Tuesday, February 17, 2015

#OnThisBoroDay 1998: Boro beat Liverpool in the Coca Cola Cup semi final to book another trip to Wembley


When Bryan Robson returned to Teesside recently for a Riverside reunion he described the match as his best night as Boro boss.


It’s not difficult to see why.


Brilliant Boro burst out of the blocks to stun Liverpool and book yet another trip to Wembley on this day in 1998.


The second leg of the Coca Cola Cup semi-final with the Premier League giants will live long in the memory.


Ask any Riverside regular to name their top five games on home turf and this enthralling clash won’t be far from the top of the pile.


It had everything. A tie perfectly poised with just one goal in it after the Scousers edged the first leg at Anfield 2-1, the Riverside absolutely packed to the rafters, Boro on the verge of a THIRD trip to Wembley in a year.


Fans celebrate with Craig Hignett after the Coca Cola cup victory over Liverpool


But if they were going to stun the firm favourites, they had to make their intentions clear from the off.


Two goals in four minutes - almost sucked into the net by the incredible noise generated by the Boro faithful - wasn’t a bad way of doing it.


At a time when flag days seemed to be almost a weekly occurrence, the sold-out Riverside was a sight to behold before kick-off.


It certainly inspired Boro’s starting XI. Just 90 seconds had passed when Mikkel Beck burst into the box. Clumsy Carragher, making only his second start for Liverpool, clipped the striker.


All eyes on the referee who put his whistle to his mouth and pointed to the spot.


Boro fans celebrate the Coca Cola Cup victory over Liverpool


And while the roar that greeted Paul Merson’s spot-kick still rumbled around the Riverside, the magic man weighted a perfect through ball into the feet of Marco Branca, splitting the Liverpool defence in two.


Making his Boro debut, you could count the number of touches Branca had made in English football in one hand but that didn’t prevent the Italian from coolly slotting the ball underneath David James.


In just four minutes Boro had turned this thrilling tie on its head. And that’s how it stayed.


Shellshocked Liverpool couldn’t even lift themselves for a rousing finish after trying to recover from the early body-blow.


Bryan Robson had spent the opening stages of the game in the stands but soon joined his coaching team and players pitchside as the celebrations got underway.


Next stop Wembley. Again!



Billingham's Tracerco's ground-breaking scanner wins top industry award


A Billingham technology firm’s groundbreaking oil and gas scanner has won a top national award.


Tracerco has developed Discovery - a global first, which could save operators millions by allowing them to inspect subsea pipelines from the outside without having to remove protective coatings.


The scanner, developed at the company’s Belasis Hall Technology Park base, is set to change the face of the industry.


Discovery took the Innovation & Technology Subsea UK Award at the Subsea UK Awards - the second top industry accolade it’s picked up in a year.


Tracerco’s outbound marketing manager Helena Barrass said: “Discovery potentially saves millions in lost production.


“This truly is an industry breakthrough, and as such, is a deserved winner of the award.”


“If there is a blockage in the pipeline, production could be compromised or even stopped altogether. Over time these only increase until remedial action can be taken.


“DiscoveryTM allows oil companies for the first time to discover in detail the extent and nature of any deposits or blockage, allowing them to effectively plan remedial action with confidence.


“Nothing else currently on the market can give such detail and accuracy, in real time, online, without any modification to subsea pipelines.”


Last October the company unveiled a multi-million pound test centre to help grow its innovative work in oil, gas and petrochemical measurement technology.


The £9m custom-built Research, Development and Engineering Test Centre at its Billingham base “reaffirms the company’s commitment” to the region, according to bosses.



Middlesbrough striker Patrick Bamford craves central role to bolster promotion push


Patrick Bamford would love to be Boro’s central striker - but says he’s prepared to sacrifice that preference for the greater good.


The Chelsea loanee has found himself in an unfamiliar role on the right wing in recent weeks, playing on the flank against Manchester City, Brentford and Charlton.


Impressed with his application out wide, Aitor Karanka again asked Bamford to play on the right at Arsenal - but the 21-year-old endured a disappointing afternoon at the Emirates.


Bamford revealed he would prefer to play up front, but is happy to put that to one side if it helps Boro’s promotion push.


“Playing on the right isn’t a role I prefer but sometimes you’ve got to do your job for the team,” Bamford said.


“It’s something I’m a bit foreign to, and defensive duties come a bit harder to me.


“It’s one of those things I’ll have to learn if that’s where the gaffer wants to use me, but I’d prefer to be up front.”


Despite playing out of position, Bamford has enjoyed a purple patch in front of goal having found the net three times in his last five appearances.


Bamford clinched his 11th goal of the season against Charlton and has become a vital part of Karanka’s side since arriving from Stamford Bridge last summer.


The England Under-21s star admitted he has set himself goalscoring targets on Teesside, but may have to adjust them if he continues to be selected on the wing.


“I’m loving it here and fortunately I’ve been scoring goals, even though I’ve been playing out of position,” he added.


“Thankfully I’ve had a nack of scoring wherever I’ve played, so imagine what I could do if I played up front all the time.


“At the start of the season, as a striker, I set a lot of targets. But depending on where I play, I have to alter them a bit.”


Bamford says Boro didn’t do themselves justice at the Emirates, but with games against Birmingham, Leeds, Bolton and Sheffield Wednesday still to come this month, there are plenty of opportunities to make amends.


“I think every game in the Championship is hard but every game is winnable,” Bamford said.


“It’s about being consistent. Sometimes you can perform against the big teams that are in around you, but then you can slip up against the lower position teams.


“That’s what can hurt you when you’re challenging for promotion.”



Apprenticeship starts fall in Teesside but completions are on the rise


A sharp fall in apprenticeship start-ups on Teesside has been offset by a rise in completions, two new surveys have revealed.


The number of people beginning apprenticeships in Middlesbrough dropped more than a fifth last year, according to latest Government figures - the steepest decline in the North-east.


In the year to July 31 2014 there were 1,480 people who took up new apprenticeships in the town, a drop of 22.1% on the previous year.


The number of new starters on the training schemes fell almost everywhere in Teesside and the wider North-east - as it did in most places across the country.


Hartlepool was the only bright spot in the region, where the number of new apprentices rose by 1.6%. Redcar & Cleveland saw a 20.3% fall while the 14% decrease in Stockton on-Tees was higher than the national average decline of 13.8%.


Businesses on Teesside have previously expressed concern over declining apprenticeship numbers, with Redcar car parts maker ElringKlinger describing the lack of manufacturing skills in the region as a “ticking time bomb” for the industry.


But other statistics from the TTE Technical Training Group paint a much brighter picture.


The Teesside-based organisation, which is one of the UK’s largest apprenticeship training bodies for the engineering, manufacturing, oil & gas and process sectors, said 92.5% of its 107 apprentices had completed their training in 2014 - a significant jump on the national average of 68.9%.


It’s the second piece of good news for TTE, which was endorsed in Ofsted’s most recent learner and employer survey. The study said 96% of trainees would recommend TTE to a friend, while 98% claimed the training accurately met their skills needs.


Steve Grant, TTE managing director, said: “The huge difference between our success rate and the national average is something both the trainees and trainers can take great pride from. Combine this with the results of our learner and employer survey and it’s clear that we’ve managed to create a quality training programme that utilises our links in industry to give students and employers the skills they require.”


Mr Grant’s comments follow a political war of words on apprenticeships ahead of the General Election in May. This week Labour leader Ed Miliband pledged to guarantee an apprenticeship for school leavers who achieve level 3 qualifications - equivalent to A-Level standard - and slammed the current system for failing to provide sufficient high-quality training options for young people.


But Conservative party chairman Grant Shapps defended the Tories’ record, claiming apprenticeships had doubled since 2010. The Tories have pledged to impose further cuts on benefits to fund an additional three million apprenticeships if they are re-elected in May.


Mr Grant described Mr Miliband’s pledge as “bold and aspirational” but said more needed to be done to promote the benefits of apprenticeships to smaller firms.


“The penny has dropped among businesses that apprenticeships are not a second choice anymore. We do have smaller firms offering them but SMEs are the hardest to reach.


“If every company in the area took on just one apprentice, that would go some way to resolving the problem of skills shortages in certain industries.”



Stockton job losses spark call for Government action on offshore industry


Calls are growing for the government to act on the crisis in the offshore industry after oil drilling services firm MHWirth announced its Stockton base will close.


The company is the fourth North-east firm to shed jobs in response to the crash in oil prices. The future of around 18 workers is under threat, after it announced the closure of its Preston Farm operation just three years after it talked of employing 200 staff at the site.


The move is part of a global plan to shed up to 750 jobs from MHWirth, and follows similar moves by several other North-east oil and gas supply chain operators hit by shrinking investment by large oil firms.


International reorganisation at subsea engineering firm DeepOcean is expected to spell job losses in Darlington, and earlier this month the Norwegian parent company of Stockton’s Reef Subsea UK filed for bankruptcy, calling into question the future of the North-east operation.


In December, oil field services firm Archer abruptly closed its Blyth office, while subsea umbilicals specialists Flexlife confirmed their Newcastle operation was under review.


In light of the market turmoil, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has established an “Energy Jobs Taskforce” to shore up Scotland’s oil and gas supply chain. The body will guarantee Scottish Modern Apprentices (MAs) faced with redundancy the offer of alternative employment or continued off-the-job training before alternative employment.


Senior executives from the likes of BP, Taqa, Petrofac and the Wood Group joined the taskforces’ inaugural meeting last month.


So far, the UK government has not acted on calls to help the industry, but Mrs Sturgeon yesterday increased the pressure on ministers at Westminster to act.


George Rafferty, chief executive of NOF Energy George Rafferty, chief executive of NOF Energy


George Rafferty, chief executive of NOF Energy, welcomed the creation of the Scottish taskforce, which he said would help the North-east.


He said: “One of the toughest challenges facing a cyclical industry like oil and gas is maintaining the workforce and, in particular, continuing to support the development of future skilled personnel through apprenticeships.


“Any support that can be provided by government to secure jobs and provide a platform for future investment has to be welcomed, and the principles of the Energy Jobs Taskforce demonstrate the willingness of politicians to assist the industry.


“Ensuring apprentices complete their training is essential if the oil and gas sector, like all industries, is to avoid potential skills gaps. Providing a guarantee that apprentices are off­er­ed alternative employment if they face redundancy is a positive move towards safeguarding the sector’s next generation.”


Ms Sturgeon said UK government could no longer ignore calls for urgent tax changes that could yield a “resurgence” in the North Sea oil industry.


She said “urgent fiscal stimulus” was needed to increase exploration work, claiming that “quite frankly, the UK government has failed to address the exploration problem in the North Sea.”


She added: “We only have to look at the situation in Norway in 2005 to see that simple steps can be taken to restore a decline in exploration. In three years, the introduction of the exploration tax credit saw the number of exploration wells increase an incredible four-fold.


“We have also called for the reduction in the headline rate of tax in the North Sea and the introduction of an investment allowance, all of which have the potential to provide an important signal to investors, increase the attractiveness of North Sea exploration projects and enhance the competitiveness of the sector.”



Is Israel the Problem, or Are Jews the Problem?


AP100127022968 In the aftermath of the killing of a man at a Copenhagen synagogue by a member of the Religion of Peace, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, “This wave of attacks is expected to continue. Jews deserve security in every country, but we say to our Jewish brothers and sisters, Israel is your home.” Russian emigre Natan Sharansky echoed Netanyahu’s call, stating, “There is no future for Jews in western Europe.”


In response, European leaders shouted down Netanyahu. “We know there are doubts, questions across the community,” said French President Francois Hollande, who was elected with in excess of 93 percent of the Muslim vote. “I will not just let what was said in Israel pass, leading people to believe that Jews no longer have a place in Europe and France, in particular.” The same week, Jewish tombstones were spray-painted by the hundreds in eastern France.


But undoubtedly, European anti-Semites will now claim that Netanyahu’s comments simply demonstrate why Europe must force out its Jews: because Israel is just so awful. That, at least, is what a German court in the city of Wuppertal concluded after convicting two German Palestinians of setting fire to a synagogue. The Wuppertal court stated that the men were simply attempting to bring “attention to the Gaza conflict.” In other words, Jews are fair game because of Israel.


But it’s precisely the reverse that is true: Israel is fair game because it is Jewish. This is the dirty little secret of anti-Israel policy: It is almost entirely anti-Semitic policy. That is why Muslims attack Jewish synagogues in Paris during the Gaza war: because Israel is a stand-in for the Jews, not the other way around. Were Israel a Muslim country, the rest of the world would see it as a beacon of light and hope for the future of an entire religion.


Because it is Jewish, Muslims target it for destruction, and the rest of the world tut-tuts Israel’s nasty habit of attempting to survive. The extra-American world hates Israel because it is Jewish. It does not hate Jews because of Israel. Israel is merely a convenient excuse.


Ironically, radical Muslims, in targeting Jews throughout the world, reinforce the necessity of a state of Israel. Their argument seems to be that Israel is an unnecessary Jewish nationalist cancer; to prove that argument, they suggest killing Jews all over the planet, leaving no place safe for Jews except for Israel.


And so Jews go to Israel by the droves. European governments can rip Netanyahu all they want for his supposedly brusque dismissal of European tolerance, but that supposed tolerance means less and less when Swedish Jews abandon entire cities as the authorities make way for radical Muslims. European governments can condemn the Gaza war, but Jews see that war for what it was: an exercise in Jewish self-preservation, with the Europeans once again attempting to prevent such self-preservation.


Unlike the Europeans, Americans continue to side with Israel because America is founded on Judeo-Christian principles. America embraces Judaism, and so it embraces Israel, not the other way around. The formula is simple: Love Jews; love Israel. Hate Jews; hate Israel. Opposing Israeli action may not be anti-Semitism, but it sure does have a funny habit of backing the agenda of anti-Semites.


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There is No Modern Islam


ISIS Al-Qaeda Militants Fighting Syrian Civil War Like math and the Midwest, ISIS confuses progressives. It’s not hard to confuse a group of people who never figured out that if you borrow 18 trillion dollars, you’re going to have to pay it back. But ISIS is especially confusing to a demographic whose entire ideology is being on the right side of history.


Raised to believe that history inevitably trended toward diversity in catalog models, fusion restaurants and gay marriage, the Arab Spring led them on by promising that the Middle East would be just like Europe and then ISIS tore up their Lonely Planet guidebook to Syria and chopped off their heads.


But ISIS also believes that it’s on the right side of history. Its history is the Koran. The right side of its history is what Iraq and Syria look like today. It’s also how parts of Europe are starting to look.


Progressive politicians and pundits trying to cope with ISIS lapse into a shrill incoherence that has nothing to do with their outrage at its atrocities and a lot to do with their sheer incomprehension. Terms like “apocalyptic nihilism” get thrown around as if heavy metal were beginning to make a comeback.


Those few analysts who admit that the Islamic State might be a just a little Islamic emphasize that it’s a medieval throwback, as if there were some modern version of Islam to compare it to.


Journalists trying to make sense of ISIS demanding Jizya payments and taking slaves ought to remember that these aren’t medieval behaviors in the Middle East. Not unless medieval means the 19th century. And that’s spotting them a whole century. Saudi Arabia only abolished slavery in 1962 under pressure from the United States. Its labor market and that of fellow Petrojihadi kingdoms like Kuwait and Qatar are based on arrangements that look a lot like temporary slavery… for those foreigners who survive.


Non-Muslims paid Jizya to Muslim rulers until very recently. Here is what it looked like in nineteenth century Morocco from the account of James Riley, an American shipwrecked sea captain.


“The Mohammedan scrivener appointed to receive it took it from them, hitting each one a smart blow with his fist on his bare forehead, by way of receipt for his money, at which the Jews said, ‘Thank you, my lord.’”


Those Jews who could not pay were flogged and imprisoned until they converted to Islam. An account from 1894 is similar, except that the blows were delivered to the back of the neck. Only French colonialism finally put a stop to this practice as well as many other brutal Islamic Supremacist laws.


Morocco was one of the Arab countries where Jews were treated reasonably well by the standards of the Muslim world. It’s one of the few Arab countries to still retain a Jewish population. When ISIS demands Jizya from non-Muslims, it’s not reviving some controversial medieval behavior. It’s doing what even “moderate” Muslim countries were doing until European guns and warships made them stop.


If the French hadn’t intervened, the same ugly scene would have gone on playing out in Morocco. If the United States hadn’t intervened, the Saudis would still openly keep slaves.


Islam never became enlightened. It never stopped being ‘medieval’. Whatever enlightenment it received was imposed on it by European colonialism. It’s a second-hand enlightenment that never went under the skin.


ISIS isn’t just seventh century Islam. It’s also much more recent than that. It’s Islam before the French and the English came. It’s what the Muslim world was like before it was forced to have presidents and constitutions, before it was forced to at least pay lip service to the alien notion of equal rights for all.


The media reported the burning of the Jordanian pilot as if it were some horrifying and unprecedented aberration. But Muslim heretics, as well as Jews and Christians accused of blasphemy, were burned alive for their crimes against Islam. Numerous accounts of this remain, not from the seventh century, but from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Those who weren’t burned, might be beheaded.


These were not the practices of some apocalyptic death cult. They were the Islamic law in the “cosmopolitan” parts of North Africa. The only reason they aren’t the law now is that the French left behind some of their own laws.


Muslim countries like Saudi Arabia that were never truly colonized still behead men and women for “witchcraft and sorcery.” Not in the seventh century or even in the nineteenth century. Last year.


The problem isn’t that ISIS is ‘medieval’. The problem is that Islam is.


What progressives mistake for modern Islam, whether while touring Algeria or on the campus of their university, is really an Islam whose practice has been repressed by the West while its ideology remains untouched. Modern Islam is in a state of contradiction. It’s a schizophrenic religion whose doctrine calls for supremacism but whose capabilities prevent it from exercising the full measure of its doctrines.


Islam is the 90 lb. weakling that wants to be the school bully. It can’t punch you in the face, so it stabs you in the back and then blames someone else. When you punch it back, it plays the victim.


This split between ideas and power forced Islamists to resort to sneakier tactics, from terrorism to mass migration, to fulfill the spirit of their religion. The underlying imperative is to restore a conquering Islam capable of humiliating non-Muslims in Muslim lands and expanding into non-Muslim countries. That is why Saddam and Iran pursued weapons of mass destruction. Why Muslim armies tested themselves against Israel. Why Al Qaeda built a decentralized terrorist network with cells around the world.


Together with the practical agendas of wealth and power was a deeper spiritual significance. Islam required that its leaders wage a war against the infidels. And they had to do so on terms that would allow them to win. Or at least to survive the attempt.


ISIS cuts through the split by advocating an uncompromising supremacism. Its theater of brutality is meant to convince Muslim audiences that they have the ability to directly confront the West. They no longer need to navigate a course between their capabilities and their religion. Under a Caliph, they can build the capabilities to restore the full practice of Islam as it was before the Europeans put a stop to it.


In the bigger picture, ISIS would like to turn the clock back to the seventh century. That’s a vision it shares with any number of Islamist groups and governments. But its most objectionable behavior, such as beheading and burning non-Muslims, taking slaves and demanding Jizya from non-Muslims, only requires turning back the clock to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.


To truly understand ISIS, we don’t need to go back to the seventh century. The eighteenth century would be just as good. And once we understand that, we understand all the rest of it too.


Progressives see ISIS as a historical aberration. ISIS sees them the same way. It’s all a question of whose history book we’re using and which side is willing to do anything to win. Islam is a religion of war. Its right side of history is not a matter of faith. The right side of history is the side that wins.


*


Don’t miss Shillman Fellow Raymond Ibrahim on The Glazov Gang discuss “ISIS’s Islamic Inspirations”:


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Mustapha Carayol gets 90 minutes under his belt as Boro XI thump Blackpool


Mustapha Carayol got 90 minutes under his belt as a strong Boro development team hammered Blackpool 7-1 at Rockliffe Park on Tuesday.


Under-21 coach Paul Jenkins’ also included Emmanuel Ledesma and Yanic Wildschut in his starting line-up.


Argentinian winger Ledesma marked his appearance with a hat-trick, opening the scoring in the 20th minute before the visitors hit back to equalise soon after.


Adam Jackson, a centre-back hailing from Darlington, restored Boro’s lead, firing home five minutes from half-time after being teed-up by Tom McAloon.


Carayol, who is expected to break back into the first in the next few weeks following almost a year on the sidelines due to a serious knee injury, scored his goal in the 53rd minute.


Wildschut set up Ledesma’s second 16 minutes later before sub Bradley Fewster made it 5-1 in the 83rd minute. Moment before the referee blew the final whistle, Ledesma completed his hat-trick.



Beach hut boom for Redcar and Saltburn?


Could Saltburn and Redcar be set for a beach hut boom?


Redcar and Cleveland Council has begun a tendering process for companies interested in building and managing beach huts.


The plans would see potential operators build huts at identified sites on the Lower Promenade in Saltburn and on Redcar Esplanade, near the Tuned In complex.


And with a 200-strong waiting list for the 20 existing annually-let chalets in Saltburn, the council expects demand to be high.


Applications, the council says, would be “evaluated on design, deliverability and strength of business plan alongside other criteria.” Unique and traditionally designed beach huts will be considered, but there wouild be some restrictions, including no overnight use.


Doug Moody Photography Tuned In, Redcar


Tuned In, Redcar

Once on site, the operators could lease out the huts to the general public. And with the demand in Saltburn so high, the council predicts operators could easily recoup their initial investment.


The release of the sites for beach hut use is part of the council’s ambition to significantly grow visitor numbers to the borough and is part of a recently completed, five year Visitor Destination Plan.


The council’s new leader, Councillor Mary Lanigan, said: “This is a perfect opportunity for businesses across the borough to assist in easing the demand for beach huts across the coastal areas of our borough.


“Other seaside towns like Whitby and Filey have proved just how popular huts are for people like kayakers or surfers who enjoy coming down to the beaches regularly. I am sure a similar development in Redcar, and especially Saltburn, could prove equally as popular.”


The submission deadline is 11.59 on Monday, March 9 via www.nepoportal.org . Registration for the site is free and full documentation on the plans can be found once an expression of interest has been made.



Dominic Shaw: We were all too hasty to write Mejias off but it would be a huge gamble to drop Dimi at this stage of the season


What to do with Tomas Mejias?


A couple of months ago the answer would have been unanimous, try to offload the Spanish stopper.


Five unconvincing games at the start of this season following on his from nervous debut last year was enough.


He wasn't good enough for the English game, was the general consensus. He lacked the confidence and physicality to make it in the hustle and bustle world of the Championship.


The ink on his Boro contract was still damp but Mejias was filed away in the Karanka transfer mistake category - a rarity.


Such was the standard of his early season displays, Mejias suddenly found himself not just out of the firing line between the posts but out of the squad all together.


Blackman brought in, Mejias, we assumed, merely making up the numbers on the training pitch.


But rather than disregard his time at Boro as a failure and look for the first possible move back to Spain, the 26-year-old has now given Aitor Karanka something to ponder.


Action Images


Arsenal's Wojciech Szczesny with Middlesbrough's Tomas Mejias

Back from the cold for the FA Cup third round clash at Barnsley, his clean sheet and one particular superb save in the final moments went unnoticed.


But for the stopper it was a step on the ladder.


And if a clean sheet at Oakwell was routine stuff, a shut-out at the Etihad was anything but.


Silva, Aguero, Navas and Jovetic tried but failed. Mejias stood firm for 90 minutes with an eye-catching eyebrow-raising display.


Chris Vaughan/CameraSport


Middlesbrough manager Aitor Karanka, left, and Middlesbrough's Tomas Mejias celebrate the win over Manchester City in the FA Cup

One inspired performance proves nothing but the Spaniard followed that up with another terrific showing at the Emirates.


Indeed, Mejias was the best of Boro's performers on the big stage in north London, highlighting that his memorable afternoon at the home of the Premier League champions in the round earlier was no fluke.


What will have pleased Boro's boss most in both games against the Premier League giants was the manner in which Mejias commanded his area.


The nervous keeper who looked lost between the sticks at the start of the campaign was replaced by a confident stopper, sharp off his line and aware of the danger and, most impressively, convincingly claiming crosses and corners with relative ease.


His save to deny Sanchez in the second half unsurprisingly hogged the headlines but the manner in which he raced off his line and was first to numerous inch-perfect through balls from Ozil and Cazorla was just as impressive.


Boro can take heart from their performances against Manchester City and Arsenal but none of the players will benefit from the injection of confidence like the young stopper.


Middlesbrough's Tomas Mejias


If you can put in assured displays like that at stadiums such as the Etihad and the Emirates then surely you can do it on any stage?


Not necessarily. Bizarrely, it's his first game back behind the defence at the Riverside which will be the real gauge of the stopper's development.


The ironic cheers that greeted routine catches and saves earlier in the campaign will have contributed to Karanka's decision to take him out of the firing line.


Decisions like that can make or break a player. It's a credit to Mejias that he's bounced back to give the boss something to think about once more.


So what now for the keeper? Did the cup exit at Arsenal mark the end of the season for Mejias? In a word, no.


"If someone is thinking that Tomas is not going to play more games because we don't have more cup games they are making a mistake," said the boss.


Karanka doesn't shy away from making a big decision but it would be extremely harsh on Dimi to drop him given the fact Boro have the best defensive record in the football league.


And it would be a huge gamble, regardless of the quality of the second choice keeper's recent displays.


Tomas Mejias and Dimi Konstantopoulos Tomas Mejias and Dimi Konstantopoulos


The big Greek is in the form of his career, keeping five clean sheets in six league games at the turn of the year.


Rotating keepers isn't the answer either. Defenders benefit playing in front of the same stopper week in, week out.


But Boro and Dimi himself will know the 36-year-old isn't the long-term solution, even if Shay Given demonstrated last year that keepers can retain their class into their late 30s.


At some point you feel Karanka will have to give Mejias a run in the team to determine whether he is good enough to take control of the No.1 spot.


But it would be a risk to do that in the middle of the pressure cooker of a promotion chase.


The boss has repeatedly emphasised his desire to have two players competing for every position. His wish was granted thanks to the excellent work of the club in the transfer market.


And a revitalised Mejias means it's also the case between the sticks as the summer signing puts pressure on the ever-reliable Konstantopoulos.


Not only did the FA Cup run give the players a taste of the type of teams they could come up against and stadiums they could play in next season.


It also showed that perhaps we were all too hasty to write Mejias off.



Anonymous donor gives £700 to two women diagnosed with cancer after being 'touched' by their stories


A kind-hearted mystery donor has given £700 to two Teesside mums who are battling cancer.


Melissa Lacey and Amanda Booth have received £350 each after the charitable Teessider, who wants to remain anonymous, read of their plights.


“It is so overwhelming,” said Melissa, a 33-year-old mum-of-one who has a rare appendix cancer.


“People are just amazing. What can I say? Thank you doesn’t seem enough but I really mean it.”


Melissa, who lives in Billingham with her “soulmate” husband Carl and their eight-year-old son Evan, was diagnosed with stage four signet ring cell appendix cancer, also known as psuedomyxoma peritonei (PMP) last year.


But as if one cancer wasn’t enough to deal with, she also has bowel cancer, ovarian cancer and peritoneal cancer.


Melissa has since decided to stop chemotherapy treatment in order for her to have a better quality of life in her final days.


One of her biggest wishes is now to take her little boy to Walt Disney World - something she insisted she would fund herself even if it meant draining her life savings.


Melissa Lacey is pictured with the kind donation


But her old school friends vowed to help and a fundraising page was set up by Michelle Kenny, who last saw Melissa at the age of 16 when they were pupils at Sunderland’s Southmoor School.


The page, ‘Memories for Melissa,’ was initially set up to help raise £500 but more than £3,400 has now been gathered.


“I am just so thankful for what everyone has done,” she said.


“I honestly never wanted or expected any of this.”


Also overwhelmed by the response she has received is Amanda Booth, of Longlands, Middlesbrough.


The 28-year-old has terminal cervical cancer and like Melissa, is determined to make as many precious memories with her family and friends as possible.


She has already made two wishes on her “bucket list” become a reality after she renewed her vows with husband David on Valentine’s Day and had two of her three children baptised during the ceremony.


Lucas Booth 5, David Booth, Demi Leigh Taylor 11, Amanda Booth, and Leon Taylor 8. VIEW GALLERY


People have also come forward to help with other plans on her list - with Hollywood Bowl at Teesside Park offering her a free visit with her family and the owner of Whitby Holiday Cottages donating a free four-night stay.


The £350 donation is the latest act of kindness.


In a letter from the anonymous donor, they wrote: “I have been touched by these stories as they are both so young and have young children who are affected by their illness.


“I hope Melissa can achieve her dream of going to Disney Land and that Amanda can do most of the things on her bucket list.”



Disorder-plagued pub keeps licence - but nightclub below must remain closed


A pub which was previously a target for disorder and anti-social behaviour has won its battle to stay open.


The Don Bar was threatened with closure when Stockton Council revoked its licence after a number of anti-social incidents.


The Calvert’s Lane pub appealed the decision and Teesside Magistrates’ Court today said it could keep its licence after hearing the pub has successfully turned itself around.


However owner Julia Cooper was told that the nightclub below the pub, Taboo, has been removed from the licence and therefore must remain shut.


Julia Cooper at the bar of the Don Bar


Mrs Cooper was also told that three door staff must be working every Friday, Saturday and bank holidays from 11pm until closing time at 4am.


Joan Smith, representing the Stockton Council told magistrates there had been an improvement in the premises since October last year.


PC James Johnson from Cleveland Police said since the review was started, there had been no incidents at the pub.


He said officers will continue to monitor the premises and said “action will be taken” if slip ups are made.


VIEW GALLERY


After the hearing Mrs Cooper spoke of her relief at the decision.


She said most of the previous trouble came from the club rather than the bar and said the pub is now a “safe” environment.


Mrs Cooper, 50, said: “We have been so worried about this.


“Since we were told the council was taking away the licence we have worked hard to turn this around.


Julia Cooper with some of her regular customers


"Taboo has been shut for about a year now.


“It was being managed by a family member and it didn’t work out.


"There was a lot of trouble there with fighting and vandalism. It wasn’t nice.


"But changes were made and the pub is now known as a safe, family environment.


“Customers have been so worried about all this too and quite a few of them came along to court.”


The Don Bar Poppy Wall VIEW GALLERY


Last year, to mark the centenary of the First World War the pub adorned its walls with 23,000 poppies which remain in place in support of Teesside war heroes.


Councillor Steve Nelson, Stockton Council’s cabinet member for housing and community safety, said: “We are pleased that the downstairs nightclub – which was the area of most concern to the police – has been removed from the licence and that the court has insisted on additional door staff being employed.


“Let us be absolutely clear – we want to create a safe, family friendly environment in Stockton town centre and we will not tolerate any premises there, or indeed anywhere in the borough, that becomes a focal point for disorder.


“We will take firm and decisive action wherever such problems occur and will work with the police to closely monitor any premises where concerns are reported.”


Dave Blenkey, 38, a security section leader at Asda, is a regular at the pub.


He said: “I was devastated when I heard the licence might be taken away.


"It is a great pub and it’s a safe place. I take my family and colleagues in there and we never feel unsafe."



Temporary reprieve for Guisborough's Waterfall Kennels as work to find a replacement continues


VIEW GALLERY


Campaigners calling for kennels to stay on Teesside say talks have given them fresh hope.


Dog lovers feared for the future if, as reported, Guisborough’s Waterfall Kennels close on April 1.


The kennels are used as a pound by local councils and operate a non-destruction policy. The campaigners fear that if they close, dogs could be taken out of the area to kennels which don’t have such a policy.


But now, after talks with landowner Gisborough Estates, the Waterfalls closure date has been put back until November 1 and potential new premises identified.


The campaigners now hope Middlesbrough and Redcar and Cleveland Councils will delay any decisions while the options discussed during today’s talks are explored.


The new developments follow talks between Lord Gisborough’s son Perry Chaloner, his agent Rob Close and dog campaigners Jane Galliford and Michelle Cooper, both of the Maxi’s Mates dog group, and Margaret Young, of Save Our Strays.


Jane said: “Obviously all parties have to agree, but they have said the dogs can stay until November 1 and they are going to work with us to hopefully get other premises.


“It’s very promising, although we don’t want to say too much at the moment in case it falls through.


“But I do feel a lot more encouraged and positive.”


She said the potential new premises were on Gisborough Estates land, but declined to go into further detail.


She said: “We’re trying to keep our feet on the ground in case it falls through, but it looks like there’s potential there for a really good place. It’s local as well, which is the key. There would be a lot of work and fundraising needed, but hopefully we could work with them and take over the place. It could then be run by volunteers.


“Hopefully the councils can hang fire and not make any sort of decision until this is explored further.”


Before today’s talks, both Middlesbrough and Redcar and Cleveland councils said they were working to secure alternative arrangements if the kennels were to close on April 1.



Craig Hignett joins ex-Boro teammates at Premier Player Football Academy


Boro legend Craig Hignett will cast his eyes over the region’s young talent after joining forces with a Teesside football Academy.


Hignett has joined ex-teammate Andy Collett at Premier Player Football Academy, which provides football coaching for youngsters aged between five and 16.


Collett admitted he is delighted to have recruited new coach Hignett, who made more than 150 appearances for Boro between 1992 and 1998.


“I’ve known Craig since we were players at Middlesbrough and Darlington and had always kept in touch,” Collett said.


“Obviously his time at Boro came to an end so I mentioned that if he wanted to come down and do some coaching we would love to have him on board.


“Craig’s a top coach and a top man, so we are delighted he has joined. He’ll be looking to get back into full-time football, but in the meantime we are going to use his experience and coaching skills. That will only improve our Academy members”


Hignett joins up with Mark Proctor, Bernie Slaven and Neil Maddison, who are all coaches at the Academy.


Premier Player is launching free taster sessions for its newly-launched girls Academy tomorrow evening, with females from the Under-8 to Under-16 age groups all welcome.


The free sessions will be held at Middlesbrough College and is for outfield players and goalkeepers.


Sessions for Under-8s to Under-11s will be held from 6pm until 7pm, while the Under-12s to Under-16s age groups are to take place from 7pm until 8pm.


To book your place email trials@premierplayerfootballacademy.co.uk.



'Nuisance' South Bank family become first in the UK to be evicted under new powers


A South Bank family who have become the first in the UK to be evicted under new powers say the decision to force them from their home is “disgusting”.


Caroline Beck and her four children have been accused of making their neighbours' lives hell for more than two years.


They were evicted today after authorities built up a file of evidence alleging deliberate fires, criminal damage, illegal use of off-road motorbikes, noise nuisance and other antisocial behaviour.


A covert operation to gather CCTV evidence of their behaviour was also mounted.


But Ms Beck blasted the move to oust her and her 12-year-old daughter Billy-Jo and sons Dan, 21, Arron, 19 and Mark, 15 from their double-fronted Steele Crescent home.


Arron Beck Arron Beck


The 39-year-old said: “To say we’ve made our neighbours’ lives hell is disgusting. My neighbours, 99% of them, have said our eviction is a disgrace.


“People are saying my kids are causing all this anti-social behaviour? There’s a youth club and a skate park just around the corner. When they clear out, all the kids gather on the corner near my house.


“None of my kids have criminal records, three of them have qualifications, one of them’s a prefect at St Peter’s School. How can they be named for anti-social behaviour?


“There’s an old man on the estate who said, ‘I aren’t half going to miss your son, he always walks me through the cut when it’s dark and he held my arm all the way when it was icy’”.


The eviction is the first in the UK to be agreed solely on the grounds of antisocial behaviour (ASB) under section 80 of the Antisocial Behaviour Crime and Policing Act 2014.


Cleveland Fire Brigade, social housing firm Coast and Country Housing and Redcar and Cleveland Council and Cleveland Police worked together to secure the eviction.


Authorities said efforts made to support the Beck family had failed and led police to apply for an antisocial behaviour closure notice on the house.


The order was upheld today at Teesside Magistrates’ Court, although the family left the property three weeks ago.


Ms Beck added: “I’ve lived at that house for 12 years - All that mess outside is what has happened in the three weeks since we were evicted. People reading the paper will think that’s how we had it when we lived there - that’s just not true.


“These powers that have been used to evict us have only been in force since last year. They’ve used us like guinea pigs.”


PC Mark O'Hagan outside the house PC Mark O'Hagan outside the house


South Bank Neighbourhood Sergeant Steve Chambers said the force was “delighted” that the the closure notice has been approved.


He said: “As neighbourhood police officers, we work to ensure our communities are safe places to live and work without the fear of crime, harassment and ASB which can blight the lives of the law abiding majority.


“Today’s ruling should send out a very clear message that police and partners will not tolerate persistent antisocial behaviour and criminality and we will use every tool at our disposal to deal with anyone taking part in this.”


Barbara Watson, Coast and Country area manager added: “Coast and Country has worked extensively with Cleveland Police and partners to address the anti-social behaviour perpetrated by this family and recently, as part of our investigations, set up a covert operation to gather CCTV evidence of their behaviour.


“In this case the anti-social behaviour was intolerable and decisive action was taken and we would like to thank all the organisations involved.”



'She was our Queen Mum': Family pays tribute to Middlesbrough centenarian


Isabel on her 100th VIEW GALLERY


“We used to call her the Queen Mother as she was our Queen Mum.”


Those are the fitting words from the family of Isabel Ethell, from Brookfield in Middlesbrough, who died aged 101 on February 3.


Known as Belle, she was born in Sheffield on January 11, 1914, before moving to Teesside - where her parents originated - when she was just two.


Married and widowed twice, Belle had two children, Jean and Charles, two step-children, three grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.


She worked in the office at grocery store Hintons and then at ICI, also in the office.


Daughter and son-in-law Jean and Joe Wearmouth, from Norton, today paid tribute to her.


“Mam and dad bought their first house in Buttermere Avenue in Acklam and then they moved to Acklam Road opposite the Master Cooper,” said Jean, 70, a retired office manager, who has two grown-up children Amanda, 45, and Stephen, 38, and four grandchildren, Danielle, 23, Rhys, 19, Callum, 18, and Finley, six.


“We lived with Mam when we were first married, after Dad died, until this house was built.


“She had been fit and healthy all her life.


“She led an active life and had a lot of friends.


“On a Wednesday night she’d go to the Majestic Bingo with her friends. She was very bright and could do six books at the same time.”


Belle, who married David McNab in 1938, was widowed in 1966. She remarried 10 years later to Gilbert Ethell, becoming stepmother to Malcolm and Jean. He died in 1984.


“When my Dad died, I didn’t know how she would cope as they were very close but she was marvellous,” said Jean.


Joe, 72, said: “She was very regal, like the Queen Mother.


“I was president of Billingham Synthonia Bowls Club and Gilbert - her second husband - was a bowler and they used to go on bowling holidays together.


“He asked our permission to ask her to marry him.”


Belle, who spent many happy holidays to Jersey with Jean and Joe, had never been in hospital in her life - even as an outpatient.


But just before Christmas, Belle, who still lived independently at home, had a fall from her sofa which left her bedridden.


Known as Nana B to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren, her family “thought the world of her” with grandson Stephen “doing anything for her” and granddaughter Amanda doing her cleaning and washing her hair every week.


The Gazette joined Belle for her 100th birthday celebrations last year at the Riverside Stadium where she revealed she had bought the Gazette since 1938.


“I like to know how the Boro do and I have been buying the Gazette since it was a penny,” she said.



Outdoor gym, nature trails and swimming pool among ideas as Nunthorpe residents have say on open space


Residents in Nunthorpe have been getting their thinking caps on for how they would like a new area of open space used.


An outdoor gym, nature trails and even a swimming pool are some of the ideas which have so far been put forward for three hectares of land set to be developed as a public open space south of Guisborough Road.


“We want to hear residents views about that they would like to see on this open land which will be provided,” said Charlton Gibben, senior planning policy officer at Middlesbrough Council.


“We want people to suggest whatever they want to see on that site - ideally suggestions that would suit both the older and younger generations.


“After the consultation has finished at the end of the month, we will then be starting the masterplan and the suggestions people have put forward will then be assessed.


“They will then go to a steering group made up of parish councillors, community councillors, councillors and local residents.”


From left: Charlie Rooney, executive member regeneration, June Bonnington, community council executive, Alan Bonnington (back) Lesley McGloin, chair of community council, David Leyland, parish councillor, Dave Budd, deputy mayor and Cllr Brenda Thompson on the proposed site From left: Charlie Rooney, executive member regeneration, June Bonnington, community council executive, Alan Bonnington (back) Lesley McGloin, chair of community council, David Leyland, parish councillor, Dave Budd, deputy mayor and Cllr Brenda Thompson on the proposed site


The outdoor amenity, equipment and facilities will be funded through money from the nearby Grey Towers Village housing development.


The initial plans that have been drawn out show the open space will be two patches of land either side of Marton and Nunthorpe Recreation Club.


The land surrounding them has been set aside for 250 homes in Middlesbrough Council’s ‘Local Plan’.


But local resident, Alan Bonnington, who has lived in Nunthorpe for 40 years, said the council should consider having one larger space of open space instead to two smaller patches.


“I am very happy we are going to get an area of open space but I would like to see it as one patch of land,” he said.


“Having just the one area would be a lot better for many reasons such as safety and to lessen any conflict which would arise for two patches apart.”


Lesley McGlorn, another local resident, also agreed there should be one larger area rather than two smaller open sites.


She said: “Everything has been taken away from us here in Nunthorpe - we have nothing, so I am pleased as this is something to give back to the residents although I do think the council should consider one patch of land as it makes more sense.


“All we have is that open area with the spectacular views of Roseberry Topping and that is what we are fighting for.”


Brenda Thompson, Independent ward councillor for Nunthorpe, said: “I think this is brilliant that this has been set aside for Nunthorpe.


“An area of open space is something we are lacking here so this will address the problem.”


The final drop-in session for local residents to have their say is being held next Tuesday, February 24, from 10am until 12.30pm at Nunthorpe Methodist Church.



Bus lane fines were scrapped after 'annoyed' Ray Mallon dealt with complaints, council emails reveal


The decision to refund drivers who were fined for entering a Middlesbrough bus lane was made after Ray Mallon became "annoyed" at personally handling complaints relating to the policy, council correspondence reveals.


Emails released to The Gazette under the Freedom of Information Act also detail how the mayor phoned a town hall boss from the Newport Road roundabout to express his anger at the scheme.


Mr Mallon spent 40 minutes on the call to the council's assistant director of environment Tom Punton after watching traffic negotiate the new road layout.


Following the conversation, Mr Punton wrote to other senior officers and said "to say [the mayor] was not happy would be a huge understatement".


A separate email from Sharon Thomas, assistant director of development and planning services, details how the mayor was "quite annoyed as he has been contacted by three people today who have received [penalty charge notices] for using the bus lane".


She went on: "Ray advised Tom that he wants reference to the camera removing from his speech, details of the number of tickets issued so far and all these tickets refunding".


Google


The bus lane in Newport Road

The bus lane camera was installed last June and drivers received penalty charge notices from late July.


In October, projected income from the camera was included in the mayor's budget proposals for the next financial year, a move which was described as "sickening" to drivers by the RAC.


The measure was removed from Mr Mallon's budget proposals in December, when it was also announced drivers would now receive a warning before being fined and that fines already paid for first offences would be refunded.


At the time, the mayor insisted the council must be "proportionate" in its enforcement policy.



The emails, released to The Gazette, now detail his personal involvement in the U-turn and officers' frustrations at the decision.


The council's highways and transportation manager sets out their belief there are "significant benefits" to the scheme after being asked to suspend the issuing of fines.


And after a final decision from the mayor, an officer states it is "particularly disappointing" as unenforced bus lane restrictions were being ignored by drivers.


Tony Winward


Middlesbrough Town Hall and Centre Square

A spokesman for Middlesbrough Council said: "It should be fairly obvious that before any new policy is implemented it would be discussed openly and that all involved are able to put forward their views.


“In this case discussions took place over a number of weeks late last year, involving the mayor and officers, which led to a policy of refunding money to motorists who had been fined without warning for driving in Newport Road bus lane.


“The mayor explained this policy and the reasons for it at length to a full council meeting in December, which was widely reported in the media at the time.


"This is all standard practice and selective extracts taken from such a high volume of e-mails cannot be expected to accurately reflect this process.”


Almost 2,000 motorists were fined £60 for entering the bus lane, which was reduced to £30 if they paid within 14 days.


More than £65,000 was originally generated by the camera.



Man bailed by police in connection with North Ormesby incident


A man has been bailed by police in connection with an incident in North Ormesby.


Cleveland Police arrested a 38-year-old man on suspicion of trespassing with intent to commit a sexual offence after an incident in the early hours of Saturday.


He was taken into police custody for questioning and has since been bailed pending further inquiries.


Officers were called at 6am on Saturday after a report of a suspicious man inside a woman’s home on Coronation Street. He is said to have left moments after being challenged.


Anyone who saw or heard anything suspicious in the Coronation Street or Beaumont Road area between around 5am and 5.30am on Saturday is asked to contact Cleveland Police on 101. Alternatively, contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.



Panto: Beauty and The Beast at Billingham's Forum Theatre


It is a tale as old as time - but that doesn’t stop audiences loving it.


Beauty and The Beast comes to Billingham’s Forum Theatre tomorrow to sprinkle some half term magic for theatre goers on Teesside.


Starring Gems TV’s Fiona Egan as evil assistant Snivel and Scott Worsfold as Dame Polly Potts the musical comedy promises everything from madcap fun to a fairytale ending in a run that lasts until Sunday.


When an enchantress and her evil assistant curse a vain and conceited Prince, he is turned into an ugly beast and confined to his castle in the woods.


The panto also stars Scott Worsfold as Dame Polly Potts, Andy Steed as J'Espere and dancers from the Karen Heritage Dance Academy in Stockton The panto also stars Scott Worsfold as Dame Polly Potts, Andy Steed as J'Espere and dancers from the Karen Heritage Dance Academy in Stockton


The spell can only be broken with love’s true kiss and a magic rose is his only opportunity to return back to his natural self - can he find someone to fall in love with him before it loses all its petals and dies? Enter Beauty, who might just be the very girl.


Expect mischief and mayhem from the PMA Productions show as they re-tell the classic tale with madcap characters.


The team brought the successful The Wonderful Wizard of Oz to Billingham last February half term. This year’s cast also includes dancers from Stockton’s Karen Heritage Dance Studio.


*Beauty and The Beast, Forum Theatre Billingham, Wed Feb 18-Sun Feb 22, tickets from £11, http://bit.ly/1EJFnKX for more information.



Your Club: Stockton Town Choir


The town choir, practising at Arc, Stockton, with Mike McGrother VIEW GALLERY


Club name:  Stockton Town Choir


Address:   Arc, Dovecot Street, Stockton on Tees TS18 4LU


Tell us about your club:  Stockton Town Choir provides a weekly opportunity to come and enjoy a healthy meal, have a sing and get involved in positive activities across the borough. Open door policy which allows people to drop in and out, the choir is all about reducing stress and allowing you to sing your heart out with lots of other people! All free – even the food! Singing children welcome if accompanied by an adult.


How often does your club meet?   In Arc every Wednesday, food from 5.20pm and singing from 6–7pm


No. of people in club:  From 80 to 100.


When did the club start?  We grew out of the Diaspora Vocal Collective which began nearly nine years ago!


What are the club’s key achievements or have you or your members won any awards?   Stockton Town Choir have created a host of events, from #smile in Stockton high street to 1245 sunflowers. Led by Mike McGrother, from Wildcats Of Kilkenny and The Gazette Community Champion Ambassador, this is a group full of smiles and energy!


Any other information you want to include?   This really is the choir for anyone! No musical experience needed. Be part of something that puts a smile on people’s faces! Check the stocktontownchoir Facebook page for updates.


Contact name and number:  For more information on the choir contact Mike McGrother on 07415 471927.


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Lindsay Sandiford: Death row Redcar gran's sister travels to Bali in last ditch attempt to save her life


The sister of Redcar gran Lindsay Sandiford who could be executed in weeks, has flown to Bali in a last ditch attempt to save her life.


Hilary Parsons is reported to have gone to the Indonesian island with three lawyers in a bid to save her 58-year-old sister’s life.


Sandiford is facing death by firing squad after she was convicted of trying to smuggle £1.6 million of cocaine into Bali in May 2012.


She claims she was forced to transport the drugs to protect her son, whose safety was at stake.


Sandiford, originally from Redcar but now of Cheltenham, currently has no legal representation and cannot afford to pay for a lawyer, which means she had been denied the opportunity to fully challenge her death penalty and the right to file for clemency.


And two other Bali prisoners - Australian ringleaders of a heroin smuggling ring are facing death by firing squad in what could be a matter of days.


The executions of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were said to be in the final stages of preparation.


Representatives of Indonesia’s legal department were reported to be meeting Australian officials in Jakarta to discuss the execution.


Indonesia’s Attorney General was reported to have said the prisoners will be transferred to the place where they will face the firing squad “in a matter of days”.


It is understand that Sandiford has one last legal attempt at saving her own life which is to ask for a judicial review of her case.


Recently-elected President, Joko Widodo has said he will show “no mercy” to people sentenced to death for serious drug offences and so far he has held to his word with the execution last month of six prisoners for drug-linked offences.


However, the Attorney General’s Department has made it clear that no-one will be put to death until they have exhausted every possible legal avenue.


The Foreign Office has previously said that it had consistently provided and offered consular support to Sandiford, which she at the time declined to accept.



Teesside food firm makes TWO MILLION spring rolls for Chinese New Year


A food company is gearing up for Chinese New Year - by making TWO MILLION spring rolls.


It’s one of the busiest times of the year for Teesside firm SK Chilled Foods, which has orders on behalf of some of the UK’s biggest supermarket chains.


The Chinese New Year - the Year of the Sheep - begins on February 19.


The chances are that if people buy chicken, duck or vegetable spring rolls from their local supermarket in the coming weeks, they will have been made by the company, which supplies chilled and frozen snack foods.


SK Foods' Marek Blonski with just a small amount of the spring rolls made by the company SK Foods' Marek Blonski with just a small amount of the spring rolls made by the company


From its development kitchen in Wynyard, the company’s four chefs have been honing and perfecting the recipe for their spring rolls.


With the largest spring roll it makes measuring 14cm, the two million made for Chinese New Year alone would be enough to stretch from Middlesbrough to Birmingham.


In an entire year, the company makes around 58 million spring rolls – enough to stretch from Middlesbrough to Beijing.


Jeremy Faulkner, managing director of SK Foods, said: “Oriental food is one of our specialisms so Chinese New Year is always a very busy time for us.


“Our development chefs spend a great deal of time and effort testing out various recipes to meet the exact needs of customers.”


Spring rolls get their name because they are traditionally eaten during the Spring Festival. Marek Blonski, SK Foods executive new product development chef, said: “There is an art to making a good spring roll. The key is always using fresh ingredients and ensuring you get the right balance of meat, vegetables and the sauce and spices that can enhance the flavour.”


Chinese New Year is the longest and most important of the traditional Chinese holidays. Traditionally, celebrations last 15 days with families preparing by cooking food, buying gifts and preparing their houses well in advance.


SK Chilled Foods employs 550 people across three sites in Middlesbrough and Billingham.



Inspire2Learn conference facilities supporting schools in Redcar and Cleveland - sponsored


When schools in Redcar and Cleveland were looking to retain a teacher centre in the face of reductions in spending Inspire2Learn was born.


As well as providing a valuable resource for teachers, the centre also provides state-of-the-art facilities for meetings and conferences for local businesses.


Unusually, the aim of the centre isn't to make money.


Funded in part by schools in Redcar and Cleveland the revenue that comes in from the centre goes back to the schools helping them offset their contribution.


The centre has a range of rooms making them suitable for board meetings, interviews or large events seating over one hundred guests in cabaret style or up to two hundred theatre style.


All rooms have access to high speed WiFi and modern AV facilities - all of which carry no additional charges.


The centre has recently undergone a major refurbishment making it suitable for any evening activities such as fitness classes that might require a larger space.


Through having local businesses make use of their facilities it is hoped that relationships between schools and the local economy will be strengthened.


Andrew Stogdale, manager of Inspire2Lean, explains: “One of our big priorities here is to develop a strong relationship between schools and the local economy.


"If the purpose of education is largely to equip our children for their future lives as both citizens and employees then it is essential to ensure that they have the knowledge of what employment options are available and how they would achieve them.


"Education is not all about tests!


"We run highly successful free STEM days that offer local children the opportunity to meet and work with ‘real people’ from the world of work.


"These sort of events and our in-school interventions are one brick in building awareness of the fantastic possibilities for a career that the local economy can offer.”


Run by former teachers who still provide in-school support to schools both in the Tesside area and beyond for much of their time, the centre also runs nationally-recognised courses, buys in key CPD on request and brokers collaborative support across alliances, trusts and chains.


Inspire2Learn’s in house catering facilities can cater for most events with the option of bringing in other local hospitality services when required.


Specialist rooms, such as the two 24-seat ICT suites, are currently being completely updated to ensure that the facilities are among the best on Teesside.


If you are looking for conferencing facilities in the Redcar area then consider booking your event at Inspire2Learn where your contribution will support local schools in their continued efforts to do their best for local children.


For more information visit their website, email i2lbookings@lea.rac.sch.uk or call 01642 467138 to discuss your requirements.