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2005

 

Scum in Paris

Dunes at Sunrise

Power of worldlings

Flu in Flight

Peace in the Middle East

Islam and European values

Poppy is Life and Death

Ethnicity, Religion and Citizens

Religion and Terrorists

Bumper to Bumper

Can the Tories Win?

Energy for the Poor

The EU works

Communicable Diseases

Asylum & Immigration

Euros for Oil

Letter to Howard

Fair Tax

East Meets West

Food for Thought

Luxury for Pets

No Smoke without Cash

Perfume not Poison

Reform Healthcare

Virtual Healthcare

Victims of Poverty

 

 

2004

 

Illiteracy

U-turn on Constitution

Diagnosis, disease, poverty

Europe of 25 nations

Subsidies

Athens Airport

A week in the life of an MEP

Expansion

Martin Bell

Battery Recycling

ACP-EU Joint Assembly

London and the EU

Martin Bell

Trading with the poor

Symbols & Religious Freedom

EU interference in aviation

Your MEP in Brussels

Peace in Rural East Anglia

Hajj

Living with Chemicals

Fair Share of Sugar

Old Cures

 

 

2003

 

Hallmarks

Europe needs Business

Espresso Victims

MEP numbers to fall

ID Cards

Cat and Dog Fur

British Hallmark

Killing for Dishonour

Conflict in Africa

British Ethnic Congress

Farmers' hardship

Church Repairs

North Sea Fishermen

Russian Oil in Euros

HIV/AIDS commission

Cat and Dog Fur

BNP Victory Shock

Rights for Disabled People

Hallmarks

Environment

Illegal immigration

Labour ignores rural economy

Sheep's Ear for EU

Gujaratis in politics

Muscle or machine energy

Out of fish

CAP Reform

Indians in Belgium

Parallel import of medicines

Rich pets in luxury

Euro - Not now but soon

In Europe, Not Run By Europe

The Future of Europe

India and the EU

Green Future for the Poor

Oil should be priced in Euros

Save local chemists

Cow Mountains

Glaxo cuts not enough

Animal Welfare in the EU

Britain and the Euro

Help for UK Farmers

Abandoned Cars

Food, not guns, for poor

EU will evolve

Ethiopia Aid

Ethiopia Famine  

Cyprus in the EU  

 

 

1999-2003

 

Fair wages for off-shore workers

Pharmaceuticals fail the Poor

Loss of UK jobs

Parliament accountable

India and China

Agency Workers Directive

EU immigration

Britain and the Euro

Indian Takeaway

Old Tyres

Future of EU

Preserve the Countryside

EU Waste and SMEs

Biodiesel

Renewable Energy

African Dictators

Stansted

Financial Reform of EU

Smoking

Kashmir

Fishing

Buying from the poor

End to Poverty

EU Must Reform

EU and poverty

Blackcurrant Farmers

Mobile Phones

India's Poor

India and terrorism

British Muslims visit Cairo

US offends Arabs

Reality of Islam in Europe

Animal Welfare

India's Potential

Terrorism

Letter from Brussels

AIDS report

Food Aid

Mauritania

Peterborough regeneration

Football Contracts and EC

Fuel tax

East-West rail link for Bedford

Europe

From Blackpool

 

Newsletter from Europe Issue 6/2002
Bashir Khanbhai MEP
(Norfolk and Suffolk)

 

 

EU PARLIAMENT MUST QUIT STRASBOURG

MEPs in the European Parliament, Commission and Council meet in Brussels for three weeks every month. For just one week, more than 3,000 people - MEPs, their assistants, translators, staff of the Parliament, Commission and Council (including chauffeurs, ushers and catering personnel) move between cities. Every Friday before the Strasbourg session, 17 lorries loaded with metal trunks containing documents and personal effects travel 300 miles to Strasbourg - and back again seven days later! Yet another convoy transports mountains of paper from Luxembourg where the translation service and secretariat are based. At the end of this week, the buildings in Strasbourg are deserted for three weeks until the next session. This travelling circus costs the European taxpayers at least 100m Euros every year!

To most people in Eastern Region, the European Parliament is a remote and irrelevant institution. Our farmers, industries and businesses suffering from falling incomes and excessive EU legislation cannot accept waste of public money. The French cannot force the rest to use Strasbourg as the seat of Parliament – if they do then they must bear the full cost!

 

BREAK UP OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Prescott’s Local Government Bill intends to divide the UK into Regions as requested by the European Commission: Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and England having 9 regions.

The Government claims that this White Paper is about the devolution of power. This is simply not true, as it will abolish our Metropolitan Councils

and County Councils, thereby eroding our national authority and Westminster’s scrutiny of the EU. British people want a Europe of nation states. They do not want a Europe of Regions with no national identity!”

In our Eastern Region, there are 57 MPs, 8 MEPs and County Council leaders of the major political parties in the six counties. They are all elected and paid for by taxpayers. They can assemble on a quarterly basis for public discussion of the major local issues with agendas well advertised in local papers. Adequate time should be given for the public to ask questions, submitted in writing in advance. This is real democracy at grassroots level and if Prescott is serious then he should offer such a cost-effective alternative – not more politicians, more bureaucrats and more taxes with less public consultation, less accountability and less transparency!

 

COCKLES IN THE WASH!

The cockle fishing industry in the UK is worth about £25m per annum. Many fishermen, ship owners, seamen, pilots, engineers, sea food processors, wholesalers and retailers depend on this work for their livelihood.

There is an EU draft Directive for testing for toxins in cockles. Such a test is conducted in different ways in Holland, Germany, France and the UK. Test samples of live cockles, previously taken once a month, are now taken each week from the beds. Transport and storage before testing must be identical to produce results that are comparable and reliable. The UK tests are too stringent and often give contradictory results to those conducted on the continent thereby penalising our fishermen from Kings Lynn and elsewhere as they are denied the right to fish!

It is unacceptable that continental cockles, tested using continental methods, are allowed to be imported for public consumption in the UK whilst UK cockle fishermen are denied the right to harvest cockles that would pass the continental tests but fail in the UK!

It is essential that the UK test is in line with the other EU Member States. UK cockle processors can then have independent tests from the same batch to verify the results from DEFRA analysts. Thousands of jobs are at stake throughout the UK, especially in Kings Lynn and Norfolk. The UK Government must act now!  

GUIDELINES ON ANIMAL TESTING

 

The European Parliament has passed a Resolution on testing of cosmetic products that strikes a good balance between our concern for animal welfare and safety of products. Use of laboratory animals for testing will be phased out over a defined period and there will be an ultimate ban on marketing of cosmetics tested on animals. Provision is made for tests to continue until alternate methods are available only for specific toxicity relating to cancer and reproductive health.

A specified time period for a ban on marketing will give industry time to find alternative testing methods that do not exist at the moment. Whilst we are all concerned about animal welfare, politicians must take responsibility to ensure appropriate legislation that protects the health of our citizens.

 

HYGIENE FOR HUNTERS

The European Parliament Report (Schnellhardt) on hunting wild game is seriously flawed.  It does not distinguish between private and commercial

activity as it defines the hunter as a “food business operator” and hunting as “primary production” The “production” must be subject to strict hygiene provisions such that game, given to a friend or local restaurant, must conform to all hygiene rules applicable to commercial food factories or slaughterhouses. All “processing” of game must be undertaken in a registered and “approved establishment” thereby making it impossible to pluck, skin or cut a piece of game in a kitchen. “Traceability” is required for wild animals and birds, even if the birds are migratory!  Any game handed to a friend or the local restaurant must be stored at 4/7 deg C and delivered to a veterinarian for inspection within 12 hours of being shot – unrealistic as most shoots are at weekends in rural areas!

 

Many shoots would be devastated with the consequent loss of livelihood and employment for many people living in rural areas. Such restrictions would discourage farmers from establishing small shoots to offer city people an opportunity to enjoy country life – diversification encouraged by the EU!  I believe that the current European “Directive on game meat (92/45 EEC)” that exempts small quantities of wild game supplied directly by the hunter to the consumer, including the local retailer, works very well and should not be replaced by a new restrictive directive.

 

ACTIVITIES

17 May Visit to Norwich Bio-Incubator

17 May Postwick Current Affairs Evening.

18 May Visit - Native Yacht Company, Brundall.

20 May Parliamentary Dinner with John Major

24 May Meeting with Essex County Councillors

28-30 May EUW Visitors Group in Brussels

3 June Pharmacy Conference in Paris

4 June Pharmacy Conference in Brussels

7 June Visit to Copdock & Suffolk Show

9 June Essex Jubilee Service, Chelmsford  

 

 

 

 

 

 Promoted & Printed by Conservative MEPs in the EPP-ED Group in the European Parliament, Brussels: Khanbhai, Sturdy, Beazley & Van Orden


2004

 

Issue 3/2004
Issue 2/2004

Issue 1/2004

 

 

2003


Issue 8/2003

Issue 7/2003

Issue 6/2003

Issue 5/2003

Issue 4/2003

Special Issue

Issue 3/2003

Issue 2/2003

Issue 1/2003

 

 

2002


Issue 9/2002

Issue 8/2002

Issue 7/2002
Issue 6/2002
Issue 5/2002
Issue 4/2002
Issue 3/ 2002
Issue 2/2002

Issue 1/2002

 

 

2001


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2000


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