Friday, February 7, 2014

15-year old Mariyah…the youngest detainee in Egyptian prisons


Mariyah Al-Metwalli Samaha


The alliance supporting the elected Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi considered the verdict issued on Thursday against a 15-year old student, sentencing her to one year in prison, as “an example of the oppression and injustice executed by the military coup in the name of the law.”


The Juvenile Court in the Dakahlia governorate (in the Nile Delta) issued a verdict on Thursday sentencing the 15-year old student, Mariyah Al-Metwalli Samaha, to a year in prison and a fine of EGP 20,000 (about $2,800) on charges of possession of flyers with the Rabaa sign during her participation in a demonstration supporting President Morsi.


The prosecution charged her with inciting riot, being a member of a banned group (the Muslim Brotherhood), and demonstrating without a permit. Her case was transferred to the juvenile court, according to legal sources.


After the verdict was issued, Mariyah became the youngest Egyptian female sentenced to prison due to her participation in protests opposing the military authorities.


In a statement issued by the Alliance, it described the verdict against the high school student as harsh and “a disgrace to the Egyptian judiciary”, adding that “such sentences will only increase the Egyptian people’s determination to defeat the coup.”


According to legal sources, the verdict issued by the juvenile court in Dakahlia is subject to appeal, which the girl’s lawyer is expected to do.


It is worth noting that an Egyptian court in the city of Alexandria had already issued a ruling sentencing 14 girls supporting Morsi to 11 years and one month of imprisonment last November, as well as sending seven other girls to juvenile detention due to the fact that they were under the legal age of 18, on charges that, according to observers and activists, are baseless.


At the time, the ruling sparked criticism from international and local human rights organisations before the ruling was vetoed last December and reduced from 11 years to a suspended one year term, while the seven minors were released



Palestinian women changing the resistance


Palestinian women changing the resistance


On January 31 2014, the Popular Struggle Committees participants united as part of the “Melh Al-Ard” (salt of the Earth) campaign with the objective of revitalising the abandoned village of Ein Hiljeh in the Jordan Valley.


The choice of the location wasn’t random; it’s strongly connected to the political requests of the action: stop the on-going effects of the Occupation’s plan and reconfirm the Palestinian sovereignty over those territories in the Jordan Valley (Area C) that Israel want to annex with the assent of the negotiations carried out by US Secretary of State John Kerry.


More than 300 Palestinians from different villages of the West Bank gathered on the first day. An increased participation compared to that of 2013 in Bab Al-Shams, the Palestinian encampment erected on the outskirts of Jerusalem, where Israel wanted to build 35,000 housing units creating a corridor of settlements with the intent of fragmentising and isolating the Occupied Palestinian Territories.


The transformation and appropriation of Palestinian land, implemented by Israel, doesn’t only aim to the establishment of the Zionist idea of “Greater Israel”, it also has a less visible agenda: the control of the Palestinian population and resources.


The Palestinians counteract by refusing the occupant’s authority, reclaiming the Palestinian sovereignty, denouncing the occupation in all its elements and looking for new forms of nonviolent popular struggle.


The aim is to create an alternative grassroots movement able to escape from corrupt government policies but with a national impact. Direct nonviolent actions as Ein Hijleh have a powerful resonance: they raise consciousness and use creative tension as a mean of bringing down an unjust system, replaced by a just and human one.


“Melh Al-Ard” (Salt of the Earth) refers to a phrase from the bible, Matthew 13:5: “You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled underfoot.”


As the communication of the campaign states: “The sons and daughters of Ein Hijleh call upon our people to join the struggle to revive the village and protect our rights, history, culture and land. Daughters and sons of Palestine be the salt of this earth and stay steadfast on it.”


To this invitation, residents of Nabi Saleh responded by leaving their village, still involved in the weekly Friday demonstrations against the Israeli Occupation Forces, to head towards Ein Hijleh. Nabi Saleh is a small village of 500 inhabitants located near Ramallah and belonging to the Tamimi family.


An essential member of the Popular Struggle Committee, it’s one of the most active resistant villages in the West Bank. Positioned in area C, their struggle is against the illegal expansion of the Halamish settlement. In 2008 Ein Al-Qaws was taken over by the settlers, since then Nabi Saleh has been fighting against the Occupation system.


On Friday, Nabi Saleh’s inhabitants challenged the mobile checkpoints that were blocking the main roads to Ein Hijleh. After taking a secondary road and deceiving the Israeli police, they arrived triumphantly singing their way through the palms that surround the ruins of the old Canaanite village.


In the village of Nabi Saleh, the role of women is fundamental to the popular struggle. The commitment of women is recognised and supported because “they are the educators of the new generations. If women aren’t free nor will the new generations be”, Bassem Tamimi, recognised as Human Rights Defender by the EU, said.


Women are the driving force of the nonviolent movement in Nabi Saleh. Every Friday, while chanting slogans and proudly holding Palestinian flags, they daringly lead the march towards the tower at the entrance of the village or towards Ein Al-Qaws.


“Palestinian women are planting the seeds of resistance,” Manal Tamimi says. She explained that the women raise their children in a culture of resistance and they are teaching them not to be victims themselves but to react.


For this reason, despite the uncertainty and danger, the women of Nabi Saleh brought their children to Ein Hijleh. “We want them to learn the spirit of volunteering. It’s important for children to participate to these actions in order to grow aware of their role in the resistance,” Manal said.


Women and children of Nabi Saleh are well aware of how to act in case of raids from the army, they were born and raised under occupation and they’ve had to deal with it daily.


“Let them come. The army comes everyday to my house stepping on my land,” Rouan Tamimi said. Women also join these events to help deter the use of excessive violence towards the activists.


It is pivotal to involve children and women in the construction of the foundations of society in order to assure an inclusive community. The strength of the nonviolent movement is the equality of responsibility, regardless of affiliation, gender or social class. Anyone can give their contribution to the struggle.


The author is a Servizio Civile Internazionale Italia (SCI) volunteer with a Master’s degree in International Cooperation. She is currently living in Nabi Saleh and reporting about the Popular Struggle



Man dies in crash on Brotton bypass in East Cleveland

7 Feb 2014 19:19

A man has died following a serious accident on the bypass (right) between Skelton and Brotton




Scene of accident at Brotton Bypass


A man has died following a serious accident on the Brotton bypass.


Emergency services were called to the scene of a fatal crash on the bypass (right) between Skelton and Brotton.


The Great North Air Ambulance, police, fire brigade and road ambulances were at the scene.


A spokesman for the Great North Air Ambulance said a male casualty suffered multiple injuries and was pronounced dead at the scene.


Several vehicles were involved in the accident on the A174 at Brotton at 5pm tonight.


The air ambulance was called to the incident with the doctor-led trauma team on board.


Multiple patients were injured and several ambulances were also sent, as well as rapid response paramedics.


The injured were taken to James Cook University Hospital, in Middlesbrough.


Diversions were in place through Brotton village and motorists were being advised to avoid the area.


The road was likely to remain closed for some time.


Cleveland Police said they were dealing with an ongoing serious incident but had no further details at this stage.



Serious accident closes Brotton bypass in East Cleveland

7 Feb 2014 18:06

Emergency services are dealing with a serious accident on the Brotton bypass in East Cleveland




Road closed by police


A road was closed following a serious accident on the Brotton bypass.


Emergency services were called following the incident on the bypass between Skelton and Brotton this evening.


The Great North Air Ambulance, police, fire brigade and road ambulances are reported to be on the scene.


Motorists are being advised to avoid the area while the emergency services deal with it.


Cleveland Police said they were dealing with an ongoing serious incident but had no further details at this stage.



The day's news in pictures: February 7 2014

7 Feb 2014 17:08

The day’s biggest stories from the UK and around the world in pictures




Female Sumatra orangutan Matra holds her newborn cub at the Hellabrunn zoo in Munich, southern Germany


The Winter Olympics in Sochi officially got under way on Friday with a lavish opening ceremony designed as a depiction of the history of Russia as seen through the dreams of a young girl - although much of the focus was on the pre-show performance of controversial pop act t.A.T.u.


Large waves and strong winds are threatening to cause further significant flooding along the coastline of the south of England, forecasters are warning.


The Football League has said it cannot make progress with Massimo Cellino’s bid to purchase Leeds as it has yet to receive “all of the information it has requested for the relevant parties”.


The first statue in the UK of literary giant Charles Dickens has been unveiled - despite it being against his dying wish to have a monument erected in his memory.




Investigations under way after body of a man found in Borough Road flat

7 Feb 2014 16:01

Several police vehicles and an ambulance could be seen parked outside the property in Middlesbrugh town centre






Investigations are under way after the body of a man was found in a Middlesbrough flat.


Emergency services were called just after 2pm to Borough Road after the body was discovered.


Several police vehicles and an ambulance could be seen parked outside the property, which lies at the corner of Palm Street.


Officers could be seen going into the main entrance of the flats.


Several people had also gathered outside but none knew what had happened.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman said: “Police were called to a report of the body of a man at a flat in Borough Road at 2.05pm.”


She added investigations were now underway.


It has not yet been determined whether the death will be treated as suspicious.



Israel treats Gazans worse than animals: American Ex-marine



A former US marine has accused Israel of treating the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip as sub-humans and regarding them as animals.




In an interview with Press TV, Ken O’Keefe was asked about the reason behind the siege that has been imposed on the Gaza Strip.



“In fact…[many animals] will find better care in most Western countries than the people of Gaza find at the hands of the Israeli system, which has systematically looked at them and treated them as sub-humans,” Ken O’Keefe told Press TV from London.



“…We can see historically the treatment of the Palestinians has been nothing short of atrocious; they are treated like sub-humans on every level,” he noted.


“In fact, the entire population of Gaza suffers from one degree to another of post-traumatic stress disorder. The entire population of Gaza is continuously being punished,” O’Keefe said.


“So whatever the Israelis say or don’t say doesn’t change the fact that the people in Gaza are treated worse than many …[animals] are treated in the world.”


Israel occupied the Palestinian territories of East al-Quds, the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank during the Six-Day War of 1967. Israel conducted a self-proclaimed withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, but Israeli forces have been carrying out regular deadly forays into the sliver ever since the so-called pullout.


Gaza has been blockaded by Israel since June 2007, a situation that has caused a decline in the standard of living, unprecedented levels of unemployment, and unrelenting poverty.


HN/AB



Darlington set for one of their biggest tests of the season against Curzon Ashton

7 Feb 2014 12:30

Darlington are set for one of their biggest tests of the season when fellow promotion chasers Curzon Ashton visit Heritage Park




Darlington's Chris Hunter in action


Darlington are set for one of their biggest tests of the season tomorrow when fellow promotion chasers Curzon Ashton visit Heritage Park.


With their hosts Bishop Auckland scheduled to be in Northen League action against Newton Aycliffe tonight, there is a question mark over whether the wet pitch can accommodate games in successive days.


Curzon, second in Evo-Stik League Division One North, have won 10 of their 12 away games, but Darlington, in fourth place, are on a fine winning run having picked up maximum points in 10 of their last 11 league games.


Quakers have hit the goal trail, netting 25 in their last six games.



Wearside League: Champions Stockton Town seek a rot-stopping result

7 Feb 2014 12:20

Stockton Town face an in-form Redcar Athletic having lost their last two games and their last three away from home




Football


Reigning Wearside League champions Stockton Town seek a rot-stopping result in tomorrow’s derby at in-form Redcar Athletic.


Town are in unfamiliar territory by their own lofty standards having lost their last two games and their last three away from home.


Michael Arthur should be available after missing last week’s surprise 5-1 defeat to Ryhope which cost them top spot.


Guisborough reserve keeper Dan Dixon took Arthur’s place in the heavy home setback but bizarrely did not have a save to make as Chris Winn scored five times in a windswept encounter.


Stockton were 5-0 down by the time they got to grips with the blustery conditions in the closing half-hour.


James Ward smashed in the goal of the game from 25 yards when they finally made a breakthrough, but it was nothing more than a consolation for Stephen Gill’s shellshocked side.


The last four games between Stockton and Redcar have all finished 2-1 and have been shared with two wins apiece.


And fans of both sides will be in for a treat if the game turns out to be even half as good as the last meeting between the sides in January.


Adam Preston scored a dramatic late winner in that action-packed Wearside League Cup game and will be looking to add to his tally to draw level with James Kesterton as Redcar’s top scorer.


Striker James Swann returned from a long-term injury with two well-taken goals in the friendly 7-1 win against Marske a fortnight ago and will be hoping to be in the starting line-up.


Redcar’s six-match unbeaten run in all competitions has seen them take care of Prudhoe, Annfield Plain, Sunderland West End, Horden and Easington, as well as tomorrow’s visitors.


Having drawn 1-1 at Hartlepool in one of only two league games which went ahead last weekend, Wolviston are at home to Sunderland West End.



William Roache verdict 'irrelevant', judge tells jury in Dave Lee Travis

7 Feb 2014 12:05

Verdict must not be influenced by sex offence allegations against other celebrities, Judge Anthony Leonard warns




Dave Lee Travis


Jurors in the trial of veteran disc jockey Dave Lee Travis must disregard the verdicts of the William Roache trial and not be influenced by sex offence allegations against other celebrities, a judge has warned.


As he gave directions in the case against Travis - who is charged with 13 indecent assaults and one sexual assault - Judge Anthony Leonard told jurors to forget he is famous as they deliberate their verdicts.


The judge said: “You won’t be unaware that the Jimmy Savile inquiry has spawned a number of inquiries into various people who were well known in the 1970s and beyond.


“During the course of this trial alone Rolf Harris has appeared here and of course Bill Roache has been tried elsewhere.


“The verdicts of the jury in the Bill Roache trial are all irrelevant to your consideration of this case.


“There is no such thing as guilty or innocence by association.


“You have no way of assessing the strengths or weaknesses of any other investigations but you can in this trial.”


Coronation Street star Roache was yesterday found not guilty of two counts of rape and four charges of indecent assault following a trial at Preston Crown Court.


Australian entertainer Harris pleaded not guilty to 12 counts of indecent assault when he appeared in court last month.


Judge Leonard told jurors they must ignore those cases along with any media reports about Travis’s well-publicised trial.


“You are trying allegations of historic sexual assaults against someone who, as I say, has been in the public eye for many years,” he told them.


“The fact that the defendant is a well known personality does not change the rules of the way that you try this case.


“You must not allow yourselves to be overawed or deflated by the interest that this case has attracted.”


Travis, now 68, is on trial under his birth name David Griffin charged with indecently assaulting 10 women and sexually assaulting another in incidents dating back to 1976 and the height of his fame.


He denies all the charges, which relate to allegations from when he was working as a BBC DJ, as a broadcaster with Classic Gold radio, while appearing on Top Of The Pops and when starring in panto.


Judge Leonard said the trial had looked back at a time when things were different.


He told jurors: “There is a lot that has been said during this trial about the attitudes to sexual offences in the 70s, 80s and perhaps the 90s and now.


“It may be that attitudes of men and women in the work place have changed and that behaviour once thought acceptable is no longer tolerated.


“It may be that more women are less likely to put up with such behaviour and they have more efficient channels to deal with them.


“But this trial is not the place for a debate about changing attitudes towards sexual offences committed in the work place.”


Judge Leonard said many of the alleged offences “took place a long time ago”.


“It follows that memories will fade or disappear altogether,” he said.


“In addition, these offences are alleged to have happened at a time when the defendant had a very successful career and a full agenda of appearances spread across the country.”


The judge told jurors that after he has summed up the case and sends them to deliberate their verdicts “you then decide what evidence you accept as truthful and accurate and what evidence you reject as unreliable.


“It is your judgment alone that counts.”



Hartlepool full-back Neil Austin battling to be fit and maintain record

7 Feb 2014 11:46

Neil Austin, 30, suffered a badly bruised toe when blocking a shot in last week’s goalless draw with Scunthorpe




Colin Cooper with Craig Hignett


Hartlepool full-back Neil Austin, 30, is battling to be fit to maintain his record of having played in every one of his club’s games this season.


He suffered a badly bruised toe when blocking a shot in last week’s goalless draw with Scunthorpe United. Austin has featured in all of the club’s League Two and cup fixtures.


If he fails to recover in time, Jordan Richards looks likely to slot in to the right-back role at Dagenham and Redbridge tomorrow, after he completed a three-game ban following his red card at Fleetwood Town.


Pools seek a double having won the home game between the sides in November.


Both sides are in mid-table though Dagenham are four points and six places better off than their visitors.



Teesside University's £400,000 boost for small business

7 Feb 2014 11:40

Teesside University has been successful in leveraging £400,000 of European Regional Development funding to support 40 small to medium-sized enterprises




Sue Smith, assistant dean of Teesside University Business School


Small businesses across Teesside will have the chance to benefit from thousands of pounds worth of business support from Teesside University over the next 18 months.


The university has been successful in leveraging £400,000 of European Regional Development funding to support 40 small to medium-sized enterprises.


Each business will benefit from £10,000 worth of support as part of the new Leading Growth scheme run by Teesside University Business School, supported by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).


Applications are being invited from those who would like to take part and an event on Thursday, March 6 will be an opportunity to meet the organisers and find out more about the project.


Sue Smith, assistant dean of Teesside University Business School, explained: “This is a really exciting opportunity for small to medium-sized enterprises to benefit from funding that will have a direct impact on their business.


“We will be able to make a real impact on the companies that are selected to take part, to grow and expand their business.”


The first cohort will start in May and the second in September with 20 business leaders on each. They will undergo 10 months of leadership training, master classes and one-to-one coaching which includes a residential session and peer supported learning.


The programme has been carefully developed by university experts to ensure there is a rigorous approach to development and rich content which includes input from inspirational industry leaders.


Expressions of interest are invited from established small businesses that have been trading for three years and have a minimum of four employees and fewer than 250.


Sue, who set up a similar successful scheme previously in Lancashire, added: “I know how successful a scheme like this can be for a business. Many people with smaller companies find it hard to take the time to develop the leadership skills they need to move the business to the next level.


“We will work in partnership intensively with each of the 40 businesses selected to maximise their growth potential and this will grow employment opportunities for the future economic success of this region.”


The Leading Growth event will take place at 5pm on March 6 at the university’s Darlington Campus. For details email leadinggrowth@tees.ac.uk or visit tees.ac.uk/events



Facebook share: Part 2 - Carling Cup bus


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Morning news headlines for February 7, 2014


LORD SMITH TO VISIT SOMERSET LEVELS


The chairman of the Environment Agency will today visit the Somerset Levels for the first time since it was hit by floods, as more residents were urged to evacuate their homes overnight.


Royal Marines who had been in the region building sandbag defences were drafted in to assist with the evacuation of residents in the village of Moorland this morning.


Another night of heavy rain overwhelmed local flood defences and the water level began to rise.


PM URGES ALL TO ENCOURAGE UK UNION


Prime Minister David Cameron is calling on the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland to send a message to Scotland as it prepares to vote in the independence referendum: “We want you to stay.”


In a speech at the Olympic Park in London, Mr Cameron will summon up the spirit of patriotism of the 2012 Games as he argues that the whole country will lose if Scotland votes to leave the UK.


While accepting that the decision on September 18 is a matter for Scots alone, Mr Cameron will urge the English, Welsh and Northern Irish to do whatever they can to influence the outcome, telling them: “You don’t have a vote, but you do have a voice.”


US BANS LIQUIDS ON RUSSIA FLIGHTS


The US Homeland Security Department is banning all liquids from hand luggage for non-stop flights from the United States to Russia.


The ban comes after the department warned airlines that terrorists might try to smuggle explosives on board hidden in toothpaste tubes. The warning said terrorists might try to assemble explosive device in flight or upon arrival at the Olympics.


Delta Airlines, the only US airline with regularly scheduled non-stop flights to Russia, posted a warning about the Transportation Security Administration policy yesterday.


OSBORNE TO VISIT AIRPORT RAIL BOOST


George Osborne will seek to highlight Government efforts to boost the economy in the north of England when he helps start work on a £20 million rail upgrade at Manchester Airport.


The Chancellor will insist growth will not be “concentrated in any one place” following a warning from cabinet colleague Vince Cable that London was “draining the life out of the rest of the country”.


His visit comes ahead of next week’s Wythenshawe and Sale East parliamentary by-election, where the Conservatives are battling not to be pushed into third place by the UK Independence Party.


DOZENS TAKEN ILL AT BELFAST CONCERT


Fourteen young concert-goers have been admitted to hospital and many more were treated at the scene during an incident in Belfast, health authorities said.


Doctors and ambulances were called to help up to 50 rave party goers outside the Odyssey Arena. But a spokeswoman for Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, which represents the city’s hospitals, said no major incident had yet been declared.


Odyssey general manager Adrian Doyle said they arrived at the venue already drunk.


US SEES RUSSIAN HAND IN BUGGED CALL


Two senior American diplomats, thinking their conversation about the Ukraine was secure and private, were caught disparaging the EU in a phone call that was apparently bugged.


United States officials say they strongly suspect Russia of leaking the conversation.


The suspicions were aired last night after audio of the call was posted to the Internet and amid continuing criticism of the US in Europe and elsewhere over National Security Agency (NSA) spying on foreign leaders.


700 MEDICS CALL FOR CAR SMOKING BAN


Around 700 medics and health experts are calling on the Government to ban smoking in cars carrying children ahead of a Commons vote on Monday.


In a letter to the British Medical Journal (BMJ), respiratory experts said secondhand smoke was a “major cause of ill health in children”, damaging the developing lungs, causing sudden infant death and leading to thousands of hospital trips every year.


Signatories to the letter are being co-ordinated by Dr Nicholas Hopkinson from Imperial College London and chairman of the British Thoracic Society’s chronic obstructive pulmonary disease specialist advisory group.


JUDGES RULE ON TRIBUNAL FEES ORDER


High Court judges who have been urged to quash an “unlawful” order which imposed fees for the first time on workers wanting to bring tribunal proceedings against their employers announce their decision today.


Lord Justice Moses and Mr Justice Irwin will rule on judicial review action brought by the union Unison over what it describes as “punitive” fees, which it says are “unfair and should be dropped”.


Under changes introduced last July workers in the UK are now charged a fee to bring a claim, a fee if the claim is heard and a further charge if they want to appeal against a decision.



Shortlist for North East Business Awards 2014 to be revealed on Tuesday

7 Feb 2014 10:20

Full details of companies and organisations who are in the running for the top honours will be announced in our Business Supplement




North East Business Awards


The shortlist for the North East Business Awards 2014 will be revealed on Tuesday.


Full details of the companies and organisations from around the region who are in the running for the top honours will be announced in our Business Supplement.


Winners from three sub-regional events will go forward to the regional final at Hardwick Hall in Sedgefield on May, 1, 2014.


Teesside’s heat will be held at the Olympia Building at Teesside University on April 3.


The Durham and Wearside heat will be at Ramside Hall Hotel, Durham, on March, 6 and Tyneside and Northumberland’s event at the Hilton Hotel, Gateshead is on March 20.


Awards will be made in categories including Export, Manufacturing and the coveted Company of the Year crown. The awards are organised by the Evening Gazette and The Journal.


To book your ticket visit http://ift.tt/1kjZN6z.



Your Daily Muslim: Saamer Akhshabi


Saamer Akhshabi

Saamer Akhshabi



Iranian Muslim Saamer Akhshabi was just like any other Georgia Tech grad student studying computer networking – except for the Molotov cocktail-esque device in his apartment and the materials to make more. Unfortunately for this wannabe jihadi, his plan erupted right before (and into) his eyes.


When Akhshabi was messing with his would-be weapons, one of them caught fire. Akhshabi’s body was then engulfed in flames, as some kerosene had poured onto his clothing. It is unknown how he survived, but it is estimated that 90% of his body was burned. His apartment building had to be evacuated. It’s a shame he ended up engaging in less-than-noble activities that got him where he is, because he’s actually pretty smart. However, he’s not smart enough to reject the obvious fiction that is the Qur’an, or realize that Obamacare (which he was a big supporter of) will actually harm both the economy and the medical field. Then again, he apparently isn’t such a big fan of America, so I guess his support of Obamacare makes sense in that light…




200 jobs to be created after Able UK wins major oil rig recycling contract

7 Feb 2014 09:40

Deal will mean three platform topsides and a steel platform jacket will be dismantled at the Able Seaton Port on Teesside






Billingham-based Able UK has been awarded a contract for the disposal of four offshore structures from the Shell-operated Brent Field in the North Sea.


The contract will see three platform topsides, as well as a 138m-high steel platform jacket, transported from the Brent field over 100 miles north east of Scotland to Able Seaton Port on Teesside.


The timing of the arrival of the first topside is subject to further offshore preparation work and regulatory approvals.


Able UK Limited Managing Director Andrew Jacques said: “We are delighted to have been selected to undertake this significant platform decommissioning project.


"This six-year contract will see the deployment of the very latest techniques and technologies in the recycling of these materials.


“We are looking forward to working with our partners on this project, and we are justifiably proud to have been selected for this exciting project.


“Able Seaton Port is already a superb facility and it will see further investment from Able UK Limited with the construction of what will be one of Europe’s heaviest load bearing quays (60t/m2infrastructure at the northern end of the dry dock to receive the structures.


"This will enable the topsides and jackets to be shipped to the new quay for dismantling.”


About 100 jobs will be created during the 18 month construction of the new quay with the six-year recycling contract itself generating a further 100 new jobs.


It is anticipated that over 97 per cent of the structures will be reused or recycled.


The platforms will be individually transported from the Brent field to the Tees on board the newly-constructed Allseas “Pieter Schelte” vessel, which has been specially designed for single lift installation and removal works.



'Cut to the bone' Cleveland Police force facing budget black hole of £11.5m by 2018

7 Feb 2014 08:50

Cleveland Police and Crime Panel has been told to expect further enforced Government cuts in the coming years




Police Commissioner Barry Coppinger


Cleveland Police is facing a budget black hole of £11.5m by 2018 – despite already being “cut to the bone”.


The force announced in November that 123 jobs would be axed as it looks to make an extra £4.8m of savings on top of the £26m cuts already made from a total budget of £137m.


But now the Cleveland Police and Crime Panel has been told to expect further enforced Government cuts in the coming years.


A report to the panel revealed that although the final 2015/16 settlement has not yet been confirmed, it is assumed Cleveland’s grant will fall by £4.5m (5%).


And it is forecast that there will be a budget gap of £11.5m by 2017/18.


The report was compiled by the Task and Finish Group, set up to examine the key issues and financial pressures surrounding the budget for 2014/15 and beyond at Cleveland Police.


Barry Coppinger, Police and Crime Commissioner for Cleveland, said in November that the force was “down to the minimum number of people it needs to deliver policing in Cleveland”. He added then that the force had been “cut to the bone”.


Mr Coppinger admitted yesterday that the £11.5m shortfall would present a “real challenge” for Cleveland Police.


“What we need to do is to continue to plan ahead,” he said.


“It’s a considerable challenge – the only positive aspect is it’s four years away and hopefully we have got time to plan. We are already pursuing a number of measures to bridge the budget gap over the next few years, and we are on track.”


These measures include internal restructuring including cutting middle and senior management posts, an early retirement and voluntary redundancy scheme, renegotiating external contracts, better use of estates, including the sale of the Ladgate Lane HQ and closer collaboration with other forces and agencies.


Mr Coppinger said the Home Office’s view was that Cleveland Police was “making progress and moving forward” in planning for the future.


The report to the Police and Crime Panel showed that by November last year the force had reduced to 1,391 police officers from 1,727 in 2010 but was moving “to a sustainable operating model of 1,333 officers to deliver policing in Cleveland”.


In July 2011, the then chairman of Cleveland Police Authority, Peter Race, said the minimum number of officers required to maintain the quality of service was 1,500.


The report noted that with 1,333 officers, Cleveland will have 2.4 officers per 1,000 population, above the national average of 1.9, adding: “This partly reflects the level of need in the area. In order to attempt to maintain this, there will need to be ever greater focus on savings and efficiency elsewhere.”


James Wharton, Conservative MP for Stockton South, said he will be “watching closely” to ensure Cleveland Police manages the budget savings “carefully and appropriately”.


The MP said: “It is clear that ordinary police officers are doing their job and achieving more with less, now the management need to do the same and to look seriously at where savings can be found that will not hit the front line.


“I find it hard to believe they cannot find savings to protect the service we all rely on if they look seriously at their cost base.


“We all know that difficult decisions have to be taken as we get our economy back on track.”


More on this topic


Barry Coppinger: 'Police officers taking patients to hospital is a drain on our resources'


MPs call for Cleveland Police cuts rethink - as figures show personnel has been cut by a third


Latest cuts will reduce Cleveland Police officer numbers to 1,342 by March 2015


Cleveland Police to axe 58 MORE officers in bid to save extra £4.8m


Cleveland Police preparing to budget for further £7m cuts in next financial year



Thornaby drug dealer jailed after cocaine was sold in the vicinity of two primary schools

7 Feb 2014 08:10

Stephen Swainston, 28, locked up for three-and-a-half years after being caught in operation targeting Class A drug dealers in Stockton




Stephen Swainston


A drug dealer who sold cocaine in the vicinity of two schools is behind bars for three-and-a-half years today.


Stephen Swainston was caught in “Operation Eros” which targeted Class A drug dealers in Stockton.


Prosecutor Rachel Masters said: “The supply of drugs over that period occurred in the vicinity of two schools.”


Swainston was seen dealing rocks of crack cocaine in April to May last year, Teesside Crown Court heard yesterday.


Five other people snared by undercover police in a series of deals were jailed for a total of 13 years last October.


Drops took place at a number of locations in Stockton and Thornaby, including near Oxbridge Lane and St Patrick’s primary schools.


At the time, Swainston was already on bail after he was caught with Class A drugs more than a year earlier.


He and Leah Wilson, both 28, were in a Vauxhall Astra when they were stopped by police in the Mandale Triangle area of Stockton.


Passenger Wilson had 2.6g of crack cocaine secreted about her body and a set of electronic scales in her handbag.


Wilson tried to protect Swainston by hiding the bag of drugs when they realised they were being followed by police.


A wrap of heroin and £350 cash were also found in the car at 3am on March 15, 2012.


Weeks later on April 9, Swainston was found asleep in a car on Suffolk Street, Stockton, with a small amount of heroin.


Texts which related to drug dealing were found on his phone.


Swainston, of Tipton Close, Thornaby, admitted conspiring to supply, supplying and possessing with intent to supply Class A drugs.


Wilson, of Bath Lane, Stockton, admitted possessing Class A drugs with intent to supply.


They had 94 previous offences between them but none for drugs supply. Defence barristers said the two were now free of drug addictions.


Peter Wishlade, for Swainston, said he accepted he dealt drugs to fund his own habit.


He told how Swainston had a reasonable work record, but broke his neck in a motorbike accident and became “catastrophically addicted” to heroin after he was introduced to the drug to relieve the pain.


Swainston showed remorse for his low-level street dealing.


Peter Sabiston, for Wilson, said it had been almost two years since her crimes, during which she lost a child.


She had moved on since, was now “a very different person” and had lost weight over the worry of the court case.


Judge Tony Briggs said prison sentences were inevitable for both defendants.


He jailed Swainston for three-and-a-half years.


He suspended Wilson’s one-year sentence for two years with supervision and 150 hours’ unpaid work, in light of her reform attempts in the two-year case delay.



More pictures of Boro's staff and players making open-top bus return to Middlesbrough

7 Feb 2014 08:00

Part Two: Tens of thousands of supporters turned out to see the side return to the town - here's more pics of the players and staff on board






Tens of thousands of Boro fans turned out to see their heroes return to the town with the Carling Cup in early March 2004.


The bus set off from Ayresome Park, making its way through the town and ending up at the Riverside Stadium.


On board were the players and staff who had made the victory possible - and here are some of the pictures of them.


Click here to see more pictures of the players bringing the cup back to Middlesbrough 10 years ago.



Boro defender Dani Ayala could be sidelined for a month, Aitor Karanka confirms

7 Feb 2014 07:55

A major set-back for the club and for Ayala, who penned a three-and-a-half year deal with Boro just two weeks ago




Dani Ayala in action against Doncaster


Dani Ayala could be sidelined for a month, Aitor Karanka has confirmed.


The Spanish defender suffered an ankle injury in the 0-0 draw at Doncaster last weekend and it transpires the damage was worse than initially thought.


“Dani has a serious injury, he has a problem with his ankle,” said Karanka.


“I think it will be four, five or six weeks, it is the injury he had at Doncaster.


“I thought, and he thought, it wasn’t a serious injury but, finally, we now know it is a serious injury.”



It’s a major set-back for the club and for Ayala, who penned a three-and-a-half year deal with Boro just two weeks ago.


“We were fighting to get his permanent contract,” added his compatriot Karanka. “We managed to do that, which was good, but now he is injured, that’s football!”


The good news is Jonathan Woodgate is fit and available for tomorrow’s home game against Blackburn and he’s expected to partner Ben Gibson in the centre of a defence that’s kept seven clean sheets in the last nine Championship fixtures.


Albert Adomah is also fit to play after missing the Doncaster game through an ankle injury.