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BREAKING SCOTLAND REPORT: Civil servants made 58,000 bank card transactions for VIP Services at Airports

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The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister
The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Aug: 08: 2023:

AceNewsDesk – Civil servants in Scotland used bank cards to make tens of thousands of purchases, including spending nearly £10,000 on VIP airport services.

The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister
The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister

For a fee former first minister Nicola Sturgeon, and her staff, were given fast-track security and access to lounges at UK and European airports.

Other purchases on procurement cards included yoga classes and nail polish.

The Scottish government said it could not comment on a first minister’s travel plans for security reasons.

An official added that all spending on the cards was subject to “robust authorisation and regular auditing arrangements”. 

The Scottish government issues its senior staff with credit-card style electronic purchasing cards for buying goods and services up to a value of £5,000 per transaction. 

A summary of purchases over £500 is officially published, but Scottish Labour obtained a full breakdown detailing all values between September 2019 and August last year.

BBC Scotland News has seen the data which included a payment of £4,182 on 8 September 2019 for hospitality and hotel accommodation at the five-star Gleneagles Hotel in Perthshire. 

This is listed as being for Scottish Women and Girls in Sport and came prior to the Solheim Cup women’s golf tournament. A £856 payment for “hospitality with UK Sports Minister” at Gleneagles during the Solheim Cup also appeared. 

A stay at Gleneagles Hotel in Auchterarder was among the items paid for on the Scottish government procurement cards

The 58,000 transactions on the taxpayer funded cards also showed purchases of Edinburgh Festival tickets. 

A breakdown of the airport services paid for by the Scottish government for Ms Sturgeon and her staff highlighted transactions typically around the £500 mark.

However, one entry for February 2020 showed the government spent £1,271 at Schipol Airport in Amsterdam on VIP services which included private security and passport checks, as well as lounge access. 

A total of £9,898 was spent on airport services for the former first minister, both in the UK and across Europe, between September 2019 and June last year. 

UK government ministers have also previously used VIP airport services and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has been accused of living an “A-list” lifestyle at taxpayers’ expense for his use of private jets. 

A total of £14.2m was spent on the Scottish government procurement cards over the near three-year period.

One of the items was a set of heel stoppers – costing £24.99 – for an event involving Ms Sturgeon in Berlin in 2019 which the transaction description said were required due to the venue’s historic flooring.

What were the more unusual items bought?

  • a driving theory test for member of staff
  • china crockery for a meeting room
  • nail polish
  • a yoga class
  • a £1.59 leaving card
  • a £27 “homedisco” from eBay 
  • and £272 on “wellington boots for inspections” 

Among the books purchased by civil servants were six copies of “Women hold up half the sky” – a book of speeches by Ms Sturgeon, and a printed copy of the Scottish government’s own 2014 independence White Paper. 

The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister
The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister

A book about Marxism and 21 copies of “How to run a government so that citizens benefit and taxpayers don’t go crazy” were also purchased. 

The vast majority of the entries were for everyday purchases needed by civil servants and the period covering the Covid lockdown showed a large number of homeworking items, such as computer monitors. 

But elsewhere more than 3,000 entries in the list of purchases have no description against them. 

In addition, more than £25,000 of fraudulent transactions occurred on the cards and were flagged up by civil servants for refunds. 

Accidental purchases, including a vacuum cleaner and Amazon Prime memberships, that were refunded are also listed in the transactions. 

‘Frivolous purchases’

Scottish Labour Finance spokesperson Michael Marra said: “These are the spending habits of an arrogant and entitled government with no regard for taxpayers.

“The SNP government is frittering away public money on frivolous purchases and VIP treatment while services are stretched to breaking point. 

“The SNP must end the financial mismanagement that has plagued their government and start delivering for Scotland.”

A Scottish government spokesperson said it was “committed to delivering the best value for money for taxpayers”.

They added: “Spending through electronic purchasing cards is used to support government officials during their usual course of work such as on training, catering, room hire and one-off supplies. 

“The cards are not for personal expenditure and there are robust authorisation and regular auditing arrangements are in place to monitor their use.

The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister
The Scottish government paid for support services at airports in the UK and Europe for Nicola Sturgeon and her aides during her time as first minister

“For security reasons we cannot comment on the first minister’s travel arrangements.”

By Andrew Picken: BBC Scotland News

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FEATURED SCOTLAND REPORT: Faulty concrete fears at 250 NHS sites over Use of RAAC Cheaper Version of Building Materials

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jul: 25: 2023:

AceNewsDesk – More than 250 NHS buildings in Scotland could contain a potentially dangerous type of concrete that can collapse without warning.

Ninewells Hospital
Buildings in Dundee’s Ninewells Hospital are identified in the report

NHS Scotland issued a Safety Action Notice in February and completed a “desktop survey” of its estate in June.

Reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) was used to build roofs, walls and floors from the 1960s to the 1990s.

NHS Scotland has warned the material is potentially vulnerable to “catastrophic failure without warning”.

NHS Scotland’s review identified 254 buildings that “have two or more characteristics which are consistent with the presence of RAAC”.

Following the desktop survey, health officials began on-site investigations to determine whether RAAC is actually present. These are expected to take between six and eight months to complete.

The sites identified in the initial survey range from main ward hospital blocks to disused public toilets. 

Major sites such as Ninewells Hospital in Dundee, University Hospital Crosshouse in Kilmarnock and the more recently constructed Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow are named in the report as having buildings which could contain RAAC.

Any repairs are expected to come at a considerable cost. 

NHS Grampian had the most buildings which could potentially contain RAAC, with 53 identified by the health board, followed by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde with 44 and NHS Lothian with 35.

NHS Highland identified 25 potentially affected buildings, while NHS Fife had 22. NHS Forth Valley reported eight and NHS Borders seven.

What is RAAC?

The lightweight concrete was widely used from the 1960s to the 1990s

The lightweight concrete was used in roofs, floors and walls between the 1950s and 1990s as a cheaper alternative to the standard building material. 

RAAC has air bubbles inside of it and has a limited lifespan.

It was widely used in public buildings and has been found in Scottish hospitals, schools and police stations. 

NHS Scotland warned in its Safety Action Notice that RAAC planks are considered to be “relatively weak and prone to degradation over time”.

It added: “The limited visible exposure of panels to assess their condition may result in catastrophic failure without warning.” 

The alarm was first raised about the potential dangers the material, also known as Siporex, in 2018 after the roof of a primary school in Kent suddenly gave way.

A leaked email sent to Downing Street from senior officials at the Department for Education in December said many school buildings now posed a “risk to life” as a result of the presence of crumbling concrete.

Pupils at two Edinburgh primary schools will be moved into temporary classrooms when the new term begins next month after RAAC was found in the roofs. 

Children at Trinity and Cramond primaries will be taught in portable classroom units.

Four classes at Trinity Primary will move into makeshift classrooms being erected in the nearby Trinity Academy playground.

And at Cramond, two blocks each with two separate rooms and toilets will be sited on the netball pitch.

The makeshift units were previously used at Liberton Primary School after a fire caused significant damage to the building in 2020.

City of Edinburgh Council has not said when the remedial work will begin, but it has asked engineers to progress initial designs for the roof replacements.

Earlier this year, the council said 15 buildings it owned”may” contain the concrete mix and surveys are ongoing to determine if any others are at risk.

Joan Griffiths, education, children and families convener for Edinburgh Council, said: “The safety of all our young people and staff in our schools is paramount and the measures we have taken reinforce this position. 

“As soon as this was confirmed we immediately put in place alternative learning and teaching arrangements at these schools for the small number of classes affected.”

Other local authorities, including West Lothian Council, have already set out plans to spend millions replacing RAAC panels in schools.

FEATURED BBC SCOTLAND BUSINESS NEWS REPORT

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World History & Research Reports

HISTORY TODAY: Scotland’s medieval Declaration of Arbroath is too important for cherry picking by politicians

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jul: 12: 2023:

AceHistoryDesk – Medieval Scotland’s most iconic document, the Declaration of Arbroath, recently went on display at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh for the first time in 18 years.

As long as a hundred of us remain alive, never will we on any conditions be subjected to the lordship of the English. It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.

From The Declaration of Arbroath

The Declaration is a letter written in 1320 to Pope John XII by various Scottish aristocrats and “the whole community of the realm of Scotland”. At this time, the papacy did not recognise Robert Bruce as the true king of Scotland.

The letter was a sophisticated diplomatic response by the Scots against claims from English kings that they were the ultimate sovereigns of Scotland. The declaration is both a masterful piece of propaganda and one of the earliest statements of national sovereignty found in Europe.

It is a keystone of Scottish history, similar to Magna Carta in Englandwhich held that the English king was subject to the law of the land. The declaration has not been as widely (even comically) misunderstood as Magna Carta but it is still a contested piece of medieval history in today’s politics.

Conservative MSP Murdo Fraser claimed a few years ago that Scots who opposed independence should celebrate the Declaration of Arbroath. This is part of a tradition within Scottish unionism that sees Scotland’s victory in the wars of the early 14th century as necessary to bringing about the perfect union between the two countries in 1707.

SNP MP Joanna Cherry recently praised the document as “a statement of the sovereignty of the Scottish people”. For Cherry, this statement of popular sovereignty means the Declaration of Arbroath is incompatible with the “peculiarly English doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty”. This refers to the tradition that places parliament at the centre of English political history.

A very fragile old document, the Declaration of Arbroath, on faded yellowed paper.
The 700-year-old Declaration of Arbroath is rarely displayed because of its extremely fragile state. National Archives of ScotlandCC BY

Why the declaration really matters

Both unionist and nationalist views of the declaration tell us very little about the declaration itself. They are a reminder that the past is a powerful weapon in political arguments

We must remember that the declaration’s authors had little desire to see an Anglo-Scottish union centuries later, nor had a high opinion of popular sovereignty. Democracy too was an alien concept at this time. This was a document written for the elites, by the elites.

Indeed, there was also no concept of parliamentary sovereignty in England at this time. It was not until the 17th century that such doctrines emerged in response to the absolute political power of the Stuart kings(ironically, in this context, a family who were initially kings of Scotland).

The Declaration of Arbroath was not a law or a treaty but a letter to the pope. It had no legal weight but was a statement of political intent, and a product of political circumstances. 

Robert I’s position was unstable at this time. An act of parliament in 1318tried to control rumours that were spreading questioning his claim to be king.

When the document was written, Robert’s brother Edward had been killed in Ireland two years earlier and the king had no sons to take over if he died. His grip on power was more precarious than he realised. A few months after the declaration was sent to the pope, several individuals were executed or imprisoned for conspiracy to assassinate the king.

The declaration really gives us an insight into the development of written agreements to ensure loyalty and support. At this time, nobles across Europe, including Scotland, were beginning to write down the terms of their alliances and keep identical copies. The Declaration of Arbroath was an early example of this.

Earlier studies of the declaration concluded that nobles were encouraged to send their seals to Newbattle, just south of Edinburgh, where initial drafts were made. The final copy was drawn up at the king’s writing office in Arbroath Abbey.

The nobles may have given their seals to the document, and it may have claimed to be from the whole community of Scotland, but this was very much written for the king’s own ends. 

In this respect it was the opposite of Magna Carta, in which the English king was forced to accept a document in his name forced upon him by his barons. Robert I was a king who forced his barons to accept a document in their own name.

A statue overlooking some hills with a monument in the distance.
A statue of Robert the Bruce looking out from Stirling Castle. Ulmus Media / Shutterstock

The fact that the document was produced to serve the immediate interests of the king should not diminish its importance. The Declaration of Arbroath is a fascinating document because it tells us so much about how politics and ideas of sovereignty played out in the 14th century.

It drew on biblical and classical precedents, developing a story about the kingdom’s origins. The origin myth given in the declaration may seem like fanciful fiction today, but it resonated with the sensibilities of the time. In the 14th century, myths about history were valuable political weapons and, even though those myths have changed, they still remain powerful today.

Events of the intervening seven centuries have allowed people with opposing political ideas to call on it for their own purposes. Yet, history is too important to allow certain bits to be cherry picked for modern day purposes. It is only when considered in their immediate historical context that documents like the Declaration of Arbroath, can be understood.

The fact that there are many ways of viewing this fascinating document remind us that the historian’s job is never-ending.

THE CONVERSATION REPORT: Published: July 11, 2023 4.59pm BST

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Ace Daily News

FEATURED U.K REPORT: Orkney Islands Archipelago off Coast of Scotland May Soon Be Part of Norway

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jul: 09: 2023:

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jul: 09: 2023:

AceNewsDesk – A British outpost for 600 years, why Orkney Islands may soon be part of Norway

Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jul: 09: 2023:

The United Kingdom’s Orkney Islands, an archipelago about 15km off the north coast of Scotland, is considering “alternative forms of governance” which could include becoming part of Norway, its council leader says.

Visitors look at the 5,000 year-old remains of Skara Brae village in the Scottish Orkney Islands.

Sick of being ignored by far-away politicians, officials on Scotland’s remote Orkney Islands are mulling a drastic solution. ( AP Photo/Naomi Koppel, File)

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FEATURED SCOTLAND COURT REPORT: Scottish food crime unit secures a first conviction

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jul: 06: 2023:

#AceNewsDesk – The Scottish Food Crime and Incidents Unit (SCFCIU) has secured its first major conviction since the agency was created in 2015.

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Food Standards Scotland (FSS) welcomed the sentencing of Jamie George, who supplied the public with a potentially fatal substance sold as a diet pill for weight loss.

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The 32-year-old was sentenced at Stirling Sheriff Court to 37 months in jail for distributing 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), a toxic industrial chemical. The gym boss was convicted on July 4 after pleading guilty to supplying DNP, a yellow powder, usually made into tablet or capsule form.

George pleaded guilty to a charge that, between May 1, 2017, and October 8, 2021, at various premises, including Muscle Hut in Camelon, he supplied the public with 2,4-dinitrophenol for consumption, knowing it was unsafe, injurious to health, and potentially lethal if ingested.

Reaction to sentencing:

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Ron McNaughton, head of the SFCIU, said the verdict highlights the work undertaken by the unit, local authorities, and Police Scotland to keep people safe.

“Jamie George’s sentencing sends a clear message that there are consequences for those individuals who are prepared to put peoples’ lives at risk to profit financially from the supply of DNP. DNP is not safe for human consumption under any circumstances. If you consume DNP, you are very likely to become ill, potentially seriously ill, and there is a real possibility that you could die as a result,” he said.

Sentencing resulted from an investigation between FSS’s Scottish Food Crime and Incidents Unit, Police Scotland, and Falkirk Council’s environmental health department. It is the first case involving DNP to be prosecuted in Scotland. Authorities recovered 5 kilograms of DNP, 120 filled capsules, and 10,000 empty capsules as part of the investigation. It’s thought that 1 kilogram of DNP is enough to create 5,000 capsules.

DNP has been linked to at least 33 deaths in the United Kingdom since 2007, including two in Scotland. Other side effects include nausea, vomiting, sweating, dizziness, headaches, rapid breathing, and an irregular heartbeat.

Detective Chief Inspector David MacGregor of Forth Valley CID said it was vital that George’s operation was halted to prevent further poisonings.

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“Jamie George acted recklessly, without regard for the lives of those he supplied it to. It’s vital the public understands how lethal DNP can be, and that’s why this conviction is so important. It sets a precedent to anyone who thinks it’s acceptable to break the law and put lives at risk through supplying it.” 

From Oct. 1, DNP will be regulated under the Poisons Act 1972, which means anyone who wants to buy it will need a license and use a registered pharmacist. This act applies in England, Wales, and Scotland.

Cecil Meiklejohn, leader of Falkirk Council, hopes the conviction acts as a deterrent.

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“The investigation involving our environmental health officers involved a significant resource in executing search warrants, examining evidence, interviewing witnesses, and checking fitness centers. The aim was to disrupt and stop the manufacture and sale of this dangerous chemical for human consumption.” 

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily  and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and comment thank you 
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