Thursday, February 20, 2014

Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Friday 21 February, 2014.


You can contribute to the live blog by posting your comment below, and you can also tweet us @EveningGazette to share breaking news stories, pictures and opinions.


Our Teesside breaking news live blog begins at 07:00am every weekday and is updated throughout the day and into the evening.



France, Germany to send troops to Mali


A picture taken on March 16, 2013, shows French snipers wearing a ghillie suit sitting on the top of a hill during operations in the Adrar des Ifoghas in Mali


A picture taken on March 16, 2013, shows French snipers wearing a ghillie suit sitting on the top of a hill during operations in the Adrar des Ifoghas in Mali’s Kidal region.


Wed Feb 19, 2014 9:58PM GMT



France and Germany say they will deploy troops to Mali as part of a joint military brigade in the West African country.



“France and Germany have decided to send elements of the Franco-German Brigade to Mali; the first deployment under the aegis of the EU and in an African location,” said a joint statement issued on Wednesday.


The decision was made during a security and defense meeting between the two countries in Paris.


The statement said the forces will join a European mission, which was launched in February last year, to train nearly 3,000 Malian forces. It did not mention the exact number of the troops involved.


On the same day, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said the EU is “preparing to renew” the mandate of the mission until 2016.


Paris and Berlin also called for greater foreign involvement in training troops and security forces in the African country.


Chaos broke out in the West African country after Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure was toppled in a military coup on March 22, 2012, for failing to contain the Tuareg rebellion in the north.


Last month, French soldiers in Mali killed nearly a dozen Muslim fighters in the northern desert region of Timbaktu.


France launched a war on Mali in January 2013 under the pretext of halting the advance of the fighters, who had taken control of the north of the country.


Some political analysts believe that Mali’s abundant natural resources, including gold and uranium reserves, could be one of the reasons behind the French war.


DB/MHB/SS



Video: Canine capers making Stockton dog Sydney a TV superstar with owner Stacey

20 Feb 2014 20:46

For Stacey Nicholson and prodigious pooch Sydney, training was key in getting them on Channel 4's Superstar Dogs: Countdown to Crufts




WITH VIDEO Stacey Nicholson from Stockton and her dog, Sydney are set to feature in Channel 4's Superstar Dogs. 19/02/14



Training your dog to sit can feel like an achievement to most, but that’s just the start if your dog happens to be a superstar.


And for professional pet sitter Stacey Nicholson and her prodigious pooch Sydney, training was the key in getting them on Channel 4’s Superstar Dogs: Countdown to Crufts.


Presented by John Barrowman, the series began on Monday and features dogs and their owners from all over the UK competing in a number of challenges.


While Sydney licked her face, Stacey, 23, said: “It’s really worth a watch.


“About 1,000 dogs applied but only 250 got through to the first audition and then only 30 made it to the TV recordings.”


Judged by The Kennel Club expert Dave Ray, the dogs and their owners compete in a number of disciplines such as swim and fetch, a penalty shoot- out and finally a giant assault course aptly called the Dogstacle Course.


Showing off the skills that got them past the auditions, Stacey and Sydney performed some of their best tricks.


In one trick, Sydney sat attentively while Stacey slowly stretched out her arm and took aim at him with pistol shaped fingers.


Then with a shout of “BANG!” Sydney keeled over onto his side - quite “dead”.


But not for long, soon the clever canine was crawling along the floor, jumping, hiding and barking on command.


Stacey, from Stockton, started training three-year-old Sydney when he was a puppy.


And it doesn’t take long to realise that Stacey loves all animals.


But Stacey’s mum, Alison, told of how her daughter’s confidence had been knocked after an attack by a Japanese Akita left Stacey with scars on her arms and legs.


Alison said: “I didn’t think she would ever work with animals again but how wrong can you be, the house is full of them.”


Now Stacey runs her own franchise of Paw Pals and makes her living pet-sitting.


While she played with her pet grass snake Spot, Stacey told us how, despite Syd being cute and clever, life with him isn’t always a walk in the park.


She said: “Everyone on the show took to Sydney.


“John Barrowman loved him, he was rolling around on the floor with him and the crew called him Brussel because he’s a Beagle-Jack Russell cross.


“But in one of the auditions I kept telling Sydney to sit and he just kept barking at me.


“He will do what he’s told - if he feels like it.”



  • Stacey’s heat airs on Thursday, February 27, at 5.30pm.



Driver who killed Billingham runner as he crossed road in Dubai jailed for just two months

20 Feb 2014 20:14

Driver, reported to have been drunk when he hit Gavin Duffy, also ordered to pay £24,484 'blood money' - compensation to Mr Duffy’s family




Gavin Duffy


A DRIVER who killed a Billingham man as he crossed the road in Dubai is reported to have been jailed for just two months.


The driver, who is reported to have been drunk when he hit Gavin Duffy, was also ordered to pay £24,484 “blood money” - compensation to Mr Duffy’s family.


Mr Duffy died on November 23 last year when he was hit by a car in the United Arab Emirates city.


The 29-year-old respected runner and fundraiser was on holiday visiting friends when the tragedy happened.


Reports from The National website state that a 31-year-old Brazilian man appeared at Dubai Traffic Court on Tuesday where he was convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol, causing a person’s death and fleeing the scene of an accident.


It is reported that he was jailed for two months, had his driving licence suspended for six months and ordered to pay Dh150,000 - £24,484 - “blood money” which is compensation to Mr Duffy’s family.


Prosecutors immediately filed an appeal against the sentence. The first hearing will be on March 6.


The report states that the driver fled the scene after Mr Duffy was hit but a passerby noted down the car licence plate number and informed the police.


The witness, from Lebanon, is reported to have said the driver did not even brake after the accident.


The driver is also reported to have tried to leave the country following the accident.


He went to his workplace in Jumeirah Lake Towers to pick up his passport and then headed to Dubai International Airport.


He was arrested in the duty-free area before he could board a 4.20am flight to Beirut.


Boro fan Mr Duffy, a quantity surveyor, was an accomplished marathon runner and was a member of Marsh House Harriers.


Following his death relatives and friends launched an appeal to repatriate his body back to Teesside.


They raised a staggering £10,000.


The remainder of the money was given to Mr Duffy’s favourite charities - The Butterwick Hospice, The Jo and Mya Fund, Zoe’s Place baby hospice and Dementia UK.


Following Mr Duffy’s death his parents Michael and Susan paid tribute to him describing him as “happy, kind and caring person who liked his independence and loved travelling.”



Over 50 jobs at risk as house builder Yuill Homes collapses

20 Feb 2014 20:04

Company is based in Hartlepool and is well-known across the wider Teesside area for developments in Middlesbrough and Stockton




David Mullins, managing director of Yuill Homes which has fallen into administration


ONE of Teesside’s oldest and best known house builders has collapsed into administration.


More than 50 jobs are at risk after builder Yuill Homes hit financial trouble.


The founding Yuill family - which sold the company in 2006 - has said it is “disappointed” at the news.


The company is based in Hartlepool and is well-known across the wider Teesside area for developments in Middlesbrough and Stockton.


The firm carried out extensive developments in areas such as Billingham, Hemlington and Coulby Newham.


It was also behind Grey Towers Park built in 2005 in Nunthorpe, Middlesbrough.


Administrators Baker Tilly said attempts are now being made to sell the company as a going concern.


It is currently working on a single development site in Brierton Lane in Hartlepool and also owns a number of other sites for future development, said Baker Tilly.


Yuill family spokesman Edward Yuill, managing director of Mowden Park Estates, said: “We are, of course, disappointed that Yuill Homes has gone into administration – the company was founded by my grandfather Cecil Yuill in 1927 and has been responsible for a sizeable proportion of the region’s housing stock in the intervening years, building up to 1,000 homes every year at its height and employing some 500 skilled personnel.”


“In 2006, however, concerned over the future of the housing sector, we sold the entire company to Irish house builder Taggart Holdings and have had no commercial interest or responsibility since that date.”


The company was bought out by its management team in 2008 after Taggart went into administration. It is owned by Newbridge Enterprises, which was formed out of directors of Yuill and the Bank of Scotland (Ireland).


Managing director David Mullins said: “The last five years have seen some of the toughest market conditions in the industry and we have done everything possible to avoid this route.


“However the financial economic climate has left us with little alternative.


“That said, we are hopeful that from this process there will be an emerging business that continues to build on a successful brand that has been in the North-east housing market for over 85 years.”


Steven Ross, a restructuring and recovery partner at Baker Tilly, said: ‘Our immediate priorities are to speak with employees, suppliers and other stakeholders as well as those people who are in the process of buying a new home from the company.’


The company has suffered falling income in recent years. In 2012 it recorded an annual loss of £3.4m, down from a profit of £953,128 a year earlier.


At the height of the housing boom in 2007, the company enjoyed sales of more than £60m.



Police alerted after body found at bottom of cliffs near Saltburn

20 Feb 2014 19:47

Investigations 'at a very early stage' after alarm was sounded when a walker made the grim discovery




Police tape


Police were alerted after a body was found at the bottom of cliffs near Saltburn.


The alarm was sounded at around 3pm today after a walker made the grim discovery.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman said investigations were “at a very early stage”.


Dave Cocks, Redcar Lifeboat’s deputy launching authority, said both lifeboats from Redcar were called to assist.



Three teens banned from Boro games until 2017 after Riverside smoke bomb

20 Feb 2014 19:40

Three males, all aged 14-17, have now been banned by the club until June 2017 after the incident in a South Stand toilet block




Riverside Stadium


THREE teenagers have been banned from Boro games until June 2017 after a smoke bomb was let off inside the Riverside.


The club has completed an investigation after the incident in a South Stand toilet block during half-time of the Wigan Athletic game on January 28 - the first time a pyrotechnic had been discharged inside the stadium.


The three males, all aged 14-17, have now been banned by the club in line with a precedent set three years ago when a group of Boro fans were convicted for pyrotechnic use at Burton Albion. A breach could see the period extended, or even a lifetime ban.


Safety officer Chris Patzelt said the club is “committed to providing a safe environment for all supporters to watch football” and will act against “any person who threatens the safety and reputation of both our supporters and the club itself.”


He added: “We hope the bans handed out to those responsible will make others think twice.”


Meanwhile, with crowd of more than 20,000 expected, there are special arrangements for Saturday’s 12.15pm kick-off against Leeds, with fans urged to arrive early to avoid queues.


The Riverside ticket office and club shop will open at 9am, pre-ordered tickets available from 10am. The South Stand Boro Bar won’t open before the game.



Theft of 117 wheels from 27 brand new trucks shocks South Bank business

20 Feb 2014 19:34

Bill Whyte, the owner of Autoplate UK, faces a £10,000 bill after the thieves struck some time overnight on Tuesday




Bill Whyte of Autoplate UK


A BUSINESSMAN has been left counting the cost of “mindless” criminals who stole 117 wheels from 27 brand new trucks in a matter of hours.


Rows of callously damaged and wheel-less Ford Transit flat bed vehicles line the yard at Autoplate UK in South Bank, where company owner Bill Whyte faces a £10,000 bill.


“This can affect a business badly and already has,” said Bill.


Some time overnight on Tuesday thieves stole the 117 rare wheels and caused substantial damage to the trucks.


Employees at the Middlesbrough Road East vehicle delivery business discovered the theft when they arrived for work on Wednesday morning.


“We start work at about 6am in the morning and when I got in, a couple of drivers were already here,” said Bill.


“One came over to me and said ‘it’s a disaster’.


“It was pitch black at the time so I couldn’t fully see what had happened but I was in shock when I saw the full extent of it.


“It took me two days to fully assess the damage.”


As well as the wheels, fitted with rare Bridgestone 623 tyres, six tailgates were stolen, windows were smashed, and doors damaged.


“Eight of them will have to go to the body shop which will cost £7,000 to £8,000,” said Bill. “The man there was astonished at the brutality used.


“Then to replace the wheels it will cost about £2,300 and for the windows, about £1,000.


“It takes a long time to earn that money.”


“This has been planned in advance,” he added. “It is a massive operation.


“They have gone through the fence outside our office and across the field with the wheels.


“Moving the amount taken would have been a massive job.”


Bill is now hoping people will come forward if they have any information.


“Within the business community, people are relaying to others what has happened so if anyone is offered wheels for sale, I hope they pass information on,” he said.


“Never in my working life have I ever experienced anything like this before.”


Cleveland Police are appealing to anyone who may know the whereabouts of the wheels or anyone with information. They should call DC Matthew Waterfield at Redcar and Cleveland CID on the non-emergency 101 number or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.



Shay Given aims to sign off Boro stint in style against Leeds

20 Feb 2014 19:24

Shay Given will be looking for a clean sheet against Leeds, but would sacrifice that shut-out for a win on his swansong




Shay Given


Shot stopper supreme Shay Given aims to sign off his Boro stint in style in Saturday’s showdown with Leeds.


The keeper wants to end his successful loan spell at Boro by collecting a tenth clean sheet.


But he would sacrifice that shut-out so long as Boro win in his swansong.


“There’ll be a bit of sadness with it being my last game here,” said the veteran, who returns to Aston Villa on Monday.


“I really want to go out on a high at Middlesbrough and keep another clean sheet.


“But if I can’t do that and it finishes 10-9 then I’d take that now because we just want to win the game. It’s all about the team not about me personally, we just want the three points.”


Given has proved a massive hit with fans and admits that the vocal support helped him find his feet at the Riverside.


“I want to say thank you for the way the fans made me welcome,” he said. ”They have been fantastic to me personally.


“There’s always a bit of trepidation when you are settling in to a new club but the fans here have been fantastic.


“With my connections with Newcastle, one of the big local rivals, it could easily have gone either way but they have been phenomenal from the first game, home and away. So I want to thank them for that.


“And they haven’t just backed me but the whole team and I want them to keep that up for the rest of the season and keep on believing.


“I have been happy how things have gone and how the fans have reacted to me on a personal level was very pleasing.


“And I like to think I’ve helped the team a little bit as well.”


Boro tried to extend the clean sheet specialist’s loan deal in January and he was keen to stay but the club couldn’t agree terms with Villa on deadline day,


“I would have liked to have stayed until the end of the season and try to help Boro climb the table but it was very much out of my hands and I have to go back to Villa,” he explained.


“But I will look back fondly on my time at Boro. I was delighted that Mr Karanaka brought me in. I’ve had great times here and enjoyed every minute of it.”



Daylight attacker stamped on victim's head before leaving him in middles of the street

20 Feb 2014 18:51

VIDEO: CCTV showed Lee Harvey punching, kneeing and kicking a man on a Gresham street in Middlesbrough



CLEVELAND POLICE PICTURE


Lee Harvey


A street attacker who stamped on a man’s head three times and left him lying unconscious on the ground has been jailed for five years.


CCTV showed Lee Harvey punching, kneeing and kicking a man on Enfield Street, Gresham, Middlesbrough.


The 26-year-old admitted stamping on him wanting to knock him out, to “neutralise” him and “take him down”.


He’d told a jury he thought he was doing the right thing on August 30 last year.


Sentencing him yesterday, Judge Peter Bowers said: “You did stamp on his head while he was unconscious, and left him there lying in the road.”


The video showed the victim knocking on a house door.


He argued with a woman at the house before Harvey emerged from the home and pushed him into the road, Teesside Crown Court heard.


Prosecutor Rachel Masters said it was a sustained attack where the victim tried to defend himself but Harvey overpowered him.


She said Harvey pushed, held and punched the man, putting him to the ground.


Then he kneed him and kicked him on the ground, one witness said “like a football”.


The footage showed the victim unconscious in the middle of the road until another man dragged him to the side.


He suffered a punctured lung and bruises to the eye and jaw.


He had fractured ribs but it could not be proved that Harvey was responsible as he’d also been assaulted two days earlier.


Harvey, of Valley Road, Grove Hill, Middlesbrough, admitted affray but denied attempting to inflict grievous bodily harm with intent.


He was convicted of that charge by a jury after a short trial earlier this month.


Harvey told jurors the victim tried to grab him and threatened to stab the woman.


He said: “I thought he was going to stab me as well. I thought I’ll just take him down.”


He claimed he was in fear of his life when he had the man on the ground.


He said he acted to prevent an assault, stop the man reaching into his pockets and keep him on the ground.


He added: “I didn’t put full force but I did stamp on his head. I didn’t intend to cause any injury to him. I just tried to shock him, to give him a warning, to say leave her alone.


“I thought I was doing right at the time but obviously I wasn’t.”


He was previously jailed for three years for grievous bodily harm in 2006 and received an extended sentence for assault and affray in 2009.


At the time of the attack he’d been out of prison for three years and just finished his licence period.


Brian Russell, defending, said yesterday: “Trouble came to his door rather than him seeking it out.


“It doesn’t excuse what happened thereafter.


“He felt at the time he was doing the right thing. He realises he lost control.


“He’s now demonstrating a degree of maturity and realises that he can’t behave in this way.”



Police search for missing Middlesbrough man Darren Fenwick

19 Feb 2014 21:38

Police are trying to trace 37-year-old Middlesbrough man, Darren Fenwick, who has been missing since Tuesday evening




Missing Middlesbrough man Darren Fenwick


Police are appealing for help in tracing a 37-year-old Middlesbrough man who has not been seen since yesterday evening (Tuesday).


Officers are concerned for Darren Fenwick’s welfare and ask anyone who has seen him or his silver 53 plate Vauxhall Corsa to contact them.


Darren is described as white, 5ft 11in tall and of slim build. He has a prosthetic left arm and he walks with a limp to his left leg and may be using a walking stick. He has mousey cropped short hair and a tribal tattoo on his right arm.


He was last seen wearing a grey zip-up cardigan, light blue jeans and black footwear.


Anyone who knows of his whereabouts or who has seen his vehicle is asked to contact Cleveland Police on 101.



Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Wednesday 19 February, 2014.


You can contribute to the live blog by posting your comment below, and you can also tweet us @EveningGazette to share breaking news stories, pictures and opinions.


Our Teesside breaking news live blog begins at 07:00am every weekday and is updated throughout the day and into the evening.



Amnesty censures Kenya over Somali refugees

File photo shows Somali refugees walking at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya.




Amnesty International says extensive intimidation and human rights abuse is forcing Somali refugees out of Kenya.



In a report published on Wednesday, the human rights group warned over the hostile environment in Kenya, saying that the refugees are actively targeted by the police with indiscriminate arrests.


According to the report, named No Place Like Home, the refugees are even denied access to registration, meaning they are illegally staying in the African country.


“The environment in Kenya is now so hostile that some refugees feel they have no option but to return to Somalia where the ongoing conflict in parts of the country continues to destroy lives. This is tantamount to forced return,” said the rights group’s deputy regional director Sarah Jackson.


Last week, the Kenyan government called on Somalia to speed up repatriation procedure of some half a million Somali refugees living in the United Nations-designated camps in Kenya.


The Kenyan government argued that stability has returned to Somalia following successful joint operations by the African Union and Somali government forces.


The Somali government also said it wants its refugees resettled, but the process must be gradual.


According to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), about 42,000 people in Somalia sought asylum last year.


Nearly 60,000 Somalis were also displaced in the country’s southern and central regions last year.


Somalia did not have an effective central government from 1991 until August 2012, when a previously agreed upon political transition was instituted.


On September 10, 2012, Somalia’s clan elders appointed 275 members to a new parliament, which subsequently elected Hassan Sheikh Mohamud president.


MOS/HSN



Watch: Canine capers making Stockton dog Sydney a TV superstar with owner Stacey

20 Feb 2014 14:00

For Stacey Nicholson and prodigious pooch Sydney, training was key in getting them on Channel 4's Superstar Dogs: Countdown to Crufts






Training your dog to sit can feel like an achievement to most, but that’s just the start if your dog happens to be a superstar.


And for professional pet sitter Stacey Nicholson and her prodigious pooch Sydney, training was the key in getting them on Channel 4’s Superstar Dogs: Countdown to Crufts.


Presented by John Barrowman, the series began on Monday and features dogs and their owners from all over the UK competing in a number of challenges.


While Sydney licked her face, Stacey, 23, said: “It’s really worth a watch.


“About 1,000 dogs applied but only 250 got through to the first audition and then only 30 made it to the TV recordings.”


Judged by The Kennel Club expert Dave Ray, the dogs and their owners compete in a number of disciplines such as swim and fetch, a penalty shoot- out and finally a giant assault course aptly called the Dogstacle Course.


Showing off the skills that got them past the auditions, Stacey and Sydney performed some of their best tricks.


In one trick, Sydney sat attentively while Stacey slowly stretched out her arm and took aim at him with pistol shaped fingers.


Then with a shout of “BANG!” Sydney keeled over onto his side - quite “dead”.


But not for long, soon the clever canine was crawling along the floor, jumping, hiding and barking on command.


Stacey, from Stockton, started training three-year-old Sydney when he was a puppy.


And it doesn’t take long to realise that Stacey loves all animals.


But Stacey’s mum, Alison, told of how her daughter’s confidence had been knocked after an attack by a Japanese Akita left Stacey with scars on her arms and legs.


Alison said: “I didn’t think she would ever work with animals again but how wrong can you be, the house is full of them.”


Now Stacey runs her own franchise of Paw Pals and makes her living pet-sitting.


While she played with her pet grass snake Spot, Stacey told us how, despite Syd being cute and clever, life with him isn’t always a walk in the park.


She said: “Everyone on the show took to Sydney.


“John Barrowman loved him, he was rolling around on the floor with him and the crew called him Brussel because he’s a Beagle-Jack Russell cross.


“But in one of the auditions I kept telling Sydney to sit and he just kept barking at me.


“He will do what he’s told - if he feels like it.”


Stacey’s heat airs on Thursday, February 27, at 5.30pm.



Number of people out of work on Teesside continues to rise

20 Feb 2014 14:15

Latest tally shows 23,804 people were claiming Job Seekers Allowance in January - a rise of 566 compared with December




Job Centre


The number of people out of work on Teesside is continuing to rise, according to new figures.


The latest tally shows 23,804 people were claiming Job Seekers Allowance in January - a rise of 566 compared with December.


Last month saw the first rise in the number of people claiming Job Seekers Allowance on Teesside in almost a year.


The Teesside figures have bucked the trend of falling unemployment seen across the North-east in recent months.


Numbers of those out of work fell by 3,000 across the region in the three months to December.


The Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed that a total of 130,000 people were unemployed in the North-east between October and December.


The region’s unemployment rate was 10% and it saw a fall of 2.3% during the period.


According to the North East Chamber of Commerce (NECC), employment in the North East stands at 1,174,000 or 67.4% – a rise of 7,000 over the quarter and 2,000 over the year. This compares to a rate of 72.1% nationally.


The claimant count stands at 72,200 or 5.8% in the North East (down 1,400), compared to 3.8% nationally.


NECC Policy and Research Manager Mark Stephenson, said: “The labour market figures in the North East are continuing to improve, even if unemployment remains stubbornly high.


“Our claimant count figure continues to shrink which is to be welcomed while we also continue our modest yet consistent progress in the employment figure which has improved on both the quarterly and annual measure – although as ever the quarterly figures must be read with a degree of caution owing to the margin of error.


“The labour market estimates for the North-east are as ever difficult to characterise but the overriding trend, going back several months, is that employment is increasing and the claimant count number is going down. The NECC will challenge the Government ahead of the forthcoming budget to develop policy in a way that enables businesses to play their part in addressing this.”


Local unemployment rates for Teesside are: Middlesbrough 6,230 (7%), Redcar & Cleveland 4,587 (5.5%), Stockton 6,085 (4.9%), Hartlepool 3,961 (6.8%) and Darlington 2,941 (4.5%).


Figures for December showed 23,238 people claimed Job Seekers Allowance on Teesside.


Unemployment nationally has continued to fall and a record number of women are in work, new figures have revealed. The jobless total was 2.34 million in the final quarter of last year, down by 125,000, giving a rate of 7.2%.



Mum-of-three shop worker refuses to hand over cash in face of 'armed' robber

20 Feb 2014 14:14

'I still don’t know why I said no,' says Karen Croker, 44, who has been called a hero. 'I’m obviously a bit stronger than I thought'



Google


A.J.'s convenience store in Crescent Road, Middlesbrough


A brave mum has spoken of the moment she stood up to a robber who threatened her with violence.


Karen Croker was working at A.J’s convenience store on Crescent Road, central Middlesbrough, when a man approached the counter and demanded money.


The mum-of-three said when she refused he produced what appeared to be a weapon concealed in a carrier.


But Mrs Croker continued to stand her ground and attempted to grab the weapon at which point a customer entered the shop and the man fled empty handed.


“I still don’t know why I said no,” said the 44-year-old.


“I’m obviously a bit stronger than I thought.”


She said it wasn’t until afterwards that the reality struck.


“In my head it felt like it lasted an hour when in fact it was really no more than a minute.


“I must have been shaking because afterwards I know I struggled to lock the door.”


Store owner John Bird, 56, hailed the Middlesbrough mum - who has only worked at the shop for seven months - a hero.


“She was heroic as far as I am concerned,” he said.


“I can’t believe a person who has worked here for just a short time handled the situation so well.”


Mrs Croker’s daughter Zoe, 18, was working in the shop’s stockroom when the robber struck at 6.45pm on Sunday.


It wasn’t until Mrs Croker spoke to police later that she said she thought about what could have happened.


Having previously worked in pubs she said this was the first time she has experienced a robbery and her response has taken even her by surprise.


The incident happened just days after an armed robbery on the same road which occurred on February 7, when two men wearing balaclavas targeted two Loomis security guards filling up the cash machine outside Sainsbury’s.



They were brandishing a large machete-type weapon.


After a scuffle, one of the security guards was frog-marched inside the store and they were threatened into handing over a substantial amount of cash.


Mrs Croker said: “It was a bit of a shock when Sainsbury’s got done.


“Sometimes, behind that counter, you can become quite blasé.


"You don’t think something like this is going to happen.”


The A.J’s robber is described as white, aged 25 to 30, 6ft tall and of a skinny build.


He had long black hair, which could have been a wig, and was wearing a white woollen hat, sunglasses, a grey jacket, black trousers and brown slip on shoes.


He was also carrying a black satchel bag.


Anyone with information about either incident is asked to call Cleveland Police on 101.



Hartlepool housebuilder Yuill Homes goes into administration

20 Feb 2014 13:16

Firm employs more than 50 staff and owns a number a sites marked for redevelopment




Some Yuill homes in Darlington


Hartlepool-based housebuilder Yuill Homes has gone into administration.


The house builder, which was originally established in 1927, was purchased by Cecil M Yuill Limited in 1993 and trades from premises in Hartlepool, employing more than 50 staff.


It is currently working on a single development site in Brierton Lane in Hartlepool and also owns a number of other sites for future development.


Steven Ross and Ian Kings of Baker Tilly have been appointed joint administrator.


And Mr Ross, a restructuring and recovery partner, said: " Yuill Homes is a well-known brand in the North-east housing market but, due to the high level of debt finance, was placed into administration to protect the value of its assets for the benefit of creditors.


"The company will continue to trade while we seek a buyer for the business on a going concern basis.


"Our immediate priorities are to speak with employees, suppliers and other stakeholders as well as those people who are in the process of buying a new home from the company."


Any enquiries from interested parties should be directed to Steven Brown at Baker Tilly on 0191 511 5000.



US targets anyone opposed to its corporatist system



An international lawyer says the US targets anyone who opposes its corporatist system in order to discredit or eliminate them.





In a phone interview with Press TV on Wednesday, Barry Grossman said the US National Security Agency, with the help of other corporations spread throughout the world, is spying on people across the globe and targeting them “not only to be criminalized, but to be discredited and if necessary eliminated.”



“We now live in an era where basically anything can be done and covered up by the notion of national security, by drawing this opaque curtain of national security to justify identifying [and] gathering data [about] anyone who is hostile or in any way considered as possibly being opposed to this out-of-control, what’s really become almost a fascist global system where corporate interests and corporations set the policy agenda that is spoon-fed to the politicians,” he added.


Documents leaked by whistleblower Edward Snowden have brought to light the scope and scale of US spying activities across the globe


Recent leaks show that as far back as 2010 the NSA added the founder of whistleblower website WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, to a “MANHUNTING” target list, together with suspected members of al-Qaeda.


“We now have a working definition of what a terrorist is, according to [former US Secretary of State] Henry Kissinger. It is just being somebody who is opposed to the international system, whatever that happens to be. This is of course very dangerous,” Grossman said.


He also said that “it is really quite astounding that people remain quiet” and do not stand up to Washington’s vast spying programs.


AN/ISH



Syria: New deadly cluster bomb attacks


Soviet-era cluster bombs of the Syrian military


Syrian government forces are using a powerful type of cluster munition rocket not seen before in the conflict, Human Rights Watch said today. The new use of cluster munitions is causing civilian casualties and adding to the country’s already devastating legacy of unexploded artillery.


Evidence indicates that government forces used the rockets containing explosive submunitions in attacks on Keferzita, a town north of Hama in northern Syria, on February 12 and 13, 2014. The rocket is the largest type of cluster munition rocket to be used in Syria and contains submunitions that are more powerful and deadly than others.


“It is appalling that Syrian government forces are still using banned cluster munitions on their people,” said Steve Goose, arms division director at Human Rights Watch. “Cluster bombs are killing Syrian civilians now and threatening Syrians for generations to come.”


Syrian government rocket attacks on Keferzita on February 12 and 13 killed at least two civilians and wounded at least 10 others, according to a local activist from Hama who is not affiliated with rebel groups and a doctor who spoke to Human Rights Watch.


Photographs of rocket remnants provided to Human Rights Watch by local activists who said they took them after the attack show sections of a 9M55K 300mm surface-to-surface rocket – including parts of the rocket motor, its cargo section, nose cone and the associated connectors.


Also pictured was an unexploded cylindrical 9N235 antipersonnel fragmentation submunition, the type delivered by the 9M55K rocket, with markings indicating the submunition was manufactured in 1991.


The 9M55K rocket is launched from the BM-30 Smerch (tornado in Russian), a multiple launch rocket system designed and initially manufactured by the Soviet Union in the late 1980s and then manufactured and exported by the Russian Federal State Unitary Enterprise “SPLAV State Research And Production Association” from 1991 onward.


The BM-30 Smerch weapon system was not previously known to be in the possession of the Syrian government and Human Rights Watch had not previously documented the use of the 9M55K rocket and 9N235 submunition in the conflict.


The local activist from Hama, who was present when four rockets hit the town on February 12 and 13, gave Human Rights Watch an account of the attacks. He said that on the late afternoon of February 12:


“A rocket fell on the eastern part of Keferzita on a neighborhood called Al-Makassem Al-Hatef. There is a small square and the rocket fell there. The rocket released small bomblets when it exploded in the air. I did not see a helicopter or warplane at the time of the attack or before. One of the rockets did not explode and military specialists dismantled it and found dozens of bomblets. They removed the fuse from every bomblet.


The second rocket exploded in mid-air and released bomblets that injured people including women and children and killed one internally displaced person from the nearby village of Mourik. The only infrastructure damage caused was from the shrapnel. I remember seeing at least 10 injured but I was told that it was much more. I only saw injuries from shrapnel but I didn’t see any amputations.”


The local activist told Human Rights Watch that he believed the rockets were launched from Hama airport just under 30 kilometres south of Keferzita, which is controlled by the Syrian government: “On February 12, in the afternoon around four, I received a phone call from a [opposition] military source that two rockets were launched from Hama military airport. We all tried to alert the residents but not everyone was able to hide in time.”


According to its manufacturer, the BM-30 Smerch can launch 9M55K rockets from a minimum range of 20 kilometres to a maximum range of 70 kilometres.


The local activist said that the next day:


“Two rockets fell on the northern area [of the village] next to Al-Ma’sara Road, injuring several people. There were no deaths. I saw a 65-year-old man injured by fragments in his shoulder and his son’s wife injured in the leg. Both rockets exploded but caused limited damage to infrastructure. The rockets were also launched from Hama airport. There were no airplanes flying before or after the attack. The injured were taken to the field hospital.”


The local activist said at least 20 unexploded submunitions were collected after the rocket attacks on February 12 and 13.


A doctor in Hama told Human Rights Watch that he had also witnessed the rocket attacks on Keferzita. He said the attacks killed two civilians; a child named Abdulrahman Rami Al-Mahmood, three or four-years-old, and a man named Mahmood Talal Al-Daly, approximately 25-years-old , and wounded 10 more civilians.


Since armed opposition groups took control of Keferzita in December 2012 the town has been the target of Syrian government air strikes, including with barrel bombs and artillery shelling. Fierce clashes between certain rebel groups and the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham (ISIS) ended after ISIS withdrew its forces from the town on January 5.


The local activist told Human Rights Watch that there were no Free Syria Army (FSA) targets in the Keferzita neighbourhoods hit by the rocket attacks on February 12 and 13.


Several videos, which witnesses confirm were filmed in Keferzita, show evidence of the cluster munition rocket attacks on the town:



  • A video uploaded to YouTube on February 12 shows the attack and the remnants.

  • A video uploaded to YouTube on February 12 shows multiple small explosions on the town after a rocket attack.

  • A video uploaded to YouTube on February 13 shows several explosions on the town after a rocket attack.


It is highly unlikely that rebel forces could acquire the eight-wheeled, 43,700 kilogramme launch vehicle or operate its sophisticated fire control system without significant training or time to conduct practice drills.


There is no video evidence or written claims that any rebel group controls any BM-30 launchers, its similarly sized re-supply vehicle, or any 300mm surface-to-surface rockets like the 9M55K rocket.


Eliot Higgins of the Brown Moses blog, which tracks weapons used in the Syria conflict, has identified the BM-30 Smerch weapon system including 9M55K rocket and 9N235 submunition used at Keferzita and concluded that “it seems unlikely that the rocket could have come from any other source” than the Syrian military.


N. R. Jenzen-Jones and Yuri Lyamin of Armament Research Services also identified the weapons system and said: “It is not clear how Syria obtained these munitions, nor the systems required to fire them” but note that Russia is “the most likely origin of the systems in Syria.”


According to standard reference materials, the BM-30 Smerch system has been transferred to Algeria, India, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, while Azerbaijan, Belarus, Turkmenistan and Ukraine either inherited or acquired the system after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.


All of the cluster munitions used in Syria appear to have been manufactured in the Soviet Union except for the Egyptian-made 122mm SAKR surface-launched rocket containing dual-purpose anti-personnel/anti-materiel submunitions. There is no information available on how or when Syria acquired these cluster munitions.


The 9M55K rocket is three times as large as the other type of cluster munition rocket used in Syria, while the weight of the fragments contained in the 9N235 submunitions make them more powerful and deadly than other types of submunitions.


While designed to detonate on impact, each submunition has a back-up pyrotechnic self-destruct feature designed to destroy it two minutes after being ejected from the rocket, but in this attack the self-destruct feature appears to have failed in some cases.


A total of 113 countries have signed or agreed to the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, which prohibits the use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster munitions. The treaty also requires the clearance of cluster munition remnants within 10 years as well as assistance for victims of the weapons.


Of these countries, 84 are states parties legally bound to carry out all of the convention’s provisions, while the other 29 have signed but not yet ratified the convention. Syria has not signed the convention.


Syria’s cluster munition use has attracted widespread media coverage and public outcry. The Convention on Cluster Munitions requires each state that has signed the agreement to “make its best efforts to discourage States not party to this Convention from using cluster munitions.”


More than 100 countries have condemned Syria’s use of cluster munitions, including more than three-dozen non-signatories. Most condemned the use through a UN General Assembly resolution, while several foreign ministers have repeatedly expressed concern about the use of cluster munitions in Syria.


Cluster munitions have been banned because of their widespread indiscriminate effect at the time of use and the long-lasting danger they pose to civilians. Cluster munitions can be fired by artillery and rocket systems or dropped by aircraft and typically explode in the air and send dozens, even hundreds, of small submunitions, or bomblets, over an area the size of a football field. Submunitions often fail to explode on initial impact, leaving duds that act like landmines.


Since the Convention on Cluster Munitions became binding international law in 2010, three governments are confirmed to have used the weapons, all non-signatories to the convention: Syria, Libya and Thailand.


Human Rights Watch is a founding member of the international Cluster Munition Coalition, the civil society campaign behind the Convention on Cluster Munitions.


For more on Human Rights Watch’s reporting on cluster munitions, please visit: http://ift.tt/Yf8WRS


For more on Human Rights Watch’s reports on Syria, please visit: http://ift.tt/whLi7S


For additional information on cluster munitions, please visit: http://ift.tt/13Pzv5h


For more information, please contact:

In Washington, DC, Steve Goose (English): +1-540-630-3011 (mobile); or gooses@hrw.org

In Beirut, Nadim Houry (Arabic, French, English): +961-3-639-244 (mobile); or houryn@hrw.org

In Beirut, Lama Fakih (English, Arabic): +961-390-0105 (mobile); or fakihl@hrw.org

In Cairo, Tamara Alrifai (English, Arabic, French, Spanish): +20-122-751-2450 (mobile); or alrifat@hrw.org


Source: MEMO


http://ift.tt/1bHkoJZ



Israel shipping African refugees to Uganda: Report


Israeli forces arrest an African protester in East al-Quds (Jerusalem) on December 17, 2014.


Israeli forces arrest an African protester in East al-Quds (Jerusalem) on December 17, 2014.


Thu Feb 20, 2014 1:31AM GMT



The Israeli regime is secretly transferring African refugees to Uganda, a report by an Israeli newspaper says.



Over the past month, dozens of the Africans left for Uganda while some had already departed, a Wednesday report by Haaretz quoted a senior Israeli official as saying.


The paper obtained information about a Sudanese inmate of Israel’s Saharonim prison in the Negev Desert, who ended up in Uganda.


“The man called his friends in Israel and said there were six other asylum seekers from Sudan with him on the flight, all of whom had been released from Saharonim,” the report said.


Israel’s Population and Immigration Authority declined to comment on the matter.


In June 2013, an Israeli official told the regime’s supreme court that an agreement had been reached with an unnamed third country ready to take in the African refugees.


African asylum seekers have been protesting against the Israeli regime’s violation of their rights, including implementation of an anti-infiltration law that allows Israel to jail illegal asylum seekers without charge.


Human Right Watch has said that Tel Aviv uses the “threat of prolonged detention” to force the African migrants give up their asylum claims, adding, “Israel should end its unlawful detention policy and release all asylum seekers.”


NT/MHB/SS



Gisborough Priory Project volunteers left devastated after arson attack in grounds

20 Feb 2014 10:15

Storage garage, used to keep tools and equipment for the Gisborough Priory Project was set alight - destroying all its contents




Volunteers Carole Robinson and Jenny Thomas outside the burnt-out container which was used to store tools and equipment that helpers used to maintain and restore the priory gardens


Volunteers who have worked for more than seven years to restore historic gardens in Guisborough have been left devastated after an arson attack in the grounds.


The Gisborough Priory Project was set up seven years ago to restore and improve the gardens surrounding Guisborough’s ancient priory.


However they have now suffered a massive blow after a storage garage, used to keep tools and equipment was set alight - destroying all its contents.


Cleveland Police has confirmed they are treating the fire as arson.


The floor of the container was destroyed as well as all the contents, leaving just pieces of twisted charred metal.


Judith Arber, treasurer of the project, said: “We have been doing work at the gardens for some time now and this is a huge setback for us.


“It was a couple of volunteers who found the container completely destroyed - we were devastated.


“We have collected a lot of tools and equipment over the years so this is just so upsetting.


“At the moment we are begging and pleading for other tools and members are having to use their own from home which isn’t ideal.


“Fortunately it didn’t spread to the gardens, so the work we have done has not been destroyed.”


The fire happened sometime between Monday, February 10, and Thursday, February 13.


The Gisborough Priory Project, which is a registered charity, is still planning to hold its annual open day on Sunday when the Snowdrop Walk takes place between 1pm and 3pm at the gardens.


Cleveland Police confirmed that they are treating the attack as arson.


Witnesses or anybody with information should contact PC Carl Drinkel by calling the non-emergency 101 number or Crimestoppers anonymously, on 0800 555 111.



Pregnant woman and partner who ran amok at Middlesbrough shop and park allowed to keep their freedom

20 Feb 2014 08:40

Gillian Boyle was armed with a hammer and Carl Rankin had a knife at a store on Linthorpe Road before they challenged people in Albert Park




Teesside Crown Court


A pregnant woman and her partner who ran amok at a Teesside shop and park have been given a chance to prove they can raise a child.


Carl Rankin and Gillian Boyle challenged people to fight in Middlesbrough’s Albert Park in a bid for revenge, Teesside Crown Court heard yesterday.


Trouble erupted in the One Stop Shop on Linthorpe Road at about 3.30pm on December 10 last year.


Boyle, 39, was waving a small hammer and carrying an ornamental cat.


Trouble spilled out of the shop and Rankin, 29, was seen in the park holding a kitchen knife and running at another man, said prosecutor Rachel Masters.


A judge watched CCTV of the pair in and out of the shop, with Boyle “in a very angry state”.


A security officer at the park heard the commotion and saw the couple.


He was concerned at what could have happened at a time when young families and elderly people were in the park.


The group dispersed when the police arrived at the scene. The two were arrested nearby.


Boyle said she was using the hammer to fix a door at home when her partner Rankin came home with his head bleeding.


She said they went out to find the people who assaulted him, thought they’d found the culprits in the shop, and got angry that they were laughed at.


Boyle and Rankin, of Ayresome Street, Middlesbrough, each admitted a charge of possessing an offensive weapon.


Both had criminal records, Rankin’s with 67 offences.


Andrew Turton, defending, said they were disappointed in themselves and regretted their impulsive behaviour after Rankin was beaten up.


He said Rankin had a knife because he thought one of his assailants had a knife.


Mr Turton said: “Nobody was injured, no damage was caused to the shop, when that could have happened.


“There’s a lot of posturing and a lot of coming and going between the two factions.


“It’s amongst people who know each other. Nobody came to any harm.”


He said the pair were expecting a baby in June and were both in drug treatment.


“They are out to prove that they are fit and proper persons to be able to parent this child,” added Mr Turton. “They’re worth a further chance.”


Judge Simon Bourne-Arton QC, the Recorder of Middlesbrough, told them: “In broad daylight, there you are, taking out your argument in the street.


“Your thought was only for your own selfish desire to get revenge.”


But he said he was impressed by the couple’s determination to clean up, and hoped his sentence would make them think about the future.


He gave each a four-month prison sentence suspended for two years with a year’s supervision.



Your Daily Muslim: Abu Umar


Abu Umar and the Mujahideen of Bulgaristan

Abu Umar and the Mujahideen of Bulgaristan



The Mujahideen of Bulgaristan are a Bulgarian/Russian jihadist group with a real hatred of Elton John. They hate him not because of his music, but because he is, as they put it, a “sodomite.” A Muslim using the kunya (assumed name) of Abu Umar is a “messenger” of the Mujahideen of Bulgaristan, and he issued a statement about John’s upcoming concert in Bulgaria. Of course, like any other statement from the religion of peace about gays, it sure wasn’t peaceful.


Elton John & Paul McCartney, who are probably both too old to not sound like dying frogs when they sing, are set to kick off their tour in Bulgaria on May 17, 2014. When Umar and his jihadi buddies got wind of this, they knew they had to act quickly to prevent the lemonparty (don’t google this) from descending upon Bulgaria. The Mujahideen contacted local imams, who warned their congregations of the upcoming concert. Umar then posted a letter online with thinly-veiled threats against the concert. Of course, the letter rambled on about the usual Islamic subjects, such as Muhammad (pigs be upon him) and demanding the release of justly-imprisoned jihadists. Now, here’s where the fun (read: threat) begins: “If the sodomite Elton dares to appear on the territory of the Emirate, maybe you will encounter some surprises. Meanwhile, in Kazan [Russia], the imams of the Zakabannaya mosque gather daily to condemn the British sodomite Elton John and voice their concerns and warnings if he shows up in the capital of Tatarstan. According to the Russian Rosbalt news agency, during Friday prayers, imam Saidzhagfar Lutfullin urged to cancel the visit of Elton John to Kazan. According to the imam, Elton John is going to call publicly for freedom of sodomy in Tatarstan and will support local pederasts.”


How is allowing gay sex going to enable pedophiles?! I still can’t believe there are idiots out there who conflate homosexuality with pedophilia. And of course, the Muslims mentioned the concert-goers would “encounter some surprises.” Maybe by that, they just mean they’re gonna set up a Dawah booth outside the entrance… *eyeroll* Hopefully the threat is nothing but talk, and the concert happens without any issues.




Hollande recalls French ‘debt’ to Muslim soldiers



By IINA,


Paris : President Francois Hollande Tuesday said France “owed a debt” to Muslim soldiers who died in World War I and pledged a tough fight against racism and discrimination.



Hollande was speaking at a ceremony in Paris’s main mosque, which he visited for the first time since being elected president in 2012. “France will never forget the price of the bloodshed” by Muslim soldiers, Hollande said in a speech ahead of events planned later this year to mark the 100th anniversary of the start of the war. About 600,000 troops from France’s colonies took part in the 1914-18 war and about 70,000 Muslims lost their lives, according to figures released by the defense ministry in 2010, AFP reported.


France has one of the highest Muslim populations in western Europe, estimated at around five million, but relations are sometimes tense over government moves like the banning of full-face veils in public. Islam is “perfectly compatible with the values of France,” Hollande said. “This homage is a call for respect,” Hollande said, urging a “fierce fight against discrimination, inequality and racism” as well as against “anti-Muslim words and acts.”




Shia leader Muqtada Al-Sadr calls Al-Maliki a dictator


Muqtada Al-Sadr


Shia leader Muqtada Al-Sadr has criticised Iraq’s Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki and his government, calling Al-Maliki a dictator who runs an authoritarian tyranny.


The cleric stated that Al-Maliki’s government violates the rights of the Iraqi people of all sects, as well as oppresses and detains its opponents in the name of Shiites. “The Iraqi government sheds the blood of Iraqis and steals the country’s wealth,” he said. Al-Sadr reiterated his earlier announcement that he will withdraw from political life and dissolve his political movement, but called on his supporters to still participate in the upcoming elections.


Iraq’s Hammurabi news agency quoted sources earlier as saying that Al-Sadr’s decision comes after learning of a conspiracy to oust him and his movement by Al-Maliki and his government.


At least 19 members of the parliamentary bloc affiliated with Al-Sadr have submitted their resignations following his announcement.


A member of the Shia coalition known as the National Iraqi Alliance, Ahmad Masari, told Arabiya news agency that Al-Sadr’s resignation will only serve the other political parties in the National Alliance and boost Al-Maliki’s position, allowing him to return for a third term as prime minister.


A member of the Al-Sadrist parliamentary bloc, MP Thafer El-Ani, noted that while Al-Sadr’s decision is unexpected, his critique of the Al-Maliki government is not a surprise. “We are appealing to the Al-Sadrist movement to convince him to reconsider his decision, which will lead to a significant imbalance within Iraq’s political process,” he said.



Driver who killed Billingham runner as he crossed road in Dubai jailed for just two months

20 Feb 2014 08:20

Driver, reported to have been drunk when he hit Gavin Duffy, also ordered to pay £24,484 'blood money' - compensation to Mr Duffy's family




Gavin Duffy


A driver who killed a Billingham man as he crossed the road in Dubai is reported to have been jailed for just two months.


The driver, who is reported to have been drunk when he hit Gavin Duffy, was also ordered to pay £24,484 “blood money” - compensation to Mr Duffy’s family.


Mr Duffy died on November 23 last year when he was hit by a car in the United Arab Emirates city.


The 29-year-old respected runner and fundraiser was on holiday visiting friends when the tragedy happened.


Reports from The National website state that a 31-year-old Brazilian man appeared at Dubai Traffic Court on Tuesday where he was convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol, causing a person’s death and fleeing the scene of an accident.


It is reported that he was jailed for two months, had his driving licence suspended for six months and ordered to pay Dh150,000 - £24,484 - “blood money” which is compensation to Mr Duffy’s family.


Prosecutors immediately filed an appeal against the sentence. The first hearing will be on March 6.


The report states that the driver fled the scene after Mr Duffy was hit but a passerby noted down the car licence plate number and informed the police.


The witness, from Lebanon, is reported to have said the driver did not even brake after the accident.


The driver is also reported to have tried to leave the country following the accident.


He went to his workplace in Jumeirah Lake Towers to pick up his passport and then headed to Dubai International Airport.


He was arrested in the duty-free area before he could board a 4.20am flight to Beirut.


Boro fan Mr Duffy, a quantity surveyor, was an accomplished marathon runner and was a member of Marsh House Harriers.


Following his death relatives and friends launched an appeal to repatriate his body back to Teesside.


They raised a staggering £10,000.


The remainder of the money was given to Mr Duffy’s favourite charities - The Butterwick Hospice, The Jo and Mya Fund, Zoe’s Place baby hospice and Dementia UK.


Following Mr Duffy’s death his parents Michael and Susan paid tribute to him describing him as “happy, kind and caring person who liked his independence and loved travelling.”