Thursday, August 28, 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 29th August, 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.



Take No Prisoners

Andrew C. McCarthy is a Senior Fellow at the National Review Institute.



bb The Republican presidential ticket was animated, with both Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan finally ripping President Obama’s foreign policy to shreds. Pity that it happened nearly two years after they were soundly beaten in the 2012 election.


The too-little-way-too-late indictment occurred during a Fox News interview days after Islamic State jihadists decapitated an American journalist. It was a stark departure from the campaign, when so scathing a critique might have made a difference. Take, for example, the third debate between the candidates, a session on foreign affairs. All of America, it seemed, waited for Romney to unload on Obama’s shameful malfeasance before, during and after the then-recent Benghazi massacre. Alas, the Republican standard-bearer decided the winning debate strategy was to permit no daylight between Obama’s approach and his own, the better to focus the election on the economy. Quickly seeing that Romney had no intention of attacking, Obama reverted to the default Democrat strategy of ridiculing his rival as an out-of-touch rich guy who hadn’t heard the Cold War was over and wanted to hunker down in Iraq for a thousand years. Romney, to the contrary, seemed by debate’s end to be on the verge of endorsing Obama, whose foreign policy outpaces even Jimmy Carter’s in sheer destructiveness.


Romney, Ryan and their GOP leadership colleagues might not be the nice guys who finished last if they’d taken a few lessons from David Horowitz in the art of political warfare. Yes, warfare: The exercise in aggression in which the object is to defeat your adversary, not demonstrate how much you admire and have in common with him.


Political warfare is the subject of Mr. Horowitz’s latest book, Take No Prisoners: The Battle Plan for Defeating the Left . It is a particularly fitting topic for the bestselling author – the publisher of FrontPage and president of the David Horowitz Freedom Center. He is, after all, an unparalleled expert in the Left’s tireless and transformative political activism having learned it, lived it, escaped it, and dedicated his career to defeating it.


But warfare? Must it really be so cut-throat? Well, perhaps not … but let’s not kid ourselves. The old saw that “politics ain’t beanbag” predates the modern Left. Today’s timid consultant-class cautions about avoiding political “divisiveness” – the only schooling to which Republicans seem attuned – is nonsensical. Politics is innately divisive. People in a democratic society have vastly different policy preferences, and politics is the process by which we choose. One doesn’t get to govern, to apply policy preferences, without first prevailing in the sharp-elbowed electoral arena. As Horowitz demonstrates, moreover, good policy can be bad politics – the skill sets are different, and while voters may say they want policy that works, they elect candidates who care, or at least give the appearance of caring, even if such treacle translates into ruinous policy.


The inevitable divisiveness of politics has become more akin to warfare because, Horowitz explains, the modern Left is out not merely to defeat but to annihilate its opposition. Today’s Democrats have transformed the proudly pro-American party of Cold Warrior John F. Kennedy into the post-American party of the radical, antiwar, anti-captitalist and anti-Constitutional Left. It is not so much a political party as a missionary movement suffuse with apocalyptic zeal. It does not have opponents; it has enemies. Its grandiose aim is to elevate government as the “social savior,” transcending human history and experience, transmogrifying the United States into a remorselessly egalitarian society based on forced equality of results, not vibrant equality of opportunity.


For the Left, those who stand athwart their utopia rate not reasoned opposition but seething contempt. Democrats blithely portray Republicans in bracing terms: racist, misogynistic, xenophobic, greedy villains – defenders of the parasitic “top one percent” who luxuriate on the backs of decent working people.


Republicans are ill-equipped to deal with the onslaught because its driving convictions lie outside their worldview. Guided by history and experience, they are all too conscious of human failing, very much including their own. They are skeptical of grand schemes to perfect our nature, particularly those orchestrated through the notoriously imperfect vehicle of government. And their basic assumptions about caring – steeped in self-sufficiency and personal responsibility – do not sound-bite nearly as well as extravagant promises to provide for your needs by spending other people’s money.


We are left, then, with a serious passion gap. Republicans depict Democrats as wrong; Democrats decry Republicans as evil. Republicans deconstruct Democratic policy as well-meaning but misguided or “liberal”; Democrats counter that their mean-spirited opponents are the oppressors of women, children, minorities, the poor, and the environment.


In warfare, Horowitz observes, you cannot win “when the other side is using bazookas and your side is wielding fly swatters.” If they are to be viable competitors, Republicans must regard politics as warfare because that is what the opposition is doing. Horowitz explains that for the Left, “the issue is never the issue”; each controversy that arises, each crisis that is manufactured, is fit into an overarching narrative, like the “war on women,” based on its serviceability to “the socialist future and the revolution” by which it is being ushered in.


The narrative is designed not so much to win the day as to drive this transformative agenda. A good-and-evil narrative needs a scoundrel – recall the most infamous of Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals: “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” To gin up the hostility necessary for such a campaign, an abstraction will not do. Best to have a flesh-and-blood enemy that can more realistically be cast as a threat to society. That is the role of the Republicans, one they often seem only too willing to play.


Horowitz contends that Republicans must fight fire with fire. Importantly, he is not suggesting that the GOP should slander its opposition with lies. That, in fact, is the power of his argument. Horowitz wants Republicans to throw at the Left the abysmal failures of a half-century’s social welfare policies, and to do it with righteous passion, not apology.


Horowitz elaborates that this is crucial because the “racial Teflon is the reason Republicans lose elections.” Even though it foolishly narrowed the campaign to the economy – to the exclusion of national security, a defining issue in nearly every presidential election won by Republicans since 1952 – the Romney campaign still had a very strong case in light of Obama’s non-recovery, 23 million jobless, and millions more underemployed. Yet much of the voting public never heard the case: Democrats spent $200 million on a television ad campaign that smeared the candidate as a rich, heartless, untrustworthy job-destroyer who was cruel to his dog.


The consultant-driven campaign did not respond in kind despite the fact that a true response was ready to hand. As Horowitz puts it:



Obama is undoubtedly the most obvious and determined liar in presidential history. He is an absentee executive, notably missing in crisis after crisis or busy complaining he was uninformed about matters of crucial concern. While Egypt and Syria burned, he golfed and attended campaign fund-raising events. His endless dithering, misguided interventions, and steadfast support of the Muslim Brotherhood helped to set the Middle East aflame. Meanwhile, he and his wife carry on like royalty, consuming tens of millions of taxpayer dollars on their family vacations and dog, while tens of millions of Americans suffer historic levels of deprivation because of his policies.



Cutting to the chase, Horowitz observes that Republicans were petrified to paint this portrait of Obama because he is black – or, more accurately, half-black and staunchly leftist. In our hyper race-conscious political environment, this qualifies him as a man “of color,” insulated from the “standard to which others are held.” To break through this paralyzing political correctness, Republicans must not be afraid to show that the poor and minority groups are the victims – the human face – of Democratic programs that cheat them out of education, employment opportunity, quality healthcare, security, and stable families.


Horowitz upbraids Republicans for tepidly describing these programs “wasteful,” or sugar-coating them in a wrong-headed and self-defeating concession of the Democrats’ noble intentions. Instead, they are “morally repulsive, life-destroying programs that are inhumane and unjust,” and must be attacked as such. And attacked with real-life images of blight, such as once great American cities like Detroit – a global industrial jewel in living memory, but half of whose population (i.e., over a million people) has now abandoned the wreckage wrought by generations of exclusively Democratic rule.


Modern politics, the author counsels, is about inspiring fear as well as hope. And it is an art of war in which the aggressor usually prevails. Thus, if the opposition’s objectives will imperil the nation, it is essential to convince the public that they are to be feared. Hope can work, as it did for the 2008 Obama campaign, “but fear,” Horowitz writes, “is a stronger and more compelling emotion.”


As we are seeing day after day, Obama and his allies are to be feared. Will that be enough for the Beltway GOP and the grassroots conservatives of the Tea Party to concentrates on what unites rather than divides them? As the author admonishes, it better be. An America that is free, secure, and a positive, decisive leader on the world stage – the America that David Horowitz fights for – hangs in the balance.



Fuel pipes cut on more than two dozen Teesside vehicles


Thieves have been cutting the fuel pipes and stealing petrol from dozens of vehicles in Teesside.


Police are appealing for information after 25 reports of fuel pipes being cut in order to syphon the fuel from vehicles in Middlesbrough.


The incidents took place overnight on the dates of Wednesday August 20, Thursday August 21, Friday August 22 and Sunday August 24 into Monday August 25 on the Ladgate ward and Marton ward.


In some of the cases fuel was syphoned from the vehicles.


Anyone who may have information or anyone who may have seen anyone acting suspiciously around vehicles in the areas of Ladgate and Marton are asked to contact Sergeant Jon Hutchinson on the non-emergency 101 number or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Five arrested after drink-fuelled fight on train to Middlesbrough


Five men were arrested after a fight broke out on a train leaving passengers injured.


Fellow travellers on the 18.35 Manchester Airport to Middlesbrough service on Wednesday looked on as a drink-fuelled brawl broke out as the train neared Thirsk.


One passenger claimed the violence was triggered after a noisy group of men was asked to quieten down.


A British Transport Police spokeswoman said the train was delayed for an hour after arriving at Thirsk Station at 8.40pm, as two passengers who had been injured were treated by paramedics before continuing their journeys.


She said the five arrested were all from the Middlesbrough and Teesside area and had been held in custody overnight due to the amount of alcohol they had consumed.



Knifeman hunted after raid on home in North Ormesby


A man armed with a knife who raided a home in North Ormesby is being hunted by police.


Police were called to a report of an aggravated burglary after a man entered an address on Dorothy Street, North Ormesby, at around 6.10pm on Wednesday.


Officers said the man, who had a knife, stole a handbag containing cash before making off on foot towards Derwent Street.


A 48-year-old woman who was at the address was unharmed.



Kei Kamara leaves Boro after his contract is cancelled by mutual consent


Kei Kamara has left Boro after the club confirmed his contract has been cancelled by mutual consent.


The Sierra Leone striker hasn't featured at all this season after falling out of favour during the summer.


And the 29-year-old is now on the lookout for a new club after parting company with Boro.


Kamara joined Boro for £900,000 from Sporting Kansas City on deadline day last summer.


And although he made a bright start to his stint on Teesside, the striker suffered a knee injury at the turn of the year and struggled to force his way back into Aitor Karanka's plans.


He was heavily criticised by fans for criticising the club on Twitter for "doing nothing" when he contracted malaria during the summer.



Sats results success for Teesside primary schools


More children on Teesside are reaching the standards expected of them in the three Rs by the time they leave primary school, new figures show.


The results of this year’s national curriculum tests - known as Sats - show improvements across all three council areas in the proportion of 11-year-olds gaining at least a Level 4 - the standard expected of the age group, in the basics.


Schools in Redcar & Cleveland achieved some of the best performance in the country, with 83% of pupils achieving a Level 4 in reading, writing and maths.


The figure, up from 80% in 2013, was one of the highest in England and well above the average for England of 78%.


The results also revealed further improvement in Middlesbrough primary schools, with 77% achieving Level 4, a big jump from just 72% two years ago.


Performance in Stockton schools was also above the national average at 80%, up from 78% a year ago.


The data also revealed the proportion of pupils making the expected progress between Key Stage 1 (ages 5-7), and Key Stage 2 (ages 7-11) was the joint highest in the country in Redcar & Cleveland at 94%.


Performance in both Stockton and Middlesbrough was also above the 89% average for England at 92%.


About 5,000 11-year-olds across Teesside took the tests.


School Reform Minister Nick Gibb welcomed the improvement in results, and said the Government had set “unashamedly high expectations” for all children.


Mr Gibb said that around 80,000 more children were reaching Level 4 in reading, writing and maths, than five years ago, allowing them to start secondary school secure in the basics and able to move on to more complex subjects.


“It means in the long term these children stand a far better chance of winning a place at university, gaining an apprenticeship and securing good jobs,” he said.


Joan Guy, Redcar & Cleveland Council’s cabinet member for children’s services and education, said the borough's results highlighted the "superb work" being done in primary schools.


“They are a testament to the hard work and dedication of our teachers, support workers, governors and parents as well as the children themselves," she said.


Councillor Jan Brunton, Middlesbrough Council’s executive member for education congratulated the children who are now getting ready to starts secondary school.


“Our target now is to continue to improve and work towards reaching attainment levels higher than the national average.”



Recap: Surviving WWII Lancaster bomber flies into Durham Tees Valley Airport


Hundreds of people are expected to visit Durham Tees Valley Airport today to see one of only two Lancaster bombers still flying.


There will be a series of events around the visit of the historic 1945 aircraft - including the chance for the public to view the plane.


The aircraft is due to complete a flypast at 3pm today.



Win a car with The Gazette: Peugeot 208 up for grabs in new competition


The competition which sees Teesside go car crazy is back - and among the first to enter will be the Gazette reader who won last year!


Delighted John Diaz became the proud owner of a brand new Peugeot after he triumphed in the Gazette’s 2013 Win A Car competition, run in association with the Simon Bailes Peugeot dealership and Stockton’s Wellington Square shopping centre.


John, of Stockton, emerged with the smart white 208 Active after choosing the correct set of keys in a nail-biting finale.


And with the launch of the 2014 contest just days away, he’s urging people to follow his lead and have a go.


Grandad of three John, 65, was one of 10 finalists randomly selected from 51,000 entries to take part in last year’s final.


“Guess the price” rounds whittled the numbers down to two, who then went head to head in a game of Play Your Cards right.


The winner of each round chose a car key - and John couldn’t believe his luck when the key he picked in the third round opened the lock.


Recalling his win, John said: “I get The Gazette every day anyway, so it didn’t cost me anything to enter and I’m very glad I did.


“I remember I was shaking when I won - I couldn’t believe it really.


“It was marvellous to win it, and the warranty meant I’d have trouble-free motoring for at least three years.


“So I’d just say to people ‘have a go’ - I certainly will! I didn’t expect to win the first time but if you don’t enter, you don’t have a chance.”


For the 2014 contest, which launches on Monday , the Gazette has again teamed up with Wellington Square and Simon Bailes Peugeot Stockton to give away a brand new Peugeot 208 Active, worth a cool £12,695.


And both the main sponsors are revving up for an exciting competition.


Rob Gildersleeve, Wellington Square Centre manager, said: “Last year’s Win a Car competition was a huge success with our shoppers and retailers alike, and we are keen to carry on the theme of rewarding our shoppers again this year.


“It was a pleasure to give the car to John last October, but who knows where the winner will come from this year? We’re looking forward to finding out.”


Bridget Charlton, marketing director at Simon Bailes Peugeot, said: “We are delighted to be involved in this promotion again this year as a Peugeot 208 is such an amazing prize to win.


“It creates such a buzz, both among our staff across all three of our dealerships and also with customers, old and new. It gets people talking and I’m sure it’ll be a great success.”


For details on how to enter, visit http://ift.tt/1md60Qe or buy The Gazette on Monday.



Aitor Karanka considering whether to include Ryan Fredericks in squad for Reading



Read: Three facts about Boro loanee Ryan Fredericks


Aitor Karanka is considering whether to include new signing Ryan Fredericks in his squad for Saturday's home clash with Reading.


The 21-year-old attacking full-back, who trained with the first squad this morning, has signed a season-long loan deal with Boro and is eligible to play at the weekend.


Fitness permitting, Damia Abella will be the first right-back for the time being but Fredericks gives Karanka options in a position that proved problematical to fill following the departures of Jozsef Varga and Stuart Parnaby at the end of last season.


The Boro head coach said: “I am very pleased to sign Ryan because he plays in a position I have been trying to sort for a lot of months.


“Eventually we managed to bring in Damia from Spain and now we've got a young lad from Tottenham.”


Watch: Ryan Fredericks talks about debut goal for Millwall


Karanka revealed today that he spoke at length about Fredericks with Spurs boss Mauricio Pochettino and received a glowing report from the Argentinian.


“I was speaking to Mauricio about him and I think it is a good deal for everybody, “ he revealed.


“Like the young lads we brought in from Chelsea, I like to work with these kind of players and I think it is going to be a good thing.


“I don't know yet whether he will be in the squad for the Reading game because I need to make sure he is 100% fit, but I'm pleased he's joined us and we will need him as the season goes on because we have a lot of games in the Championship and I will need to give players a rest.”


Fredericks is a product of the Tottenham Academy and has spent time on loan with Brentford and, last season, with Millwall.


He's also been capped at England Under-19 level.



Middlesbrough Empire calls time on bar queues with a new drink-ordering app


Bar queues could soon be a thing of the past at a well-known Teesside nightclub if a new smart phone app takes off.


One of Middlesbrough’s most well known night spots - The Empire - is the first venue in the North-east to make use of the Q App which enables punters to order their drinks from their smart phone.


A designated member of staff will receive notification on a behind-the-bar tablet, prepare the drinks and then either notify the customer that their drink is ready or deliver it to them.


If successful, other Teesside nightclubs and bars may be encouraged to offer the service too.


The Empire joins some of the UK’s top entertainment venues to use Q App including the Royal Albert Hall in London and Ministry of Sound nightclub, also in London.


Ashley Wem is managing director at The Empire.


He said: “The owners of the app got in contact with me and asked us if we’d launch it here so we are going with it - it’s a brilliant app.


“You don’t even have to bother moving!


“Who wants to queue?


“You can order your drinks and have them brought to your table or you can go to the bar and collect them.”


The service at The Empire, in Corporation Road, launches on September 6.


The Empire is having a wifi system enabled so that the app can be used easily.


Ashley, who lives at Ingleby Barwick and has worked at the Empire since 1993, said: “It could take a while before people cotton on and for people to get used to it as all these kinds of things take a bit of time.


“But I’d rather order my drinks using it.


“You’re not going to get everyone using it though - it’s for a certain clientele.


“We are starting this week to let everybody know about it via Facebook and Twitter.”


The app is free to download from the iTunes App Store.




The Gazette Me and My Pet


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The Editor



Chris Styles


Editor, Evening Gazette



Email

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Chris was appointed editor of the Evening Gazette in January 2012. He is also a former Gazette news editor. Chris has more than 20 years experience as a journalist and has previously worked in senior positions in Newcastle, Exeter and Nottingham.




The Gazette: A Day in the Life


The Evening Gazette



Join us on social media.


For the latest local news straight to your Twitter, Facebook feed or e-mail inbox.







The Editor



Chris Styles


Editor, Evening Gazette



Email

chris.styles@trinitymirror.com

Twitter

@chrisstyles16



Photo of Chris Styles

Chris was appointed editor of the Evening Gazette in January 2012. He is also a former Gazette news editor. Chris has more than 20 years experience as a journalist and has previously worked in senior positions in Newcastle, Exeter and Nottingham.




Live: Surviving WWII Lancaster bomber flies into Durham Tees Valley Airport


Hundreds of people are expected to visit Durham Tees Valley Airport today to see one of only two Lancaster bombers still flying.


There will be a series of events around the visit of the historic 1945 aircraft - including the chance for the public to view the plane.


The aircraft is due to complete a flypast at 3pm today.



Two arrested after armed robbery at Middlesbrough petrol station



Two arrests have been made following an armed robbery at a petrol station.


Police are appealing for information after an armed robbery at the BP Tudor Lodge garage on Marton Road, Middlesbrough, at around 1.35am this morning.


Two people entered the premises and made off with a small amount of cash. No one was injured during the incident.


Men aged 23 and 26 have been arrested on suspicion of aggravated burglary and are currently in police custody.


The BP Tudor Lodge garage on the corner of Ladgate Lane and Marton Road at Marton crossroads, Middlesbrough, remains closed and has been taped off by police who are investigating the incident.


It comes just days after the petrol station was refused a 24-hour alcohol licence by Middlesbrough Council amid concerns about alcohol fuelled anti-social behaviour, nuisance youths and violence.


A police car was at the scene and windows at the garage appear to have been broken.


Any witnesses to the incident are asked to contact Detective Sergeant Rachel Taylor at Major Crime on the non-emergency number 101 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Dispute over how many friends Iranian asylum seeker has after he is caught with £760-worth of cannabis


A Iranian asylum seeker could face jail after he admitted possession of £760 worth of cannabis.


Kaivan Mahmoudi, 27, was caught with 3oz of the Class B drug in three parcels, Teesside Crown Court heard yesterday.


Prosecutor Sue Jacobs said police found the drugs when they went to a property “to arrest somebody else for something else completely different”.


Mahmoudi, of Stranton Street, Thornaby, admitted possession of cannabis with intent to supply.


There was dispute over the intended supply and “how many friends he’s got”.


Mrs Jacobs referred to a request for half an ounce on a mobile phone suggesting “this was rather larger scale than sharing a bit among some friends”.


Warren Ridley, defending, said: “The drugs were bought jointly, not simply bought by him to supply.”


He said Mahmoudi, who has been in the UK for four years, had leave to remain in this country.


He was in a relationship with a British citizen who was expecting a child.


But he did not have permission to work and was “stuck” here as the authorities deemed it unsafe for him to return to Iran.


Judge John Walford bailed Mahmoudi until he receives his sentence on September 19.



Detectives investigating suspected armed robbery at Middlesbrough petrol station



Detectives are investigating a suspected armed robbery at a busy Middlesbrough petrol station.


The BP Tudor Lodge garage, on the corner of Ladgate Lane and Marton Road, near Stewart Park in Middlesbrough, remains closed and has been taped off by police who are investigating the incident.


A police car was at the scene and windows at the garage appear to have been broken.


The incident is currently being investigated by CID.


It comes days after the petrol station was refused a 24-hour alcohol licence was refused by Middlesbrough Council amid concerns about alcohol fuelled anti-social behaviour, nuisance youths and violence.


Cleveland Police had opposed the application.



Morning news headlines: Crime chief quits Labour party, £160m boost for cancer drugs fund


CRIME CHIEF QUITS LABOUR PARTY


South Yorkshire police and crime commissioner Shaun Wright has resigned from the Labour Party, but insisted he would not leave his post.


Mr Wright's resignation came after Labour threatened to suspend him unless he stepped down in the wake of a damning report into child abuse in Rotherham.


He has faced repeated calls to quit because he was the Rotherham Council cabinet member for children's services between 2005 and 2010.


NO 10: NO US AIR STRIKE REQUEST


Britain joining strikes against jihadists has not been requested and is not currently under discussion, Downing Street has insisted, despite reports that Barack Obama is hoping to win agreement to bring allies into the air campaign by next week's Nato summit.


The United States has launched scores of bombing attacks on Islamic State (IS) militants in northern Iraq in a bid to assist Kurdish and Iraqi forces in their fightback.


Reports in The Times said the Pentagon had been exploring whether western allies such as Britain and Australia, and allied Gulf states, would assist in a broader campaign in Syria against the group, which was formerly known as Isil.


£160M BOOST FOR CANCER DRUGS FUND


Thousands more cancer patients in England will be offered vital treatments in a £160 million boost to the Cancer Drugs Fund (CDF), the Department of Health said today.


The fund, which has helped more than 55,000 cancer patients since it was set up four years ago, will be increased from £200 million a year to £280 million a year.


The move will mean many more patients with rare conditions will benefit from life-extending drugs recommended by their doctor.


CAMERON PLEA OVER AFGHAN GOVERNMENT


David Cameron has urged both of Afghanistan's presidential candidates to work towards the "prize" of a democratic unity government in time for the Nato summit in Wales next month.


The Prime Minister called Dr Ashraf Ghani and Dr Abdullah Abdullah yesterday and urged them to stick with a process outlined by US Secretary of State John Kerry.


The pair topped a first round of elections in April but, following claims of electoral fraud, a victor was not declared following a second round run-off in June.


BRITAIN IS 'DEEPLY ELITIST SOCIETY'


Britain is still "deeply elitist" with privately-educated pupils and Oxbridge graduates continuing to dominate top roles in society, a major new report warns.


Many of the nation's judges, politicians, armed forces chiefs, journalists, TV executives, public officials and sports stars attended fee-paying schools before going to study at Oxford and Cambridge, it suggests.


This stark lack of diversity means that many of Britain's key institutions are not representative of the public they serve, and the people running them may not understand the daily issues facing people from different backgrounds, according to the Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission.


LATEST MIGRATION STATISTICS DUE


The Government's attempts to slash net migration to the tens of thousands will come under the spotlight today as official figures are released amid increased debate over the inclusion of international students in the target.


Migration statistics for the 12 months to March will be published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) just days after the publication of a report suggesting overseas students should be removed from immigration targets.


An ICM opinion poll suggested that the British public does not see international students as immigrants and are opposed to attempts to reduce their number in a bid to lower net immigration.


CAMERON PRAISES 'SINGLE MARKET' UK


The Prime Minister will hail the UK as one of the world's "oldest and most successful single markets" as he campaigns to keep the country together.


With just three weeks to go until the independence referendum, David Cameron will address the business organisation CBI Scotland's annual dinner in Glasgow this evening.


The Conservative leader will use his trip north to make the business case for Scotland remaining in the UK.


EX-GLADIATOR DAVID LEAVES BB ARENA


Kelly Brook is celebrating being reunited with her fiance after he became the first housemate to be evicted from Celebrity Big Brother.


Former Gladiator David McIntosh was booted out of the reality TV show after receiving the fewest votes.


And lingerie model Brook could barely contain her excitement at seeing her betrothed again, immediately tweeting after his departure was announced and he danced his way down the steps out of the house.


PARENTS 'MISSING MEALS' TO PAY RENT


An estimated 880,000 working parents in England have resorted to skipping meals in the last year in order to cover their mortgage or rent, according to research from Shelter.


The charity said that 10.5% of working adults with children said they or their partner had missed meals in the last 12 months to help pay for their home, equating to 880,000 parents, if the figures are projected across the country.


Working parents with children aged under 18 were asked about steps they had had to take over the last year in order to meet their housing costs.


DEPRESSED CANCER PATIENTS 'IGNORED'


Large numbers of cancer patients suffer from major depression and in the vast majority of cases their mental anguish is being overlooked or ignored, a study has found.


A survey of more than 21,000 patients in Scotland found rates of clinical depression ranging from 6% to 13%, compared with a prevalence of just 2% in the general population.


Of the 1,130 who had been diagnosed, almost three quarters (73%) were not receiving any kind of effective treatment.



Steve McClaren: 'Patrick Bamford will prove to be a great signing for Boro'


Steve McClaren believes Boro have bagged a star man in Patrick Bamford as the Chelsea striker puts the final touches to his loan move to the Riverside.


The former Boro and England boss, plotting another promotion push with Championship rivals Derby County this season, knows first-hand what Bamford offers in front of goal after working with him at Pride Park last season.


The England under-21 international striker scored eight goals in 21 appearances for Derby at the end of last season.


And McClaren believes Aitor Karanka has pulled off a major coup by persuading the hitman to move to Teesside.


Boro’s Carling Cup winning boss McClaren, who still has a home in Aislaby said: “I worked with Patrick last season and he is a really good lad and a good player.


“He had a good time at Derby with us and scored goals, and I think he will prove to be a great signing for Boro.”


Bamford and both clubs have agreed the switch and he is expected to sign for Boro imminently once a minor red tape issue is resolved.


Meanwhile, wideman Emilio Nsue is recovering from a a back injury picked up against Preston.


He limped off after tumbling heavily under a challenge just before the break but the knock has settled and he is hopeful of being fit for Saturday.



Middlesbrough Council mileage: How much did the councillors and Ray Mallon claim?


The mileage claims submitted by the councillors and Mayor Mallon over the period in question include:


CLLR TRACY HARVEY


:: Claimed seven miles for attending a remembrance service in November 2012. At 40p a mile, this equates to £2.80.


:: Claimed eight miles for watching the Olympic Torch arrival in Middlesbrough in June 2012 = £3.20.


:: Claimed seven miles to attend a Christmas concert = £2.80.


:: Claimed 12 miles to attend Armed Forces Day in June 2013 = £4.80.


CLLR RON LOWES


:: Claimed 10 miles to watch the Olympic Torch arrival in June 2012 = £4.


:: Claimed 10 miles to attend Thornaby Mayor Mick Eddy’s funeral in August 2012 = £4.


:: Claimed 60 miles to go to a Battle of Britain ceremony in September 2012 = £24.


CLLR NICKY WALKER


:: Claimed 10 miles to attend a press call at Stewart Park = £4.


Mileage was paid at 40p a mile prior to October last year.


Since then it has been paid at 45p a mile.


Total cost of mileage claimed in 2012-13:


:: Cllr Brady £485.60;


:: Cllr Brunton £416.40;


:: Cllr Budd £488.80;


:: Cllr Harvey £812;


:: Cllr Lowes £507.60;


:: Mayor Mallon £1,224;


:: Cllr Walker £256;


Total cost of mileage claimed in 2013-14:


:: Cllr Brady £522.50;


:: Cllr Brunton £263.25;


:: Cllr Budd £1,000.30;


:: Cllr Harvey £562.35;


:: Cllr Lowes £380.30;


:: Mayor Mallon £1,409.80;


:: Cllr Walker £396.10;


These mileage expenses are on top of the basic councillor allowance of £6,129.96 for Cllrs Brady, Brunton, Budd, Harvey, Lowes and Walker and Mayor Mallon.


On top of these in 2012-13 Cllr Harvey got a special responsibility allowance of £5,371.95, Cllr Brunton received a SRA of £12,260.04, Cllr Budd got a SRA of £18,390, Cllr Lowes got a SRA of £3,069.96, Cllr Walker got a SRA of £12,123.82 and Mr Mallon got a SRA of £61,299.96.


In 2013-14 Cllr Brady received £6,129.96 BA and £2,698.50 SRA, Cllr Brunton got £6,129.96 BA and £12,260.04 SRA, Cllr Budd got £6,129.96 BA and £18,390 SRA, Cllr Harvey got £6,129.96 BA and £6,129.96 SRA, Cllr Lowes got £6,129.96 BA and £511.66 SRA, Mayor Mallon got £6,129 BA and £61,299.96 SRA and Cllr Walker got £6,129.96 BA and £12,260.04 SRA.