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Nurses’ strikes: Staff warn of more action as numbers walking out will be ramped up | UK | News

Nurses are threatening even more strike action in January and warning the numbers walking out will increase if the UK Government doesn’t get back around the negotiating table. The NHS is facing a winter crisis with some 100,000 nurses to go on strike in a furious dispute over pay. Members of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will stage the biggest strike action of its kind for the sector when they walk out for 24 hours on December 15 and 20.
Nurses and other nursing staff will take action at half of the locations in England where the legal mandate for strikes was secured last month. There will also be strike action at every NHS employer in Wales except one and throughout Northern Ireland.
In a further blow for hospitals throughout the UK, the GMB trade union said more than 10,000 ambulance workers across nine trusts in England and Wales will strike – a day after nurses also walk out over pay.
Speaking to Express.co.uk, RCN General Secretary and Chief Executive Pat Cullen accused the Government of “forcing nurses to strike” by not meeting for “detailed negotiations on NHS pay”.
He insisted the door remains “open” for negotiations to take place over nurses’ pay but warned if this fails to materialise, more strikes will follow, with more nurses walking out.
Mr Cullen told this website: “The meetings with the UK Government were not formal, detailed negotiations on NHS pay. That’s what I offered and the Government declined.
“They have forced nursing staff to strike and patients will know this was the government’s decision. And the government has the power to open negotiations any time.”
The RCN boss further warned: “Since the result of the ballot was announced, we have sought detailed and formal negotiations with the Government. We have attended two meetings with the Health Secretary that did not focus on this year’s NHS pay dispute.
“If the negotiation table is empty, we can see they are not serious about progress and we are calling on them to negotiate with us. Our door is open.
“RCN members will take action at half of the locations in England where the legal mandate for strikes was secured in November. The number of NHS employers affected by action will increase in January unless negotiations are held.”
The RCN has said that despite the recent pay award of £1,400, experienced nurses are 20 percent worse off in real terms because successive below-inflation awards since 2010.
It wants nurses to receive a five percent pay rise above inflation, claiming the economic argument for paying nursing staff fairly is clear when billions of pounds are being spent on agency staff to fill gaps in the workforce.
Health Secretary Steven Barclay has his “door is open” to meet with nursing union officials ahead of strikes later this month.
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Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting told the House of Commons: “The chairman of the Conservative party (Nadhim Zahawi) claims that NHS strikes are exactly what Vladimir Putin wants, so why isn’t the Health Secretary negotiating to prevent them from going ahead?”
Mr Barclay replied: “I have seen him make this claim across the media a number of times. Just to reassure him, my door is open. I have been very clear with the trade unions I am available.
“I am available to see them this afternoon or tomorrow. It is not me that set a precondition on those talks.
“There is a number of issues when I met with the trade unions that they raised. Not only pay but around safety of staff, and other conditions, the estate, tech and so forth and I am very happy to engage with the trade unions on those points.”
Mr Streeting replied: “We get the warm words about wanting to negotiate but a Government source briefed the Times last week that his plan is to wait for public sentiment to turn against striking nurses.”
“He knows this winter is going to be the most difficult the NHS has ever faced and he is using nurses as a scapegoat to avoid the blame. That is the shameful truth isn’t it?”
The Health Secretary responded: “The point is he himself does not support the 19 percent pay demand of the trade unions. So, he stands here saying we should be talking while himself not accepting their proposals.”
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How the spread of invasive sucker fish is devastating wetlands and livelihood

Shantas Das was busy repairing a fishing net with two other fishermen at Shamlashi Beel, a wetland connected to the Buriganga River. For Shantas, who supports a family of six, his boat and nets — worth around Tk200,000 — are his only means of survival.
That day, however, he was forced to mend the net after it was badly torn by an invasive species formally known as the suckermouth catfish, locally called ‘sucker fish’.
“Day by day, the number of these fishes in the Buriganga and its surrounding area is increasing,” Shantas said.
Another fisherman with him, Mohammad Razab Ali, echoed the concern, “Today we caught at least five maunds of sucker fish in our net, but the fish we could actually sell weighed only six to seven kilos and earned us just Tk1,200.”
However, Shantas explained that the situation was very different just a few years ago.
“Seven or eight years ago, this fish suddenly started to spread. My family has been fishing in the Buriganga for generations. Pollution reduced the number of native fish, but we could still survive by fishing in this wetland beside the river. Now these new monsters have arrived,” he said.
“Earlier, we used to sell Tk5,000–6,000 worth of fish every day. Now we sell only around Tk1,000,” he added.
The sucker fish was first introduced to Bangladesh in the 1980s as an aquarium species. With its hard, armoured body and suction-cup mouth, it was marketed as a “cleaner fish” that feeds on algae inside glass tanks. Over time, many aquarium owners released the fish into nearby water bodies, unaware that it could survive, breed, and spread aggressively in the wild.
In Bangladesh, the first known sighting dates back to the mid-1980s in Gulshan Lake, though it went unreported at the time. Scientific identification came much later, in 2008, when researchers confirmed the presence of the Orinoco sailfin catfish in Bogura. Since then, media reports and field observations have documented the species across almost every type of freshwater habitat — rivers, ponds, lakes, haors, beels, canals, ditches, and even paddy fields — demonstrating its ability to thrive regardless of depth, flow, or seasonal variation. However, the number was very minimal.
Originally native to freshwater rivers and streams of Central and South America, particularly the Amazon Basin, the sucker fish has proven exceptionally adaptable. It can survive in fast-flowing or stagnant waters, polluted environments, and low-oxygen conditions, as long as freshwater and organic matter are present. This ecological flexibility, combined with rapid growth and early maturity, has allowed the species to spread far beyond its natural range, raising serious concerns about biodiversity loss.
A 2023 study published in the Bangladesh Journal of Zoology, titled “Invasive Suckermouth Catfishes in Bangladesh Wetlands: Present Status and Challenges”, notes that the first confirmed record of the species in open waters dates back to 2008. Since then, it has quietly colonised rivers, canals, lakes, haors, beels, and even paddy fields across the country.
Unlike native fish, sucker fish grow quickly, mature early, and thrive even in polluted or low-oxygen waters like the Buriganga. Their bony, armoured bodies protect them from predators, while their sharp spines tear fishing nets and injure birds and animals that attempt to swallow them. Researchers warn that the fish uproot aquatic plants and burrow into riverbanks, accelerating erosion and destroying breeding grounds of indigenous species. As their numbers increase, small native fish — many already under threat — are pushed out by competition for food and space.
The study also notes that fishermen frequently find their nets filled with sucker fish that have little to no market value. Removing them consumes time, damages equipment, and leaves less space for valuable species such as koi, shing, and punti. The study documents the presence of sucker fish in at least 17 rivers, including the Buriganga, Turag, Shitalakshya, Padma, Halda, and Meghna, with higher concentrations around urban centres where aquarium dumping is more common.
An analysis of media reports from 2009 to 2023 shows a sharp rise in sightings after 2020, peaking in 2022. The spread is most concentrated around Dhaka, Chattogram, and Khulna, suggesting that aquarium dumping in cities has been a key driver of the invasion. Reports now span dozens of districts and at least 17 major rivers, indicating that it took nearly two decades for the species to become fully invasive.
Recognising the growing threat, the government banned import, breeding, sale, transport, and possession of sucker fish in 2022. However, researchers warn that eradication will be extremely difficult, as the species is already firmly established in open water systems.
A few minutes’ walk from Shantas, on the far side of the beel, 62-year-old Mohammad Babul Hossain operates several boats and hires labourers to catch fish.
“Every year, the number of sucker fish increases,” he said. “In the past, if we invested Tk10,0000 for a season, we could earn around Tk70,000 in revenue. Now we don’t invest that much, because we barely make a profit of Tk10,000 to Tk20,000.”
He added, “If we go fishing and there are 10 kilos of deshi fish we can sell, our nets will contain more than 300 kilos of sucker fish.”
Banning import and trade was necessary, but it came too late. Without a national action plan that combines strict enforcement, scientific monitoring, public awareness, and financial incentives — where the government can buy the invasive fish from fishermen and dispose of it safely by burying it — the situation will continue to worsen. This is currently the only viable way to reduce the population and protect native species.
Md Hasan Faruque, Associate Professor, Department of Fisheries, University of Dhaka
Rashed Khan, a seasonal labourer from Netrokona working for Babul this season, said the fish cause serious injuries. Holding up both hands, marked with deep cuts, he added, “These fish hurt a lot. Our nets catch hundreds of them, and then we have to throw them back into the water because it’s impossible to kill them all. So our work doubles without any additional benefit.”
Evidence of their claims was visible along the banks of the beel, where numerous sucker fish lay dead.
“When it first became common, we even tried making dried fish, but it didn’t work,” Babul said. “It’s not edible and it’s of no use for anything. Slowly, it’s destroying our lives. Who knows what will happen in five years? Still, we haven’t received any help from the government or any authority. It spreads heavily in the wetlands in Keraniganj and Savar.”
Unlike native fish, sucker fish grow quickly, mature early, and thrive even in polluted or low-oxygen waters like the Buriganga. Photo: Saqlain Rizve
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Unlike native fish, sucker fish grow quickly, mature early, and thrive even in polluted or low-oxygen waters like the Buriganga. Photo: Saqlain Rizve
Another study published in 2023 in Asian Fisheries Science, titled “A Review of Suckermouth Armoured Catfish Invasion, Impacts and Management: Is Its Invasion a Threat to Bangladesh’s Fisheries Sector?”, shows that what fishermen are experiencing along the Buriganga is neither isolated nor accidental.
The study shows that sucker fish can establish explosive populations within five to ten years of introduction and are now reported from 38 of Bangladesh’s 64 districts. Rivers such as the Buriganga, Turag, Shitalakshya, Padma, Meghna, and Halda are already affected, placing the country’s most important fishing grounds directly in the path of invasion.
It explains why the damage feels so sudden and severe. Unlike native fish, sucker fish dig deep nesting tunnels — sometimes more than a metre into riverbanks — weakening shorelines, increasing erosion, and destroying breeding habitats. Dietary analyses cited in the paper show that while the fish mainly consume detritus, up to 11% of their stomach contents can be fish eggs, directly undermining the reproduction of already declining native stocks.
Drawing on evidence from India, Sri Lanka, Mexico, and Southeast Asia, the study warns that Bangladesh has entered the impact stage of invasion, where complete eradication from open rivers is no longer realistic. In similar ecosystems, carp production fell by nearly 20%, fishing efficiency declined sharply, and invasive catfish began to dominate catches.
Dr Md Hasan Faruque, an associate professor in the Department of Fisheries at the University of Dhaka, acknowledged that the sucker fish has already spread across a vast area of Bangladesh, making control extremely challenging — particularly in the Buriganga and Turag rivers and the surrounding wetlands of Keraniganj and Savar.
“Our research and field observations show that this invasive fish is now present in rivers, wetlands, canals, beels, haors, ponds, and even paddy fields across much of the country,” he said. “In some areas, especially around urban centres like Dhaka, the fish has moved rapidly through interconnected waterways.”
He warned that fishing communities are already paying the price. “Fishermen are finding their nets filled with sucker fish that have little to no market value, while native species like koi, shing, and punti are disappearing. Torn nets, injuries, and falling incomes are now common along rivers like the Buriganga,” he said.
“Banning import and trade was necessary, but it came too late. Without a national action plan that combines strict enforcement, scientific monitoring, public awareness, and financial incentives — where the government can buy the invasive fish from fishermen and dispose of it safely by burying it — the situation will continue to worsen. This is currently the only viable way to reduce the population and protect native species.”
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At least 100 children killed in Gaza since ceasefire: UN

At least 100 children have been killed in airstrikes and violence in Gaza since the start of the ceasefire three months ago, the United Nations said today (13 January).
“More than 100 children have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire of early October. That’s roughly a girl or a boy killed here every day during a ceasefire,” James Elder, spokesman for the UN children’s agency UNICEF, told reporters in Geneva from Gaza City.
He said the children had been killed in “airstrikes, drone strikes, including suicide drones… tank shelling… live ammunition.”
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CU’s self-proclaimed ‘zamindar’, former Jamaat leader, promoted despite controversy

The promotion was approved at the university’s 565th syndicate meeting held on Friday (9 January).
Screengrab from a video shows Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami leader and nominated member of parliament candidate for Chattogram-5, Sirajul Islam, speaking at a views-exchange meeting near the Chittaogong University campus on 4 September 2025.
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Screengrab from a video shows Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami leader and nominated member of parliament candidate for Chattogram-5, Sirajul Islam, speaking at a views-exchange meeting near the Chittaogong University campus on 4 September 2025.
Mohammad Sirajul Islam, a Chittagong University (CU) official who previously sparked controversy by claiming the university stood on his “ancestral land”, has been promoted from section officer to assistant registrar.
The promotion was approved at the university’s 565th syndicate meeting held on Friday (9 January).
Sirajul, a former Jamaat-e-Islami Hathazari upazila unit ameer, came under widespread criticism last year after a video of his remarks at a meeting in Jobra village on 4 September went viral.
In the video, he said, “Chittagong University stands on our ancestral land. We are the owners of this university and its surrounding areas. We are zamindars, and we will not tolerate anyone interfering with us.”
The remarks followed clashes between CU students and local residents on 30-31 August, during which at least 400 students were reportedly injured.
After the video surfaced, Sirajul was removed from his upazila-level party position, his Jamaat-e-Islami parliamentary candidacy was cancelled, and disciplinary action was taken against him by the university authorities, including temporary suspension.
Explaining the decision to promote him, CU Acting Registrar Professor Dr Mohammad Saiful Islam said, “Although he has been qualified for promotion, it had been withheld earlier due to discrimination. He was previously sanctioned and temporarily suspended because of the controversial remarks. However, regulations do not allow a promotion to be blocked indefinitely. The decision was made following the recommendation of the Anti-Discrimination Committee.”
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