Friday, June 6, 2014

Rallies expected in 80 cities around the world in support of Jerusalem


Palestine Rally


The biggest global mass rallies in support of the occupied city of Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque are to take place Friday and Saturday in more than 80 cities in 42 countries around the world.


Huge marches are to kick off in the West Bank and the occupied territories of 1948, heading towards Jerusalem or to the nearest point to it, in addition to the rallies taking place in the surrounding countries, in several Arab countries, as well as in Turkey, Indonesia, Malaysia, 10 European countries, Latin America and in countries where there are Israeli embassies.


The Jerusalem International Foundation has urged Arabs, Muslims and the international community to participate in the rallies, saying: “At the time that when the Israeli occupation is celebrating the anniversary of its occupation of the city of Jerusalem, we need to unify all efforts and capabilities in support of Jerusalem, and we have faith in the people of the Arab and Islamic world as well as the liberals of the world who have renewed their loyalty to Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa through the organisation of the Global March towards Jerusalem.”


It also demanded that the Palestinian and Arab masses and all the popular and official institutions “strongly and effectively participate in the march and in its different events in order to send a message to the occupation that Arabs and Muslims will protect Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa with whatever they have and will preserve their principles and sanctities.”


Arab governments have called for “immediate and urgent intervention to rescue the holy city,” asking officials to “get closer to the pulse of the people who reject the occupation’s attacks.”



Police disperse anti-Sisi rally at Azhar dorm


Egyptian police


Egyptian security forces used teargas to disperse a rally held by supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsi inside the Al-Azhar University dormitory in eastern Cairo today.


“Police forces stormed the dormitory and used teargas and buckshot to disperse the students protesting against the inauguration of [former army chief] Abdel Fatah Al-Sisi as Egypt’s president,” an eyewitness told the Anadolu news agency.


Moaz Mohamed, a member of the Students against the Coup group, confirmed that security forces had stormed the dormitory to disperse the student rally.


The rally was part of protests called by the pro-Morsi National Alliance for the Defence of Legitimacy against the inauguration of Al-Sisi, who led the army to oust democratically elected Morsi last July.


Al-Sisi was declared the winner of last week’s Egyptian presidential election in which he clinched almost 97 per cent of the vote, according to Egypt’s election commission.


Egypt’s army-installed interim presidency invited 22 countries, 16 of whom have already confirmed their attendance, to Sunday’s inauguration ceremony in Cairo, according to a well-placed source.


While supporters describe Morsi’s ouster as a “military coup”, opponents term it a “military-backed revolution”.



Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson: 'I've never really thought about my funeral until now'


Gazette columnist Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson has been thinking about her funeral - she definitely wants there to be pizza




Even in the chaos of my usual travelling back and forth to London, the past week has been more unusual than most.


A competition for my daughter in mid Wales (it doesn’t look that far on the map but I can assure you it is), two funerals - one perhaps you could say was expected sooner rather than later, and the other completely out of the blue - and the State Opening of Parliament to contend with.


I didn’t go to the formal ceremony this time, because although it is great to be part of, I have so many papers sitting on my desk I am meant to be reading that I decided a better use of my time would be to work through my emails.


But I do love the ceremony, the dresses and the jewellery; there are so many diamond necklaces in the building, it is hard to comprehend what they must be worth.


The two funerals I have been to in the last week also made me think in a little more detail about what I would like (but hopefully not for a long time yet).


There can’t be anything worse for the family than trying to think about how their loved one would like to be remembered. What is their favourite music, and who they would like to speak?


Both my parents had really clear views about what they wanted but until now, I have never really thought about it.


The funeral I went to this week was of a friend and fellow wheelchair racer.


He had campaigned to get wheelchair athletes in to the London Marathon and had taken part in the first one.


His family had found his very first race numbers and put one on the back of the coffin and one on the right hand side.


I couldn’t help but smile, because in my sport you have one number on the back of your chair, and one on the right hand side for the photo finish camera.


It made me smile, quite a lot. Everyone from the sport who was there appreciated it too.


I have kept quite a lot of my race numbers and I was debating with another friend last night who was there whether it would be possible to decoupage a coffin and stick all the race numbers all over it.


I am not sure it would be possible to buy enough PVA glue to do it, and I am not sure who would do it either but we both decided it would be a really good idea.


Based on my previous experience of trying to tear up paper and glue it to a small ball, I’m not the best person to do it.


Maybe that should be on the “think about” list.


Everyone would have to wear a small amount of purple, I want Soft Cell’s Tainted Love played at some point, along with the Jam’s A Town Called Malice.


I realise the titles are not terribly appropriate but they are my favourite songs.


I realise I should probably think about this a bit more, but the one thing I am going to do is tell my family the sort of thing I would like.


And finally, there has to be pizza.



Missing Middlesbrough man Adam Robinson is found


Cleveland Police have confirmed that a Middlesbrough man reported missing earlier today has been found




Police have now located 34-year-old Adam Robinson who had been reported missing earlier today.


A spokesman for Cleveland Police said: “Police can confirm that Adam Robinson has been found.


“Police would like to thank members of the public for their help in this matter.”



Veterans remember D-Day in Redcar, 70 years on


D-Day veterans joined by more than a hundred people to commemorate 70th anniversary of D-Day landings




D-Day veterans were amongst more than 100 people gathered in Redcar to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Allied invasion of Europe.


Medals glinted in the bright sunshine and military standards waved alongside Union Jacks as veterans paraded to the cenotaph on Coatham Road in Redcar.


Among them was former bomber pilot William Caster, who flew two daring missions on D-Day.



He laid a wreath at the service and said: “It is something that deserves to be remembered. I’m proud to have been asked here, and I’m glad to see people of all ages turn out.”


Dennis Eeles, 90, who was born in Stockton but has lived in Redcar for 60 years, bombed Caen on D-Day in a Lancaster plane. He said: “The memories are still very vivid. It is wonderful to see so many people here today. I went to the 40th anniversary of D-Day in Normandy, but I haven’t been back since.”


Dennis Wears, 89, who served in the Durham Light Infantry, landed in a boat at Gold Beach on D-Day.


Mr Wears, who was born and bred in Redcar, said: “I was dead scared. I was going on for 19 then.


“I remember it was horrible. We got out of the boat and the sea was up to my chest, we had to wade in. We couldn’t get far enough in because we were heavy loaded.”


Asked how he felt at the service, Mr Wears, who worked as a fitter at British Steel and has three sons, said: “I feel really old - but there are a few older than me.


“It’s good that what happened is remembered all these years on.”


The Rev Alison Phillipson, from Christ Church in Coatham, led the service, while Redcar and Cleveland Mayor Carole Simms laid a wreath alongside Redcar MP Ian Swales, D-Day veteran Bill Caster, Ian Barnes of the Dormanstown Merchant Navy Association, and Army Cadets. Local schoolchildren also laid crosses at the cenotaph.


Rev Phillipson said during the service: “We owe them great debt of gratitude. We owe it to them never to forget.”


Chairman of the Redcar branch of the Royal British Legion, Eric Howden, said: “I’m glad the weather was so nice, and I’m glad that so many came. It is so important that we mark today properly. It is a special and important anniversary.”


Captain David Hamilton, of the 102 Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers based in Newton Aycliffe, said he was “humbled” to be invited to the event.


“It is an honour and a privilege. To be here with those heroes who took part in the D-Day landings is very special.”



Boro snap up Real Madrid goalkeeper Tomas Mejias on two-year deal


Former Under-21 Spanish goalkeeper played once for Boro while on loan last season :: Real Madrid have first option on re-signing the player




Real Madrid shot-stopper Tomas Mejias has signed a two-year deal with Boro.


Senior club sources confirmed today that the former Under-21 Spanish keeper has put to pen to paper on a permanent switch to the Riverside.


The Real reserves keeper arrived on loan deal in the January transfer but played just once in the first team, in a 1-0 defeat to Sheffield Wednesday.


He then dislocated a finger in training and was sidelined for the rest of the campaign, opening the door for Dimi Konstantopoulos to step in and impress.



But head coach Aitor Karanka spoke highly of him at the end of the season and praised his attitude and work rate in training and admitted he was keen to look at an extended deal.


That has now been agreed.


The two-year deal gives the Spanish giants a first option to resign the keeper.


Karanka knows the young keeper well from his spell as assistant manager to Jose Mourinho at Real.


Mejias, 25, came up through the ranks of his home town club and turned out for the Academy side and second string - and also played for Spain’s Under 20 and Under 21 squad - but played for Real Madrid’s first team just once.


Related stories


Boro summer transfer links: Who could be joining and leaving the club this summer?


Who should Boro sign this summer? Here's 25 players Boro fans want at the club



Police officers attend Labour candidate selection meeting 'to deter potential disruption'


Two officers sit in to prevent trouble at meeting in Beechwood :: Former Labour councillor questions whether it was a good use of police time




Police were on standby at a Labour Party candidate selection meeting - to deter any potential trouble-makers from misbehaving.


Officers attended a Middlesbrough Labour Party selection process meeting for Middlesbrough's Beechwood ward at The Sutton Centre, in Collin Avenue, last night.


However, there was no disruption - prompting questions to be asked as to why police were asked to attend.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman today said that the Labour Party would not be invoiced for the officers' time.


Councillor Len Junier, who represents North Ormesby and Brambles Farm ward and who resigned from the Labour Party last month, was not at the meeting.


But he said: “It has been assumed that there was going to be a problem at the selection process last night.


“It seems a waste of valuable resources.


“I think it is a disgrace that the Labour group in Middlesbrough can do this.”


Cllr Junier, who was one of five councillors recently deselected by the party and who will stand as an independent, added: “From what I heard there were no issues at the meeting - it was over and done with in less than 30 minutes.


"It was not a controversial meeting.”


As reported last month, police were called to attend a Middlesbrough Council meeting which had descended into chaos as a result of two members of the public began filming inside the town hall.


There were also said to have been problems at an earlier annual general meeting for the Clairville ward.


A Middlesbrough Labour Party spokesman confirmed the police had been asked in advance to attend last night’s meeting.


“The police were there for reassurance because at an earlier meeting (the AGM) there had been damage to the property and intimidation to party members by people not eligible to be at the meeting,” he said.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman had earlier confirmed: “Two police officers attended the meeting yesterday evening.


“They were there to deter any possible disruption to proceedings and did not participate in any political activity or debate.


"The meeting passed off smoothly and without incident.”



Emma Egan admits her dangerous driving caused the death of cyclist Eric Codling


Dad-of-two Eric Codling - who was raised in Middlesbrough - died following accident while cycling in Sheffield in November





A motorist has pleaded guilty to causing the death of a Teesside-born cyclist in Sheffield by her dangerous driving.


Dad-of-two Eric Codling died after he was involved in a collision with a car on Sunday, November 3.


The 55-year-old died as a result of the accident in Millhouses, Sheffield, where his family now lives


Driver Emma Egan, 26, of Dewsbury, also faces charges of drink-driving, failing to stop, and failing to report a road traffic collision.


She will be sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court on July 17.


As reported, decorator Mr Codling was raised in Park End, Middlesbrough, but later went to Oxbridge School in Stockton and Egglescliffe School.


His wife Karen, and two daughters, Grace, 12, and Eve, nine, were at home at the time of the accident.


Related stories


Woman charged over death of Middlesbrough-born cyclist Eric Codling


Hundreds pay respects to 'Boro-mad' dad who died after being knocked off his bicycle


Family pay tribute to loving dad-of-two and Boro fan who died after being knocked off his bike



Police warn public not to approach missing Adam Robinson


Officers are looking for the 34-year-old :: Force say that he was last seen in central Middlesbrough at 1.15pm today




Police are appealing for information to trace a 34-year-old Middlesbrough man.


Adam Robinson was last seen at his home address in Aire Street in the town centre at around 1.15pm today.


He has visible recent injuries to his face and arm and police have advised residents not to approach him.


Cleveland Police have refused to give any more details about the search.


The man is described as white, about 5ft 8, of stocky build, with short brown hair.


He is believed to be wearing a black and white Adidas top and blue, black and white checked McKenzie shorts, and red and black Nike trainers.


Although police do not believe that he poses a risk to the public, anyone thinks they have seen him are advised not to approach him but to contact police immediately on 101.



Kathleen Calpin said man she was living with was half-brother as she falsely claimed more than £28k in benefits


Kathleen Calpin, 46, continued taking four types of benefits without telling the authorities she was living with a man




A woman who falsely claimed more than £28,000 in benefits over nine years has been given a suspended prison sentence.


Kathleen Calpin claimed four types of benefits without telling the authorities she was living with a man on Henry Street, Redcar.


The 46-year-old received income support, jobseekers’ allowance, housing benefit and council tax benefit between 2004 and 2013, Teesside Crown Court heard.


Prosecutor Jonathan Walker said Calpin was obliged by law to tell the authorities if there was a change in her circumstances.


He said investigations revealed she had been living with a man since around November 2004.


“She’d never reported that cohabitation,” added Mr Walker.


“As a result of that, the benefits would have been significantly reduced.”


She was overpaid a total of £28,202, the court was told today.


In three separate interviews Calpin denied living with the man and stated he was her half-brother.


Calpin admitted four counts of failing to notify the authorities of a change in circumstances affecting benefits - her first offences.


She was of previous good character, having never been in trouble before.


Mr Walker pointed to sentencing guidelines suggesting a punishment ranging from a community order to a short prison sentence.


Graham Brown, defending, said: “The average over the 10 years has been about £2,500.


“The Probation Service makes it very clear that this is not a defendant who has lived a high life.


“This is a defendant who is socially disadvantaged as a result of her educational background and alcohol dependency and came from a very violent previous marriage.”


He said her current relationship was “tumultuous” with periods when her partner was not living with her.


He added she was first interviewed in December 2012 and the case hung over her head for 18 months until it was resolved.


Judge George Moorhouse told Calpin: “Benefit fraud is very prevalent these days and is a serious offence.


“And your fraud took place over a number of years, which is another aggravating feature.”


He said he took into account her early guilty pleas, lack of previous offending and the delay in bringing the case to court.


Calpin was given a 10-month prison sentence, suspended for two years, with alcohol treatment and 18 months’ supervision.


Read more stories from around Teesside's courts



The story of how Redcar girl Ellen Daniels helped plot D-Day


Ellen Daniels, an 18-year-old serving in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, found herself part of the landmark day in history




Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Europe is one of the most famous campaigns of World War Two.


Written about and depicted in film and TV extensively, the story of the soldiers landing on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day is well known.


But less familiar is the story of the women who helped plot the Allied victory.


Ellen Daniels, an 18-year-old serving in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF), found herself part of this landmark day in history.


Ellen, now 88, said: “I was brought up in Redcar and moved to Parliament Road in Middlesbrough when the war started.


“I joined up at 16 - I had to have a terrible argument with my mother.


She said: “She didn’t want me to go and she had said, ‘I’m going to go down and tell them.’ Well I must have been a little swine because I just told her that she would get into more trouble than me and that I was going - I’m glad I did because it was an experience.”


But Ellen was nearly dismissed from the Forces when the secret of her age was found out.


“One morning this woman came up to me and said, ‘You’re on a court martial tonight - I’ve come to pick you up’.


“It was because I was only 16, but I was surprised when they said, ‘If we send you home you’ll probably just join up again’.”


Delighted she had not been sent home, when Ellen heard that volunteers were wanted for the naval plotting room, she jumped at the chance.


“I thought there’s one of those in Newcastle which was a bit closer to home so I signed up for it, but I was surprised to find that I was being sent to Fort Southwick.”


Fort Southwick, on Portsdown Hill, overlooks the naval base of Portsmouth in the county of Hampshire, England.


During the Second World War, underground headquarters or UGHQ, the communications “nerve centre” for Operation Overlord, was in a secret network of tunnels excavated 100ft underground.



Ellen, of Coulby Newham, said: “There were 240 steps to get down into the bunker, it was like the steps to Whitby Abbey getting out.


“If anything had happened we had enough supplies for us to last three months.


“I was sent to go and work in the naval plotting room where the radar used to plot the German E-Boats coming out of France.


“Being in the WAAF, we were used to tracking aircraft so we were used to moving very quickly and, at first, we were just plotting normal traffic in the channel.”


By May 1944, 1.5 million American troops had arrived in Britain.


As June 6 approached, Ellen sensed that something big was about to happen.


She said: “We knew something was going on, we had all these men coming out and there was a lot of traffic coming in to the area.


“I always wondered how the Germans didn’t figure out that something was going on because it seemed so obvious.


“The night before, when we came on duty everybody had to leave the room except us. “We were told that we should go home and get a good night’s sleep and they gave us a lecture about how we had to just go home, not go out and not talk to strangers.”


On the evening of June 5, ships met at a rendezvous point near the Isle of Wight ready to cross the Channel.


Meanwhile minesweepers had began clearing lanes for the convoys and a thousand bombers left before dawn to attack German coastal defences.


When Ellen arrived at Fort Southwick in the early hours of June 6 1944, the magnitude of what was happening hit home.


Ellen said: “When we went back into the plotting room I really had a fright.


“We couldn’t see the plotting table because of all the ships.


“There was that many ships that it was almost impossible to plot them and you couldn’t give anyone any useful information. All we could do was try and hope for the best.”


By 2am the 24,000 paratroopers had landed in anticipation of the amphibious landing - 132,000 infantry began arriving on the beaches at around 6.30am.


Ellen said: “When they landed on the beaches it was quite overwhelming.


“We had this balcony above us where all the big wigs would stand.


“There was this high-ranking officer up there on the balcony with these red lapels - It always makes me upset to think about him.


“People always make out that the officers didn’t care about the men, well that wasn’t true.


“As soon as he found out that the men had landed he just broke down crying.”


The women of the WAAF and the Women’s Royal Naval Service worked throughout the initial invasion, plotting ships and relaying information.


After the most important shift of their lives they were given two days off to recover.


Ellen said: “We were still terrified to talk to anyone but everyone was saying D-Day’s happened.”


After the war Ellen worked for the Ministry of Aviation at Manchester Airport and married RAF veteran Frederick Daniels.


More of our D-Day anniversary coverage:


'I wanted to be fighting. I wasn't frightened. I had a job to do and I did it'


Stolen radishes, vicars on the move and Stockton boxing: 10 other things which happened on Teesside on D-Day


The full story of Teesside D-Day hero Stan Hollis


In his own words: Middlesbrough D-Day hero tells of beach landings



RSS targets education system, asks Smriti (HRD Minister) to rejig CBSE curriculum


NEW DELHi: RSS man Dinanath Batra met HRD minister Smriti Irani on Tuesday evening and gave her a charter of demands, including a blueprint to overhaul Central Board of Secondary Education and a new curriculum framework that can lead to a “strong and vibrant India”.



Batra also petitioned the ministry about several alleged wrongdoings in the National Council for Educational Research and Training (NCERT), Indira Gandhi National Open Universi ty (IGNOU) and National Co Teacher Education (NCTE).


“I met the minister on Tuesday . I have requested her to completely overhaul the system,” Batra said. He also told the minister that as president of NCERT, she is within her rights to reconstitute the council. He has asked her to instruct NCERT to call a meeting of the council immediately .


Batra has sought transformation in CBSE’s profile to an “internationally credible national school board, rooted in the Indian culture”. His petition says, “CBSE should work on its own in syllabus formation, text book and support material development, teacher training, studies and research. Work of other tests and examinations presently handled by CBSE should be handed over to a new Na tional Evaluation Board.”


Batra demanded that CBSE should restrict itself to giving affiliation to only those schools that exhibit “interstate and international presence” rather than “creating parallels to the state board/council”. CBSE, the charter of demand said, must have exclusive presence over seas as a national board. Demand has also been made that CBSE be headed by a professional and experienced chairperson, rather than a civil servant.


Batra also requested that the job of developing the National Curriculum Framework (NCF) should be assigned to a committee of academics/ experts constituted by the HRD ministry to independently undertake the exercise and submit the NCF to the government to be passed by Central Advisory Board of Education



Decision to transfer Middlesbrough community centre to special needs school to be reviewed


A review on Monday will decide if the decision to hand the running of Netherfields Community Centre to Priory Woods School was the right one





A decision to transfer the running of a Middlesbrough community centre to a special needs school is to be reviewed after several councillors questioned it.


Last month Middlesbrough Council’s Executive approved a community asset transfer (CAT) of Netherfields Community Centre to Priory Woods School and Art College despite objections by ward councillors and local residents and users of the centre.


The Fulbeck Road centre was one of the ones identified as being surplus to Middlesbrough Council’s requirements in a 2011/12 review.


As a result, alternative options for the future of the building were considered. Priory Woods and the current management committee of the community centre both submitted proposals to the council but the Executive Sub-Committee for Property approved the recommendation that Priory Woods’ CAT be implemented. The school would take over the running costs of the building, saving the council £29,972 a year.


Cllr Dave Budd, Middlesbrough’s Deputy Mayor and chairman of the committee, said after the decision: “The transfer of Netherfields Community Centre to Priory Woods School represents the best option put to the council for its future use.”


Using Middlesbrough Council’s Call In Procedure, Cllr Peter Cox and four other councillors - Brian Hubbard, Mick Saunders, John Hobson and Pervaz Khan - requested the decision be reviewed by the local authority’s Overview and Scrutiny Board.


The reasons given for the call in were:


1. Cost. The centre is to close to save money yet this transfer will cost £250,000.


2. The Community Asset Transfer to the Centre Management Committee was not given enough consideration and council officers were actively working against the committee, by directing prospective users away from the centre and to the Thorntree Hub.


3. No consideration given to the effect on the local community. None of the activities lost will be accommodated by Priory Woods School.


The Overview and Scrutiny Board, which meets on Monday to discuss the issue, has two courses of action available to them: either to refer the decisions back to the committee for reconsideration or to determine that it is satisfied with the decision making process that was followed and the decisions taken.



Tickets for John Bishop's Middlesbrough Town Hall gig sell out within hours of going on sale


Scouse comic will road test his new material at a 'Work-in-Progress' gig at the town hall on September 19




Tickets for John Bishop's gig at Middlesbrough Town Hall later this year sold out in less than a morning.


The Scouse comic will test out a batch of new material at the venue on September 19.


The Town Hall announced all tickets had been sold shortly after 11am.


Some fans had queued outside from about 8am hoping to secure front row seats.


Tickets for a gig by Frank Skinner at the same venue also went on sale earlier.


Try our John Bishop or Frank Skinner quiz. Who came up with which jokes?



Eston Park Academy making 'reasonable progress' towards removal of special measures


Ofsted report finds that quality of teaching at the Burns Road school is 'better than it has been for some considerable time'




An academy has been told it is continuing to make “reasonable” progress towards the removal of special measures.


Eston Park Academy has been told it has made progress since it was deemed to be failing its pupils in July last year.


The latest development comes after a monitoring inspection by education watchdog Ofsted.


The Burns Road school vowed to turn things around after the education watchdog found it was not giving pupils an acceptable standard of education following a routine visit in May 2013.


Its then headteacher Duncan Haig then resigned, the Gazette reported in June last year.


At an Ofsted inspection in November 2009 - before it had converted into an academy - Ofsted ranked Eston Park as “good”.


The academy is merging with nearby Gillbrook College - which itself is said to require "significant improvement" - in September this year.


Eston Park has since undergone three monitoring inspections.


During the most recent in April, it was found that the “momentum of improvement in the quality of teaching has been sustained” and that the performance of students is improving.


“From the outset the priority has been to raise standards of teaching and learning and it is clear that the quality of teaching is better than it has been for some considerable time.


“Although much still remains to be accomplished,” the latest report read.



Three-car collision on A66 causes delays for commuters in Teesside Park area


Rush-hour smash causes delays on A66 near Teesside Park :: Cleveland Police spokeswoman says there were no serious injuries





Commuters faced delays this morning after a multi-car smash.


Emergency services were called at 8.25am to a three-car collision on the A66 eastbound at Teesside Park.


It involved a grey Peugeot, a silver Mazda and a blue Renault Scenic.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman said there were no serious injuries sustained in the incident.


The road was clear by just after 9.25am.


Follow the Gazette's live blog for traffic and travel news



Richard Smallwood: 'I'd never taken a senior-level penalty before play-off final shootout winner'


Watch: Boro midfielder scored the goal that got Rotherham United promoted at Wembley with his final kick of loan spell




Scoring the winning penalty in a Wembley final was a dream come true for Richard Smallwood.


The Boro midfielder’s final contribution of a loan spell at Rotherham United was converting a spot-kick in the League One play-off final against Leyton Orient.


Seconds later Millers keeper Adam Collin saved Chris Dagnall’s attempt to complete a 4-3 penalty shoot-out victory - and seal a place in the Championship.


Smallwood, who is about to enter the last 12 months of his current Boro contract, has revealed to the Gazette that he’d never taken a penalty before at senior level - or visited Wembley prior to the final.


He also said he was encouraged to volunteer to take a spot-kick in the event of a shoot-out by his brother Michael.


“My brother said to me to take any opportunity to make an impression so when you look back on the match you will have a fantastic memory of the day,” Smallwood explained.


“After extra-time, I walked over straight away and said I’d take one.


“When I was younger I took a few penalties, I scored a few and missed a few.


“The advice from our coaches at Wembley was ‘don’t change your mind’ and I decided to put it straight down the middle and it went somewhere near.”



The 23-year-old joined Rotherham on loan in January and was a first team regular in manager Steve Evans’ promotion-chasing outfit.


They had to settle for a place in the play-offs but overcame Preston in the semi-finals to earn a trip to Wembley.


In a dramatic game, Orient raced into a 2-0 half-time before the Millers hit back after the beak to level.


Extra-time was goalless, hence the penalty shoot out.


Boro fans have since said in a Gazette poll that Rotherham is the ground they are most looking forward to travelling to next season.



“I remember we hardly got a kick for the first 20 minutes,” said Smallwood, looking back to the final.


“I thought it would be hard to come back from 2-0 down but I knew we had come back from bad positions before at other times in the season.


“The manager and the assistant manager were brilliant at half-time, they just said it was vital to score the next goal and that’s what happened.”


The tough-tackling midfielder from Dormanstown was determined to make the most of his day at Wembley, whatever the outcome.


“You try to prepare in the same way as you would for a normal game but when you are there you do take pictures and video footage of the stadium,” he added.


“When you put the shirt on you have to focus on the game - it was emotional, though, when they played the national anthem.


“It was the first time I had been there, I’d never been near the place before, I just never had the opportunity to go before, as a fan or as a player.


“When you are young, you dream of playing there, no matter what the occasion is, FA Cup, League Cup or play-off final.


“So, to do that is fantastic and it was a great occasion.”



Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson: 'I've never really thought about my funeral until now'





Chemicals company Johnson Matthey reports 17% increase in pre-tax profits


Johnson Matthey - which employs around 700 on Teesside - says it performed well in 2013/14




Johnson Matthey - which employs around 700 staff on Teesside - has reported a jump in annual profits.


For the year ending March 31, 2104, the international speciality chemicals company revealed profits before tax were up 17% at £406.6m, compared with £348.6m in 2013.


Revenue was also up 4% to £11.2bn and sales jumped 11% to £2.98bn, compared to 2013.


Robert MacLeod, Johnson Matthey’s new chief executive, who replaces outgoing chief executive Neil Carson, said the good results had been driven by growth across the group’s main divisions -


Emission Control Technologies, Process Technologies, Fine Chemicals, Precious Metal Products and New Businesses.


The Process Technologies division takes in a number of operations on Teesside including the Tracerco business which is based in Billingham, JM Davy in Stockton and a Process Technologies site in Billingham.


Johnson Matthey group also has a research and development centre in Billingham.


Tracerco is currently expanding in Billingham with the development of an £8.6m Measurement Technology Centre - this will see its 150-strong Teesside workforce grow by another 50.


The 61,000 sq ft bespoke research and development facility at the site, announced last year, was boosted by a £1m investment from the Let’s Grow programme, part of the £30m Regional Growth Fund.


In the annual results the Process Technologies division of Johnson Matthey saw sales rise 11% and underlying operating profit grow by 10%.


It added that sales in its Diagnostic Services business - Tracerco - also increased and were up 14% to £68m.


Elsewhere in the group Emission Control Technologies outperformed the underlying growth rate in many of its markets with sales up 13% and underlying operating profit 25% higher. Fine Chemicals also grew its sales by 5%.


But despite the expectation of continued growth across the group this year, Mr MacLeod said the company would also face some “headwinds” - the effect of exchange rates at current rates and changes in contracts with Anglo American Platinum - that could impact the business by about £50m.


He said the company had “performed well” in 2013-14 and there had “been good growth across sales, profit and a dividend”.


“Overall, we expect this year’s performance to be broadly in line with 2013-14,” he added.


“The underlying drivers for Johnson Matthey’s future growth remain firmly in place.


“With strong positions in growing markets, commitment to R&D, and excellent people I’m really confident Johnson Matthey is well-positioned to deliver long-term growth through creation of value-adding sustainable technologies.”



Ending Abbas’s Winning Streak


Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas holds a Mahmoud Abbas must be great at cards.


The PLO chief has no real assets to speak of.


He’s physically unattractive. He has zero charisma. He’s old.


And no matter how hard he tries, Abbas can’t do much of anything to dampen public support for Hamas or raise public support for himself. By many accounts, if elections are ever held, Hamas would win them in a walk.


As for money, beyond the PLO’s slush fund, all Abbas has is what outsiders give him. He is completely dependent on the Americans, the Israelis, the Europeans and the Gulf states. Without them, he would have nothing to buy people’s loyalty with.


If the money ever stops coming in, he’ll go broke and lose power immediately.


Militarily, if Israel ever stops lending military support to Abbas’s forces, it will be a matter of weeks, or perhaps days, before Abbas will be forced to surrender to Hamas.


And yet today Abbas is sitting pretty on the top of the volcano that is Arab politics, dictating terms for people with real power while playing mind-boggling radical politics.


And he’s winning big.


This has been a great year for Abbas. In exchange for agreeing to humor the Obama administration with “negotiations” consisting of rejecting pro-Palestinian American peace proposals while refusing face-to-face contact with Israel for nine months, he got the Americans to force Israel to release several dozen terrorist murderers from prison.


He then abandoned the negotiations and effectively ended the peace process when he signed onto 15 international agreements as “the president of Palestine,” seeking to gain international recognition for a Palestinian state that is in a de facto state of war with Israel.


From there he went on secure his own power at the helm of Palestinian politics by signing the unity deal with Hamas.


It’s a win-win deal for Abbas and the genocidal jihadist group.


The deal frees Hamas from the financial burden of governing Gaza. The slack will be made up by the PA’s US, European and Israeli-financed budget. Hamas will be able to go back to using all of its own funds to run its 20,000-man army and expand its already massive arsenal of missiles.


Just as important, it will be able to rebuild its military and political infrastructures in Judea and Samaria.


Moreover, as a partner in the government, Hamas will have veto power over many of the Palestinian Authority’s governing decisions, so there will be no negotiations, no recognition, no cessation of terror assaults and no peace with Israel with this Palestinian government. Then again, none of these things was forthcoming with Abbas at the helm at any time.


As for Abbas, by signing the deal, he gets to deploy a ceremonial force to Gaza that will enable him to tell willfully credulous Americans that he is now in charge of Gaza, so they should feel comfortable giving him more taxpayer funds.


Abbas’s unity deal with Hamas renders the entire Palestinian Authority a terrorist organization. Modeled on Hezbollah’s deal with the Lebanese political leadership, the unity agreement formalizes the PLO’s role as Hamas’s protector and defender on the international scene. And it enables Hamas, as a member of the PA, to receive open assistance of every kind for its terrorist operations in Gaza and Judea and Samaria alike.


Since unlike Fatah, Hamas is recognized as a terrorist organization by Israel, the US, the EU, the unity deal makes it unlawful for any of them to continue to cooperate with, let alone support, the PA in any way.


But that doesn’t seem to matter.


The US and the EU raced to see which one would recognize the new government first, while pledging to continue funding the PA to the tune of nearly $2 billion per year.


In Israel, the Left, led by Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, insists that Israel mustn’t cut off the PA, for doing so would end the peace process, which of course would be a disaster.


As for Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and the rest of his government, their non-rhetorical responses have been anemic.


So far the only financial steps the government has taken to curtail funding to the PA involves using some of the tax revenues Israel transmits to the PA to pay off some of the massive debt the Palestinians owe the Israel Electric Corporation. But Israel still turns over the remaining tax revenues to the PA. Israel remains the PA’s financial lifeline.


And this brings us back to Abbas.


Abbas is a successful politician because he knows what he wants and he is able to make the most of the cards he’s been dealt.


Abbas knows that his American, European and Israeli supporters are convinced they can’t make it without him. They don’t care that he is a radical. They will believe any lie – no matter how flimsy – to keep up the game of proclaiming him a moderate and a man of peace.


Abbas was certain that the same US, EU and Israeli Left that supported him through his demand to free terrorists, and to abrogate the property rights of Jews, the same forces that uphold him despite his rejection of Israel’s right to exist, his material breaches of the agreements he personally signed, and his general bad faith, would support his decision to join forces with Hamas.


The Israeli Left’s support for Abbas makes sense. Without Abbas it has no reason to exist. Without the myth that Israel has a Palestinian partner in peace, no one would give the likes of Livni the time of day. So she clings to him.


As for Netanyahu and his allies, their paralysis isn’t rooted in dependence on Abbas. They, like Israel would be far better off without him.


They are paralyzed by their fear of President Barack Obama.


Netanyahu and his colleagues know that like Abbas, the Obama administration has no problem with Hamas. Obama was courting Hamas through his then-campaign adviser Robert Malley as early as the 2008 presidential election. Malley is now a senior director on Obama’s National Security Council. And according to media reports in the US, Obama’s representatives have been holding talks with Hamas for the past six months.


In her statement on the new Fatah-Hamas government, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki didn’t even pretend that the administration has a problem supporting the terror tag team. Psaki said that since Hamas terrorists are not serving as ministers in the “technocratic” government that serves at their pleasure, the US will continue funding it.


This leaves us with the US Congress.


Congress may cut off funding to the PA despite Israeli cowardice. Certainly, initial responses from Republican and Democratic leaders alike have signaled that US lawmakers intend to abide by the laws that they passed and end all US financing of the PA terror government.


But it is still early in the game.


Congress understands that voting to cut off aid to the PA places its members on a collision course with the administration.


That’s fine for Republicans. But for Democrats, choosing the law over Obama may be a bridge too far. Past attempts have all failed.


And this brings us back to our frightened leaders.


All of Abbas’s great accomplishments over the past year have harmed Israel. Israel is more isolated today than it has ever been.


And this isolation redounds in large part to Abbas’s ability to exploit the US’s addiction to him. His success not only in forming the government with Hamas, but in securing US and EU support for it, is the worst blow so far. Israel now finds itself weaker diplomatically not only than Abbas, but than a genocidal terrorist group run by Iran.


This simply cannot continue.


The fact is that Israel has gotten nothing from playing along with American coddling of Abbas. It receives less support from Obama every day. And its willingness to go along to get along has demoralized and angered the Republicans who oppose what Obama is doing. It has given cover to Democrats who are loath to oppose the White House.


The time has come for Israel to stop playing this game, where the PLO gets to materially breach its agreements and so render them effectively null and void, while Israel, the sucker, keeps upholding them.


The time has come for Israel to stop collecting tax revenues for the PA. All of the money Israel collects and transfers to the PA is now serving Hamas directly.


And it isn’t enough to keep collecting, but stop transferring the revenues. The monies always end up being transferred eventually.


The only way to end this is by actually ceasing to serve as the PA’s taxman.


Obama won’t like it. But what’s he going to do? Facilitate Iran’s nuclear weapons program? Blame Israel for Palestinian aggression against it? Recognize and fund Hamas? The only way to get off this train is to get off. And disembarking is also the only way to impact US behavior. No single act by Israel will do more to empower the US Congress to stop funding the Palestinians than that.


And once that happens, a virtuous circle is formed, where at a minimum, Abbas’s winning streak will end.


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