British Prime Minister Tony Blair has told members of his Cabinet inner circle that he will step down in the middle of next year and hand power to Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, the Independent on Sunday said.
The Independent on Sunday and two other national newspapers, the Sunday Times and the Mail on Sunday, all claimed that the 53-year-old premier would go between next year's local, Scottish and Welsh elections and the Labour Party annual autumn conference.
Blair is said to have been forced into naming a date after increasing calls from parliamentary colleagues for a firm pronouncement on the matter as continued speculation could be harming the party long-term.
He has until now said only that he would serve a "full third term" and not contest the next general election, which is due before 2010 at the latest.
The newspaper said it had asked one unnamed Cabinet minister if Blair had told him he will step aside halfway through next year.
He is said to have replied: "I'm not going to tell you exactly what Tony said but I wouldn't disagree with that."
Another was quoted as saying that Blair had now given "half the Cabinet" private assurances about a date but was not going public for fear it would play into the hands of the main opposition Conservatives.
Blair told his monthly press conference last week that to set a timetable for his departure would "simply paralyze the proper working of government" and that he was keen for a "stable and orderly" transition of power.
The Mail on Sunday, meanwhile, said Blair had told Brown in February he had decided to step down next year but was now keen to backtrack on that decision because of the Chancellor of the Exchequer's perceived "disloyalty."
For its part, the Sunday Times said Brown, frustrated by years in the wings, is still demanding a specific date.
Blair's former social security minister Frank Field told the BBC on Friday that Brown was unlikely to be elected unopposed, with a likely challenge from Blair's loyal Home Secretary John Reid and possibly some other candidates.
Drug lord Jose Adolfo Macias Villamar, alias “Fito,” was Ecuador’s most-wanted fugitive before his arrest on Wednesday, more than a year after he escaped prison from where he commanded the country’s leading criminal gang. The former taxi driver turned crime boss became the prime target of law enforcement early last year after escaping from a prison in the southwestern port of Guayaquil. Ecuadoran President Daniel Noboa’s government released “wanted” posters with images of his face and offered US$1 million for information leading to his capture. In a country plagued by crime, members of Fito’s gang, Los Choneros, have responded with violence, using car
The team behind the long-awaited Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile yesterday published their first images, revealing breathtaking views of star-forming regions as well as distant galaxies. More than two decades in the making, the giant US-funded telescope sits perched at the summit of Cerro Pachon in central Chile, where dark skies and dry air provide ideal conditions for observing the cosmos. One of the debut images is a composite of 678 exposures taken over just seven hours, capturing the Trifid Nebula and the Lagoon Nebula — both several thousand light-years from Earth — glowing in vivid pinks against orange-red backdrops. The new image
CYBERCRIME, TRAFFICKING: A ‘pattern of state failures’ allowed the billion-dollar industry to flourish, including failures to investigate human rights abuses, it said Human rights group Amnesty International yesterday accused Cambodia’s government of “deliberately ignoring” abuses by cybercrime gangs that have trafficked people from across the world, including children, into slavery at brutal scam compounds. The London-based group said in a report that it had identified 53 scam centers and dozens more suspected sites across the country, including in the Southeast Asian nation’s capital, Phnom Penh. The prison-like compounds were ringed by high fences with razor wire, guarded by armed men and staffed by trafficking victims forced to defraud people across the globe, with those inside subjected to punishments including shocks from electric batons, confinement
Canada and the EU on Monday signed a defense and security pact as the transatlantic partners seek to better confront Russia, with worries over Washington’s reliability under US President Donald Trump. The deal was announced after a summit in Brussels between Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa. “While NATO remains the cornerstone of our collective defense, this partnership will allow us to strengthen our preparedness ... to invest more and to invest smarter,” Costa told a news conference. “It opens new opportunities for companies on both sides of the