It's called Hot Pursuit.
Well established procedure in International Law.
Which they are, invariably in this situation.Pontius Navigator wrote: ↑Thu May 21, 2020 6:15 pmBut only if the offender was in their territorial waters to begin with.
From the Fail before anyone claims left wing biasBoris Johnson was today warned he cannot stonewall demands to sack his right hand man Dominic Cummings for flouting lockdown rules.
The maverick No10 chief travelled from London to his parents' Durham farm in March to self-isolate with coronavirus symptoms - despite the government's own restrictions banning non-essential journeys.
The bombshell revelations sparked accusations of hypocrisy with Mr Cummings' position branded 'untenable', and signs of disquiet among Tory MPs.
Dorset police and crime commissioner Martyn Underhill warned this morning that the flagrant breach will be thrown in the face of officers as they tried to restrain sun-seeking visitors on what is expected to be a hot bank holiday weekend.
But extraordinarily, sources close to Mr Cummings claimed he is 'not remotely bothered' about the storm caused by his actions, and there is 'zero chance' of him resigning. No10 has refused to comment officially, despite questions about what Mr Johnson knew and when. The PM's official spokesman told reporters at the time that Mr Cummings was isolating 'at home'.
Five people have been charged with the murder of a law student in a drive-by shooting.
Aya Hachem, 19, died when shots were fired from a passing car in King Street, Blackburn, on Sunday.
Feroz Suleman, 39, Abubakir Satia, 31, Uthman Satia, 28, Judy Chapman, 26, and Kashif Manzoor, 24, are due to appear before magistrates on Saturday, Lancashire Police said.
They are also charged with attempted murder.
That charge relates to a man who was believed to have been the intended target.
The force said two shots had been fired - the first hit a building but the second hit and killed Ms Hachem.
.
European leaders have reacted with fury after Britain revealed its plans for a tough new quarantine regime requiring arrivals into the UK to self-isolate for 14 days.
Home Secretary Priti Patel has received widespread backlash both at home and abroad after unveiling the measures, which have been dubbed 'ineffective and unenforceable' by the travel industry.
Ms Patel's announced yesterday that anyone arriving into the UK from June 8 would be legally required to self-isolate for two weeks or face fines of up to £3,200.
France immediately hit back at the UK last night, saying it 'regretted' the decision and would look to impose a 'reciprocal measure' on Brits arriving at its borders.
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Britons are urged to stay away from
beaches today with dry, sunny weather and 66F highs
Meanwhile Italy, which at one point was the epicentre of Europe's coronavirus crisis, said it hoped Britain would rethink its rules and called for a 'coordinated approach'.
Miss Patel last night confirmed that the new quarantine regime would apply to almost all arrivals, including people returning from holidays abroad.
But she also revealed a list of 39 categories of people who would be exempt from the rules, including healthcare workers, pilots and those coming over from Ireland.
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And you didn't did even mention his whiffle waffleness, Lord Spaffer of Mendacity, the would be Churchillian, Johnson!Boac wrote: ↑Sun May 24, 2020 7:46 amThat's it! The latest 'Dominic' stupidity does it for me. 'Rumours' now of 3 trips away from home during 'lockdown'. We have also now discovered that '100,000 tests a day' probably means '50,000' since Tony Hancock appears to be counting the nasal and throat swabs on ONE PERSON as 2 tests!!??**. Chuck in the cross-Channel fiasco as well. Even if 'Domestic Dom' does go there are still too many other incompetents in the government.
Having been a Conservative b=voter for all but a couple of elections I will now not vote for this bunch of charlatans again. We are certainly 'working closely' with the US!
Furious Tory MPs demanded Boris Johnson sack top aide Dominic Cummings today for breaking the coronavirus travel lockdown, as the first cracks in party unity appeared.
Steve Baker, a former Brexit minister and a senior hardline Brexiteer like Mr Cummings, broke cover to demand the advisor be removed, demanding the Prime Minister 'take back control' of events squirming from his grasp.
The Prime Minister has mounted a determined defence of his controversial lieutenant over revelations he travelled 270 miles from London to Durham while the public were told to stay at home, telling allies: 'It's not like he was visiting a lover.'