News
Report gives warning as Welsh Government fails to deliver on human rights promises
Cross-Party Group calls for new Human Rights Wales Act
A NEW report has warned that the Welsh Government’s failure to deliver on its own human rights commitments could have “serious consequences” for people across Wales.
The Cross-Party Group on Human Rights, chaired by Plaid Cymru MS Sioned Williams, published its findings on Wednesday (Nov 12) following an inquiry into the current state of human rights in Wales.
A decade of recommendations “not delivered”
The report notes that despite more than ten years of recommendations from the United Nations, Senedd committees, independent researchers and civil society groups, the Welsh Government has not fulfilled its Programme for Government pledge to incorporate key international human rights treaties into Welsh law.
Ms Williams described the findings as “both sobering and galvanising”, warning that human rights in Wales remain “promises rather than protections—aspirations rather than guarantees”.
The report recommends the introduction of a Human Rights Wales Act at the “earliest opportunity”.
Poverty, discrimination and barriers to services
In her statement ahead of a Senedd debate on Wednesday, Ms Williams said many people in Wales continue to face poverty, inadequate social security, and barriers accessing healthcare, housing, education and justice.
She added that discrimination is still denying rights to disabled people, women, racialised communities and children.
“The timing couldn’t be more crucial,” she said. “A powerful, coordinated anti-human-rights movement is growing in Wales and across the world, threatening to roll back our hard-won freedoms and rewrite the rules on whose rights, bodies and lives deserve protection. If we want a Wales that values dignity, equality and justice, we must fight for it.”
Amnesty backs call for new legislation
The report was produced by Professor Simon Hoffman of Swansea University and Glenn Page of Amnesty Cymru.
Glenn Page, Director of Amnesty International Cymru, said it was no longer enough for the Welsh Government to simply express support for human rights.
“The Welsh Government must protect human rights in law to ensure that now, and in the future, people’s everyday rights are protected and upheld,” he said.
“That’s why Amnesty International Cymru is calling for a Human Rights Wales Bill—because it’s the only way to ensure protections for people’s rights to education, health, housing and all the things we need to live with dignity and security.”
Thanks to contributors
Ms Williams thanked Professor Hoffman and Mr Page for their “longstanding dedication” to strengthening human rights in Wales.
News
Why NASA’s new race to the moon is partly powered by Wales
SPECIAL REPORT – How latest lunar plans are a truly an international effort
THE SPACE RACE is back — but forget Apollo’s flag-planting sprint. NASA’s Artemis programme is a marathon of supply chains, standards and long-term presence. As NASA’s massive Artemis II rocket slowly rolls out to the launch pad today (Sunday) this isn’t just about who plants a flag first. It’s about who builds the infrastructure, sets the rules, and sustains influence in the next era of lunar exploration and beyond.


On the surface, Artemis looks like an American show: a Florida launchpad, NASA’s Space Launch System rocket, an Orion spacecraft. But peel back the layers and it becomes obvious this is a genuine coalition effort — one where the United Kingdom, and increasingly Wales, has a meaningful supporting role in the rules, the hardware and the industrial backbone that will define deep-space missions for decades.


The UK is not a passenger
Britain isn’t supplying the giant rocket, running the launch, or leading the programme overall. Yet the UK is embedded in Artemis through three critical dimensions: diplomatic frameworks, essential hardware and specialist capability.
First, the UK signed the Artemis Accords in October 2020. That sounds like paperwork, but it matters. In a future of frequent missions, lunar bases and commercial activity, the real competition will be over behaviour, interoperability and trust: who shares data, who can work safely together, and who helps shape the norms that govern activity beyond Earth. The Accords are the scaffolding for all of that — and signing them puts Britain inside the tent as the rules of the next space era are written.

Second, the most tangible proof that Artemis is international is bolted directly to the spacecraft. Orion relies on a European Service Module delivered through the European Space Agency, with Airbus as prime contractor. This module isn’t a decorative “European contribution”. It provides the unglamorous essentials that make the mission possible: electricity, propulsion, thermal control, and key life-support resources such as air and water. Without it, the spacecraft cannot operate as intended.
Third, that European contribution draws on a distributed industrial chain — the modern reality of spaceflight. The UK’s space sector matters because it is strong in the behind-the-scenes work: high-reliability engineering, advanced electronics, precision materials, software and testing. These are not headline-grabbing roles, but they are the difference between a mission concept and a mission that flies.
So where does Wales fit?
To be clear and honest about scale: Wales isn’t designing the SLS rocket, selecting the crew, or dictating mission timelines. But Wales is demonstrating real relevance in the technologies the long-duration exploration economy will depend on — and that is what “powered by Wales” should mean.
Cardiff-based Space Forge is the standout example. At the end of 2025, the company successfully generated plasma aboard its ForgeStar-1 satellite — describing it as a world-first capability for commercial orbital semiconductor manufacturing. In plain English, it showed that the extreme conditions needed for processes like gas-phase crystal growth can be created and controlled autonomously in low Earth orbit.

Why does that matter to a Moon programme? Because better semiconductor materials and tougher high-performance components can mean more efficient power systems, more resilient communications, and hardware that survives harsh environments for longer. These are the incremental gains that ripple through satellites today and, in time, through the systems needed for sustained lunar operations tomorrow.
This is not isolated innovation, either. Wales is building the kind of ecosystem that turns a clever demonstration into a supply-chain advantage. The Wales Space Cluster Catalyst Fund — backed by the UK Space Agency in partnership with Space Wales and the Welsh Government — is designed to unlock opportunities for Welsh businesses and researchers, building skills and collaboration across the sector.
In the new space race, that ecosystem-building is not window dressing. It is how places secure a future share of contracts and talent. You do not have to own the rocket to benefit from the industry — but you do have to be ready when primes and agencies decide who they trust to deliver.
Why the international angle matters — especially for Wales

The new Moon race isn’t just prestige. It is strategic: presence, influence, and economic leverage in a domain where China is advancing its own lunar ambitions and partnerships. America’s answer is not isolation, but alliance — spreading cost and risk, and building legitimacy through international cooperation.
For the UK, Artemis offers leverage: a voice in standards, industrial participation through ESA-linked hardware, and the technology spillovers that come with serious programmes. For Wales, the opportunity is more specific: to become known for specialist capability — in advanced manufacturing, materials, electronics, and the research-to-industry pipeline that turns prototypes into products.
The real prize isn’t the first set of footprints. It is the long tail: sustained supply-chain roles, industrial growth and well-paid skilled jobs.
This isn’t about waving a flag at a distant launch. It is about doing what Wales has always done best: building clever, reliable things the world increasingly needs — and making sure Wales is on the supply lists when lunar exploration stops being a spectacle and becomes routine.
News
Lib Dems urge tougher action as homelessness figures remain stubbornly high
THE WELSH Liberal Democrats have called for stronger action to tackle homelessness in Wales, warning that the number of people relying on temporary accommodation has remained largely unchanged for more than two years.
The party cited the latest figures showing 10,818 people were living in temporary accommodation, with 1,287 occurrences of people being placed into temporary accommodation in October 2025.
Jane Dodds, leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats, said the figures showed that existing policy was not delivering meaningful improvement.
She said: “These numbers have barely changed in over two years and homeless people are being let down by consecutive Welsh Governments. Legislation by itself is meaningless unless the Welsh Government also [backs it with the resources and action needed].”
Ms Dodds added: “We must help these hidden victims of the cost-of-living crisis who have been ignored by those in Cardiff Bay for far too long.”
The party said it would seek to address the situation through a major expansion of social housing, proposing the construction of 30,000 new social homes for rent.
Ms Dodds said: “The Welsh Liberal Democrats would build 30,000 new social homes for rent, ensuring that people on low incomes or with experience of homelessness can access a safe and secure home.”
Focus on rural pressures
The comments come amid growing concern about the pressures faced by councils across Wales, with rising demand for emergency accommodation and increasing costs to local authorities.
Sandra Jervis, the party’s lead candidate for Ceredigion Penfro, said rural areas faced particular challenges and claimed Ceredigion’s figures highlighted systemic issues.
She said: “The fact that Ceredigion has the highest number of homeless people in Wales outside of Cardiff shows the failure of our Plaid-led local authority.”
Ms Jervis added: “Rural homelessness presents unique challenges beyond the scarcity of homes, with a combination of poverty and inaccessibility to jobs and other services accumulating into a dreadful sense of isolation from the rest of society.”
Housing campaigners have previously warned that rural homelessness can be less visible than in cities, with people more likely to “sofa surf”, live in insecure private rentals, or face long distances to access support services — factors that can make the problem harder to identify and resolve quickly.
The Welsh Government has previously pointed to its homelessness prevention approach and housing investment programmes, while councils continue to warn that demand is outstripping supply — particularly for larger family homes and genuinely affordable rental properties.
Farming
Natural Resources Wales urges farmers to follow safe slurry spreading rules
NRW is reminding farmers across Wales to take key steps to prevent pollution as the organic manure spreading season re-opens.
During the autumn and winter “closed periods”, restrictions were in place to stop slurry and other high-nitrogen manures being spread, helping reduce the risk of agricultural pollution.
Grassland spreading can resume from Thursday (Jan 16), with spreading on tillage land re-opening on Friday (Jan 31). However, NRW said a number of controls under the Control of Agricultural Pollution Regulations (CoAPR) will remain in force until the end of February.
Those restrictions include limits on application rates — no more than 30m³ of slurry per hectare, or eight tonnes of poultry manure, in a single application — with at least three weeks required between applications.
Before spreading organic manure, producers must also carry out field inspections to assess weather and soil conditions, slope, ground cover and proximity to watercourses, to help reduce the risk of runoff.
Farm businesses are expected to plan and record all applications in their Nitrogen Management Plan to ensure nutrients match soil and crop need and remain within nitrogen limits.
Spreading is prohibited on waterlogged, flooded, snow-covered or frozen ground — including soil that has been frozen for more than 12 hours in the previous 24 hours.
NRW said its teams will continue to support farmers while monitoring compliance.
Simon Griffiths, team leader of NRW’s Agricultural Pollution Inspection Team, said: “As the closed periods come to an end, we want to remind farmers, tenants, landlords and contractors of the restrictions which remain in place until the end of February.
“This means anyone considering spreading organic manure needs to ensure the conditions are suitable before work starts.
“NRW is committed to protecting the environment and any instances of pollution will be investigated and appropriate enforcement action taken.”
NRW is urging farmers and members of the public to report pollution incidents immediately via its online “report it” form or by calling 0300 065 3000.
-
Crime4 days agoMilford Haven man tells jury he feared being run over outside pub
-
Crime5 days agoMan jailed after samurai sword brandished in Pembroke Dock street brawl
-
Crime6 days agoFather jailed for 35 years after baby hurled at television
-
Education6 days agoPembrokeshire Learning Centre placed in special measures following Estyn inspection
-
Crime4 days agoDock woman sentenced after assault on neighbour during ‘psychotic episode’
-
Crime6 days agoMilford Haven man, 65, convicted of sexual assault on teenage girl
-
Crime4 days agoMilford Haven man denies sexual assault charge
-
Crime4 days agoOn-duty paramedic racially abused at Withybush General Hospital










