The Times - UK (2022-05-17)

(Antfer) #1

28 Tuesday May 17 2022 | the times


Letters to the Editor


Letters to the Editor should be sent to
[email protected] or by post to
1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF

building for 12 to 20 years, also seems
far too long. Her third option, moving
to a new site outside London, seems to
miss the point of parliament: it should
surely be in the centre of our capital
city. Moreover, as an architect, I find it
profoundly depressing that she thinks
that the best our British architects
could come up with would be a
“glass-and-steel cathedral”. Of course
our parliament should stay in its
wonderful building, but could we not
set up a task force, like the one for
developing the vaccine, a consortium
of bright imaginative people, those
with a record for getting things done?
Sue Martin Mason
Titchwell, Norfolk

Sir, Clare Foges is right to insist that
parliament should vacate the Palace
of Westminster while it is being
restored, but where to? One solution
world be to build a ship capable of
accommodating MPs and their
spouses, cruising from port to port
round the UK. Debates could be held
in suitable local buildings and
parliamentarians could eat in
restaurants to give local economies a
boost. When the ship was moored in
Portsmouth, for example, MPs could
debate in the city’s Guildhall, or in

Sir, Libby Purves (“This year’s A-level
class deserves our sympathy”, May 16)
cites employers such as Sir James
Dyson who rate resilience above
A-stars. Surely the successful
navigation of four weeks of intensive
exams and the associated pressure,
and the final achievement of an A*, is
indicative of a high degree of
resilience? As a teacher of A-level
students for 35 years, I have seen many
students make phenomenal strides in
their understanding and ability to
think under pressure in the final few
months of the course, something that
stands them in excellent stead for life’s
future challenges.
Mark Brown
Lindfield, W Sussex

Watership downfall


Sir, Further to your article “Life
imitates art as developers declare
Watership Down victory” (May 14), my
father wrote Watership Down in 1966
and it was published 50 years ago. He
chose to write about the destruction of
greenfield sites for housing to draw
attention to what was happening to
our countryside. He chose Sandleford
as a site that he knew well and loved,
and which he also knew could be
targeted for development. How sad he
would be to see exactly that happening
in this case. It would seem that Fiver’s
vision will become dreadful reality
very soon if it is not stopped.
Rosamond Mahony
Farnham

Liverpool in one of the cathedrals.
The ship could also spend time in
Cardiff, Edinburgh and Belfast,
strengthening ties between the
nations. Modern cruise liners can
accommodate about 6,000
passengers, so providing every MP
with a suite would not be a problem.
Chris Partridge
Fishbourne, W Sussex

Sir, Clare Foges got it spot on when
she suggested that parliament decant.
May I suggest Northumberland as the
temporary home? The government
wants to level up the north, and this
county is England’s northernmost. It
is also the geographic centre of
Britain, as the mid point on the
longest north-south axis.
Jake Doxat
Thorncombe, Dorset

Sir, Why not move parliament to
Buckingham Palace while the repairs
are being done? Neither the Queen
nor Prince Charles wants to live there
and it would maintain the dignity of
parliament that having a concrete and
glass building would lose. It could also
save billions of pounds.
Philippa Evans
Hambledon, Surrey
Deterring moths

Sir, James Morrison (letter, May 16)
has a point about the efficacy of
mothballs. But who wants to walk
around in a jumper smelling of
naphthalene? A bar of soap in a
drawer is said to be an effective
deterrent against clothes moths.
Heather Willson
Bath

Art of the moon


Sir, The race to take the first piece of
art to the moon (report, May 14) may
already have been won. The crew of
Apollo 15 took a 3-inch metal
sculpture, Fallen Astronaut, to the
lunar surface at Hadley Rille and left
it there on August 1, 1971, with a
plaque bearing the names of all the
astronauts (and Russian cosmonauts)
known to have died.
Julian Lloyd
Chester

Knowing the drill


Sir, The German manufacturer of
Tim Cooper’s cordless drill (letter,
May 16) should be commended. I am
repeatedly frustrated by
manufacturers not including a
manual with their products, expecting
the customer to find one online. This
now includes the manufacturers of
motor vehicles. It is not always
convenient searching online for the
answer to a problem. Much easier to
reach into the glove compartment to
consult the printed manual.
Deborah Spirrett
Leeds

Stable monarchy


Sir, As an amateur walking stick
maker I was very pleased to see from
the photograph on your front page of
the Queen at the Windsor Horse
Show (May 16) that she has changed
to using a thumb stick. This will give
her more stability and confidence and
help her posture more than using the
seemingly ever-popular and shorter
“granny” stick, which gives very little
support at all.
Tim Jay
President emeritus, Royal College of
Chiropractors; Taunton, Somerset

Corrections and


clarifications


The Times takes
complaints
about editorial
content seriously. We are committed to
abiding by the Independent Press
Standards Organisation (“IPSO”) rules
and regulations and the Editors’ Code of
Practice that IPSO enforces.
Requests for corrections or
clarifications should be sent by email to
[email protected] or by post to
Feedback, The Times, 1 London Bridge
Street, London SE1 9GF


Hunt’s view of NHS


Sir, I have been a nurse for more than
40 years and I agree with Jeremy
Hunt: I too have seen the best and the
worse of the NHS (Magazine,
May 14). The total neglect of basic
emergency care today is contributing
to poor-quality outcomes. There is no
real intentional neglect by clinical
staff. Instead this neglect is the result
of a lack of resources, which causes
long waiting times for ambulances.
There are also an insufficient number
of hospital beds and trained clinical
staff. This results in preventable
diseases such as sepsis occurring,
causing longer-term recovery if the
patient is lucky or, if not, ending in
long-term care or even death. No
amount of managers seem able to
solve this situation. Unfortunately the
NHS builds up empires and does not
like to reorganise them when they
need it. There needs to be a national
debate about the structure and future
of the NHS because it is s untenable
in its present form.
Judith Evans
Care co-ordinator and NHS nurse,
Pencelli, Powys


Sir, Given Jeremy Hunt’s six years in
charge of the NHS he must take some
responsibility for the state of the
health service and its culture. His
observations are hardly new. The
medical profession is notoriously slow
at recognising or learning from
mistakes; other organisations, for
example the airline industry,
thoroughly investigate an incident to
try to prevent it happening again. The
problem can be solved. However, the
question is whether the present
government, which has hardly set a
great example of learning from its
mistakes and which is led by someone
with a reputation for blaming
everyone else, will really be able to
deal with this.
Chris Kessell
Glenville, New York


Rehousing MPs while the builders are in


Sir, Moving out of parliament
permanently or temporarily would do
nothing to stop the rule-breaking
lobbying linked to MPs’ second jobs
(“Move out of parliament could clean
up MPs’ act”, Clare Foges, May 16). It
would not energise complacent MPs
with large majorities, deter lying in
parliament or guarantee that the
prime minister would enforce the
ministerial code. Even so, an urgent
decant of parliament is still necessary.
The risk of a disaster occurring in this
world heritage building increases
daily. A plan was drawn up by the
joint committee on the Palace of
Westminster in 2016 for a temporary
chamber that would have allowed
new ways of working, including a
“harmony-promoting semi-circular
design”. Foges says the latter would
lead to “dull, sludgy” politics, but
surely a good dose of harmony is
exactly what politics needs.
Tom Brake
Director, Unlock Democracy; Deputy
leader, House of Commons, 2012-15

Sir, None of Clare Foges’s options
seem realistic: the first, repairing the
buildings at a cost of £22 billion and
taking 76 years, is out of the question.
The second, of moving out of the

Sir, Nadhim Zahawi, the education
secretary, says that Oxbridge
admissions should be based on merit
alone (report, May 14; letters and
leading article, May 16). I agree. But
how does one define merit? He
attributes the disproportionate
number of Oxbridge admissions from
private schools to the “attainment gap”
between state and private sectors, and
highlights an initiative by Eton College
to open three state sixth forms in
Dudley, Middlesbrough and Oldham
to help pupils get into Oxbridge and
other leading universities. However,
there was scant mention of the many
outstanding state schools that exist up
and down the land and no mention at
all of the numerous sixth-formers in
the state sector who already reach
high levels of academic achievement.
Given that 93 per cent of the nation’s
children are state-educated, doesn’t
Mr Zahawi stop to wonder why private
school pupils make up about a third of
those at Oxbridge? One does not have
to be tribal (as he puts it) to think that
this is a bit odd.
Dr Janet Dobson
Dunnington, N Yorks

Admission on merit A-level resilience


from the times may 17, 1922

BRITISH LEAVE


CURRAGH


CAMP


PM’s work ethic


Sir, Boris Johnson says that he finds
working from home inefficient,
because he finds himself regularly
stopping work to walk very slowly to
the fridge to cut off a small piece of
cheese, then walks very slowly back
to his laptop and forgets what he was
working on (“WFH doesn’t work
because of cheese and coffee breaks,
says PM”, May 14). Surely this says
more about his attention span and
work ethic than it does about the
downside of home working.
Ian Aunger
Peterborough


thetimes.co.uk/archive

Put out to grass


Sir, Plastic lawns are indeed ecological
disasters (leading article, May 14). We
are lucky that our lawn is a remnant of
old, species-rich meadow; we maintain
it by mowing small areas, leaving the
majority to flower and set seed then
cutting these “hay patches” once in

autumn when the birds and voles have
eaten all the seeds. It gives us immense
pleasure to see the butterflies, bees
and many other insects it attracts.
Anyone with a little space can create a
wildlife-friendly lawn by planting
native grasses and flowers; far better
that than smothering the ground in
plastic or concrete.
Michael Boxall
Hepple, Northumberland

Protocol must be


observed by UK


Sir, Bruno Waterfield is right in his
analysis that “If Britain moves to
unilaterally override EU regulations

... that would be tantamount to an act
of aggression as well as a breach of a
treaty that was negotiated and ratified
by Britain only a few years ago”
(“Johnson defies warnings over
protocol”, May 16). Pacta sunt
servanda — treaties must be observed
— is a golden rule in all international
negotiations. The DUP regards the
Good Friday agreement as a
“capitulation” and wants a return to a
border sealing the six UK counties of
Ulster from the rest of Ireland. They
have a right to that position but the
people of Northern Ireland, as we saw
in the elections to the Northern
Ireland Assembly, do not share that
minority view. For more than a
century the extremist tail of Ulster
anti-Dublin nationalism has wagged
the dog of wider British interests. It is
time the prime minister told the DUP
that it can no longer impose its hard
line on the rest of the people who live
in the British Isles.
Denis Macshane
Former Europe minister, London SW1


The Curragh Camp was formally
handed over this morning at 10.30 to
the official IRA, and the green, white
and orange colours of the Irish
National flag are now flying from
the lofty water tower which stands
up so stark amidst the rolling fields
and low barrack buildings around it.
By reciprocal agreement, ceremonial
between the outgoing and incoming
troops was avoided, and the brief
programme was carried through
with rigidity and military precision.
Yet the proceedings were not
without a wistful dignity. An hour or
two before the appointed time the

bulk of the Leicester and Northants
Battalions had already marched
away across the rain-soaked Downs
to their entraining station, and we
were still many miles from the camp
when we passed the head of the long
motor transport column, which
rattled briskly along, the lorries gaily
decorated with Union Jacks, the
Royal Standard and French and
Belgian flags. Where a track strikes
across the Downs to Hare Camp, we
came upon Lieutenant-General
O’Connell, of the IRA and his two
staff officers. A few minutes later a
detachment of about 60 men of the
IRA came over a little hill 50 yards
off. General O’Connell put himself
at their head, and came down to the
broad camp road. As he rounded the
corner two British officers in trench
coats came up. There were no
salutes on either side. The party
moved forward with General
O’Connell and Lieutenant-Colonel
Sir F N Elphinstone-Dalrymple in

front and their ADCs a pace or two
behind, as the incoming Irish guard
took up seatry duty on the posts
vacated a minute before by the
British sentry. After nearly 70 years,
during which the camp had grown to
the third only in size to Aldershot
and Salisbury Plain, the Curragh had
passed out of British hands. With the
departure of the British troops the
forced restraint was relaxed. Knots
of men gathered to hear a Minister
of the Provisional Government
recall how, barely a year ago, he and
two officers of today’s incoming
Carlow unit had arrived in that same
camp as prisoners chained to the
sides of British motor lorries. If
regret was naturally uppermost, one
had seen and heard enough to
perceive that the IRA intended in
time to make the Curragh not
unworthy of its military past.
Free download pdf