
Greyhounds forced to undergo security checks and wear visitor passes during Holyrood visit
Holyrood sources said it was "no joke"
MUTTS BE JOKING Greyhounds forced to undergo security checks and wear visitor passes during Holyrood visit
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
GREYHOUNDS yesterday had visitor passes put round their necks by jobsworth security staff after they were led into Holyrood for a photocall with an MSP.
Parly guards at the public entrance even put the pooches' beds through metal scanners normally reserved for items like rucksacks and handbags.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
3
Dogs were given visitor badges
3
The move has been branded bizarre
3
Scottish Green MSP Mark Ruskell wants to end greyhound racing
They allowed the dogs to keep their collars and coats on as they took part in their checks.
But their beds were then passed through scanners.
Staff at the reception then wrapped visitor passes around the necks of the hounds, which they were seen wearing throughout their visit to Holyrood.
A Holyrood source said: 'Security staff were robust with the dogs. The visitor passes were no joke.'
The checks were mocked by parliamentary sources, with a Scottish Tory insider joking: 'People will find this bizarre approach by Parliament staff as somewhat over the top or even barking mad.
'Here's hoping they show some common sense if dogs visit Holyrood again in support of other legislation, such as Maurice Golden's plans to crackdown on dog thefts.'
The bizarre checks came despite security staff having prior knowledge of the animal's arrival to the Scottish Parliament, for an event to tie in with the launch of Mr Ruskell's member's bill.
A Scottish Green spokesman told us: 'As far as we knew they were guests so they had to have passes.
'They may have gotten a lot of attention, but they were very well behaved guests.'
Parly chiefs last night admitted they had searched the dogs 'like all visitors' — but insisted the visitor passes were a 'bit of fun'.
However, this was disputed by our insider who said staff insisted on the dogs wearing the lanyards.
A Holyrood spokesman said: 'Like all visitors, the greyhounds and their baskets were searched by our security staff.
'But the wearing of 'visitor passes' was a bit of fun initiated by the photocall organisers to help promote the Bill.'
Lewis Hamilton's beloved dog Roscoe diagnosed with pneumonia as carer gives health update
Some sources said they were surprised to see dogs in parliament, having believed they were not allowed in unless they were guide dogs or other working dogs.
But Holyrood will welcome more mutts to the Scottish Parliament on Monday for the annual 'Dog of the Year' contest, run by the The Kennel Club and the Dogs Trust.
Mr Ruskell's rescued greyhound Bert, is in the running for top dog, alongside SNP MSP David Torrance's golden retriever Buster and Scottish Tory MSP Craig Hoy's black lab Roma.
Two bills around dogs are going through Holyrood, with Mr Ruskell's ban on greyhound racing being introduced to parliament on Wednesday and Scottish Tory MSP Maurice Golden's bid to make dog theft a specific criminal offence also being considered by MSPs.
Nats chiefs came under fire last year as they refused to bring in a ban on XL Bullies, only to u-turn months later and follow England and Wales by making it illegal to own the dogs without a permit.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Diane Abbott is both an old Leftie and a true Tory
Whenever MPs legislate some monstrosity, we are often assured that the debate reflected 'the House of Commons at its best', as though an odious bill is rendered less odious by everyone having observed parliamentary niceties. Anyone seeking such solace after the approval of Kim Leadbeater's Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill will have a search on their hands. Friday's debate only confirmed what a wretched, incurious and insubstantial Parliament we have, with few exceptions. One of them is Diane Abbott, the Mother of the House. She used her allotted time to make one final plea to her colleagues not to take the NHS into the killing business. It was a speech both practical and humanist but marked above all by scepticism. Abbott lodged no religious objection. She is not, she pointed out, implacably opposed to assisted suicide; she simply could not vote for such a dangerously flawed piece of legislation. Abbott spoke a language Leadbeater displays no fluency in: doubt. She told MPs she 'would not put my life, or the life of anyone dear to me, in the hands of a panel of officials'. As for those who asserted that assisted suicide would always be voluntary, she accused the Bill's supporters of failing to consider people primed to defer to authority, who would 'think that, because their doctor raises it with them at all, they are being guided in that direction'. Pro-suicide MPs might not 'take seriously' such concerns but 'anyone who knows how institutions work should be watchful of it'. Here was a socialist warning against excessive deference to public sector bureaucrats and sainted NHS doctors. She showed an up-close understanding of the state's flaws that could only come from someone who has spent a career advocating state intervention. There is no conservative like an old Leftie. The MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington says she came into politics with hopes of being 'a voice for the voiceless'. Who, she asked her colleagues to imagine, 'could be more voiceless than somebody who is in their sick bed and believes that they are dying?' We all probably know someone who doesn't want to make a fuss or be a burden on their loved ones. 'Within the family,' Abbott said, 'the most powerful coercion is silence: it is the failure to answer when a question is put'. How many people will fall silent and go along with what they imagine to be in the best interests of the people around them? We are about to find out. What we can take a guess at is the demographic profile of those who will respond in this way. It will be older women, socialised to put their husband and children first. Women from minority religious and ethnic backgrounds, communities where it is traditional for men to do the talking and the decision-making and for women to be talked to and have final decisions presented to them. Such people exist beyond the ken of a House of Commons populated by privileged graduate professionals, those who, in Abbott's words, 'have for the entirety of their adult life been confident in dealing with authority and institutions'. What about those who don't share that confidence? When you legislate with only Esther Rantzen in mind, you're going to overlook a lot of people. Diane Abbott didn't just give a good speech. MPs give good speeches all the time. She took a stand at an hour of great moral failing and made the case for social conscience at a time of personal vanity. When a future Parliament comes to reckon with what this Parliament has done, it will look back with contempt upon a fit of callousness posing as compassion.


Daily Record
3 hours ago
- Daily Record
Humza Yousaf slams 'abuse of anti-terror laws against pro-Palestine activists'
Thousands marched on Saturday calling for an end to the war in Gaza, amid concerns that the Iran-Israel conflict could spark wider regional devastation. Former Scottish first minister Humza Yousaf said the Government was 'abusing' anti-terror laws against pro-Palestine activists at a protest in London this afternoon. Thousands marched on Saturday calling for an end to the war in Gaza, amid concerns that the Iran-Israel conflict could spark wider regional devastation. Protesters waved Palestinian flags, donned keffiyeh scarves and carried signs including "Stop arming Israel" and "No war on Iran" as they marched in the sweltering heat in central London. Addressing crowds at the national march for Palestine in Whitehall, former SNP leader Yousaf said: 'We gather here once more as the dogs of war once again try to sell us lies, this time about an imminent attack from Iran, just as they did when they lied to us about the weapons of mass destruction they told us Saddam Hussein had. 'So we stand here and we say to Keir Starmer today what we said to Tony Blair in 2003: 'In our name, don't you dare send our sons and daughters on a frivolous war for your political gain'.' Mr Yousaf added: 'While we stand a stone's throw from Downing Street, let's make it clear to the Prime Minister: You try to intimidate us with your anti-terror laws by abusing them, but you'll never silence us as we speak out against the genocide that you're supporting. 'We're not the terrorists – the ones that are literally killing children, they are the terrorists. Let's say clearly to Keir Starmer: 'End your complicity, stop selling arms to Israel, stop supporting a genocide, sanction Israel, recognise the Palestinian state'.' A pro-Palestine protester has meanwhile said it is 'absolutely horrendous' that the Government is preparing to ban Palestine Action. The Home Secretary is preparing to ban the group following its vandalism of two planes at an RAF base, it is understood. If enacted, this would make it a criminal offence to belong to or support Palestine Action. The decision comes after the group posted footage online showing two people inside the base at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire. The clip shows one person riding an electric scooter up to an Airbus Voyager air-to-air refuelling tanker and appearing to spray paint into its jet engine. Artist Hannah Woodhouse, 61, said: 'Most of us share that horror of actually being part of a genocide because our Government is not only arming the Israeli military, but we're also providing surveillance and training the military in this country.' The Government, since yesterday, have said they're also going to start to try to proscribe peace activists who are trying to take action against the genocide – so Palestine Action are now being targeted by our government, which is absolutely horrendous.' Speaking at the march for Palestine, Ms Woodhouse added: 'Counter-terrorism measures, it seems, are being used against non-violent peace protesters. The peace activists are trying to do the Government's job, which is to disarm Israel. The duty of any government right now is to disarm a genocidal state.' The march comes amid rising tensions in the Middle East, as Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi warned that any US involvement in the conflict between Israel and Iran would be 'very, very dangerous'. US President Donald Trump reportedly approved plans to launch strikes on Iran earlier this week but held off in the hope Tehran would agree to scale back its nuclear programme. Blasts were heard in southwestern Iran on Saturday as the conflict entered its ninth day, with Israel claiming to have targeted 'military infrastructure'. In London, many demonstrators chanted 'Shame on you' as they passed a small counter-protest organised by the pro-Israel group Stop the Hate near Waterloo Bridge. Police have confirmed that a bottle was thrown at the Stop the Hate counter-protest, though it fell short and no one was injured. A suspect was chased down the Strand by officers and has been taken into custody.

Scottish Sun
3 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
US deploys B-2 stealth bombers capable of firing bunker buster bombs needed to target Iran nuke reactor to military base
Scroll down to read the latest updates... WARPLANES READIED US deploys B-2 stealth bombers capable of firing bunker buster bombs needed to target Iran nuke reactor to military base Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE US has deployed B-2 stealth bombers - the warplanes capable of firing the deadly bunker buster bombs needed to target Iran's nuclear reactor. Donald Trump is all but poised to join Israel's campaign of bombing Iran as they both seek to obliterate Tehran's nuclear program – but currently has a two week deadline in place. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 B-2 Spirit drops a GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bomb Credit: USAF 5 The US Air Force airmen look at a GBU-57 at Whiteman Air Base in Missouri 5 Israeli air defense system fires to intercept missiles during an Iranian attack over Tel Aviv 5 Donald Trump talks to reporters upon his arrival at Morristown Municipal Airport in Morristown, New Jersey Credit: Reuters 5 Six B-2 stealth bombers from Whiteman Air Force base in Missouri seem to be heading towards a US Air Force base in Guam, according to various flight tracking data, Fox News reports. The B-2 are the only bombers capable of carrying the terrifying Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP). At the heart of its nuclear program is the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant, which is encased in steel more than 300 feet beneath solid rock - and has so far escaped serious damage. Israel's arsenal lacks huge bunker buster bombs needed to destroy the underground enrichment facility - some 125 miles from capital Tehran. Only America currently has the fearsome GBU-57 bombs capable of blitzing Fordow - and only the B-2 can deliver them. Multiple strikes would still be needed to reach the fortified underground laboratories of Fordow, packed with centrifuge technology at the heart of Iran's Doomsday programme. The 20-foot-long monster bomb can explode to obliterate enemy targets that are often hidden beneath mountains and massive layers of rocks. Its 30,000lb weight means that its sheer kinetic force enables it to reach deeply buried targets – almost 200ft beneath the surface. It comes after Israel announced it had killed the Iranian military commander who funded the October 7 attacks which detonated the Middle East crisis in a revenge air strike. Evil terror kingpin Saeed Izadi - head of the Palestinian Division of Iran's Quds Force - was blown to bits in a pinpoint attack in the Iranian city of Qom. Israel Defence Force said Izadi was 'one of the architects' of the horror in which 1,200 died and 250 were kidnapped 'and among the few who knew of it prior to its execution.' Izadi was said to be a top money man in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps who sent state cash Palestinian terror organizations in Gaza and the West Bank. The Israeli military later said that it killed another commander of the Guards' overseas arm identified as Benham Shariyari, during a strike on his vehicle in western Tehran. Shariyary was said to be "was responsible for all weapons transfers from the Iranian regime to its proxies across the Middle East". The ongoing cull of top Iranian commanders - and their replacements - gathered pace along with another assassination of a top nuclear boffins. IDF officials refused to identify the scientist said to play a vital role in the rogue Islamist regime's plans to build an atom bomb. He was killed by a missile fired from a drone after being moved to a 'safe house' - which Israeli intelligence located overnight. His death is the 11th assassination of a nuclear scientist in the past nine days in a special Israeli manhunt dubbed Operation Narnia. Stay up to date with the latest on Israel vs Iran with The Sun's live blog below...