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10:40am Wednesday 8th October 2008
Chancellor Alistair Darling has announced a £50 billion emergency rescue plan for stricken UK banks.
The scheme will see taxpayers' money used to buy stakes in major banks in an attempt to halt the meltdown in the financial sector.
Mr Darling said that the measures the Government was taking were in response to "extraordinary times".
"Those are absolutely critical so far as the system is concerned and we want to make sure that we can get the system going again," he told Sky News.
"It is a process that inevitably will take time. It is not an instant change but it is a restructuring, it is stabilising the system, and that is very important."
Eight UK banks and building societies - including RBS, Barclays, HBOS, Lloyds TSB and Nationwide - have signed up to an initial £25 billion scheme.
And the Government said it stood ready to make at least another £25 billion available for other eligible institutions.
The Bank of England is also extending the existing £50 billion Special Liquidity Scheme to £200 billion, while a further £250 billion is being pumped in under a debt guarantee scheme.
It is hoped that the extraordinary measures will provide the capital boost needed and help restore confidence to get banks lending to each other again.
But the Government is demanding that in return for the public-backed cash injection, banks must cap executive pay and shareholder dividends and commit to supporting lending to homebuyers and small businesses. Details of the stake-buying scheme reveal that taxpayers will buy preference shares in the banks, which means that they will be first in line for the pay-out of dividends.
Gordon Brown has presented a slimmed-down legislative programme for the coming year in a Queen's Speech focusing tightly on measures to help Britain through the economic downturn.
A HEALTH chief has written to local NHS organisations and urged them to review their child protection procedures, in the wake of the death of Baby P.
A TEENAGE tenant has had to tolerate a large hole in her kitchen ceiling for seven months.
Scheming Lambeth Council conned Government inspectors to protect its position as London’s most improved council, then tried to cover it up.
UP to 2,000 vulnerable people who were receiving their home care through Bexley Council are likely to have their help withdrawn.
A MAN from Redbridge has been arrested as part of a London-wide police operation to crackdown on commercial robberies in the run-up to Christmas.
Commons Speaker Michael Martin is preparing for a showdown with MPs furious over the Scotland Yard raid on Damian Green's parliamentary office.
Chancellor Alistair Darling moments before making his announcement
Chancellor Alistair Darling leaves Millbank studios, Westminster
RBS shares had plummeted almost 40 per cent
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