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Rishi Sunak grants more public service funds in Covid-19 fightback

UK chancellor Rishi Sunak on Monday (13) announced more than £14 billion from Britain’s Coronavirus Emergency Response Fund for the country’s public services, including the NHS and local authorities involved in the fight against the pandemic.

The funding unveiled by Sunak includes more than £6 billion to support the NHS, free up hospital beds and deliver urgent priorities including acquiring ventilators, diagnostic tests and protective equipment for NHS staff.


“Our public services and its incredible workers are working with immense resolve and skill to keep us safe. We depend on them, which is why we are doing everything we can to provide our NHS, local authorities and others, with the resources and tools they need to tackle the virus,” said Sunak.

“From the start, I’ve been clear our vital public services will get whatever they need to protect this country and its people from coronavirus. We are delivering on our pledge,” he said.

The UK’s Treasury department said that the support will also enable home delivery of medicines to the most vulnerable people in the country, and it has already helped support medical and nursing students and retired doctors and nurses to join the frontline.

Alongside £1.6 billion of new funding for local authorities, the department headed by Sunak said that it has provided a total of £2.9 billion to support local services and hospital discharge, reinforcing care for the vulnerable, and meaning that those who are strong enough can leave hospital more quickly, freeing up bed space for patients that need it.

It is also working closely with the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to provide access to the emergency funding set aside for dealing with the fallout of the pandemic.

During his maiden Budget on March 11, Sunak had initially set aside a £5 billion fund as a rapid response during the early stages of the coronavirus crisis and pledged extra resources needed by the NHS and public services over time.

The latest funds injection comes as some media reports indicate that the UK chancellor has warned his Cabinet colleagues that the country’s GDP could fall by as much as 30 per cent in the April-June quarter as a result of the pandemic.

This estimate would be in line with the UK’s National Institute of Economic and Social Research’s recent forecast that the UK GDP could shrink by 15-25 per cent in the second quarter of the year, with the economy entering a fourth week of lockdown.

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5 real haunted sites across the UK perfect for halloween chills

Britain’s most chilling haunted places

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5 real haunted sites across the UK perfect for halloween chills

Highlights:

  • Highgate Cemetery, Pluckley, Pendle Hill, 50 Berkeley Square and the Ancient Ram Inn are the five most reported haunted spots in Britain.
  • Each site has both documented history and persistent local legend like the witches at Pendle (1612), a vampire myth at Highgate (1970s), the “most haunted village” tag for Pluckley.
  • Many of these places are part of organised ghost tours

You’ve heard the usual ghost stories. But some places in Britain come with a weight that’s harder to shake off. It’s not always about a flickering shadow. It’s a history that sticks around, long after the people are gone. These five spots have a reputation that’s been built on more than just rumour.

1. Highgate Cemetery, London

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