Swire: is the Maldives more important to him than the loss of NHS beds in East Devon?

On 22 September 2016, Hugo Swire issued a bland statement about planned hospital bed closures in East Devon, broadly supportive of the plan as long as Sidmouth hospital’s beds were amongst those to be retained:

https://www.hugoswire.org.uk/news/statement-proposed-hospital-bed-closures

On the same day, he tweeted that he had met with Devon Doctors and “agreed with them that some local politicians had mislead the local community and should apologise”.

(To date, Swire has not named those local politicians, nor has he elaborated on what they should apologise about).
Yesterday, he tweeted:

Just finished 2 hour meeting at County Hall with @NEWDevonCCG and Success Regime on hospital beds consultation.“.

He does not mention whether this was (yet another) private briefing for him and Conservative politicians or whether it included others not of that persuasion.

Since then he has Tweeted on the cessation of the “Right to Buy” scheme and “Daesh on the back foot”.

He has not added any clarification of his meeting about the NHS in Devon.

In the last week, all his (written) questions (4) in Parliament have been about the Maldives:

http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/written-questions-answers-statements/written-questions-answers//?page=1&max=20&questiontype=AllQuestions&house=commons&member=1408

Swire’s new job just got harder

One of Hugo Swire’s new jobs in Parliament is to assist with arms sales to Saudi Arabia. Looks like he might have backed a bit of a loser. Imagine if Minister’s salaries had been cut by 20% when we had austerity measures!

Saudi Arabia announced several fiscal consolidation measures on Tuesday in an effort to help reduce the kingdom’s record budget deficit as it contends with lower-for-longer oil prices and costly regional conflicts.

Chief among them, according to Bloomberg:

Ministers’ salaries will be shaved down by 20%.

Salaries of the members of the Shura Council, which advises the monarchy, will be cut by 15%.

And bonus payments will be canceled for state employees.

Notably, Saudi stocks fell the most in the world for two days in a row after the announcement, tumbling by nearly 6%.The Tadawul All Share (TASI) is down by 3.4% at 5,534.43 as of 11:44 a.m. ET.

“It’s one more economic measure to balance spending. Of course people don’t like it, but it’s a sign of the times,” Saudi analyst and editor of Al Arab News Jamal Khashoggi told Reuters after the kingdom’s announcement.

“Probably the teachers and many others will be affected by it. It shows why it’s important for the private sector and Saudi GDP to diversify.”

Source: Business Insider

Swire accuses “some local politicians” of misleading the community on NHS and should apologise

From Swire’s Twitter account 22 September 2016

5.13 am

1/2 Pleased to attend Exmouth Town Council on Monday. Good discussion with Devon Doctors on proposed changes to out-of-hours GP services.

5.18 am

2/2 Fully agree with them that some local politicians have been misleading the local community and should apologise.

Anyone have any idea what he means – he sounds very unpleasant – or perhaps on the back foot?

Any “local politician” heard from Swire with a demand to apologise?

And what’s he up to at 5 am – on his way to Saudi, perhaps!

Swire says no hospitals will be closed … how does he get that idea?

The commissioning group has given four (and only 4) options:

A) 32 beds in Tiverton, 24 beds in Seaton and 16 beds in Exmouth.
B) 32 beds in Tiverton, 24 beds in Sidmouth and 16 beds in Exmouth.
C) 32 beds in Tiverton, 24 beds in Seaton and 16 beds in Whipton.
D) 32 beds in Tiverton, 24 in Sidmouth and 16 beds in Whipton.

Swire says:

From the outset it is important to note that Devon’s NHS is currently in dire financial straits. Steps need to be taken now otherwise our local NHS could be facing a £400m deficit by 2020/2021.

Establishing a new, efficient and patient-centred model of care is absolutely vital for the long term sustainability of our local healthcare service. I am clear that a key part of any new model of care must be the provision of hospital beds.

‘It is also important to stress that the CCG are not consulting on hospital closures, they are consulting on hospital bed closures. Hospital closures are not on the table.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/hugo-swire-releases-statement-on-planned-closure-of-community-hospital-beds/story-29741811-detail/story.html

NOW, LOOK AT THE FOUR OPTIONS AND TELL OWL HOW ALL THE HOSPITALS WILL BE KEPT OPEN?

To begin with, Honiton hospital isn’t mentioned – the presumption is that it will close come what may.

In Option A – Whipton, Seaton and Sidmouth go
In Option B – Seaton and Whipton go
In Option C – Sidmouth and Exmouth go
In Option D – Seaton and Exmouth go

Or, is Owl missing something?

http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/600-hospital-beds-to-be-axed-in-devon/story-29739152-detail/story.html

Whatever, it is clear that Swire views our hospitals as overspent and not underfunded.

And where is that extra £350 million a week??!!

Will Swire be absent from East Devon in November?

“Clarence House has announced that Charles and Camilla will visit the Middle East on an official royal tour in November. The couple last travelled to the region together in March 2013.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3798085/Charles-Camilla-return-Middle-East-official-royal-visit-Bahrain-Oman-United-Arab-Emirates-November.html

Can’t imagine that the Chairman of the Conservative Middle East Council (Hugo Swire) will be able to keep away from that jaunt.

It must be almost like being back in the Foreign Office. So much to do (sell?) in the Middle East, so much less time for East Devon.

“Swire Oilfield Services”

Coincidence?

“Swire Oilfield Services, part of the worldwide Swire Group, is the world’s largest supplier of specialist offshore cargo carrying units to the global energy industry and is a leading specialist in modular systems, offshore aviation services and chemical handling.

Swire Oilfield Services can provide standard, specialised and bespoke products certified to DNV2-7.1 and EN12079 to the worldwide oil and gas market. With an extensive hire fleet it allows immediate access, 24 hours a day, to a comprehensive range of products anywhere in the world.”

http://www.swireos.com

Perhaps Mr Swire can assure us that he has no direct or indirect links with the company?

More on Swire’s Conservative Middle East Council’s big donor

The largest donor to the Conservative Middle East Council, of which Hugo Swire has just become Chairman, is said to be a gentleman by the name of David Rowland.

Here is a Guardian article from 2010 on him:

A multimillionaire property tycoon who persuaded Prince Andrew to unveil a bronze statue of him at his palatial home in Guernsey might not be considered a shy man. But David Rowland, the Tory donor who was due to take up the post of treasurer of the Conservative party within six weeks, has led a remarkably guarded life.

Notoriously camera shy, Rowland is said to have refused to give the Conservatives a photograph of himself. The only publicly available image of Rowland, a man whose business interests have spanned the globe, is a black and white photograph of him smoking a cigar, printed in the Observer in 1971.

The story was about his return from Paris, where the 25-year-old had gone into tax exile after selling his interests in Fordham Investment Group for £2.4m. The accompanying description of a “wheeler dealer extraordinaire” with a penchant for fat cigars is one that would not seem out of place almost four decades on.

Rowland, along with his son, is now estimated to be worth more than £730m, a sum that makes them jointly the 25th richest people in the country. He was also set to become one of the country’s most politically influential figures, as fundraiser-in-chief for the Tories.

The announcement by Conservative party central office that Rowland would not be taking the post due to his “developing business interests” capped a tumultuous summer for the property developer who, soon after the Tories announced that he would take over as their treasurer, became the subject of a string of stories in the Daily Mail that sought to paint his business dealings and personal life in a controversial light.

The son of a London scrap-metal dealer, Rowland is said to have left school without a single O-level. Aged 15, he was convicted of petty larceny at Wimbledon juvenile court, having stolen goods worth £2. That sum would soon pale into insignificance for Rowland, who within five years had turned his life around, bought a house and become a millionaire.

By his early 20s he was renowned for his business acumen and fierce approach to takeovers, later acquiring a business empire that, in the 70s and 80s, expanded into Europe and the United States.

As well as living abroad to avoid tax in the UK, Rowland reportedly used tax havens such as the Bahamas, Panama, Luxembourg and the British Virgin Islands for his business dealings.

The property tycoon has occasionally found himself in controversy.

One such occasion came in the late 80s, when Rowland participated in an attempt to take over Hibernian, one of Scotland’s top football clubs. The deal fell, however, incurring the wrath of the local MP, who tabled a motion in the House of Commons denouncing Rowland and David Duff, the lawyer he was apparently financing.

The motion accused the pair of involving the Edinburgh club in loss-making dealings, called for an inquiry into “recent wheeling and dealing”, and described Rowland as a “shady financier”.

Another noteworthy aspect of Rowland’s life has been his friendship with the Duke of York, which has dated back several years. Prince Andrew unveiled a life-size bronze statue of Rowland – reportedly showing him smoking a cigar in “vaguely Churchillian pose” – in the grounds of Havilland Hall, the largest privately owned estate on Guernsey, in 2005.

More recently Rowland appears to have decided to forsake his privacy and take an active role in British party politics. Electoral law prevents foreign donations, and last year Rowland returned to his native country from decades of tax exile, relocating to Mayfair, which enabled him to make a string of large gifts to the Tories.

Rumoured to have paid £20,000 for a portrait of the prime minister, David Cameron, at a Tory fundraising auction, his conversion to the Conservative party’s cause seems to have been absolute.

In a little more than a year he donated almost £2.8m, making him the Tories’ largest benefactor. Exactly why a man who had not shown much interest in the party for at least a decade became an enthusiastic supporter remains a mystery.

He started with a sum of £1m in June last year, and continued to give as the general election drew nearer. By June this year, Cameron had appointed him to be his party treasurer. Rowland pronounced it a “tremendous honour”.

That appointment, however, may have placed him on a collision course with the Conservative party’s better-known benefactor, Michael Ashcroft.

In the time Rowland donated more than £1m to the Tory party, Lord Ashcroft, through his corporate vehicle, Bearwood Corporate Services, donated around £100,000, although his support of the party dates back far earlier. Rowland’s sudden promotion is also said to have irked a number of senior Tories.

Not long after Cameron unveiled his new treasurer, a series of critical articles appeared in the Daily Mail. Many appeared to focus on Rowland’s private life, and delved into marital issues dating back decades.

A more serious accusation concerned pollution from a lead smelting plant in Idaho, America, alleged to be one of the country’s worst industrial pollution scandals. The pollution was said to have caused acute respiratory health problems among local children.

Rowland was not connected to the plant when the pollution occurred in the 1970s. His property company bought Gulf Resources, which owned the plant, more than a decade later, in 1989.

Rowland and others were accused of diverting company assets which should have been used to clean up the contamination. It is alleged that the money was used instead in a property deal in New Zealand. He and other directors were also accused of transferring company assets overseas when they should have been used to pay for the health insurance of former employees.

According to a lawsuit in the US in 1997, Rowland and other directors were accused of engaging “in a course of conduct designed to loot and waste the assets of the company”. It was alleged that “the defendants entered into a series of transactions by which they transferred Gulf assets into their control”.

It was also claimed that when concerns were raised, Rowland gave assurances that Gulf would “meet its obligations for employee benefits and environmental clean-up, assurances alleged to be false and fraudulent”.

Rowland has called the court allegations “unsubstantiated and false”. He has been quoted as saying: “There were multiple defendants in the case and it is customary in such American cases for extreme claims to be made.

“No evidence was submitted in support of these false claims. The case was settled with no payment being made by David Rowland nor by any company connected with him nor by any other associates of his.”

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2010/aug/20/david-rowland-controversy-conservatives?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

And just who is sponsoring Swire’s new outfit? Is this what YOU voted for?

So, how does the Conservative Middle East Council (Chairman Hugo Swire) get its money?

“British and Arab businessmen with strong commercial interests in Saudi Arabia are key funders of the Conservative Middle East Council, a Westminster body which has become increasingly vocal in its calls for Britain to stand by the House of Saud, despite the latter’s human rights abuses and possible war crimes in Yemen.

An investigation has revealed how the group has raised close to a million pounds since 2007, using the money to lobby for a stronger relationship with Saudi Arabia, as well as arrange delegations to other parts of the Arab world.” …

… an exclusive MEMO investigation has revealed that nearly all of the CMEC’s financial backers have strong business interests in Saudi Arabia and its smaller Gulf allies, ranging from defence to manufacturing to energy resources. This suggests that the support by the CMEC for an unconditional relationship with Saudi Arabia could be driven by donor preferences, something that is denied by officials. …

… By far the most generous current backer of the Conservative Middle East Council, according to Electoral Commission records, is David Rowland, a controversial British business tycoon, political financier and Monaco tax exile. Rowland has been involved closely in helping to secure multi-billion pound defence deals between British firms and the Saudi Arabian government; he has given the CMEC nearly £350,000 since 2010. In 2011, Rowland offered his private jets to Prince Andrew for free, as the member of the British royal family visited Saudi Arabia to help secure deals for BAE Systems.

The investigation also revealed that in June 2015, Rosemary Said, the wife of Syrian-Saudi businessman Wafic Said, gave CMEC £20,000; back in 2008, the donation was much more substantial, at £100,000. Wafic Said, who was banned from making donations to Westminster political parties as he does not hold British citizenship, is reported to have played a key role as a “fixer” in arranging the controversial Al-Yamamah deals between BAE Systems and the Saudi Arabian government, using his extensive network of contacts within the kingdom. Records show that alongside channelling funds to the CMEC through his wife Rosemary, Wafic’s son Khalid, has also given £12,500 to the organisation. …

… Energy boss Abdul Majid Jafar is also a donor to the CMEC, giving the group £15,000 in January 2014. His company, Crescent Petroleum, is the oldest of its type in the Middle East, and has extensive interests in the UAE, Bahrain and Iraq, with a smaller footprint in Saudi Arabia.

The investigation has also revealed that a construction firm called International Hospitals Group has donated £40,000 to the CMEC in the past two years. The company has secured several multi-million pound contracts with the government of Saudi Arabia, and received as a result “various letters of acknowledgement [i.e. references]… from senior Royal Princes” within the House of Saud, with which the company enjoys a strong business relationship.

A former funder of the lobby group is Pierre Rolin, a financier who previously provided investment management services to a $1bn American property empire owned by Prince Abdul Aziz Bin Fahd, a prominent royal in the House of Saud. Details of the extent of this portfolio were revealed in 2012 by investigative journalist Seth Hettena. However, Rolin stopped donating to the CMEC in 2009, and shortly afterwards it was revealed that his financial advisory business to the Saudi prince had collapsed.

The MEMO investigation also showed that the CMEC received an £18,000 donation from the London-based PR firm Bell Pottinger, which has represented Saudi Arabia in a public affairs and advocacy role. Its other clients have included the Bahrain government; the company declined to comment when contacted by MEMO, although a spokesperson for the CMEC said that the donation had been made because Bell Pottinger “supported the aims of the organisation at the time.”

The Director of the Conservative Middle East Council, Leo Docherty, told MEMO that donations (and thus donors) had not influenced decision-making within the group. “No donor has given us conditions,” he insisted, “but any big business person in the Middle East has strong interests in Saudi Arabia. We see ourselves as making the case for a constructive relationship, but we acknowledge it’s not perfect.”

The CMEC head claimed that a “huge amount of pressure” was being put on the Gulf States to reform. “Anyone who has a long-standing business relationship with the Gulf States, their job is to support these reforming tendencies,” he added.

Revealed: The Gulf business tycoons backing the Conservative Middle East Council

Swire: the answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind …

Swire’s Twitter feed today informs us how excited he is that Hinkley C is going ahead.

Does anyone recall him saying anything at all about Hinkley C in the last few months?

Why does he wait until things are decided to tell us he supports them?

Might it be that he watches which way the wind blows and then bends with it?

Hugo Swire appointed Chairman of Conservative Middle East Council

So you thought we would see more of our constituency MP now that he is a backbencher – now he has even MORE reasons to be away from East Devon.

He won’t have time to save our NHS, he will be too busy brokering arms deals.

“I’m delighted to become Chairman of the Conservative Middle East Council this week, taking over from Sir Alan Duncan. Alan has been a superb Chairman over the last year and leaves CMEC firmly established and respected among Conservatives.

I am particularly delighted to be back in a role I much enjoyed before the 2010 election and my renewed involvement in CMEC reflects my longstanding interest in the Middle East.

Having been a Minister of State in the Foreign Office for the last four years I understand British foreign policy. And without doubt, the Middle East is of unparalleled importance.

For that reason CMEC is more active and more important than ever before. It’s imperative that Conservatives seek to understand the Middle East and appreciate the many challenges facing that region. But we must also recognise and celebrate the diversity and dynamism of the region. And we must appreciate the wealth of commercial opportunities the Middle East presents and – more importantly – the many longstanding friendships and historic alliances we have across the region.

CMEC has a busy program for this autumn and I am delighted that we will also be launching a new and improved website in the coming days.

Whether on Syria, Palestine, the Gulf, Egypt, Iran or the many other countries across the region CMEC will continue under my Chairmanship to facilitate a greater understanding of the issues, and to allow Conservative parliamentarians to travel to different parts of the region to see it for themselves.

I look forward to seeing you at a CMEC event soon.

The Rt Hon Sir Hugo Swire KCMG MP”

http://cmec.org.uk/depth/news-analysis/rt-hon-sir-hugo-swire-mp-takes-over-cmec-chairman

Sovereignty- an example

The [Parliamentary]committee [on Arms Export Control]is split into three factions and its constituent parts have released two reports [recall that arms export to Saudi Arabia was a Hugo Swire ministerial responsibility and he was accused of being ‘economical with the truth’ about the Foreign Office’s involvement in the deals and their ethical implications]:

“In a bizarre twist of parliamentary protocol, three competing cross-party factions on Committee on Arms Export Control (CAEC) are putting out two separate reports recommending different conflicting courses of action.

Members of the Business and International Development committees have banded together to recommend a harsher approach against the autocratic petro state. They want a ban on arms to Saudi until an international investigation into alleged war crimes by the autocracy during the course of its operation in Yemen has concluded.

The Foreign Affairs Committee faction, led by Conservative MP Crispin Blunt, however believes that the legality of the weapons sales should be left to the courts. Campaign Against the Arms Trade has already launched legal challenge, set to be heard in the coming months, meaning arms sales will continue for now. It also backs an international investigation and says arms export control should be more widely addressed.

Meanwhile a third group, MPs drawn from the Defence Committee, are understood to be in such deadlock themselves have backed neither report. The split within CAEC is so bitter than MPs have not even been able to agree to designate one of the reports a “minority” report, as would be the usual practice when MPs have disagreements.

But don’t worry it won’t make a difference because the UK government – that great believer in parliamentary democracy have said PARLIAMENT WILL NOT BE ALLOWED TO VOTE ON IT”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/saudi-arabian-arms-sales-uk-row-ban-vote-committee-arms-export-control-senate-a7309291.html

“Devon’s ‘devastating’ hospital cuts to be scrutinised”

We await Hugo Swire and Neil Parish’s plans on how to deal with devastating health and social services cuts in Devon. In the meantime, DCC councillor Claire Wright continues her long and tireless campaign on behalf of East Devon residents.

“Plans to cut nearly 200 community hospital beds across Devon by 2020/21 will come under the scrutiny of county council health bosses on Monday (September 19).

Councillor Claire Wright (pictured) described the proposals in a leaked document as ‘devastating’ and said the underfunding of the NHS should not mean that patients suffer.

More than 400 acute hospital beds in the county – one in six – could close, as the NHS in Devon looks to plug a predicted funding gap of £572million by 2020/21.

The leaked Sustainability and Transformation Plan (STP) for Wider Devon states: “The changes we are proposing will result in a reduction in the number of acute and community beds across our system of the order of 590 by 2021.

“NEW Devon Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) are developing consultation proposals on the overall strategic direction of travel and provision changes, the components of new models of care and specific intentions to close a number of community hospital beds.”

NHS bosses were approached for comment, but would not specify how the cuts would affect different localities.

Cllr Wright said: “My understanding is that the document was submitted to NHS England for its consideration in June.

“That’s three months ago – why on earth it has been kept so secret from residents, and councillors including those like me on the health and wellbeing scrutiny committee?

“As an Ottery St Mary councillor, I am very worried indeed now for Ottery Hospital’s future – and the impact that so many acute and community bed closures in general will have on patient care all over the county.

“The fact that the NHS is massively underfunded should not mean that patients have to suffer.”

A statement issued by NEW Devon CCG says more analysis and consideration was to be undertaken before a further submission is made in October.

It said: “The STP creates the opportunity for health and local authorities to work together and formulate plans to improve and secure the sustainability of services we deliver to people across Devon.

“The programme of work to review acute and specialised service across Devon will commence in October.”

A report on the STP will be given to Devon County Council’s health and wellbeing scrutiny committee on Monday.

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/devon_s_devastating_hospital_cuts_to_be_scrutinised_1_4698027

MPs should be on zero-hours contracts: don’t turn up, don’t get paid

MPs should be on a zero-hours contract. Don’t turn up? Don’t get paid. [OPINION]

Personally, Owl would settle for detailed timesheets and diary information showing exactly what our MPs are doing and, more importantly, with whom.

You want to meet Hugo Swire? Go to Kensington and Chelsea Conservatives and pay £25

Royal Hospital Autumn Party

Date Wednesday, 21st Sep 2016
Time 6:30pm until 8:30pm

***SPEAKER CONFIRMED!***

*** ONLY 40 TICKETS AVAILABLE ***

Join us for an evening with Hugo Swire MP for East Devon. The event will be held at 32 Royal Avenue [Royal London Borough of Kensington and Chelsea] by kind permission of Mr and Mrs Toland. There will be wine served throughout the evening.

Tickets £25″
https://www.kcfc.org.uk/events

Properties in Royal Avenue are currently selling for £6 million upwards.

Is Hugo Swire not sorry to see Cameron quit?

Hugo usually twitters endlessly about his pals but not a peep about his Eton mate Cameron’s resignation. And after Dave gave him a knighthood – albeit in rather tacky circumstances. Ungrateful.

New inquiry into arms for Saudi Arabia under Hugo Swire’s watch

In the week when a new inquiry has been announced into the supply of British arms to Saudi Arabia:

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/12/crispin-blunt-to-intensify-row-about-saudi-arms-sales?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

during the time that our MP Hugo Swire was the Foregn Office Minister to that country and somewhat economical with the truth, which we covered here:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2016/07/22/swire-economical-with-the-truth-at-the-foreign-office/

this article about Mr Swire and arms dealing on Colombia (also one of his areas) has been brought to Owl’s notice from September last year:

I bet you never thought that one of the duties of a Foreign Minister is to act as an arms dealer for private companies to dodgy governments, or that Royal Navy warships act as floating sales offices for arms-deals. But last June, Hugo Swire MP, a Foreign Office Minister, had a week-long trip to Latin America, which included a stop at Colombia to act as an official weapons salesman for arms firm BAE Systems.

The meeting – part of which took place on a Royal Navy ship – was revealed earlier this year. Full details of the event were supplied to me last month under Freedom of Information.

As far as the ethics of selling arms to Colombia goes, they’re not great. According to Amnesty International, Colombia has suffered a “45-year-old internal armed conflict. Leftist guerrillas fight the state and illegal right-wing paramilitary organisations, which often collaborate with sectors of the Colombian armed forces.” As Amnesty notes, “All of the parties to the conflict are responsible for human rights violations”. The Colombian Navy have been involved in such abuses as well as the army. This July, Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos sacked the heads of the army, navy and air force following a report from Human Rights watch about Colombian armed forces complicity in extra judicial killings. Despite these problems, Britain has no official bar on selling weapons to Colombia.

There were no such worries on the menu when Hugo Swire arrived in the beautiful city of Cartagena on the northern coast of Colombia and had “dinner at restaurant in the historic walled city with representatives from BAE Systems and the Colombian Navy”. The Minister’s date included a “walk” through the “historic old city”.

BAE Systems wanted to sell “Ocean Patrol Vessels” to the Colombian Navy. These are “90 metre versatile and affordable ships” made to work along the coast. BAE emphasise their use in anti-drug trade missions. The ships have a flight deck suitable for a “medium-sized helicopter” which is capable of engaging in warfare as well as drug trade interdiction.

It isn’t just the Minister acting as a salesman for BAE: The Royal Navy got in on the act too. HMS Portland, one of the Navy’s frigates was on a three-day visit to Colombia last June. The papers released to me describe this as “defence cooperation”. The Royal Navy itself put out a press release about the ship celebrating “Armed Forces Day while on a brief visit to the Colombian port of Cartagena” at the time. As well as British sailors taking part in the pomp and ceremony, and the HMS Portland crew playing a football game against the Colombian crew of the ARC Caldas, the warship was acting as a floating sales office for an arms-trade party.

The documents say the ship was there for “defence and security exports”. With help from the UK’s government run arms sales unit, called “UK Trade and Industry Defence & Security Organisation”, Hugo Swire used the ship to push the proposed deal. In the papers released to me, The British Ambassador to Colombia, Lindsay Croisdale-Appleby says, “the visiting HMS Portland gave a spectacular setting for an evening reception for senior members of the Colombian navy and defence ministry”. At the meeting, “The minister highlighted a proposal by BAE Systems to supply Ocean Patrol Vessels to the Colombian Navy”.

There is a long history of British Minister’s pushing arms sales. Most famously Mrs Thatcher saw this as a key part of her job: Thatcher called it “Batting for Britain”, and made great personal effort to promote the massive Al Yamamah arms deals with Saudi Arabia in the 1980s – a deal which also involved BAE Systems. However, from the 1990s onwards the huge problems of corruption in Al Yamamah and other arms deals encouraged to Government ministers to take a lower profile in promoting individual arms sales. The government has remained involved in arms trade promotion through the Defence Sales Organisation, renamed the Defence and Security Organisation. However, Ministers themselves have tended to have a more subtle approach to directly flogging weapons. During the Blair years, Labour were a bit tied up between Tony’s love of doing business and Foreign Minister Robin Cook’s “ethical foreign policy”.

It looks like that the newly confident Conservatives are abandoning any subtlety and going for a more direct approach.”

http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/a-british-defence-minister-acted-as-an-arms-dealer-to-colombia-849

Hugo Swire and his drain obsession …

First it was Ottery St Mary just before the General election,

image

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/09/23/praise-be-hugo-swire-is-going-to-personally-sort-out-otterys-drains/

Now, it’s Exmouth:

East Devon’s MP has vowed to deal with the issue of flooding in Exmouth during a visit to the town.

Hugo Swire promised residents overgrown vegetation by Bradham Bridge would be removed.

He said: “It was good to meet with a number of residents, local councillor Brian Bailey and two officers from the Environment Agency to discuss this ongoing problem.

“The Environment Agency has confirmed that it will clear the overgrown vegetation upstream of Bradham Bridge and we will see if this leads to an improvement. If it doesn’t, then we will have to revisit this issue.”

http://www.exmouthjournal.co.uk/news/east_devon_mp_addresses_flooding_issues_1_4689096

Unfortunately, in Ottery, arrangements had been made long, long before Hugo’s intervention to have drains cleared and it just happened to be around the time of the election – might this be the same in Exmouth with the EA already scheduled to make its call?

Still, it’s always good to know that wherever there is a stink in East Devon we will find him dealing with it.

f

David Cameron has resigned because he can’t operate as a back bench MP …

…. so is Hugo Swire going to emulate him?

Surely East Devon is now much too small for his big … brain?

Opening hotels, judging dog shows, eating canapes with councillors, having tea with pensioners … just not what you are used to … especially when it’s not in Mauritius, which SO misses you.

The world needs you Hugo. We would do our best to manage without you.

Where’s Hugo? Judging a dog show in Parliament

Do you have a dog show you want judging in East Devon? Hugo Swire is your go-to man.

John Crace’s political diary for last week in The Guardian:

“At last something Labour can win. For years now, the title of Westminster dog of the year has been a safe Tory seat, but Labour MP Jonathan Reynolds’ two labradoodles,

Clinton and Kennedy, managed to see off a strong field to be crowned 2016 champions. “I speak for everyone in the Labour party when I say it’s about time we won something, so we might as well accept this,” Reynolds said.

Mind you, Clinton and Kennedy did have an advantage as the competition seemed to be rigged in favour of the bigger dogs: the assault course jumps were twice the size of Clem, the diminutive shih tzu owned by Labour MP Anna Turley.

Despite there being two Tories on the judging panel – Andrea Jenkyns and

Hugo Swire

the owners of last year’s winners – the result wasn’t well received by some Tories, who felt Reynolds’ pooches should have been marked down for not being sound enough on Brexit.”

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/sep/09/may-minds-her-grammars-all-due-to-a-lack-of-a-decent-ringbinder?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

Swire works for ….. judge for yourself

Comment reposted:

Here is what Hugo has asked or spoken about since he became a back bencher:

The effect of Brexit on English students studying in Scotland

The effect of Brexit on foreign students studying in England (using Exeter Uni as an example – Ben Bradshaw’s constituency)

Progress of superfast broadband in Devon and Somerset and whether the SoS for CMS met BT to discuss broadband rollout in general

Four questions about the funding of the A30 upgrade east of Honiton and whether it will be dual carriageway (Neil Parish’s constituency)

Empty houses

Of course, the answers are pretty non-committal, so we learn nothing of real interest from these questions. Personally I would have thought that, with his many years experience as a minister successfully wriggling out of providing meaningful answers, he might be somewhat better at asking questions which would be specific enough to generate a useful answer..

https://www.theyworkforyou.com/search/?q=&pid=11265&phrase=&exclude=&from=2016-07-15&to=&person=&section=&column=#n4