Sunday, 10 October 2010

READING: Ansary, Destiny Disrupted

Tamim Ansary
Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes
2009

THE first thing that strikes you about Tamim Ansary’s whistlestop tour through 1400 years of Islamic history is the title. Destiny Disrupted implies an unfulfilled entitlement co-opted by western hegemony, while boldly suggesting that this destiny is back on track and on course to be fulfilled.

As an Afghan-born author living in America, Ansary is well placed to analyse this “destiny” from both an Eastern and Western perspective, but as he outlines the circumstances that made the Islamic world the bastion of culture and knowledge for almost a millennium - and of its decline - he refrains from explicitly predicting how this supremacy could be achieved again.

“Although history is not over, the period since 9/11 has not mulched down enough to enter history yet: it still belongs to the journalists. It is not too soon, however, to reflect on this period as a manifestation of two great out-of-synch narratives intersecting.”

Speculation over the Islamic world’s possible resurgence is clearly, therefore, for other authors, but for Ansary the lessons are in the history.

In the course of 350-odd pages, in his own informal conversational style, he tells how a 6th century Arabian businessman in the middle of a “mid-life crisis” started a religion which, with a small band of followers, converted Mecca, conquered Medina and, through a mixture of theological persuasion and a series of unlikely military victories, spawned an empire that would stretch from the Atlantic coast to the borders of China.

In relating this period Ansary relegates some of the greatest events in Western history – the Crusades, the discovery of America [incidentally a voyage to find trade routes to the east], the Christian reformation and the resultant wars in Europe – to mere footnotes taking part in one small corner of the Eurasian continent while the great Ottoman, Safavid and Moghul Islamic empires held sway over much of the rest.

The closest Ansary comes to articulating the Islamic world’s disrupted “destiny” actually comes from university of Chicago historian Marshall Hodgson:

“In the sixteenth century of our era, a visitor from Mars could well have supposed that the human race was on the verge of becoming Muslim.”

However, Ansary shows how the Islamic world then went into a period of decline, largely through stagnation and mismanagement. Much of its territory fell to empires built on Judeo-Christian foundations, while the rest tried to adapt to the new world order.

However, Ansary’s unspoken implication is that the last 500 years of Judeo-Christian dominance in world history was just an interlude, that normal service will shortly be resumed. According to Ansary’s thesis, backed up by a wealth of undisputed historical facts, this resurgence has already begun and has been gathering pace for the last century.

From this point on Ansary’s simple, straightforward narration really begins to illuminate by boiling down the often impenetrable world of Middle East politics and Islamist aspirations in the last century into a series of simple fundamentals.

He declares the notion of “nation-statism”, the skeleton upon which most of the world’s principals of cooperation (The United Nations) and discord (from Arab nationalism right down to Scottish Nationalist backbiting) hangs, to be a modern-day invention, a phantom almost, and far from an established fact.

“It’s easy to forget that the organisation of the world into countries is less than a century old...Unfortunately, the ideology of ‘nationalism’ and the reality matched up only approximately if at all.”

But what does all this mean for Western hegemony?

Under the principles of “nation-statism” the United States of America, the chief exporter of Western hegemony today, is a unified entity, with a shared economy, military, official language and a constitution based on the principles of “one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all”.

However, once the veil of nationalism is stripped away and its status as the established locus of organisation and control is removed, other networks of co-operation become apparent.

Today, “nation-statism” and Islamism are already combining. Countries like Saudi Arabia and Iran are already fully fledged Islamic States, where Sharia law and the law of the land are indistinguishable, but beneath the level of nationalism and statehood there is already a shared Islamic economy, military and common constitution.

Groups like the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC), which promotes Muslim values within the United Nations on behalf of its 57 member countries with Islamic majorities, and the Organisation of Petrolium Exporting Countries (OPEC), which fixes oil prices on behalf its member countries, most with Islamic majorities, form the basis of a quasi-governmental constitution and shared economy. Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, imports British and American arms by the bucketload, while militant groups like Al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban, to name but a few, work towards similar ends and form the basis of a unified paramilitary force with international reach. Finally, the insistence that the Quran be read exclusively in Arabic ensures a common language across all Islamic and Islamic-majority states.

To cobble these links together and call them The United States of Islam would be a gross over-simplification, but it is clear that Islam fosters a common link between these nations that is 1000 years older than the nationalist glue that holds the United States of America together.

However, according to Ansary this reawakening of Islamic identity to re-establish its place in world history isn’t something to be feared. Some may find it unpalatable [and I’m going to nail my colours to the mast and state that I find all theocracies unpalatable whether Muslim, Jewish, Christian or other] but it’s not necessarily dangerous or incompatible with liberty:

“The conflict wracking the modern world is not, I think, best understood as a ‘clash of civilisations’, if that proposition means we’re-different-so-we-must-fight-until-there’s-only-one-of-us. It’s better understood as the friction generated by two mismatched world histories intersecting. Muslims were a crowd of people going somewhere. Europeans and their offshoots were a crowd of people going somewhere. When the two crowds crossed paths much bumping and crashing resulted, and the crashing is still going on...

“Islam is not the opposite of democracy; it’s a whole other framework. Within that framework there can be democracy, there can be tyranny, there can be many states in between.”

READING: Sands, Torture Team

Philippe Sands
Torture Team
2008

FORMER British prime minister Tony Blair was advised that an invasion of Iraq would be illegal just hours before former US president George Bush presented him with his timetable for war.

This was the central claim put forward by leading British QC Philippe Sands when he came to Edinburgh to promote his latest book Torture Team.

Professor Sands pointed to documents uploaded online by The Iraq Inquiry which lay bare the claims he made in his earlier book Lawless World (2005), specifically that attorney general Lord Goldsmith was leaned on by the government to change his views on the legality of a war with Iraq.

He pointed to a memo drawn up by Lord Goldsmith on the eve of Blair’s meeting with Bush on 31 January 2003 – available here – in which Goldsmith categorically stated that UN resolution 1441, which offered Saddam a final chance to disarm his weapons, “does not authorise the use of military force without a further determination by the security council”.

The existence of this memo has been known about for over five years, but Sands was particularly excited by the release of a new annotated version on The Iraq Inquiry website earlier this year which includes new and, Sands argues, damning notes by Tony Blair and his private secretary on foreign affairs Matthew Rycroft.

Prof Sands even suggested that Blair thought Lord Goldsmith was “a tosser” for writing this memo on the eve of such an important meeting.

Sands told the audience at Edinburgh Book Festival: “If you go on The Iraq Inquiry website and have a look at the declassified documents available on the site there’s a memo from attorney general Lord Goldsmith dated 30 January 2003. The memo states:

'In view of your meeting with President Bush on Friday, I thought you might wish to know where I stand on the question of whether a further decision of the Security Council is legally required in order to authorise the use of force against Iraq...

'You should be aware that, notwithstanding the additional arguments put to me since our last discussion, I remain of the view that the correct legal interpretation of resolution 1441 is that it does not authorise the use of military force without a further determination by the security council.'

Sands went on: “Mischievously, and wonderfully, the Chilcot Inquiry didn’t put up the original copy – it put up the annotated Number 10 copy. In the top left hand corner someone has scribbled:

‘Clear advice from attorney on need for another resolution.’


“However, next to that is another note, by Tony Blair’s private secretary on foreign affairs Matthew Rycroft, which reads:

‘[We] specifically said we did not need further advice this week, Matthew.’


“At the bottom of the memo Goldsmith concludes: ‘I remain of the view that the correct legal interpretation of resolution 1441 is that it does not authorise the use of force without a further determination by the security council.’

“This phrase has been underlined and next to it, scribbled in Tony Blair's handwriting, is written: ‘I just don’t understand this.’

Sands continued: “In other words, Tony Blair is saying ‘I just don’t understand why this tosser is putting out advice saying that the war is illegal’.



“And what happened the next day? Blair’s chief foreign policy advisor [later US Ambassador] David Manning recorded a meeting between Bush and Blair which said that America was preparing for war. The advice is right there at the bottom of Manning’s Memo:

‘The start date for the military campaign was now pencilled in for 10 March. This was when the bombing would begin.’

“It was made clear that he was doing this with or without another resolution and Blair told Bush that he was ‘solidly behind him’" Sands continued. "Bush added that it would be good if another resolution could be achieved but only as an insurance policy.”

Sands is much more engaging in person than his writing, which is unfortunately but necessarily dry and methodical. However, his style compliments the sterile language of the memos he describes in which US defence chiefs such as Donald Rumsfeld and William Haynes discuss the degrading and inhumane treatments they were meting out to terror suspects.

He is the first to admit that he is no journalist, and is more at home wading through papers than navigating emotive prose. However, for Torture Team he had to learn the skills of a journalist as most of the evidence he needed for his exposé of the US government’s sanctioning of torture techniques in the wake of 9/11 was very deliberately not written down.

“I think many of the people I spoke to for the book met with me precisely because I wasn’t a journalist,” said Sands.

However, Sands’ paper chase to discover who-knew-what-and-when, and his pursuit of key witnesses to corroborate his assertions, would make even Woodward and Bernstein proud.

NEWS: Buses To Subsidise Trams For Four Years

MARK McLAUGHLIN and CHRIS MARSHALL
Evening News (Edinburgh)
October 8, 2010, Friday

BUSES will have to subsidise an unfinished tram line for up to four years, tram bosses said today.

Despite fears about the economic viability of the trams project, a new business case has concluded that the incremental delivery of the line, starting with the section from the airport to St Andrew Square, will be profitable from day one.

However, that business case relies on the Capital's bus service shouldering most of the burden for three to four years when present operator Lothian Buses is amalgamated into the new bus and tram operator Transport Edinburgh Limited [TEL]. The bus to trams subsidy is thought to run to many millions of pounds a year.

It was previously reported that a line running only as far as Haymarket would need to be subsidised, but the new business case says a line reaching St Andrew Square would be viable.

The report does not say when TEL expects to complete the whole of line 1A to Ocean Terminal.

The News has seen details of the new report, which will be discussed by councillors next Thursday.

Lothian Buses made an operating profit of £9.29 million last year, after making the first loss in the company's history of £801,000 in 2008.

One source said it was unacceptable to expect Lothian Buses to prop up the ailing tram service.

The source said: "Spending public money on the trams is one thing, but sacrificing an excellent bus service is too far.

"To jeopardise the bus service across the city to build half a tram line defies any measure of common sense."

The report also confirms integrating the buses and trams has already begun, with the head of the tram project being controversially "parachuted" into the top job.

Richard Jeffrey, chief executive of tram firm TIE, has been handed the same designated position at TEL.

Ian Craig, managing director of Lothian Buses, has been given the position of TEL's chief operating officer.

There is anger that the positions have not been advertised and councillors could try to block the appointments.

One source said the appointments brought closer the possibility that tram bosses could use Lothian Buses to finance the beleaguered project.

A spokesman for TIE said: "The appointment of Richard Jeffrey and Ian Craig has been made based on the expertise these individuals will bring."

NEWS: Salt 'n' Snow

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
October 5, 2010, Tuesday

THOUSANDS of tonnes of salt are being stockpiled in the Capital in preparation for another "whiteout" winter.

Road chiefs have also snapped up an extra five gritters and eight mini-tractors in an effort to keep the city moving in the face of predicted severe weather.

Forecasters who predicted last year's big freeze are warning the country is facing another "bitterly cold winter", with temperatures likely to plunge well below zero. Widespread fog is expected in December and heavy snow in January.

The city council has stockpiled 5200 tonnes of salt, with another 2000 tonnes on order, and cleared a storage "dome" at its Bankhead depot to provide space for a salt reserve 40 per cent bigger than last year.

A council spokesman said: "We have been stockpiling salt since August and are expecting more deliveries in the coming weeks so we're ahead of the game."

The council has also bought another five gritters to add to the 26 it used last winter and an extra eight mini-tractors to supplement its gritting fleet of 18.

The city spent almost its whole £1.4 million winter maintenance budget in the first week of January as it was forced to buy in more salt from the Highlands and hire private salting firms to shore up its own stretched service.

"It's worth noting that we never actually ran out of salt this year, unlike some other local authorities," the council spokesman added. "So we intend to follow a similar programme to last year, improved by the increased storage and stockpiling."

It is unclear yet how much this year's operation is likely to cost.

Forecasters Positive Weather Solutions said Scotland was in the unusual position of facing a second extremely severe winter in a row. Senior forecaster Jonathan Powell said: "Scotland has another bitterly cold winter in store. Temperatures will rival those seen last year, with snowfall a close match."

The firm, which uses long-term weather patterns, said a white Christmas is a distinct possibility. Last winter was the coldest recorded in Scotland for 31 years.

NEWS: Mosque Back On Track After Parking U-Turn

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
October 4, 2010, Monday

THE expansion of an Islamic teaching centre in Polwarth is back on track following a U-turn by the council's transport department.

The Idara Centre on Temple Park Crescent - commonly known as the Polwarth Mosque - has been given the go-ahead to change the former Al-Hilal grocers at the junction of Yeaman Place into an extension of the existing centre following a traffic survey that found it would not cause parking problems.

The expansion was initially refused in May amid concerns the proposals would "attract further patrons to the existing centre putting an additional burden on street parking".

The centre re-submitted the application with only minimal alterations and gave an assurance that the plans were intended to create a more comfortable environment for existing users, not attract more people, convincing the department to lift its objection.

However, the centre's owner, The Idara Taleem-Ul Qur'an Trust, now faces another obstacle in realising its ambitions - the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Pakistan.

Most of the centre's users and staff are of Pakistani descent, and many have seen family displaced by the floods.

Idara chairman Amjed Hussain said: "Now that we've secured planning permission we will have to raise money to fund the expansion.

"Unfortunately, this will prove difficult with the ongoing situation in Pakistan. Many people are sending all the money they can back home which doesn't leave much for us, but this is understandable.

"Family, of course, comes first and we have been doing everything we can to raise funds for the appeal."

The Idara Centre has already hosted several fundraisers, most recently a dinner at Ingliston on Saturday.

Mr Hussain confirmed that the ultimate aim for the expanded unit remains the creation of an Islamic exhibition centre to engage with the non-Muslim local community.

The centre has been steadily expanding since its foundation at 8 Temple Park Crescent in 1986, when it catered for around 20 students. Within ten years its roll had expanded to around 200 students and the trust purchased two neighbouring units to accommodate its growing numbers.

However, Mr Hussain said the possibility of attracting more people was unlikely due to the small Islamic minority in the area.

Andrew McBride, development control manager at transport planning, said: "I now have no objection to this application. A survey has been undertaken monitoring the movements of patrons attending the existing facilities.

"The majority of attendees were pedestrians. Vehicle movements dropping off patrons were minimal.

"In light of this transport planning are satisfied that the change of use will not exacerbate parking levels."

NEWS: Government Shuts Up Council Planners Over Shutters

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 30, 2010, Thursday

a JEWELLER has been told he can keep security shutters he fitted following a spate of attempted break-ins after appealing to the Scottish Government.

Mohammed Aslam, owner of Aslam Jeweller on Leith Walk, erected the shutters when his store was targeted by thieves several times, but he failed to secure planning permission.

The council issued an enforcement notice ordering him to take the shutters down on the grounds that they "fail to preserve or enhance the character and appearance of the conservation area".

However, the government's Directorate for Planning and Environmental Appeals has ruled that Leith Walk's "disharmonious" array of clashing shopfronts and tenements is in fact part of the street's character.

Appeals reporter David Buylla said: "Although the shop front is not particularly harmonious with the tenement block above, this is consistent with the established character and appearance of the conservation area and causes no harm."

Mr Aslam said he was "very happy" with the decision.

He added: "I would like to thank all of the members of the public and local businesses who have supported me. We would also like to thank our planning consultant Derek Scott."

Mr Scott, who compiled the planning application and appeal, said external shutters were the store's only viable security option.

He added: "I was delighted with the decision. My client had made a genuine error in installing the shopfront and associated roller shutters in the first place without the benefit of planning permission.

"Thankfully common sense has prevailed and the Reporter from the Scottish Government quickly recognised that the alterations did not detract from the character or appearance of the area and granted permission retrospectively.

"Whilst the Council's design guidelines on shop fronts and roller shutters still have an important role to play, this appeal decision clearly shows that they are only one of a number of considerations that need to be taken into account."

A council spokesman said: "When considering applications within a conservation area, the council has a statutory duty to assess whether the proposals preserve or enhance the character or appearance of that area. In our view, this proposal was contrary to adopted policies and guidance and was not acceptable. The Reporter, however, has taken a different view - as, of course, he is entitled to do - and we are currently considering the policy implications of his decision."

NEWS: Seamens' Memorial To Set Sail

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 24, 2010, Friday

A STATUE to honour merchant seamen is set to be unveiled in the Capital later this year after its £100,000 price tag was raised in less than six months.

A flood of donations from around the world means the memorial celebrations for the thousands of merchant seamen who gave their lives in British conflicts is now progressing at full steam.

The Princess Royal, patron of the Merchant Navy Memorial Trust, is coming to Leith on November 16 to reveal the bronze statue, which will stand atop a 15-foot plinth outside the Malmaison Hotel at The Shore.

The memorial's sculptor Jill Watson said she is "delighted" that she will be given the honour of meeting the Princess Royal, who she described as "a wonderful supporter of the Trust".

She added: "I certainly hope the sculpture will be well received, but it is not for me to say.

"The story is so important and so many people so connected to it, not just in Leith but throughout Scotland. Everyone you meet, has some connection, memory or story to tell.

"I have family connections with the sea through the fishing industry. My grandfather had a timber business very near the site of the monument.

"A friend was a young chief officer on board the ship which took Winston Churchill across the Atlantic during the war."

The statue on top of the plinth will be a bronze, timber and steel representation of a merchant vessel.

Ms Watson added: "It is made up of modelled steel and timber bows with sails cast into bronze.

"I am enjoying the work enormously. The committee have been tremendously helpful.

"The whole thing has been a huge challenge, to do justice to the brave men who went to sea.

"It is an important and complex commission.

"Learning about the importance of foreign trade, the hard lives at sea, the war years, the dangers, has been an adventure in itself. It will have educational benefits for future generations."

The Trust now hopes to add to the donations they've received so far and raise a total pot of £250,000 to fund other projects in the future.

Lord Provost George Grubb said: "Preparations are well under way for the formal unveiling of this magnificent lasting tribute to those who sacrificed their lives on our behalf.

"The Port of Leith has played a critical role in Scotland's seafaring past, so it is entirely fitting that the new monument should take pride of place at the Shore.

"There are countless families here in Edinburgh, across Scotland and beyond whose forebears served this country at sea and this striking monument will be of national significance."

NEWS: Binmen Caught Out In A Backstreet

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 23, 2010, Thursday

AN investigation has been launched after council bin men were caught on camera apparently collecting private rubbish from the back of a Ford Transit van on a city side street.

A local resident watched as the van reversed up to the bin lorry and the men began off-loading bags of rubbish, wood, and even an old fireplace.

The bin lorry involved was not one used for so-called special uplifts, where bulky items are collected for a £20 fee, or trade waste collections, which must be arranged on contract.

The bizarre exchange was captured on camera on Tuesday morning on Lindsay Street, behind the rundown Fort House block in Leith, and a probe has now been launched.

A city council spokeswoman confirmed that the photos were currently under investigation.

She added: "We welcome detailed reports into these types of incidents and would encourage the public to come forward to help us target mismanagement of waste and inappropriate use of resources.

"Any staff misuse of council vehicles or property could result in disciplinary action and improper disposal of commercial waste can result in prosecution."

The resident who photographed the incident said he started watching after a "shabby"-looking white van appeared on the street.

"It would only be seen by the small number of people still living in the block because it's due to be knocked down.

"They had what looked like and old fireplace, a van-load of wood and a couple of cement bags filled with various bits of junk. It looked like they were dumping stuff from a house clearance.

"The guys had a wee laugh and a joke with the bin men and then drove off, then the bin men went back on their rounds."

Businesses that do not have an official waste disposal contract with the council or other licensed waste carrier are liable for a fine of up to £2000.

The city council axed free special uplifts for domestic waste in April and now charge a £19.99 flat rate fee, in a move critics feared would lead to a rise in flytipping.

However, Councillor Maureen Child, environment spokeswoman for the council's Labour group said: "Without wishing to prejudge the outcome of the investigation, which may yet show that there was nothing untoward going on here, I would have serious concerns about such practices taking place as a result of the scrapping of free uplifts.

"If council bin lorries are being used to collect private waste it's a matter of great concern. It's just not on."

The last remaining residents of Fort House are expected to be removed by the end of the year, with demolition work set to begin shortly after.

NEWS: Saddling Up To Cut Fuel Prices

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 22, 2010, Wednesday

UP to 700 bikers are expected to ride a "rolling roadblock" into Edinburgh this weekend in protest at the spiralling cost of fuel.

The fuel protest, organised by the Fife Bikers club, is due to leave from Kinross and arrive at the Capital's Kings Stables Road by around 1pm on Saturday.

The protest is a repeat of a similar stunt conducted in 2008, where around 350 bikers blocked both carriageways along sections of the A90 for around an hour.

Protest co-ordinator Stephen Forsyth, 45, of Fife Bikers, said: "We received quite a bit of attention the last time we did this, and this time we expect it to be even bigger.

"We honestly don't expect it to make a blind bit of difference because we received little response from MSPs, who said fuel taxation was a matter for Westminster, while most of the MPs couldn't care less.

"However, we received a very favourable response from the public, who were supportive of what we were trying to achieve.

"We're trying to minimise the disruption to the public. We actually wanted to do it last weekend but the police said no because of the Pope's visit, and they didn't want to have another major event in the city, so we changed it to this weekend.

"Police will be escorting us in a rolling road block, so only the sections of the road with motorcycles will be closed. We will be driving at a steady 30mph or so, so delays should be minimal."

The government plans to add 1p to petrol and diesel prices from 1 October, at a time when the cost of petrol and diesel is already likely to rise because of increasing crude oil prices and weaker sterling.

Mr Forsyth added: "It always seems to be the motorist that's hit the hardest. We are the easiest target because the Government knows we need fuel, and it's not just commuters but delivery drivers who rely on their vehicles for work.

"Many of our members use their motorcycles to commute into Edinburgh for work. There's a large number of motorcycle-only spaces in the city, and they're usually all full.

"Many people think that motorcycles are more of a recreational hobby but for many it's their main form of travel."

A Lothian and Borders Police spokeswoman said the force would be working with the organisers to facilitate the protest and will make all efforts to reduce the impact on the travelling public.

She added: "The route, which includes the A90 southwards from Kinross across the Forth Road Bridge then along the A90 into Central Edinburgh, may result in some delays for motorists. Police would encourage other road users who will be travelling on these roads from noon until 1.30pm on Saturday to consider revising their route or altering their travelling time.

"King's Stables Road is the only route that will be closed, all others will be on a traffic hold basis only."

NEWS: Questions Over Squaddie Death

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 16, 2010, Thursday

A YOUNG judo champion and soldier has been laid to rest with full military honours as mourners were told of unanswered questions around her death.

Corporal Stephanie Hart, originally from Sighthill, died at the age of 29 while serving with 10th Queen's Own Gurkha Logistics Regiment.

A coroner's inquest is under way to discover the circumstances around her body being found on a recreation ground in Farnham, just outside Aldershot, where she was based.

Cpl Hart, known as Steph, was stationed in the town as part of a British force attached to the predominantly Nepalese regiment and had seen service in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Her family have spoken of the devastating loss of a "fantastic daughter" who took a bronze for Scotland at the Manchester Commonwealth Games in 2002 before signing up for the army shortly before the outbreak of the war in Iraq.

A eulogy from Cpl Hart's mother Janet, read out at her funeral at Edinburgh's Mortonhall Crematorium yesterday, spoke of unanswered questions.

She said: "To Stephanie, my daughter, so many questions, so few answers, so many things left unsaid.

"You were the light of my life and now that light has been diminished. You are in my thoughts and in my heart. Till we meet again, mum."

At her funeral, Cpl Hart was described as "a young woman who gave so much to all who knew her in the world of judo and in the army".

Standing over her coffin, which was draped in the British flag with a single red rose, her father Ian, 60, who lives in Broxburn, said: "This should have been my day, with Steph here and me in there, but it's not."

Cpl Hart won her first Scottish senior judo title at the age of 15 and represented Scotland at three Commonwealth Games. After joining the army, she led the Combined Services Ladies Team to the national team medal.

A spokesman for Cpl Hart's regiment refused to comment until the inquest has concluded.

A police spokeswoman said: "I can confirm that Cpl Stephanie Hart's body was found at Heath End Recreation Ground, Farnham, at 11.30am on 28 August 2010. Police have found no suspicious circumstances."

The coroner's inquest is not expected to return a verdict for another four weeks.

NEWS: Woman Miscarries After Assault

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 15, 2010, Wednesday

A VULNERABLE pregnant woman suffered a miscarriage after she was hit over the head with a bottle and beaten as she tried to buy drugs for a friend in a Capital underpass.

Emma Flint, 27, suffered head injuries, cuts, bruising to her abdomen and bleeding during the assault, despite begging her attackers to stop because she was pregnant.

Last week her attacker, heroin addict Natalie Paterson, 40, was jailed for 14 months for the attack but both Ms Flint and her family believe she should have been given a far harsher sentence.

Miss Flint, of Craigentinny, said: "She ended a life that day and should have been given 10 years."

She said she had gone to the underpass in Murrayburn Drive in Wester Hailes to "buy some smoke" for a friend from the group.

She said: "When I arrived a gang of them set about me. Natalie hit me over the head with a bottle and I fell, then they all started laying into me.

"I kept saying to them 'stop, stop, I'm pregnant' but apparently that didn't matter to them.

"They stole everything from me, my mobile, money, keys and fags, and ran away. As she was running, Natalie turned around and said, 'if I see you round here again you'll end up in a box'.

"Somehow I managed to get up and make it to the main road. I nearly got hit by a cab because I was staggering around, and someone phoned the emergency services.

"I was in hospital for a few hours. Three days later I discovered I had miscarried. The attack has ruined my life and yet Natalie Paterson will probably be free in seven months. I know it's a cliche, but the law is an ass."

In a letter to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority, Miss Flint's doctor Ewen Stewart, of Rose Garden Medical Centre, confirmed that she was pregnant at the time of the assault.

He said: "I can confirm that on 11 August 2008 we received a fax from the Pregnancy Support Centre at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh confirming that she had a complete miscarriage. This does appear to have been following the incident."

Paterson sobbed as she was jailed last Wednesday, having previously admitted to assault and robbery at the Murrayburn Drive underpass on 7 August 2008.

Two other people were charged in connection with the assault but their not-guilty pleas were accepted. Paterson was also sentenced to a further two months for a separate assault on a child in 2009.

Defence lawyer Paul Dunn told the court that Paterson had been the victim of a serious crime herself in 2005 and had spiralled into a series of crimes, but that she was taking steps to get off the drink and drugs she turned to after being the victim of a crime.

Sheriff Noble said: "You did participate in an assault and robbery on a woman with learning difficulties. It can only be dealt with by way of custody."

NEWS: A Death Off Barracks

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 13, 2010, Monday

THE father of a former Scots judo champion who died suddenly while serving in the army in England has paid tribute to his "fantastic daughter".

Corporal Stephanie Hart, originally from Sighthill, took a bronze for Scotland at the Manchester Commonwealth Games in 2002 before signing up for the army shortly before the outbreak of the war in Iraq.

She died aged just 29 while serving in Aldershot, Hampshire, where she was stationed with 10th Queen's Own Gurkha Logistics Regiment.

Miss Hart, known as Steph, was stationed in the town as part of a British force attached to the predominantly Nepalese regiment. Her death on August 28 occurred off barracks.

Miss Hart's father Ian, 60, who lives in Broxburn, said: "I couldn't have asked for a better daughter. She wasn't only a friend to me but a friend to many.

"She was a fantastic daughter. She liked school, even though she didn't particularly excel. She was excellent at college, where she did sports science, and had ambitions to go to university but she put it on hold to train in judo for the Commonwealth Games. She was told that you only get one shot at it, whereas you can study any time, so she went for it.

"We were delighted when she got her lottery funding and I supported her every step of the way, but despite the funding I had to put a lot more money into her training than I ever had.

"In the end she decided to join the army to prove to everyone that she was able to stand on her own two feet and make a living."

Mr Hart declined to comment on the circumstances of her death, or discuss her military career, saying he would prefer to leave these matters to the army.

An army spokeswoman declined to comment on the cause of death, except to say that an initial police investigation found no suspicious circumstances.

She added: "A full inquest was also carried out and returned no outstanding questions. As far as the army is concerned the matter is now closed."

Miss Hart joined her local judo club aged eight. She won her first Scottish senior title at the age of 15 and represented Scotland at three Commonwealth Games.

After joining the army, she led the Combined Services Ladies Team to the national team medal in 2002.

Mr Hart added: "Stephanie was outstanding, as a sportswoman, as a soldier, a daughter, a sister, auntie and cousin. Everybody loved her.

"We loved her and the army loved her. She put into her 29 years ten times what most people put into their whole life. I couldn't be more proud of her."

A statement from the British Judo Association said: "Steph was the ultimate professional as well as a talented sportswoman, a true ambassador and role model for all.

"Steph will be sadly missed by her judo friends, who remember her as an effervescent player who always had time for everyone."

Miss Hart served in Iraq as part of the first British non-special forces unit across the border from Kuwait at the start of the war. She later transferred to the Royal Logistics Corps, and came back from a tour of duty to Afghanistan in March.

She is survived by her father, her mother Janet, siblings Phil, Sharon and Terry.

She is to be given a full military funeral at Mortonhall Crematorium Main Chapel on Wednesday.

NEWS: Drummond To Kenya

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 11, 2010, Saturday

AS SCHOOL outings go, it was one of the more ambitious ones.

A group of sixth-year pupils from Drummond Community High School have recently returned from a trip to Kenya, as part of a partnership project with Muthambi Boys and Girls School in Marima, a town in the shadow of Mount Kenya.

In exchange for lessons in Scottish poetry and how to cook shortbread, the teenagers were given Swahili language tuition and a trip to a crocodile farm.

Drummond librarian Annie Scanlon, who accompanied the children on the trip, also helped to design a new school library out of "a motley collection of damp and ancient old books on rickety shelves".

She said: "With eight boys working as volunteer librarians, we cleared shelves and set up some of the new and exciting books that we had managed to take out with us.

"The library will now open for the boys in the evenings and we hope to send out more books in the future.

"In the girls school, we taught lessons on Scottish poetry and did cookery demonstrations, introducing the girls to shortbread.

"It was difficult to record their comments as their mouths were so full.

"We also took part in sports and games, music, tribal dancing and question and answer sessions on every topic under the sun, plus we made a short film on the life of a Muthambi schoolgirl."

As well as strengthening their curricular links, the school is hoping to raise £15,000 to bring eight students and two staff over to Drummond in June 2011.

Ms Scanlon added: "The trip far exceeded our expectations both educationally and socially and it would not be exaggerating to say that it has changed the lives of students and staff in all three schools.

"We embarked on a very full programme for our ten-day visit which was a combination of working and meeting with the Kenyan students and learning a bit about the life of ordinary Kenyans. The experience was far more fun than the usual 'safari' holiday."

"When we weren't in school we were out experiencing Kenyan life guided by Muthambi staff and students. We visited a crocodile farm and handled 'teenage' crocs with big teeth."

City education leader Councillor Marilyne MacLaren praised the school's visit.

She said: "Global citizenship is an important part of the curriculum for Edinburgh schools and visits like this strengthen relationships and broaden horizons for our pupils.

"Similar links are being nurtured and developed all across Edinburgh and I think it's something the city should take great pride in."

NEWS: Britain's Oldest Woman Dies Aged 111

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 8, 2010, Wednesday

BRITAIN'S oldest woman, Annie Turnbull, has died just three weeks shy of what would have been her 112th birthday.

Mrs Turnbull passed away at the care home in Leith where she had moved three years ago, having lived semi-independently in sheltered accommodation until the age of 109.

Her strength and longevity astounded friends and family but her advancing years made her something of a reluctant celebrity, and she was never fully comfortable with the mantle of Britain's oldest woman.

Daughter Margaret Paterson, 77, said: "She didn't like to make a fuss. Everybody that knew her had a good word to say about her. You can make a lot of friends in 111 years.

"She was a wonderful woman and while she lived to a marvellous age the years always failed to show."

Mrs Turnbull lived during the reigns of six British monarchs, outlived the premierships of 26 prime ministers and survived two world wars.

Born on 21 September 1898 when Queen Victoria was on the throne, her life has witnessed the advent of TV, air travel and the birth of the NHS.

Born and brought up in Stoneyburn, West Lothian, Mrs Turnbull moved to the Capital after leaving school aged 14.

Dougie Donnelly, 74, whose mother was a close friend of Mrs Turnbull in Stoneyburn, said: "Annie was often fond of telling people that she used to push me around in my pram, which was a very long time ago considering my age now. She always used to tell me stories about life in Stoneyburn back in the day, about who worked in which pub and who lived where. She was the last link to the days of old.

"She was a marvellous woman, and to me she was always my auntie Annie."

The year of her birth saw the introduction of Edinburgh's first motor buses "the Penny Stinkers" as well as the opening of the Glenogle Baths in Stockbridge.

She went into service as a table-maid, a job she held for most of her working life.

The job gave her the chance to meet well-known people, including author Rudyard Kipling.

She lived in Easter Road until the age of 92, before moving to the Manderston Court sheltered housing complex.

Britain's oldest woman is now Elsie Steele, of Repton in Derbyshire, who is due to turn 112 on January 6 next year.

The world's current oldest living person remains Frenchwoman Eugenie Blanchard at 114 years and 204 days.

The oldest person in recorded history was Frenchwoman Jeanne Calment, who set the record at 122 before her death in 1997.

Mrs Turnbull died last Thursday, September 2, after a short illness. Her funeral will be held at Seafield Crematorium at 11am on Saturday.

NEWS: Police Investigate The BNP Over "Bizarre" Website

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 6, 2010, Monday

CITY rocker Edwyn Collins demanded that the BNP remove his song from a "bizarre" party website that is being investigated by police.

The Edinburgh-born star's hit A Girl Like You featured on a Lothians British National Party website behind images of Asian men burning a union flag and veiled women waving banners saying "God Bless Hitler".

The "Lothians BNP Video" site has now been taken off-line and its creator, BNP Central Scotland organiser Mike Coyle, has resigned from the party.

Police are investigating whether any action can be taken against the site. Edwyn Collins' wife and manager, Grace Maxwell, warned the BNP against using copyrighted material on their websites.

Ms Maxwell said: "There are many iffy videos on YouTube using A Girl Like You without permission and we are normally very relaxed about it.

"Whilst we don't believe that viewers would imagine for a moment that Edwyn has sanctioned the use of his track in this bizarre setting, for the removal of any doubt, we will require it to be deleted and will take the necessary steps to ensure that this happens."

The site, which was accessed via a link on the BNP Scotland website, also featured Louis Armstrong's What A Wonderful World with a montage calling the founder of Islam a "murderer" and "a paedophile", and several original songs by a Whitburn-based heavy metal band called Mott & Bailey.

The tracks railed against "invaders marching through our land, coming in like the night" and "darkness bringing down the walls". Videos accompanying the tracks featured images of 9/11, the London bombings and processions of coffins being carried through Wootton Bassett intermixed with images of British mosques and protesting Muslims.

Mr Coyle initially defended the site, stating that he saw nothing criminal in its content and claiming that "the BNP are not in the business of upsetting people". However, within hours of being contacted by the News, copyrighted content had been removed and the site had been re-branded "The Unofficial BNP Video Site". Mr Coyle then resigned.

The father-of-four said: "My last act as a BNP member was to dismantle this site. I put my head above the parapet and ended up being lied to. I set up this website with the full approval of the Scottish party, but now that my name stands to be dragged through the newspapers they have failed to show me any support.

"When I stood as a candidate in the last election my children were subjected to death threats, but I stood firm. They have lied to me for the last time."

The BNP Scotland website carries contact details for party members, party news and a page of material written by BNP Scotland leader Gary Raikes. But Mr Raikes described it as "an unofficial blog". A line has been added to the site stating, "This is an unofficial BNP site".

He said Mr Coyle's site was set up with his support but was not officially sanctioned by the party.

He said: "We are sorry to lose Mr Coyle over this. Many sites support the BNP and we are glad for that support but cannot be held responsible for content. This would appear to be yet another witch hunt by the left-wing press."

BNP national leader Nick Griffin declined to comment.

Muslim activist Osama Saeed, founder of the Scottish-Islamic Foundation, said: "The videos show the BNP are stuck in a time warp, laden with images from the Crusades. The far-right always try to isolate and stigmatise particular groups and the latest is Muslims."

A police spokesman said: "Inquiries will be made in order to establish whether any further action can be taken."

NEWS: Sub-Standard Life

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
September 2, 2010, Thursday

BANKS and business leaders have warned that more financial job losses are on the way, following the announcement that 600 posts are to be slashed at Standard Life.

The financial giant announced yesterday that the majority of the cuts - 480 posts - would come from its Edinburgh business, but said it would attempt to find new posts within the company for those affected.

However, with more financial cuts looming, many of those facing redundancy may struggle to find another job locally.

City development leader Tom Buchanan said: "We always knew that there would be more job losses in the financial sector. We just want to ensure that we can minimise these losses in Edinburgh and put appropriate measures in place to ensure re-employment."

Standard Life employs around 6000 people in Edinburgh, down from 10,000 in 2004.

The announcement comes on the back of a mass cull at RBS which has slashed 22,600 jobs since the banking crisis began.

Last week, the bank announced it was shedding a further 400 Scottish posts at its Direct Line insurance offices in Glasgow. RBS media relations manager Linda Harper today reiterated comments made by chief executive Stephen Hester that more cuts were on the way.

Insurer Aegon UK is expected to announce up to 600 more job losses later this month.

Standard Life public relations manager Nicola McGowan said: "We are aiming to reduce our reliance on contract staff so 100 of the posts to go will be contractors. We expect a further 100 to go through people moving out of the business naturally by the end of 2011.

"We have created 100 new posts in our technology and innovation business and will endeavour to recruit internally.

"We intend to centralise 50 jobs in the English regions to Edinburgh. Those filling these posts will have the opportunity to relocate."

Graham Birse, deputy chief executive of Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce, said: "Yesterday's announcement amounts to a reorganisation of their business rather than a dire warning on the future of the sector."

The news comes as it was confirmed that Edinburgh has slipped down from 28th on a list of the world's top financial cities - the Global Financial Centres report by research firm z/Yen.

NEWS: A room with a view

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 25, 2010, Wednesday

THEY will be among the most sought-after flats in Edinburgh, if you're willing to pay for the view.

Developers have been granted planning permission to convert three upper-storey store rooms on Princes Street into six luxury flats, offering majestic views of Edinburgh Castle and Princes Street Gardens below.

Property experts expect the flats - to be created on the narrow upper floors above Bookworld - could fetch up to £300,000.

However, the flats are set to be extremely compact, with a combined lounge and kitchen with little room for more than a sofa, television and dining table, plus a master bedroom with en-suite bathroom and a small box room.

In addition, the lack of parking has led planners to demand a £7000 contribution from the developer to the City Car Club, in exchange for a year's free membership for residents.

The flats are being developed by Charlotte Square-based real estate investment firm City & Wharf.

Director Angus Forsyth said: "Given the location and the views, we have designed these flats to appeal to the luxury end of the market.

"I would think they would appeal to professionals given the proximity to the central business district, so they would be ideal for people working locally.

"The flats are not huge. They're probably about average size for a two-bedroom property in the city centre. There is a master bedroom and a second smaller room which could be used as a bedroom or study.

"We currently have no idea how much to market these flats for. Once the development is a little more advanced we'll get the professionals in to put a price tag on them."

There are very few residential properties on Princes Street. The last property to go up for sale, a three-bedroom penthouse overlooking The Mound, was sold for £380,000 earlier this year.

Sales negotiator Debra Lennie said: "That was a particularly nice flat with a balcony and we had a lot of interest from abroad for that one.

"We had enquiries from all over Europe and America from people who were thinking about moving here. I think people living in Edinburgh are slightly put off by living in the city centre, and the difficulties it can bring in relation to parking and noise, but Edinburgh is no different from some of the other great European cities such as Paris where city living is cherished."

Another property was sold through Leslie Deans & Co in 2007 for a similar price. Mr Deans said he would expect the new flats to go for slightly less.

He said: "I wouldn't expect the flats at the back, overlooking Rose Street, to go for much more than £200,000 but at the front you're paying for the view, and what a magnificent view you will get.

"I would expect that view to add another £50,000 on to the price, and if the flats are finished to an extremely high standard they could even fetch £300,000."

Conservation group The Cockburn Association has welcomed the plans, saying that the flats would add "round-the-clock vitality to the area".

However, potential buyers may have to wait a while before getting their foot in the door. Mr Forsyth said that City & Wharf would wait until market conditions improved before acting on the planning permission, which is valid for three years.

NEWS: Dr Livingstone, I presume you need a good clean-up

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 24, 2010, Tuesday

DURING his life he would have been used to wading through the droppings of many a strange creature in the jungles of Africa, but his effigy has since come under attack from some less exotic mess.

Now a century of bird droppings is set to be cleaned from the famous statue of the explorer David Livingstone in the Capital.

The bronze statue, which stands near the Scott Monument in Princes Street Gardens, needs essential conservation work to prevent corrosion.

It will be scrubbed and gently cleaned to remove all the accumulated grime, particularly algae and bird droppings, which are acidic, before a specialist treatment is applied to stabilise any corrosion.

The bronze will then be re-patinated and a new layer of wax applied to protect it.

City centre councillor Charles Dundas said: "The work is being done as part of the city-wide 12 monuments scheme, which also includes the refurbishment of the Burns Monument, the Grassmarket Well, Nelson's Monument and the Time Ball.

"This is probably one of the easier stages of the project but no less important because they're probably some of the most photographed statues in the city.

"I think it's good that Livingstone is getting a clean-up as he's such an important figure in Scotland, with a legacy that continues to this day."

Two other statues, featuring the liberal politician and reformer Adam Black and writer and philosopher Professor John Wilson, will also be cleaned in the GBP16,550 project, which is funded by Edinburgh World Heritage, Edinburgh City Council and a donation from the Mount Royal Hotel on Princes Street.

The work will be carried out in part by volunteers and out-of-work youths under the Future Jobs Fund.

Livingstone was born in Blantyre, Lanarkshire in 1813. In 1841 he went to South Africa as a missionary doctor, and became an explorer, journeying to Lake Ngami, the Zambezi River and Victoria Falls.

Upon his return in 1856 he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society for his discoveries.

He returned to Africa in 1858 and discovered Lake Nyasa. He died of malaria and internal bleeding due to dysentery in 1873, in Zambia, while searching for the source of the Nile.

Livingstone was one of the most popular national heroes of the late 19th century. He famously "disappeared" at one point, and his subsequent meeting with HM Stanley gave rise to the popular quotation, "Dr Livingstone, I presume?"

His statue was created by the sculptor Amelia Paton Hill, one of the few women sculptors in 19th century Edinburgh.

NEWS: Guns won't keep Theresa away from Gaza

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 23, 2010, Monday

AN EDINBURGH activist who was seized at gunpoint by Israeli troops in a raid on an aid flotilla that left nine dead is preparing for another sea mission to Gaza.

Theresa McDermott, 43, a postal worker from Pilrig, told how an Israeli soldier held a gun to her head and threatened to shoot her when forces boarded her boat, which was delivering supplies to the blockaded Palestinian strip on May 31.

Her boat was sailing nearby when the Israel Defence Force opened fire on board the MV Mavi Marmara after apparently coming up against fierce resistance from activists.

Despite the risks, Ms McDermott is now preparing another flotilla with the Free Gaza movement in October.

She said: "People keep asking me why I keep going back and all I can say is I'm stubborn. The people of Gaza have to put up with this treatment every day of their lives, and when we head out there we get the chance to show it to the world.

"As long as we're drawing attention to the siege conditions they're living under then we'll keep going back."

The BBC's Panorama programme this week showed Israeli troops preparing for the arrival of the next flotilla, alongside footage taken on the Mavi Marmara apparently showing activists with chainsaws and metal bars.

The programme suggested that the IDF had been provoked by a hard core of radical activists from the Turkish IHH group.

Ms McDermott said that while she was sceptical about some of the footage she was looking to obtain her next boat from the UK, and sail it solely under the banner of the British Free Gaza movement.

She said: "It's hard to organise a major aid effort with just one country, so if other groups want to come along we're not in a position to stop them.

"I can't comment on all of the footage as I wasn't on the Mavi Marmara, but we all heard the radio broadcasts and at no point did anyone hear activists shouting 'go back to Auschwitz' as the Israelis claimed.

"And one thing I can say for certain is that the IDF were firing on us before they had even boarded the ships, so the claim that they only opened fire after they were provoked is rubbish."

The plight of Gaza has figured highly in this year's Edinburgh International Book Festival, with a talk by Free Gaza activists Sharyn Lock and Sarah Irving, whose book Beneath The Bombs details their experiences in the Israeli bombing raid in December 2008.

This week also saw the launch of Before We Say Goodbye, a teenage fiction book based on the lives of an 18-year-old female suicide bomber and her victim, and a talk by Israeli journalist Gideon Levy.

NEWS: Bid to stave off the end of Hillend

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 21, 2010, Saturday

A BID has been launched to form a community trust to save the cash-strapped Hillend ski slope.

Lothians MSP Ian McKee has written to more than 200 constituents to gather support for the idea before a meeting at the Scottish Parliament next month. It comes as campaigners have been struggling to find a solution to the centre's GBP500,000 deficit after Midlothian Council insisted it could no longer afford to run it single-handedly.

The council turned to national sporting body sportscotland to help fund the centre, which draws in snowsports enthusiasts from around the country, but it said it would only offer advice on how to operate "a more economically sustainable model".

The centre has already implemented a raft of cost-saving measures - including job cuts and price rises - but these were only projected to reduce the deficit by a third, suggesting the only option to save the centre will be external funding.

Dr McKee said: "There seems to be general support for the formation of a trust, either to support Midlothian Council or any other body that might take over the running of the centre, or even one day to run the centre directly. The next obvious step is to arrange a meeting of interested parties to share ideas and to try to plan the way forward."

Dr McKee hopes the establishment of a trust will generate enough money to clear the deficit and keep the centre open, and he is calling on anyone interested in the campaign to get in touch with his office.

He said that Edinburgh law firm, Morton Fraser WS, had offered to provide legal advice so that a trust could be established in the most efficient way.

Midlothian council leader Councillor Derek Milligan said: "Midlothian Council and sportscotland have been working to explore the options for Scotland's national ski centre and a report will be considered by the full council shortly."

Sinead Feltoe, regional director of VisitScotland, said; "Hillend Ski Centre is a great addition to the visitor experience in Edinburgh & the Lothians and we believe it's important that efforts are made to make Hillend as sustainable as possible allowing visitors here to enjoy what it has to offer for many years to come. Any positive moves to help Hillend in this way would be welcomed by us."

NEWS: Man dies after doc treats cancer with fungicide

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 14, 2010, Saturday

A CANCER sufferer who raised GBP10,000 to visit Italy for controversial treatment has died.

In March, the Evening News told how father-of-six Robert Fyvie shunned chemotherapy in favour of a radical treatment.

The procedure - which sees cancer "as a fungus" - is overseen by Tullio Simoncini, and sees a catheter inserted straight into the liver in an intricate operation which cannot and will not be performed in the UK.

His other cancer treatments include baking soda.

Mr Fyvie, 59, of Eskview Terrace in Musselburgh, died peacefully at home last Friday, four months after the trip to Rome which was funded with his children's savings, money raised by his family and members of the local community.

Devastated wife Angie, 39, said: "There had been a bit of a problem with his treatment, getting the stuff delivered from Rome.

"He was in Edinburgh Royal Infirmary for just over three weeks in June. By the time we got him back home we couldn't catch up with the medicine.

"It's terrible, but what is a great comfort to us is that I was sleeping beside him when he passed away so it was very peaceful. Now I just feel like I'm in limbo.

"He was the most courageous person you could have ever met. God broke the mould when he made him."

Mr Fyvie's son Marc, 15, had hoped that his dad would live to see him take part in his first boxing match at the Bronx Boxing Gym in Tranent on October 10.

Alex Brown, who runs the gym, said: "It was quite a shock, it was certainly a bit quicker than expected.

"He was still taking treatment when he got home here and I saw him about a week before he passed away.

"I knew Robert because his son comes in to do boxing at the gym. It was really sad that the treatment in Italy didn't prolong his life at all."

The former transport business owner was first diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2006 and underwent an operation to remove the tumour, but the cancer spread to his liver.

Doctors in Britain refused to operate, saying it was too close to his biliary system and could potentially kill him.

He had always refused chemotherapy as he feared that lowering his immune system would make him less able to fight the cancer.

Mr Fyvie's search for an alternative cure took him to Thailand last summer where he spent 12 weeks taking herbal medicines, which he said made him feel stronger.

Mrs Fyvie eventually found the treatment after endless internet searching for a solution.

A funeral takes place on Monday at Richmond Craigmillar Parish Church in Niddrie at 1pm, and then at Mortonhall Crematorium at 2pm.

NEWS: Banking on a decent dram

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 13, 2010, Friday

AN award-winning Royal Mile bar is set to open a new "try before you buy" whisky store overlooking The Mound.

Gary Still, owner of Whiski, has applied to turn a section of a redundant Bank of Scotland branch and neighbouring Just Scottish gift store on North Bank Street into a "new concept in whisky retailing".

He said: "I'm going to split up the units into three rooms.

"One room is going to be the whisky store selling all-Scottish produce and the idea is you select your whisky and take it through to the tasting room and sample it before you buy it.

"I'm also planning to open a small bar and bistro in store but it's going to be very low key as I want to keep it completely separate from Whiski on the Mile, which is extremely successful in its own right."

Whiski hit the headlines last summer when Oasis spent seven hours eating and drinking there before their Murrayfield gig, while the bar also served as the backdrop for an advert featuring South American supermodel Alessandra Ambrosio and Essex bricklayer turned serial celebrity philanderer Paul Sculfor shortly after it opened in 2007.

If Mr Still gets the go-ahead by council planners, he hopes to call his new place The Whiski Still and has drafted in Belford Road-based architects KBAD to design the layout.

KBAD is responsible for a string of trendy bars in the city including Orocco Pier's Antico bar in South Queensferry, Grand Cru on Hanover Street and the Voodoo Rooms on West Register Street.

He added: "It's in a fantastic location with great views of the city and it's offering something different from the usual tartan souvenir stores in the area so hopefully it will be successful."

Meanwhile, the owners of Porto & Fi deli in Newhaven have applied to turn the rest of the bank into a bistro under the name Cairn Cakes.

North Bank Street is the second former Bank of Scotland branch facing conversion to leisure in the Old Town.

Antonio Crolla, owner of Dario's on Lothian Road and Bar Napoli on Hanover Street, is also awaiting permission to turn the former Bank of Scotland on Chambers Street into a restaurant.

Bank of Scotland parent company Lloyds Banking Group has agreed to sell off 175 branches in Scotland in the coming years, as part of the state aid remedies agreed with the European Commission in the wake of the credit crunch.

The two branches awaiting a change of use in North Bank Street and Chambers Street have been merged into Bank of Scotland's new flagship branch on the Royal Mile.

NEWS: "Brutal" office block transformed

Evening News (Edinburgh)
MARK McLAUGHLIN
August 12, 2010, Thursday
1 Edition

A "BRUTAL" 1970s office block in Haymarket would be turned into a hotel under plans unveiled today.

Plans have been lodged to turn Haymarket House, the imposing former government office block opposite the station on Clifton Terrace, into a 157-bedroom hotel, with shops on the ground floor and two new mews houses at the back.

The project's architect, Moray Place-based Comprehensive Design Architects (CDA), also plans to spruce up the hotel's appearance by hiding its dull, grey brickwork behind more attractive sandstone cladding.

CDA architect David Hannah said: "The current brutal appearance of the building is particularly obvious from Haymarket station itself and also from Morrison Street where it is viewed axially.

"Haymarket House was designed as an office building in the early 1970s and as such has limited floor-to-floor heights making its use as a modern office building no longer viable.

"One of the key objectives was to create a new use for the building by retaining its structural frame and creating a dramatic improvement."

The hotel is intended to capitalise on the major developments going on in the area, particularly the expansion of the Edinburgh International Conference Centre.

If approved, it is likely to be completed ahead of the Tiger Development's scaled-down hotel plan for the Morrison Street goods yard, after its towering 17-storey hotel was thrown out by Scottish ministers.

It will also benefit from a tram stop right outside its front door.

An operator for the hotel has yet to be chosen, but the developers plan to approach major operators and complete the final design to suit their needs.

Steven Black, associate director of planning agents Jones Lang LaSalle, said: "The primary element of the proposed development is a change of use to form a 157-bedroom hotel.

"This will involve stripping out much of the internal part of the building.

"It is also proposed that the external shell of the building is stripped and re-clad. This presents a significant opportunity to improve the visual appearance of the building.

"To complete the courtyard to the rear, two mews dwellings are proposed, designed to match the historical form and dimensions of the existing properties."

The plans were welcomed by city centre councillor David Beckett. He said: "I think its important that we get the building back into use because it's not the most attractive thing to look at, and it sits in a very prominent space.

"I'm impressed by the fact that the developers have taken into account how it's viewed from the street as well as how it's going to look inside. The sandstone cladding will make it more pleasing to the eye.

"It won't struggle to fill its capacity, particularly being so close to the EICC."

NEWS: Terrorised By Racist Thugs

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 11, 2010, Wednesday

A FAMILY told today how they are living in fear of a gang of young racist thugs who have been laying siege to their home for months.

Abdur Rahim, 32, and his heavily-pregnant wife Nazama, who are originally from Bangladesh, have suffered a campaign of vandalism and harassment since the beginning of the year.

The gang throws stones, smashes windows and vandalises taxi driver Mr Rahim's car outside his Broomhouse home. In one of the latest incidents at the weekend, a stone crashed right through the window, leaving a golf ball-sized hole.

Police today confirmed they were treating the attacks as racially motivated and appealed for information as Mr Rahim said he was at a loss to explain why he was being targeted.

The couple, who have a seven-year-old daughter, have lived in Broomhouse Loan for ten years, but the problems only started in January when the gang of around five teenagers began to attack.

Mr Rahim said: "We've never done anything against them but they have suddenly taken exception to us being here, so I can only assume they have a problem with the fact that we're ethnic Asians.

"My family is originally from Bangladesh but my daughter is Scottish and my new baby will be Scottish as well.

"My neighbour is also Bangladeshi and he's had the same problems that I've had. We're the only two houses on the street that are being targeted by this gang so our ethnic origin is the only explanation for it.

"We just don't know what to do. There's a big hole in our window but when we replace it, it will only get smashed again."

Mr Rahim's car is also covered in chips, dents and scratches left by the vandals.

Mrs Rahim, 31, a John Lewis assistant, is expecting the couple's second child later this month and fears for the safety of their family. She said: "They've smashed our windows and scratched our car, and who knows what they could do next.

"I've recently been diagnosed with diabetes and, coupled with the pregnancy, I'm already under a lot of strain, but the added stress has made me fear for the safety of my unborn child.

"The atmosphere in the house over the last eight months has been terrible."

A police spokesman said they were following a "positive line of inquiry" over the attacks.

He said: "We are currently working with our partner agencies to address this issue.

"Anyone with information that can assist us with our inquiries is asked to contact police immediately.

"Lothian and Borders Police will not tolerate racially- motivated crime."

Local councillor Eric Milligan, who sits on the police board, said he would be speaking to the chief constable to ensure that those responsible were prosecuted "to the full extent of the law".

He said: "Having been a member of the police board for many years now, I have been continuously impressed with how robustly the police deal with incidents such as this.

"We have made a lot of progress in community relations in recent years and reports of this kind have become increasingly rare.

"However, we cannot let this progress be spoiled by a few individuals, or allow their actions to besmirch the good name of Broomhouse."

NEWS: No love lost over puppy

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
August 10, 2010, Tuesday

A MURDER investigation is under way in Wester Hailes after a man was stabbed to death following a reported row over a puppy.

The victim, named locally as 34-year-old Martin Hughes, was seen staggering out of a flat in Wester Hailes Park yesterday afternoon with a stab wound.

Emergency services found Mr Hughes lying in the street and he was taken to the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary where he later died.

Neighbours claimed Mr Hughes had been involved in a dispute with his attacker, who is currently being hunted by police, in the days leading up to his death.

One local, who did not wish to be named, said: "He recently bought a rottweiler puppy but it was sick and it died shortly after he bought it.

"The word is that Martin didn't want to pay for the puppy, so the guy came round and stabbed him."

Sharon Sutherland, 34, said: "A friend of mine said she saw him staggering out of one of the flats and she thought he was drunk, and then he just collapsed.

"He loved his dogs and he was quite upset when the puppy died.

"There's a lot of violence in the area though."

Neighbours said Mr Hughes hadn't lived in the area long, but had become a popular member of the community.

Jimmy John, 21, a labourer, said: "He was popular with all of the kids because he used to look out for them and enjoyed getting a wee kick about with them in the street.

"If any of the kids had a fall he was always the first one to make sure they were okay.

Other neighbours have claimed the stabbing may have been drugs related.

Ricky Henderson, councillor for the Pentland Hills ward which covers the area where the stabbing took place said: "It is tragic when something like this happens.

"Wester Hailes Park has a good close-knit community and I hope that the police can get to the root of this very quickly."

A police spokesman confirmed they had launched a murder investigation.

FEATURE: Leith Boundaries

MARK McLAUGHLIN
Evening News (Edinburgh)
July 31, 2010, Saturday

IT was a decision that split public opinion, sparked fierce debate and prompted strong displays of emotion from proud Leithers.

Should the port be merged with Edinburgh? That was the question of the day 90 years ago.

On August 3, 1920, the official answer became "yes" as the Edinburgh Boundaries Extension and Tramways Bill received Royal Assent, moving one step closer to its implementation in November of that year.

But it was not a decision ever favoured by the majority of Leithers, who in a referendum voted overwhelming 26,810 to 4340 against the planned merger with the Capital.

Despite this, they were defeated by the authorities of the day, as a decision was made to incorporate not only Leith, but Corstorphine, Colinton and Liberton into Edinburgh as officials argued it was in the public interest.

Unsurprisingly, the controversial decision still sparks debate today.

The boundaries of Leith have clearly changed dramatically over the years. Back in 1920, the borders of the new Leith local authority ward mirrored the old borders of the Municipal Borough of Leith, straddling Pilrig Street before cutting a straight line to the south-west corner of Lochend Loch and heading out to sea.

Crucially, the old borders encircled Easter Road Stadium, but by the 1950s the borders shifted up Hawkhill Avenue.

At that point, Hibernian FC ceased to be part of Leith and became part of the old Calton ward, but to its fans Hibs remained - and still remains to this day - a Leith club.

Today, it sits in the Edinburgh City Council ward of Leith Walk, well outside the heavily contracted council ward currently known as Leith.

One of Leith's most famous landmarks, the former Boundary Bar, straddled the original boundary between the port and Leith, with the official dividing line running through the middle.

Saturday, 28 August 2010

BOOK FEST: Ambrosio, Before We Say Goodbye

Gabriella Ambrosio
Before We Say Goodbye
2010

THE teenage book market is replete with books about monsters – particularly Stephenie Mayer’s hugely successful Twilight saga – and thanks to Amnesty International the shelves now have a new addition.

Gabriella Ambrosio’s Before We Say Goodbye, a semi-fictional account of a day in the life of a teenage female suicide bomber from Palestine and her Israeli victim, received a special endorsement by the human rights group at this month’s Edinburgh International Book Festival for its contribution to the understanding of the conflict. Like Twilight there are no shortage of monsters on both sides, and like the vampires of the saga these monsters are struggling to maintain their humanity against hateful, vengeful urges and an insatiable thirst for blood.

Before We Say Goodbye is based on the factual tale of Ayat al-Akhras, 19, who became Palestine’s youngest female suicide bomber when she killed herself and two Israelis including one Rachel Levy, 17, in a Jerusalem supermarket in 2002. The physical similarities between the two girls led the authorities to speculate initially that there had been two Palestinian suicide bombers, and that Levy was al-Akhras’s accomplice and perhaps even her sister.

The case starkly demonstrated the similarities between the communities on both sides, and in this book Ambrosio imagines the personal circumstances that brought these two girls together through the lives of two proxies, the Palestinian Dima and the Israeli Myriam, both 18.

Ayat al-Akhras and Rachel Levy on the cover of Newsweek



As the book is aimed at the teenage market, I have handed over my blog for this review to two Edinburgh teenagers, Andrew MacLean and Frances Singer, recent James Gillespie’s High School graduates who Amnesty pulled together for a chat with the author Gabriella Ambrosio at the book launch last week. I was struck by their different interpretations of the book, and conflicting sympathies, but as we shall see Ambrosio herself was not surprised.

“I seemed more sympathetic towards Myriam,” said Andrew, from Bruntsfield, who is going on to study biological sciences at Oxford next month. “Dima seemed a little naive, talking about how killing herself and others would make right all of the wrongs that that her family had suffered. There’s a line in the book about her actions taking all of the injustices away and making the Israelis pay, but I think this book showed that her actions were just part of a never ending process. By the end of it the Israelis were shouting, ‘death to the Arabs’, while the Palestinians celebrated.”

‘Dima had to blow herself up in the middle of a crowd. She had to blow up a crowd.
‘She wouldn’t be doing it if she weren’t sure she would kill lots of them. She would postpone it. Her life was not worth a few lives; it was worth a great many Jewish lives – at least a hundred. She would blow herself up and take a hundred people with her. A hundred Jewish families would have to suffer what they as Palestinians were suffering. And finally the camp would celebrate. The return of honour. Of a little justice.’
(Before We Say Goodbye, p.115)

Frances, from Newington, who is going travelling for a year before taking on a chemistry degree at York, had a slightly different take.

“I identified slightly more with Dima,” she said. “You can really feel her anger at the situation, whereas Myriam seemed quite empty. Myriam was upset about the death of her friend but it never seemed to sink in, whereas Dima’s response was more emotional. I don’t think I would do what Dima did [suicide bombing] but I can see why she did it. She felt there was nothing for her, and she was going to be stuck in the same situation unless she did something about it, but if she had just carried on she could have made much more of a difference. She wanted to be a journalist and she could have made much more of a difference doing that rather than blowing herself up.”

Two other characters stand out from the book who are worth noting. Myriam’s brother Nathan, 19, is doing his military service at the Erez checkpoint and is probably the closest thing to Mayer’s teenage vampires, a human child, a pacifist, unwillingly conscripted by older monsters who begins by being horrified by the brutality on both sides but ends up resigned to it.

' “You have to check everyone who crosses over [the checkpoint],” Nathan said flatly. “People are made to partly strip off, and their shoes and bags are passed through the metal detector. Often they have blades hidden in their soles...the first thing that came to mind was a scene from the Holocaust.
“I felt like I had got everything wrong...and then that awful
thing happened...everyone saw Ariel’s head fly inside the blockhouse...
“They do this to us. Someone thinks it up and sends them to do this to us. The truth is, as far as their concerned we shouldn’t exist!"'
(Before We Say Goodbye, pp72-73)

Then there is Ghassan, the Palestinian puppet-master, the man who “thinks it up” and sends “them” – ordinary Palestinians like Ayat al-Akhras and her fictional proxy Dima – to kill Israelis. Ghassan is the personification of every Hamas/Fatah/Hezbolla/Iranian/Al-Qaida hardliner who believes death and destruction is the only solution to the Israeli occupation but sends others to do their dirty work.

‘Peace. That is what Ghassan felt after every explosion. Peace at last. The blast, the trembling air, the pieces shooting away in all directions...
‘What must it be like, living as if you were always stuffed with explosives? What else could you want if not to get rid of them every so often? This is how it was for Ghassan, who sought every explosion the way another might seek an orgasm.’
(Before We Say Goodbye, pp76-77)

I had originally believed Ghassan to be not only the personification of Arab monsters but a dual personification of the monsters from both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with his one brown eye representing the Arabs and his one blue eye a metaphor for the occupying European Jew stereotype, but according to Ambrosio his heterochromia is descriptive rather than metaphorical. Andrew’s and Frances’s insights, it seems, where more on the button than my own:

“His different coloured eyes are a result of the shrapnel in his head from one his grenades that exploded too close - nothing more,” said Ambrosio. “I am not surprised that Andrew and Frances came to different conclusions about the characters because when I read a book I identify with the people, not the politics. It’s the humans you identify with as they are your guides in this other world, and often the only way that you can understand how you would feel in this world is to understand how the characters feel."

Thursday, 26 August 2010

READING: Cowley, The Last Game

Jason Cowley
The Last Game
2009

The Last Game, ostensibly an extended essay about the Liverpool v Arsenal title decider in 1989, is about much more than football. It is part biography, part social commentary, part fanzine and a wholly passionate read. It’s about Cowley’s relationship with football, with his father, with journalism and with the world around him, often all four at once. The prologue provides an interesting insight into his psychology:

“I accepted the false dichotomy between the so called highbrow and lowbrow and had concluded that you couldn’t be both a book man and sports man – that the two cultures were separate, with no connecting bridge between them.”

As a bookish journalist living in Edinburgh, 60 miles from my derelict hometown of Linwood where ignorance is practically a virtue, and 60 miles from my football team St Mirren which I still visit most weeks largely to catch up with my brother and boyhood friends, I know all about this dichotomy and can identify with the polar forces pulling him apart.

But Cowley and I both know that this dichotomy is, indeed, false (many people still recoil in shock when I inform them novelist Christopher Brookmyre is also a St Mirren fan). Cowley approaches his sport like the giants of American literature approached their sports. He marries his bookish head with his sporting heart and does for football what Norman Mailer did for boxing, Ernest Hemingway did for bullfighting, and Hunter S Thomson did for desert racing - he chronicles the attitudes, troubles and prejudices of the day through the prism of a single sporting event.

He even measures his own theories on that other momentous sporting event of 1989, the Hillsborough disaster, not against those of contemporary British writers such as the divisive Kelvin MacKenzie but against another giant of modern American literature Don Dellilo, who described the fans’ suffering like a great religious painting, “a crowded twisted vision of a rush to death as only a master of the age could paint it”.

And he writes about Arsenal v Liverpool the way Mailer wrote about Ali v Foreman, as a titanic battle between gladiators rather than a lowbrow working class sport. He elevates Arsenal manager George Graham, a tough Scot born eight miles in the opposite direction of Glasgow as myself, to the status of an ageing warrior-poet:

“[As a player] Graham was a languid presence in midfield. He passed and moved so gracefully that he was known variously as the Stroller, the Ringmaster and The Peacock. ‘I had a quick brain but a slow body,’ he has said. ‘I needed time, which is not available in the English game today.’...

“[As a manager] Graham did not like strollers or peacocks: the footballer as the egoist or exhibitionist. He preferred grafters...Graham demanded toil and labour from his players and coaching staff.”


Even when he moves away from the football field to review the social change of the 80s he does so from the terraces, chronicling the changing attitudes to race through the eyes of John Barnes dodging bananas, likens a rave during 1988’s second summer of love to “an especially intense football match”, and conflates his Last Game thesis – that the ’89 title decider marked the transition between old and new football – with the other great social upheavals of the late 80s such as the decline of communism and Fukuyama’s theories on “the end of history”.

Running through it all is his own struggle to maintain his relationship with football and with his ailing father, his efforts to kindle his relationships with his wife and with journalism and the journey he took towards becoming the current editor of New Statesman and, as author of The Last Game, the thinking fans wordsmith.

Saturday, 14 August 2010

BOOK FEST: Lock and Irving. Gaza: Beneath The Bombs

Sharyn Lock with Sarah Irving
Gaza: Beneath The Bombs
2010

“Israelis don’t oppress Palestinians,” activist turned author Sarah Irving told a packed crowd at the opening show in Amnesty International’s Imprisoned Writers Series on the first day of the Edinburgh International Book Festival this afternoon.

Irving and her co-author Sharyn Lock are here to promote their new book Gaza: Beneath The Bombs, and their statement – while apparently jarring coming from one half of a team of committed pro-Palestinian activists – sums up the humanitarian message of the book.

“Israelis don’t oppress Palestinians...the Israeli government oppresses Palestinians,” Lock elaborated. “While a lot of racism undoubtedly exists if you speak to Palestinian taxi drivers in the West Bank many of them will tell you that some of their best friends are Israelis.

“However, such relationships are becoming more difficult because it’s hard for an Israeli to travel to the West Bank. Ariel Sharon actually made it illegal for some Israelis to travel into the West Bank, and it was a deliberate effort to cut these ties and foster separation and resentment.

“The vast majority on both sides are just people trying to get on with their lives, but one side is systematically having everything they hold dear stripped away from them.”

Both Irving and Lock have been visiting Palestine for the best part of the last decade, and their eyewitness accounts confirm many of the horror stories that continually flow out of the embattled Gaza strip and West Bank.

“I actually worry more about the West Bank than I do about Gaza,” adds Irving. “Despite the bombing going on in Gaza the extent of the institutionalisation and acceptance of Israel’s ongoing programme of settlement building concerns me.

It’s like it’s become a part of life, but I’m continually shocked by how large these settlements have become even in the last nine years that I’ve been visiting.”
Irving’s persistent activism has taken an awful toll on her health. Hobbling in on crutches she explains that her legs are slowly deteriorating from an injury she sustained after being thrown to the ground by an Israeli soldier.

Irving and Lock told the crowd of their experiences crouching in parsley fields dodging bullets, and getting drenched by Israeli water cannons firing on Gazan fishing boats. The boats fire putrid water which, the authors claim, is laced with some form of poison which makes the fishermen sick and contaminates the fish destined for an area where food is scarce.

Lock emotively related her experience to the comforts of home. “I often forget that the planes flying overhead are actually death machines, and sometime catch myself imagining that they’re actually passenger planes full of eager holidaymakers like the planes back home.

“I sometimes mistake Israeli tanks for roadworks. The noise is very similar and I suppose in a sense they are road works – they’re unmaking the roads.”

While much was said about the Israeli government’s oppression of the Palestinians, little was said about the counterpart governments in Gaza and the West Bank that arguably play their own part in oppressing the Palestinians by stoking Israeli anger – the Islamic fundamentalist Hamas and corrupt secularists Fatah.

Speaking after the event, Sharyn Lock explained why Hamas has yet to show its true colours – for good or for ill – in Gaza because the area has been under constant blockade and frequent bombardment since Hamas took power in free Palestinian elections in 2007.

“No one can really decide how well Hamas are doing because they’ve got nothing to judge it against. Any progress Hamas makes is immediately bombed out of existence by Israeli planes.

“What many people forget is that there is no such thing as a welfare state in Palestine, no health care or child support, and for a long time Hamas was the welfare state. They organised help for the communities suffering under the occupation.

“And while there are stories about Hamas forcing women to wear the veil it’s not something I’ve seen myself. Some women do wear the veil but no more than in previous years, and nobody seems to make a big deal about feeling oppressed under Hamas because they’re all so focussed on the infinitely larger oppression their suffering at the hands of Israel.

“It’s got to be remembered that 50 per cent of Palestinians are under 18, so you’ve got a community full of children who don’t engage in politics and don’t have any idea about elections. Those that did vote for Hamas had watched as the Fatah controlled Palestinian Authority failed to secure any gains for the Palestinians.

“Faced with no other option they thought – like many British people in the last election – ‘These guys aren’t working for me; let’s see what the other guys have got to offer.”