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We may need to look at free speech laws, says Streeting

Healthy secretary Wes Streeting said that the ministers may “look” at the laws of the online conversation after the arrest of comedian Graham Linehan.

The health secretary added that such laws put “more expectations on the police” and “diluting the focus and priority of the people” and “this is obviously something we need to look at,” he added.

Streeting, the BBC, only by the lawmakers who applied the laws “people are very easy to criticize the police,” and the ministers want to focus on the street crime rather than the police tasks on social media, he said.

His comments come after he was arrested at Heathrow Airport on suspicion of encouraging violence in the tasks on the X website.

The arrest caused a reaction from figures such as opposition parties, including the author JK Rowling and conservatives.

Downing Street refused to comment on Linehan’s arrest on Tuesday, and said it was “an operational issue for the police.”

However, 10 spokespersons added: “The Prime Minister and the Minister of the Interior were clear about where crime and policing priorities were, and this is reduced serious violence crimes such as anti-social behavior, theft, street crime and knife crime and violence against women.”

When the BBC’s Linehan case was asked today, Streeting repeated these words.

“Since the Prime Minister and the Minister of the Interior are open, we want the police to focus on the streets rather than tweets.” He said.

“But what we pay attention to is that as a government that supports the police to keep us safe, the police are there to implement the laws we have law as a parliament.

“For years, for years, with good intentions, the parliament has slaughtered more expectations about the police and the public has diluted the focus and priorities, this is obviously something we need to look at.”

When the law needs to be changed, Streeting said: “When it comes to speech, the context is the king. As legislative bodies, we should really print carefully when it comes to free speech limits.”

Streeting, “Sometimes it is difficult for the police, because they have to implement the law in writing, not as intended,” he said.

He also said, “All of us – let’s be honest – quite anxious.”

The street added: “And you think that when we write these laws, this is what the parliament aims? So we have to do the law correctly. The police have to implement the law of the parliament.”

57 -year -old Mr. Linehan said he was detained by five armed officers at Heathrow Airport after flying from the USA.

In an online Astack article, he said that the authorities later worried about their health and took him to the hospital.

Metropolitan police said that a man in his 50s was arrested at Heathrow airport on September 1 and was taken to hospital.

Police said the situation did not threaten life and continued to expect more investigations.

Sebbact said in his article that the arrest of Linehan was related to three tasks in X since April and challenged the issue of “a” trans-women man “in the women’s field.

The conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch criticized the arrest: “sending five officers to arrest a man for a tweet, not policing. Politics. Under the worker, we see that routine theft, knife crimes and attacks are not solved, resources are wasted to thought polymity.”

However, the new Green Party leader Zack Polanski said that the posts to BBC Newsnight were “completely unacceptable” and arrest appeared “proportioned”.

Reform British leader Nigel Farage is expected to form a railway against the Linehan case in the UK and the “censorship” in the UK when it gives evidence to the US judicial committee on Wednesday.

Separately, Mr. Linehan faced a separate harassment charges and will be in court on Thursday.

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