inputs from agencies)
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The UK's Carrier Strike Group (CSG), led by aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales, has been deployed for the exercise, which aims to enhance combined maritime and air capabilities between the two navies.
INDIA and the United Kingdom have begun an eight-day joint naval exercise, Exercise Konkan, in the Western Indian Ocean as part of efforts to strengthen overall military cooperation.
The UK's Carrier Strike Group (CSG), led by aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales, has been deployed for the exercise, which aims to enhance combined maritime and air capabilities between the two navies.
The Indian Navy said the exercise reaffirms the shared commitment to ensuring secure, open and free seas and reflects the “comprehensive strategic partnership” outlined in the India-UK Vision 2035.
“The UK and India believe in an Indo-Pacific that is free and open. We share an ambition for a modern defence and security partnership, a fundamental pillar of UK-India Vision 2035, agreed by our prime ministers this year,” said Lindy Cameron, the British High Commissioner to India.
“The engagements between the Carrier Strike Groups of our two navies demonstrate our commitment to maintaining the rules-based international order in the region and lay the groundwork for future cooperation,” she said.
Commodore Chris Saunders, defence adviser to the British High Commission, said, “Exercise Konkan provides an excellent opportunity for the Royal Navy to train in the delivery of complex multi-domain operations alongside India as partners in the Indo-Pacific region.”
“The UK and India are two carrier operating countries, and the Royal Navy and Indian Navy are in a fairly exclusive club as blue-water, multi-carrier navies,” he said.
Saunders added that the exercise allows the two maritime powers to enhance combined capability and share best practice. “The UK is also proud to co-lead the Maritime Security Pillar of India’s Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative,” he said.
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Robert Jenrick, takes part in a TV interview on day three of the Conservative Party conference on October 7, 2025 in Manchester. (Photo: Getty Images)
Robert Jenrick stands by remarks calling Handsworth “one of the worst-integrated places”
Kemi Badenoch says Jenrick may have been “making an observation”
Local MP Ayoub Khan and former mayor Andy Street strongly criticise remarks
SHADOW JUSTICE SECRETARY Robert Jenrick has defended his comments describing Birmingham’s Handsworth area as “one of the worst-integrated places” he had ever been to.
A recording, published by The Guardian, reportedly made during a dinner at the Aldridge-Brownhills Conservative Association, captured Jenrick saying he had not seen “another white face” in the hour and a half he spent in Handsworth filming a video about litter.
Jenrick said on Tuesday he had no regrets about his remarks. “No not at all and I won’t shy away from these issues,” he told BBC Radio 5Live. “It’s incredibly important we have a fully integrated society,” he said, adding that the country faced “major failures of integration”.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said she did not know the context of the recording but added Jenrick may have been “making an observation” about his visit.
“I wasn’t there so I can’t say how many faces he saw, but the point is that there are many people in our country who are not integrating,” she told BBC Breakfast.
Handsworth’s Independent MP Ayoub Khan said the remarks were “not only wildly false but also incredibly irresponsible”.
Labour chair Anna Turley said Jenrick’s comments reduced “people to the colour of their skin”.
Former West Midlands mayor Andy Street told BBC Newsnight: “Putting it bluntly, Robert is wrong,” calling Handsworth a “very integrated place”.
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Starmer said regular pro-Palestinian protests had been used by some as a "despicable excuse to attack British Jews for something over which they have absolutely no responsibility". (Photo: Getty Images)
Starmer urges students not to join pro-Palestinian protests planned for Tuesday.
Jewish Bloc for Palestine accuses government of “weaponising fear and grief”.
Manchester synagogue attack left two people dead on Thursday.
Protests and vigils planned across multiple UK cities.
PRIME MINISTER Keir Starmer has called on students not to take part in pro-Palestinian protests planned on Tuesday to mark the second anniversary of Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack in Israel, saying they were disrespectful.
Students from several London universities were due to walk out of classes at 2:00 pm (1300 GMT) before marching through central London.
Other rallies and events, including vigils, were also planned in cities such as Edinburgh, Glasgow, Sheffield and Manchester. In Manchester, an attack outside a synagogue on Thursday left two people dead — one killed in the attack and another fatally wounded, likely by armed police.
Writing in The Times newspaper, Starmer said regular pro-Palestinian protests had been used by some as a "despicable excuse to attack British Jews for something over which they have absolutely no responsibility".
He added: "That is a total loss of empathy and humanity."
Referring to Tuesday’s planned demonstrations, he wrote: "This is not who we are as a country.
"It's un-British to have so little respect for others. And that's before some of them decide to start chanting hatred towards Jewish people all over again."
The Jewish Bloc for Palestine said on Saturday that the government was trying "to weaponise the fear and grief of our community by resurrecting a slur — that those protesting for Palestine represent a danger to Jews".
In a separate statement on the anniversary, Starmer said the past two years had seen "rising antisemitism" in the UK, including the car ramming and stabbing attack in Manchester, which happened on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.
"This is a stain on who we are, and this country will always stand tall and united against those who wish harm and hatred upon Jewish communities," Starmer said.
Hamas’s October 2023 attack killed 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures. Militants also seized 251 hostages, 47 of whom remain in Gaza. Of those, the Israeli military says 25 are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 67,160 Palestinians over the past two years, according to figures from the health ministry in Gaza, which the United Nations considers reliable.
"Since that awful day, so many have endured a living nightmare," Starmer said, pledging to continue efforts to secure the release of British hostages still held by Hamas.
The prime minister, who last month announced the UK would recognise a Palestinian state alongside other allies, also welcomed the US plan "towards peace in the Middle East".
Pro-Palestinian demonstrations went ahead in Britain over the weekend despite government appeals for protesters not to gather following the Manchester attack.
Activist group Defend Our Juries said linking calls to end pro-Palestinian protests with the Manchester attack was "wrongly conflating the actions of the Israeli state with all Jews".
"Jewish people around the world are not responsible for Israel’s crimes and there are many Jewish people who do not support the actions of the Israeli state," said Zoe Cohen of DOJ on Saturday.
On Sunday, around 3,000 people gathered in central London for a commemorative event marking the October 7 anniversary, waving Israeli and Union Jack flags and carrying posters of hostages.