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                    Caitlin Moran on Keir’s good vibes and sparkles

Friday October 13 2023 | thetimes.co.uk | No 74226

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Israel shows mutilated babies
6 Images alleged to be proof of atrocities 6 Britain sends two Royal Navy ships 6 Sunak hits out at protesters and BBC
Richard Spencer Tel Aviv
Alistair Dawber Washington
Adam Sage Paris

Israel published photographs last night
that it said showed the mutilated bodies
of babies allegedly murdered by
Hamas, the Palestinian terrorist group
responsible for a series of massacres
last weekend.
The pictures were posted on Israeli
government social media. “This is the
most difficult image we have ever posted but we need each and every one of
you to know. This happened,” it said
next to one photo on Twitter/X.
It said the images, which The Times
is choosing not to publish because they
are too graphic, had been taken by the
armed forces, who had found “mutilated bodies” in settlements attacked by
Hamas on Saturday.
The decision followed a row over
allegations by some Israeli soldiers,
without evidence, that babies had been
beheaded. The search and rescue team
found “decapitated babies, women with
hands cut off, burnt bodies”, Daniel
Hagari, a rear-admiral in the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said, adding that
there was video of the alleged atrocities.
He did not say whether it would be released, despite days of contradictory
statements about whether the claim
could be corroborated.
Antony Blinken, the US secretary of
state, who flew into Israel yesterday,
was shown some pictures. He said:
“Images are worth a thousand words.
These images may be worth a million.”
The pictures were released five days
after Hamas murdered and kidnapped
Israeli men, women and children, as
well as soldiers. The assault triggered
hundreds of retaliatory airstrikes from
Israel, amid salvos of Palestinian rockets, with casualties rising on both sides.
The Hamas attacks killed 1,300 people
in Israel. Last night, as the Gazan
authorities said that more than 1,500
Palestinians had died and more than
6,600 had been wounded:
6 Britain said it was sending two Royal
Navy ships to the eastern Mediterranean and would begin surveillance flights
in a show of military support for Israel.
6 The British families of three pensioners held by Hamas said the attack
amounted to a “second Holocaust”.
6 France announced a ban on proPalestinian protests only for it to be
flouted immediately.
6 Before planned demonstrations in
the UK, Rishi Sunak urged police chiefs
to bring the “full force of the law” to
bear against protesters who committed
hate crimes and supported Hamas.
6 Three Jewish schools in north
London said they would close today for
“the safety of our precious children”.
6 The prime minister said it was “incumbent” on the BBC as the national
broadcaster to refer to Hamas members
as terrorists.
The violence, the most concentrated
bout of killings of civilians since the
founding of the state of Israel, has
prompted calls for calm from the West
to prevent an escalating war from spilling out across the Middle East.
Blinken said yesterday that while

Innocents suffer
on both sides
Palestinian children wounded in airstrikes sit in Gaza City’s Al Shifa Hospital. Israel has said it will not lift its siege for humanitarian relief until hostages are released

Washington would “always” support
Israel, the country must respect the “legitimate aspirations” of the Palestinians. “We know Hamas doesn’t represent the Palestinian people, or their legitimate aspirations to live with equal
measures of security, freedom, justice,
opportunity and dignity,” he said.
The Kremlin also warned of the risk
of the crisis spreading after Israel
bombed Syrian airports. Such an escalation, Moscow said, “must never be allowed”. Analysts have suggested Israel’s
latest strikes may have been targeting
Iranian weapons bound for Hezbollah
in Lebanon, which would have added to
the threat on Israel’s border.
Separately, in a televised address to
France, President Macron also urged
Israel to show restraint. “This is not a
war between Israelis and Palestinians
but between a terrorist group and a
society [of] democratic values. The only
response to terrorism must be strong
but just, strong because it is just. Israel
has the right to defend itself by eliminating Hamas through targeted actions
but whilst preserving civilian populations because that is the duty of democracies,” Macron said.
However, Israel warned there would
be no break in the siege of Gaza to allow

Partygoers’ cars tell of a paradise lost
Richard Spencer
Kibbutz Re’im,
Israel

T

he cars were the type
parents buy daughters for
their 21st birthdays. They
lined the track away from
the Kibbutz Re’im dance
site, the scene of the worst single
massacre in modern Israeli history.
They were white Kia Picantos and
Mazda runarounds and Hyundais
and a sporty red Mitsubishi.
Some had had their windscreens
shot out. The doors of others hung
wide open, but seemed undamaged.
Dashboard camera video
retrieved from the scene and
replayed endlessly on websites
shows what happened here. As the
ravers fled the Supernova “peace
party”, they were intercepted by the
gunmen who had caught them so
completely unawares.
Those who tried to drive for it
were shot up until the cars skidded

off into the wooded undergrowth.
Those cars that stopped had their
young occupants pulled out and
either killed there and then or, as
viewed by millions around the
world, dragged away as hostages.
The bodies, when they were found
in the hours and days that followed,
were spread widely.
In yesterday’s early evening light,
which the eastern Mediterranean’s
coastal plain sheds so gently along
its length, over lemon groves and
fruit plantations from Gaza to Israel
to Lebanon, it was easy to see why
Re’im was the perfect place for a
“peace and love” trance party. A
clearing in a wood, a rolling
landscape, and a light breeze
cooling the late summer grass
beneath bare feet — it must have
seemed like paradise.
The partygoers were the liberal,
secular, internationalist wing of
Israel’s youthful society. They
danced and drank till dawn.
Supernova was billed as being
“for friends, love and infinite
freedom”. It was celebrated on the

night of the Sabbath: this was not a
festival for conservatives or Israel’s
increasingly strident religious right.
Yesterday, as the authorities
opened the site and gave journalists
a guided tour, half-empty whisky
bottles and cans of Red Bull still
stood by the beer taps at the bar.
Plastic glasses littered the floor.
Psychedelic paintings were propped
up in the art tent.
It might be thought that the
liberalism on display as the first
gunmen landed by paraglider
contributed to what ensued,
provoking some sort of enraged
frenzy in Gaza’s own religious right.
The attackers were the
fundamentalists of Hamas, brought
up in Gaza’s close, barricaded,

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2 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Today’s highlights 7.20am Grant Shapps, the defence secretary 10am Matt Chorley hosts a debate on the next general election live from the Cheltenham Literature Festival 2pm Ruth Davidson chats to Ross Kemp, action man, right, about his autobiography 6.35pm The Ladder with the psychotherapist and author Philippa Perry 7pm Ed Vaizey broadcasts live from the Cheltenham Literature Festival DAB RADIO l ONLINE l SMART SPEAKER l APP T O D AY ’ S E D I T I O N Drive to jail fewer criminals Vaper, 12, had collapsed lung King’s new climate coins Ministers are drawing up emergency measures to reduce the number of criminals being locked up, with prisons in England and Wales about to run out of space within days. Violent and sexual offenders would not qualify for the effective amnesty. A 12-year-old girl who suffered a collapsed lung and was put into coma for four days has urged children never to start vaping. Sarah Griffin, who has asthma, had been vaping since the age of nine and was rushed to hospital a month ago. The Royal Mint has revealed the eight new designs that will appear on British coins — and for the first time, all feature nature and animals. The first set of the King’s reign mark “the climate change” era, and will celebrate vulnerable native species. 198 days since Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was detained in Russia #FreeEvan Republicans put Congress on ice Day of shame for the City Middle East flag ban at Wembley Rebel Republicans refused to unite behind Steve Scalise, their party’s choice for Speaker, the top job in Congress, as their infighting paralysed the US House of Representatives for a ninth day. More than a dozen would not back him. Jes Staley, former chief executive of Barclays, will forfeit £17.8 million in bonuses promised but not paid, after misleading the bank’s board and regulators over his relationship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The FCA fined him £1.8 million. The FA has banned fans from taking Israeli or Palestinian flags into England’s friendly against Australia at Wembley tonight, to avoid the match being turned into a protest. England will wear black armbands in tribute to all the victims. COMMENT 25 LETTERS 28 LEADING ARTICLES 29 WORLD 30 BUSINESS 33 REGISTER 49 SPORT 59 CROSSWORD 70 TV & RADIO TIMES2 FOLLOW US thetimes timesandsundaytimes thetimes OFFER Students can get full digital access to The Times and The Sunday Times for £9.99 a year THETIMES.CO.UK/SUBSCRIBE THE WEATHER 30 22 11 12 Kat Lay Health Editor Chris Smyth Whitehall Editor The NHS is pressing ministers for a £1 billion bailout to stave off a financial crisis that it says has resulted from the doctors’ strikes. Talks have begun with the Treasury as health chiefs say they will have to abandon attempts to bring down waiting lists if finances run out of control. The number of people waiting for treatment rose to a record high of 7.75 million yesterday. NHS leaders are increasingly fearful of a “profound financial crisis” as they struggle to pay inflated overtime rates to cover the shifts of striking doctors. Strikes have cost hospitals more than £700 million this financial year, with predictions that the deficit could reach about £1.5 billion if strikes continue over the winter. Julian Kelly, NHS England’s financial director, told a board meeting last week that there had been “a really sizeable” overspend of more than £1 billion this year, citing strikes as “the dominant factor”. Consultants have been paid extra to cover junior doctors on strike. “Produc- 14 20 19 25 Rain and thunderstorms in the south, chilly with blustery showers in the north. tivity and efficiency improvements” had failed to happen as bosses are busy coping with industrial action, Kelly told colleagues. NHS England is understood to have asked the Treasury for “compensation” for the cost of strikes but has yet to receive a clear answer. Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, is resisting extra spending demands as he grapples with a £23 billion increase in the cost of debt interest and attempts to find room for tax cuts in the spring. Conservative MPs are already angry about rising state spending and are likely to see bailouts for the NHS as limiting the room for tax cuts. Last autumn the NHS was given a £3.3 billion top-up for the present financial year. However, warnings about the most serious financial crisis for a decade have been intensifying as the deadlock continues in the industrial action. Many hospitals are promising savings in the second half of the financial year, which they fear may prove impossible if strikes continue. Matthew Taylor, head of the NHS Confederation, put the cost of strikes at “£1.5 billion or so”, warning that they were having a “a huge financial Care failings add to 15% rise in maternal deaths Eleanor Hayward Health Correspondent Poor NHS care is contributing to an increase in the number of women dying during and after childbirth in Britain, figures show. An independent review into maternity deaths found that 241 women died during pregnancy and within six weeks of giving birth between 2019 and 2021. It includes 17 women who bled to death, 23 who died of sepsis and 33 who died from Covid-19. A further 331 died in the 12 months after giving birth, with suicide the leading cause. The report said half the deaths were potentially avoidable had the women received better care, amid a deterioration in NHS maternity services. Maternal deaths have increased by 15 per cent since 2009, which means the government will probably miss its target of halving maternal mortality by 2025. The research, by MBRRACE-UK, a collaboration of academics, exposed stark and widening inequalities in maternal health. Women in deprived areas were twice as likely to die than those in wealthy areas, and black women were four times more likely to die than white women. The report’s author, Marian continued from page 1 Israel shows mutilated babies 11 10 NHS says it can’t start to cut waiting lists without bailout for humanitarian relief, saying that water, electricity and food supplies would not be allowed into the Palestinian territory until hostages seized by Hamas were released. No “electrical switch will be turned on, no water hydrant will be opened and no fuel truck will enter” until the “abductees” were free, Israel Katz, the energy minister, wrote. It is believed that Hamas is holding as many as 150 hostages, including British, American and French citizens. Other Middle Eastern countries were also trying to avoid the conflict spreading. Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Knight, a professor of maternal and child population health at Oxford Population Health, Oxford University, said: “This report shows persistent inequities impacting the care of pregnant, recently pregnant and breastfeeding women. Improvements in care may have been able to change the outcome for 52 per cent of the women who died during or up to a year after pregnancy.” The report issued recommendations, including speedier recognition of potentially fatal bleeding and greater mental health support for vulnerable women after they have given birth. Naomi Delap, the director of the charity Birth Companions, said: “It is truly shocking that in one of the richest nations in the world, women in the most deprived parts of the country are more than twice as likely to die during pregnancy or the postnatal period as women in more affluent areas. We’re deeply concerned by these continued trends.” She added that women were “falling through the cracks” of an NHS in crisis. “Professionals across health and social care — including GPs, children’s social care, health visiting, maternity, mental health and domestic abuse services — are struggling to provide safe and effective care in the midst of huge pressures.” Salman, spoke to President Raisi of Iran in a highly unusual exchange between the rival regional powers. Saudi Arabia “was reaching out to all international and regional sides to end the current escalation”, according to the Saudi state news agency. Tehran issued a statement after the telephone call, saying that Iran and Saudi Arabia, “as two key players [in the region], should defend the Muslim and oppressed nation of Palestine at this critical time”. The US has sent one aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R Ford, to the eastern Mediterranean. A second carrier group, led by the USS Dwight D Eisenhower, is due in the coming days. Lloyd Austin, the US defence secretary, will visit Israel today to meet Binyamin impact”. He said: “The absolute immediate priority for the health service is going to be that we get extra money in the autumn statement. If we don’t, we are going to be in a profound financial crisis. And you can forget progress in relation to things like waiting lists.” Sir Julian Hartley, head of NHS Providers, said: “The NHS will need more support to help offset the financial impact of industrial action. Time spent on managing strikes is limiting trust leaders’ capacity to deliver efficiency plans and to prepare for what is expected to be another tough winter.” Any bailout is likely to prompt questions about whether money should not have been spent resolving the doctors’ dispute, which has led to more than a million appointments being cancelled. But ministers insist that pay rises would worsen inflation. Hunt said last week that “we’ve made our choice” to prioritise inflation reduction over cutting waiting lists. Siva Anandaciva, chief analyst at the King’s Fund, a health charity, said: “It is increasingly hard to see how the NHS will be able to maintain the quality of care for patients without overspending its current budget.” Councils earn nearly £1bn in parking fees Ben Clatworthy Transport Correspondent Local councils have turned parking into a “huge cash cow”, according to new figures. Councils in England made £962.3 million from parking charges in the last financial year — £673.1 million from on-street parking and £289.2 from offstreet parking, the levelling-up department said. Experts predicted that the amount for this financial year would probably pass the £1 billion mark after councils up and down the country announced double-digit rises in fees from April. Southend, York, Rutland, Thanet and Waltham Forest have increased parking fees by about 10 per cent. In Cornwall, the county council has said parking charges would rise by 29 per cent at its most popular tourist hotspots, taking an hourly ticket to £2.20. Jack Cousens, the AA’s head of roads policy, said: “Once again official statistics show that councils have turned parking into a huge cash cow, not just a service to stimulate local trade and support workers and visitors.” Netanyahu, the prime minister. Diplomats from Qatar, which has ties to Hamas, and Egypt have been discussing ways of freeing the hostages and getting aid to Gazans. Hamas’s former leader, Khaled Meshaal, who is based in Doha and heads its diaspora activities, called for a day of protests today. In response, the US increased security at sites across the country. Meshaal also said that the governments and people of Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt had a bigger duty to support the Palestinians.
3 the times | Friday October 13 2023 News From Taylor with love, a film that has fans dancing in their seats Film Keiran Southern Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour AMC The Grove 14, Los Angeles HHHHH There was a debate over the summer about etiquette inside cinemas, with claims that audiences watching Barbie and Oppenheimer had forgotten how to behave. Let us hope that those cinephiles complaining about viewers checking their phones and talking throughout the movie do not stumble into screenings of Taylor Swift’s new concert film. The audience in Los Angeles watching the premiere of the pop superstar’s film screamed, sang and danced from start to finish, with some teenage girls barely taking their seats during its nearly three hours. Perhaps the screening was not representative — after all, Swift herself sat in a middle row, a few seats away from the actor Adam Sandler and other celebrity guests — but knowing her fans’ fervour, it is likely cinemas around the world will soon be turned into mini raves. And this is no ordinary concert film. The Eras Tour looks likely to become the highest-grossing tour of all time and the movie is already breaking records of its own. It surpassed $100 million in global ticket sales a week before release. The film more than justifies the hype, and rather than a rushed cash-in, Swift has given her fans a spectacular, lovingly crafted movie that somehow captures everything great about the live show. The bridge to Cruel Summer, the second song of the concert, was sung with as much enthusiasm in the cinema as it was in the stadium both times I saw it live. All Too Well — the ten-minute ballad beloved by Swift’s fan base — loses none of its emotional heft in the transfer from the arena to the Imax screen. August, a track from the Folklore album about a teenage love triangle, provoked a singalong in the cinema. One teenage girl appeared on the verge of tears. At times it was difficult to work out whether the cheering was from the cinema’s sound system or the audience. Many appeared to have memorised Swift’s choreography and danced along in near-perfect sync with the singer. Shake it Off, from the 2014 album 1989, had entire rows of the audience dancing. Some aspects of the film, which uses footage from performances in Los Angeles in August, even beat the live experience. Running for about two hours and 45 minutes, it is leaner than the concert. We no longer have to wait for Swift’s costume changes; in the movie she appears in a new outfit Taylor Swift received a rapturous reception both outside and inside the Grove cinema in Los Angeles for the premiere of the film of her latest concert tour instantaneously. And the camera takes the audience on to the stage with Swift, providing a close-up as she works her way through more than 40 songs from ten studio albums and 17 years of music. From the delight on her face it is clear not only that Swift loves being on stage but also that she shares a unique bond with her fans. The Eras Tour film feels like a present to those fans — the ones who have packed into arenas over the past seven months and those who were unable to get their hands on tickets. Although a trip to the cinema cannot perfectly replicate the experience of sharing a stadium with 80,000 Here we are now, educate us — pupils taught grunge and rap Kurt Cobain and Jay-Z may be part of lessons as curriculum resources become more diverse, writes Nicola Woolcock Teachers more used to classrooms smelling like teen spirit will have to get used to teaching about it if bands such as Nirvana join rappers on the line-up of new revamped lessons. Grunge bands from the 1990s, rap artists and computer game music will be taught alongside Beethoven and Mozart in more diverse curriculum resources being drawn up for schools. The materials will also include a greater range of texts for English lessons, with contemporary black British writers included alongside Chaucer and Shakespeare. Oak National Academy, which was set up during lockdown to help schools provide online materials, has now launched lesson resources for teachers across a number of subjects. The body, funded by government at arm’s length to help schools deliver curriculum content, is aiming to represent the diversity of modern life in its lessons. Schools can choose whether or not to use the materials. Several exam boards have diversified the GCSE syllabus, particularly in English literature, but some have found schools are more comfortable continuing with familiar texts such as An Inspector Calls by JB Priestley. The new resources are for primary and secondary schools. Music lessons at secondary will emphasise singing for pleasure, developing keyboard skills and composing. English lessons feature contemporary black British writers Andrea Levy and Winsome Pinnock, while for history there are resources for interpreting the British Empire, medieval women, Islamic history and the Tudors. Research by Penguin and the Runnymede Trust, published in June 2021, found fewer than 1 per cent of candidates for GCSE English Literature answered a question on a novel written by an author of colour in 2019. A separate survey in January last year found the majority of teachers in England believed more diverse and representative texts on the syllabus would be of most help to their pupils. Curriculum plans have been developed with organisations described by Oak as experts, including Twyford Church of England Academies Trust, Fox Federation, the University of York, the Geographical Association and Maths in Education and Industry. Units are set to be released on a rolling basis throughout the year, about half of them available by April. Curriculums have been designed, where possible, to address the problem of learning loss in the transition from primary to secondary. Maths, for example, uses the same core sets of models, methods and visual representations in all key stages. Matt Hood, chief executive of Oak National Academy, said: “I’m delighted that our new curriculum resources have gone live and look forward to feedback from schools and teachers. “Having highquality resources alongside them reduces teacher workload, improves happiness and retention. We have paid particular attention to Kurt Cobain of Nirvana and rapper Jay-Z are featured in new resources making sure that the curriculum represents the best of what has been thought, said, discovered, sung and danced. “We have selected topics that, when taken together, give pupils a rich understanding of the world and allow them to participate as educated citizens in modern society.” Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: “We recognise the work that has gone into developing these resources and the good intentions of Oak. However, the jury is still out on its usefulness. “This is a body that is backed by a considerable amount of taxpayers’ money and there is a lot of concern in the sector about whether it will actually end up driving other providers out of the market and reducing diversity, despite reassurances to the contrary.” Barton added: “Moreover, Oak won’t be enough to reduce the workload pressures that are driving people out of teaching.” screaming fans, Swift’s movie comes remarkably close. Pop music is a unipolar world — there is Taylor Swift and there is everyone else. With the triumphant arrival of The Eras Tour film, which will be followed at the end of the month by a re-recorded version of 1989, that gap is likely only to grow. Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour is released in UK cinemas today Follow @timesculture to read the latest reviews Times2 Social media mob raids library sale Laurence Sleator A library in West Yorkshire has had its book collection “decimated” after a fundraising jumble sale was “sabotaged” by a mob attracted by misinformation spread on social media. Batley Library, a grade II listed building, hosted a two-day sale last week where customers were invited to fill a bag with selected books for £1. Only books that were laid on specific tables were supposed to be part of the offer but “misinformed Facebookers” spread news that the library was holding a closing down sale. People began filling their bags with books from every shelf, volunteers said. Despite being continually informed of the rules, people carried on taking items not included in the offer. The sale was organised by the Friends of Batley Library, a volunteer group, to provide funds for events. Steve McGrath, one of the volunteers, accused some of having “actively stolen” stock. “I’ve lost my faith in humanity slightly today,” he wrote on Facebook. “This is the negative power of sharing and adding your own comments on social media, acting like Chinese whispers.” Kirklees council said it had not yet undertaken a full inventory to establish how many books had been taken.
4 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times News News Israel at war My hostage mother is victim of Tom Witherow The British families of three pensioners held hostage by Hamas said there had been a “second Holocaust”. There are 17 Britons feared dead or missing after Hamas militants stormed villages near the Gaza border fence on Saturday. More than 1,000 Israeli citizens were murdered and Hamas is holding about 130 hostages. Ada Sagi, the 75-year-old mother of Noam Sagi, 53, a London-based psychotherapist, was kidnapped from the Kibbutz Nir Oz, a village of 400 people from which dozens of hostages were taken on Saturday. The elderly parents of Sharon Lifschitz, 52, were also taken. Children were among the missing, including three-year-old Kfir and sixmonth old Ariel. Also missing are Tamir Adar, 38, and Yaffa Adar, 85, who was taken hostage by Hamas on a golf cart without her medication. A child called Abigail, whose age has not been given, has also been identified as missing. Dafna Elyakim is another missing Briton. Yesterday Sagi said that the village where he grew up awoke “to a massacre and a second Holocaust”. He added: “Nothing prepares you for this. I don’t Israel at war 6 Up-to-the-minute news and analysis on The Times live app and at thetimes.co.uk 6 Hear from our correspondents on the ground on our free station Times Radio DAB radio, online, smart speaker and app have words for my son to tell him how this happened. They’ve been gassed, burnt, butchered, slaughtered, killed and kidnapped. Mostly young kids and elderly people. They burnt the place to the ground, shot the dogs, nothing left.” He said that his mother, who had been due to visit London this weekend to celebrate her birthday, needed medicine including treatments for severe allergies to dust. “My son has one grandmother. I want him to be with her for his next birthday,” Sagi said. “I tell my son they are a very valuable asset so people are looking after them. My mum and dad are incredibly strong people, in their heart and their will.” Sitting in front of a table displaying photographs of some of the missing, including a six-month-old baby and young children, Sharon Lifschitz, 52, an artist and academic, said that her peace activist parents, aged 85 and 83, were also taken hostage from Nir Oz. Schools close their doors Nicola Woolcock, Laurence Sleator Matt Dathan Three Jewish schools in north London have said they will not open today “in the interests of the safety of our precious children”. Two primaries, Torah Vodaas in Edgware and Ateres Beis Yaakov in Colindale, and Menorah High School in Neasden informed parents yesterday evening. It is thought that the schools decided to close after Khaled Mashal, the former leader of Hamas, called for worldwide protests in support of Palestinians. The principal of Menorah High School said the “difficult” decision was taken “because of the risk of violence on the streets”. On Monday the Jewish Free School in Kenton, north London, cancelled after-school detentions so pupils could take their normal bus home and advised some pupils to remove their school blazers to avoid being identified as attending the school. Gillian Keegan, the education secretary, and Robert Halfon, the universities minister, have also said in a letter to university leaders that students are having to hide their Jewish identity to ensure their safety. They asked vice-chancellors to act swiftly against any threats to students and suggested that they should tackle inflammatory statements from student societies that showed support for Hamas, which is a proscribed terrorist group. The ministers wrote: “Not only are such statements of questionable legality, they are deeply troubling and hurtful to Jewish people, given that so many have friends and family based in Israel.” The letter reminded universities of their responsibilities under the Prevent counterterrorism programme to have “due regard” of the need to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism and warned them to pay attention to invitations issued by students or staff to ensure they do not “provide a platform for illegal speech”. “We have yet to really comprehend what took place,” Lifschitz said. “I feel I’ve been hollow for the last few days but I feel that we are strong, together we are facing this act of such barbarity,” she said. “You have to be a special sort of person to take an 85-year-old person out of her bed. These are frail people. It’s something so horrific we can’t contemplate [it]. In the face of all of this, bring these people back home. There are mothers waiting for their children.” Her father was a peace activist who spent time in his retirement driving sick Palestinians from Gaza to hospital appointments as a member of Other Voice, a volunteer group of Israeli citizens living near the border fence. “We now need to act together to fight that hatred with love,” Lifschitz added. “We say no to the massacre and destruction. We must believe that there is good in the world, and that I don’t accept butchery. I don’t accept it from Boko Haram, I don’t accept it from Isis, and I don’t accept it from our neighbours.” The families said they had received no information about their loved ones, or about efforts to rescue them. The scale of the hostage crisis is unprecedented in Israel’s history. Yesterday the country’s leaders threatened to continue the blockade of Gaza until all the hostages were released. Hamas has said it will kill a hostage each time Israel bombs civilian targets in Gaza without warning. The vast majority of those being held are Israelis, but it is thought that other nationalities include Americans, Germans, Thais, Mexicans, Brazilians, Nepalis as well as Britons. “This is the biggest hostage crisis in the world, that the world has faced in decades. We must do whatever we can, and whatever it takes to bring these hostages home,” Defend Israeli Democracy UK said in a statement. “They went door to door, snatched babies from their mothers, and children from their beds, handcuffed them and then brutally cold-bloodedly slaughtered them . . . in international law there is a term for such inhumane acts, it’s called genocide.” According to Chatham House, the foreign affairs think tank, Hamas may have taken people to use as “bargaining chips”, on the basis that Israel has a record of leaving no hostage behind. Among the Britons who died were Bernard Cowan, a grandfather, Nathanel Young, a soldier in the Israeli army, and Jack Marlowe, 26, who was a security guard at the music festival attacked by Hamas. Ariel Six months old Yafar Adar 85 Kfir Aged three Tamir Adar 38 Ex-ministers criticise BBC on Hamas Antisemitism Steven Swinford Political Editor Mario Ledwith, Alex Farber Seven former culture secretaries have told the BBC that its refusal to call Hamas “terrorists” risks blurring its impartiality. Led by Sajid Javid, they called on the BBC to “urgently reassess” its approach to describing Hamas as “militants” and “fighters” in a letter to Tim Davie, the director-general of the broadcaster. The group cited the BBC’s guidelines, which state that impartiality does not require “absolute neutrality” on every issue or “detachment from fundamental democratic principles”. They said: “The BBC’s commitment is to impartiality, not indifference. This distinction is now in danger of being blurred. Worryingly, the imprecise language of ‘fighters’ and ‘militants’ also serves to conflate terrorists with the Palestinian people, who suffer more than anyone from Hamas’s actions. We add our voices to the mounting concerns about the BBC’s language around this terror group. It is time to urgently reassess your approach.” The six other former culture secretaries are Karen Bradley, Nadine Dorries, Matt Hancock, Maria Miller, Baroness Morgan of Cotes and Sir Jeremy Wright. Rishi Sunak has also stated that he believes it is “incumbent” on the BBC as the national broadcaster to refer to members of Hamas as terrorists. John Simpson, the BBC’s world affairs editor, has argued that the corporation would be “taking sides” if it did so. However, the prime minister has said that Hamas is a terrorist organisation that has been formally proscribed under British law and he believes it should be described as such. A No 10 source said: “As the PM has said repeatedly, Hamas are not mili- tants, they are terrorists. It is incumbent on our national broadcaster to recognise this fact.” Sunak said on Monday: “There are not two sides to these events. There is no question of balance. I stand with Israel. The people who support Hamas are fully responsible for this attack. They are not militants. They are not freedom fighters. They are terrorists.” Noah Abrahams, 22, a freelance sports reporter on BBC Radio Derby, told TalkTV he would no longer work with the broadcaster, saying: “I have morals. The words ‘justified’ and ‘unjustified’ have been thrown around a lot and the BBC’s refusal to use the correct terminology is unjustifiable. Terminology and words when neglected have the power to fuel hate.” is growing on the streets of Oxford Trevor Stern Comment M y room-mate and I decided to put a mezuzah — a rolled scroll with scriptural verses in a box — on our door frame on Wednesday night. In light of rising antisemitism around the world, we had agreed that the best thing to do would be to publicly display and reaffirm Jewish identity. Yesterday morning, when I left my apartment, the mezuzah had been ripped off and stuck haphazardly upside down on the front door of the apartment building. I checked with property management and they did not remove it. It left me feeling quite shaken. This was a case of antisemitic harassment by someone in the building. I have experienced antisemitism in Oxford but not usually from students. I’m a master’s student from the US and have been in the city for just over a year. On arrival, it was a little strange. At the university where I did my undergraduate degree, there were many more Jewish people. But I’ve been pleased with the Jewish community in Oxford — the Oxford Jewish Centre is wonderful; it’s a space available to use 24/7. People in Oxford are generally accepting, although my orientation session for Oxford was scheduled for Yom Kippur and I was pretty upset
the times | Friday October 13 2023 5 2GM News News second Holocaust, says Briton Police told: Use law against protesters Abigail Ada Sagi 75 because I would be at the synagogue all day and fasting. I emailed the college to let them know and it didn’t come back to me until a few days beforehand to say it accepted my request not to attend. It seems it didn’t take me seriously. Until yesterday, I had never felt isolated by fellow students for being a Jew, but the town itself is different and antisemitism is a lot more present — it terrifies me. Last year I was walking past a protest on my way to a play and I heard someone shouting into a speaker about global elites who control the world. Later on I found that pamphlets had been slipped under the door of the Jewish centre. Another time, when I was walking in the park with a friend who was wearing a kippa, someone came up to him and started spewing antisemitism. He’s had other negative experiences, including “Sieg Heil” salutes directed at him. It makes me reluctant, when I leave the synagogue, to wear my kippa. Dafna Elyakim 15 Sharon Lifschitz’s parents and Noam Sagi’s mother, left, were abducted, along with the others pictured It’s sad that anyone thinks pro-Palestinian celebrations are an appropriate reaction to the death and destruction caused by Hamas. It horrifies me that people would use rhetoric to justify the killing of civilians. People are not sure about their safety; there are calls for violence against Jews internationally. I’ve heard people saying Israel is worse than Hamas and people saying horrible things on social media. There’s a real fear that it will lead to physical danger for Jewish students. The university has put out a statement acknowledging that the conflict is upsetting and offering support. But it has not condemned Hamas’s antisemitism, which we are concerned will make students feel comfortable on campus expressing antisemitism towards Jewish students. Trevor Stern is president of Oxford Jewish Society Fiona Hamilton Chief Reporter Charlie Parker, Matt Dathan Tear gas at Paris rally Rishi Sunak urged police to use the “full force of the law” against protesters who committed hate crimes and supported Hamas. Police have been told to use publicorder powers to block protests outside Jewish monuments and buildings such as the Israeli embassy, while cracking down on the use of face coverings to “purposefully conceal identity”. The prime minister announced an extra £3 million for increased security at Jewish schools, synagogues and community buildings after a rise in antisemitic incidents. Sunak said: “The UK must and will continue to stand in solidarity with Israel. At moments like this, when the Jewish people are under attack in their homeland, Jewish people everywhere can feel less safe. “That is why we must do everything in our power to protect Jewish people everywhere in our country. If anything is standing in the way of keeping the Jewish community safe, we will fix it.” Foreign students, academics and other migrants who praise Hamas or commit antisemitic acts face being expelled under plans being drawn up by the Home Office. Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, has ordered officials to draft proposals on how visas could be revoked. France has introduced similar rules and has expelled three people from the country. Prisons will be on alert for potential trouble after the former leader of Hamas called for Muslims to protest against Israel on a day of jihad. A Prison Service source said anti-terrorism teams that monitored known extremists in jails had stepped up their work amid “heightened tensions”. The Community Security Trust, a Jewish charity, said it had recorded 139 antisemitic incidents in the past four days, up 400 per cent compared with the same period last year. Sunak said police had the government’s backing in ensuring that glorification of terrorism was met with the full force of the law. Hamas is a proscribed organisation, meaning anyone who shows support for it can be arrested. French police used tear gas and water cannon against demonstrators last night after they flouted a ban on pro-Palestinian protests (Adam Sage writes). Hours after Gérald Darmanin, the interior minister, announced the ban, hundreds of protesters gathered in Place de la République in the centre of Paris, holding up banners that said “End the siege of Gaza”. Demonstrators chanted “Israel murderer” and “Macron accomplice” as they moved through the streets. The organisers had failed in an attempt to secure an injunction overturning the ban. When police moved in to disperse the crowd, violence erupted. Dame Lynne Owens, deputy commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said earlier that officers would take action against protesters who waved the Hamas flag, held up placards or directly expressed support for it. She said she understood that the Jewish community found demonstrations since the attack “morally reprehensible, intimidating, and even frightening”. However, in an open letter she said that the Met could not interpret broader support for the Palestinian cause as automatic backing for Hamas. Suella Braverman, the home secretary, has urged police to consider arresting people if they displayed Palestinian flags or chanted anti-Israel slogans. She said: “I have been clear with police chiefs . . . that there can be zero tolerance for antisemitism and that they should act immediately to crack down on any criminality in our streets and online.” Six groups are organising the rally in London in “solidarity with Palestine and to demand Israel end its occupation of Palestinian land and apartheid rule over the Palestinian people”. Ismail Patel, founder of Friends of Al-Aqsa, one of the groups, has shared inflammatory posts on social media, including claims that no one was massacred at a music festival by Hamas gunmen. Jo Malone’s son in ‘blame Israel’ row Tom Witherow The son of the perfume entrepreneur Jo Malone helps to run a Harvard Palestinian group that backed a letter blaming Israel for the Hamas attacks, according to a university directory of student groups. Josh Willcox, 22, was listed as one of three students leading the “Palestine solidarity committee”. Malone, 59, who sold her company and brand name to Estée Lauder in 1999, said the violence in Israel and Gaza had left her “heartbroken” and that Hamas’s attack was “abhorrent”. She did not respond to questions about her son but said that “we as a family . . . strongly condemn all forms of violence”. On Monday, 30 Harvard student organisations said that Israel was “entirely responsible” for the Hamas assault on hundreds of civilians. A letter called “Joint statement by Harvard Palestine solidarity groups on the situation in Palestine”, said the attack “did not happen in a vacuum”, and that the Israeli authorities had forced Palestinians to live in an “open-air prison for over two decades”. It added: “We, the undersigned student organisations, hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence. The apartheid regime is the only one to blame.” The letter prompted fierce criticism, including from the billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, who called for those behind it to be blacklisted by top Wall Street companies. Five of the groups, including the Harvard campus’s Amnesty International affiliate, have since withdrawn their signatures. Willcox, a keen fencer who attended the private Latymer Upper School in west London, did not respond to a request for comment. Another statement, shared on Wednesday by the committee, appeared to double down on the letter, saying that the “statement’s purpose was clear: to address the root cause of the unfolding violence”. It called for more condemnation of Israeli airstrikes, which have killed more than 1,000 Palestinians in Gaza, many of whom were civilians, since the Hamas attack. Sanaa Kahloon, a committee member, rejected “the accusation that our previous statement could be read as supportive of civilian deaths”, telling the Harvard Crimson student newspaper the “[committee] staunchly opposes violence against civilians — Palestinian, Israeli, or other”. Willcox is Malone’s only son with Gary Willcox, a surveyor whom she met at Bible school in south London and married in 1985.
6 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times News News Israel at war So close to the Supernova dance massacre, no one felt like arguing concrete cloisters. Outside television, they can surely have never seen anything like this. But there was no sign of that on the ground. Not only the videos but the evidence left behind revealed a highly disciplined operation. There was no out-of-control violence. No sprays of wild destruction. Only the revellers were targeted, but they were targeted closely and accurately. The symbols of their western decadence were left untouched. For those of us who had seen the films of the party, this was unnerving. The fluttering blue triangle patches of the dancefloor’s gazebo still shaded it, unharmed. The sound-deck platform had not been shot up. You could, if you wanted, stand where Shani Louk danced her last dance. Here it was that the 22-year-old German-Israeli tattoo artist whose portrait has become a defining image from the massacre was filmed swaying to the music with a friend and gurning into the camera. Louk was next seen unconscious in the back of a pick-up, manhandled by Kalashikov-toting militants who cheered and jeered over her body as they drove her off. She is thought to be in a hospital in Gaza, critically ill. It was similarly easy to follow the route taken by May Hayat, 30, a festival employee, as she spent hours trying to avoid death or capture. On Instagram, the festival’s natural site of record, she described how she was on her way to an employees’ trailer — now overturned and burnt — when the attackers arrived. She ran to the police van and sheltered there until it was surrounded, when she ran again, to the car park, with bullets flying. The car into which she clambered stuck in the sand, so she and a man she had never met before ran again and buried themselves in a cavity in the ground. But they were discovered and the man was shot dead in front of her, while begging for his life. Somehow, miraculously, she was let go, and ran again. Back at the party stage she smeared herself with the blood of bodies already there, and played dead for three hours till she heard Hebrew. The massacre sites of the Middle East come in many varieties. There are the historic battlefields, and the villages destroyed by rival sects and races — including Arabs, Turks and, yes, Jews — as the Ottoman Empire was torn apart by the British and French, who first took it over forcibly then equally capriciously abandoned it to its fate. There are the more recent venues for horror: city streets and refugee camps, open desert and farmyards, and all the sorts of places where the Five miles Gaza City Mediterranean Sea Supernova Festival GAZA EGYPT ISRAEL butchers of Isis slaughtered Shia Muslims and Alawites, or where Assad’s militias slit the throats of Sunni Muslim men, women and children whose towns dared to rise against him. And then there are the many massacres of Palestinians: most infamously, those by Lebanese Christian militias at Sabra and Chatila in south Beirut in 1982. No one seems to learn from this endless cycle, a cycle that leads to this most extraordinary danse macabre: a rave in a grove of silver birches that now sag over rows of empty sleeping mats and tents, abandoned flip-flops, bags of uneaten party snacks. Meanwhile a new massacre is under way, a few miles away. The occasional swoosh of its shells could be heard even from the festival site, as the Israelis bombarded both the militants and the civilians of Gaza. Few of the soldiers guarding the Supernova site gave that shellfire or hundreds of airstrikes a second thought yesterday. They did not regard it as comparable to the indiscriminate shooting that had happened here. Along the road to Kibbutz Re’im, too, were the signposts to Kfar Aza, Nahal Oz, Be’eri. There too they are still picking up the bodies. At the side of the road tanks and armoured personnel carriers rolled into the scrub, giant staging grounds for the offensive that everyone knows will come next. Few question it. Laviv Calderon, 22, who could easily have been at Supernova but wasn’t, though he has lost friends who were, was walking down the road to join his battalion of reserves. He had been planning to go backpacking in America but had called it off. He had no qualms. Interestingly, he had no politics, either. He did not care whether Israel’s present dysfunctional government had in some ways caused the security lapses that gave Hamas space for its incursion. He had never voted for anybody, he said, but he would, right now, do anything his government told him. “I will support whatever it does,” he said. At a checkpoint at the end of the road, beyond which even residents were not allowed as the troops prepared for battle, a father hugged his son in uniform — one of three in the army, he said. Tsur Dahan, 50, had only pride, he said, in his sons, in Israel. He had driven down from their home in Netanya in the north of the country and had brought supplies for the hard weeks to come. He was not a harsh man, he said, but he had no doubts about what had to happen. “Hamas must be destroyed, after what they did to the children,” he said. He waved to his son, and drove off smiling. So close to the dancefloor massacre, no one felt like arguing with him. But when fathers are glad their sons are heading to battle, what chance is there of peace? Israeli soldiers patrol the site of the Supernova music festival where an attack by Hamas left hundreds dead. Burnt-out cars and the victims’ belongings are scattered across the area Britain to dispatch navy and marines George Grylls Amman Mehreen Khan Marrakesh Britain will send two Royal Navy ships to the eastern Mediterranean and begin surveillance flights off Israel in a show of military support designed to reassure its ally before an expected ground invasion of Gaza. Rishi Sunak said the deployment of RFA Argus and RFA Lyme Bay, carrying a company of Royal Marines and three Merlin helicopters, would help to prevent further escalation after last week’s “barbaric attack from Hamas terrorists”. Yesterday, the first evacuation flight organised by the government departed Tel Aviv as the prime minister spoke with President Sisi of Egypt amid fears that the violence could spread unrest across the Arab world. Israel has imposed a blockade on Gaza and the UN has warned of a “devastating” humanitarian disaster facing Palestinian civilians who are running out of water and food. Andrew Mitchell, the development minister, said that Britain was considering increasing aid to the Palestinian territories in light of the deteriorating situation. “We will do whatever is nec- Israel has imposed a blockade on Gaza as it continues its campaign of airstrikes essary to play our part. Britain has a fine reputation always of going to the help those in distress and humanitarian peril,” Mitchell said. The government believes that there are still 60,000 British citizens in Israel and Gaza. There is almost no way out of Gaza and only limited ways to leave Israel after Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv was caught up in rocket fire earlier this week. Several airlines have stopped flying to the airport and a British Airways plane returned to London on Wednesday after aborting an attempt to land. Israel has already had significant mil- itary support from the United States, its closest ally, which is sending the largest warship in the world to the Eastern Mediterranean. The USS Gerald R Ford, a 1,092ft aircraft carrier, has arrived at the head of a carrier strike group that includes a guided missile cruiser and four Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers. The US show of force is designed to deter further aggression from Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia based in Lebanon amid fears that Israel could face another situation like the 1973 Yom Kippur War, when it was forced to fight on multiple fronts. Sunak said that the deployment of two Royal Fleet Auxillary vessels to the region would “support efforts to ensure regional stability and prevent further escalation”. The Littoral Strike Group comprising Argus and Lyme Bay arrived in Gibraltar yesterday on their way to the eastern Mediterranean offering a possible alternative if a naval evacuation became necessary. Both have been involved in humanitarian missions in the Mediterranean in countries including Libya. “We must be unequivocal in making sure the types of horrific scenes we have seen this week will not be repeated,” Sunak said. “Our military and diplomatic teams across the region will also support international partners to re-establish security and ensure humanitarian aid reaches the thousands of innocent victims of this barbaric attack from Hamas terrorists.” Sunak will visit the type 45 destroyer HMS Diamond in Sweden tomorrow and will be briefed on the capabilities of its sister ship HMS Duncan, which is on unrelated Nato exercises in the Aegean, a day’s sailing from Israel. Britain has a major airbase at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, which has been used for bombing missions in Syria, and is a convenient location to conduct reconnaissance missions. The RAF is likely to use Rivet Joint aircraft, one of the most sophisticated spy planes in the world, for missions off Israel. They have been used extensively over the Black Sea for surveillance missions supporting Ukraine and are often accompanied by Typhoon fighter jets. Britain will also deploy P-8 Poseidons, although these are primarily maritime patrol vessels and are used to hunt submarines.
7 the times | Friday October 13 2023 News News The festival, which took place in a clearing in a wood, was attacked in the early hours of Saturday Photographs by Jack Hill Isis comparisons may push Invasion is a Former generals doubt terrorists to free prisoners trap, warns Israel can destroy Hamas ex-MI6 chief Anshel Pfeffer Hamas is trying to find a way to release some of the prisoners it captured on Saturday in its terror attack on Israel in the hope of reducing international support for a devastating strike on its military infrastructure in Gaza, Israeli officials have said. One senior Israeli official said that Hamas was “anxious” to show that it was not similar to Isis, as the Israeli government has been portraying it, using footage of Israeli children, women and elderly being hustled into Gaza as prisoners. They said one way of doing this would be to release a limited number of prisoners, especially women, children and those who have non-Israeli citizenship. About a quarter of the captives are believed to be either dual-nationals or not Israeli. In an interview with Al Jazeera, the Hamas operations chief, Saleh al-Arouri, who is believed to be one of the masterminds of the attack, claimed his men had struck only “military targets” and that it was “civilians from Gaza [who] entered and clashed with the settlers, and civilians fell”. He added that “Hamas cannot harm civilians or prisoners” and that its fighters have orders “not to harm children and women”. His claims contradict the events of Saturday morning, when, minutes after Hamas breached the border fence with Israel, nearby civilian communities came under attack, as did the Nova musical festival, where about 260 civilians were killed. Hamas leaders have tried to claim that revellers were “mistaken for soldiers”, though they were all in civilian clothing and dancing to loud music. Within Israel there are differences of opinion over whether to prioritise the release of prisoners before launching a ground attack on Gaza. Bezalel Smotrich, the country’s finance minister and leader of the far-right Religious Zionism party, said in a cabinet meeting that Israel must strike at Gaza “without considering the prisoners”. However, former senior military officials said there was no such rush. “Israel should take the opportunity right now, before the ground offensive changes the facts on the ground, to see if some of the prisoners can be released,” said one former general. “Even if it means a limited release of Palestinian prisoners by Israel as well. Lives can be saved.” Anshel Pfeffer Jerusalem Fiona Hamilton Chief Reporter Hamas is laying a trap for Israel and would be “well pleased” if it started an open-ended full-scale ground invasion, a former head of MI6 has said. Sir Alex Younger, who headed the Secret Intelligence Service between 2014 and 2020, said the intensity of conflict and loss of innocent lives that would inevitably follow would engender more radicalisation. He endorsed Israel’s right to defend itself and said that strikes into Gaza were necessary, but added: “There is not fundamentally at the end of this a military solution to this problem. You cannot kill all the terrorists without creating more terrorists, and military operations of this kind very, very rarely succeed without some kind of political strategy. These are hard things to say . . . this is said with the intention to support.” He told the BBC’s Today podcast that Hamas would be taken aback by its success: “I don’t believe they thought they would break through this far.” Israeli former generals have said they are sceptical about the government’s promises to “destroy Hamas”. While supporting a ground offensive in Gaza in response to the group’s terrorist attack on Israel, many said they believed that more “realistic” objectives should be set. In a televised statement on Wednesday night, Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said that every Hamas member was a dead man. He repeated comparisons with the Islamic State terror group to justify his strategy. “Hamas is Isis, and we will crush and eliminate it just as the world crushed and eliminated Isis,” he said. There is consensus within the Israeli security establishment that the military must embark on a big campaign in response to Hamas’s attack, in which more than 1,200 Israelis, most of them civilians, were murdered. But there is also concern that the rhetoric of Netanyahu and some ministers doesn’t match what can realistically be achieved. “There isn’t just one monolith of Hamas,” one former general, who is still involved in operational planning and cannot be named, said. “There is the military and political wings. There’s Hamas in Gaza, and Hamas in the West Bank and in other parts of the region. It’s an ideology. Saying you’re going to destroy all of them isn’t rational. I hope it’s political grandstanding and not policy.” He said that a ground offensive in Gaza should take place and that armoured columns would be needed to “seriously degrade Hamas’s military capabilities, because not all their targets can be hit from the air”. Another former general said Israel could “take over most of the Gaza Strip within a few weeks of a ground offensive but that doesn’t mean you will wipe out Hamas. You can’t wipe out something people believe in and Israel needs to set an objective of seriously weakening Hamas as a military entity so the Palestinian Authority [ousted in 2007] can return and take control.” The chief of staff of the Israeli army, Lieutenant-General Herzi Halevi, addressed the Israeli public yesterday, admitting that the defence force under his command had failed in its duty to protect Israel and its citizens.
8 Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Emergency drive to jail fewer criminals Quintagram® No 1758 Solve all five concise clues using each letter underneath once only 1 Mexican culinary specialities (5) ----- 2 Child of one’s aunt and uncle (6) Matt Dathan Home Affairs Editor Jonathan Ames Legal Editor Catherine Baksi Ministers are drawing up emergency measures to reduce the number of criminals being locked up as prisons in England and Wales are about to run out of space within days. Rishi Sunak is expected to approve a “programme of reform” to respond to the prison crisis by Monday before it can be announced by Alex Chalk, the justice secretary, in parliament. The move will come days after The Times revealed that crown court judges had been told to delay the jailing of criminals because prisons are full. It is understood that judges and probation officers will be told to limit the number of criminals sent or recalled to prison. Also among the short-term proposals being considered is issuing new guidance to judges that would instruct them to avoid handing out sentences of less than 12 months where possible and instead make greater use of community sentences to punish low-level criminality. This would lead to criminals convicted of offences such as shoplifting and other thefts, drug dealing, drink driving and public disorder avoiding prison altogether. Violent and sexual offenders would not qualify for the effective amnesty in custodial sentences, which is expected to last for a limited period of time. Another interim measure under con- sideration is raising the threshold for recalling ex-prisoners to jail for breaches of their probation licence. Prison recalls could also be scrapped for criminals who served less than 12 months in jail. They are now only recalled for a maximum of 14 days, and scrapping recalls for them is seen as a quick way to free prison space and resources. Some prisoners will be released early and ministers are also looking at proposals to reduce the remand population, which hit a record high of 15,523 in June, accounting for nearly a fifth of the prison population, caused by the postCovid backlog in criminal trials and last year’s barristers’ strike. It is 6,000 higher than before the pandemic. The move is likely to affect only those offenders on remand awaiting trial or sentencing for non-violent crimes such as drug offences, which make up 22 per cent of those in prison on remand. The measures are being considered as the prison population is set to exceed the capacity in England and Wales in days. There are fewer than 600 spaces left in the prison estate and fewer than 150 in men’s prisons. The Ministry of Justice said Chalk would set out a “programme of reform” in the coming days to “ensure that we can continue to strengthen public protection by locking up the most dangerous criminals”. ------ 3 Unit of roughly 3.26 light years (6) ------ 4 Device for hauling in rope (7) ------- 5 Straighten out (a knotted mess) (8) -------A A A A A C C C C E E G I L N N N N O O P P R S S S S T T T U U Solutions see T2 MindGames p15 Cryptic clues T2 MindGames p14 Breakfast: 6am to 10am Our free radio station has all the latest headlines, interviews and debates every morning Listen seven days a week Horse trading Buyers from across Europe attend in the annual Drift Pony Sale in Chagford, Devon, in which semi-wild ponies rounded up on Dartmoor are sold On DAB, app, website and smart speaker
the times | Friday October 13 2023 9 2GM News Blue Peter presenter ‘was bullied and forced to care for dog’ Laurence Sleator Yvette Fielding, the former Blue Peter presenter, has claimed that she was bullied during her time on the children’s television programme and forced to look after the show’s dog. Fielding said that she was left a “shaking, gibbering wreck” during her first year in the role after she made history by becoming the youngest Blue Peter presenter, aged just 18. She said that her treatment on the programme, which at that stage was attracting eight million viewers an episode, would have “quite a few implications” if it took place today. Speaking to the Celebrity Catch Up podcast, Fielding, 55, who co-presented the BBC programme for five years from 1987, said: “I was told that I was useless, absolutely useless, again and again and again and again. I didn’t enjoy the first year. I found it very traumatic.” She said that producers on the programme would give her a strict curfew Yvette Fielding said she was told she was useless “again and again” of 9pm every night, ringing her to ensure she had gone to bed. She moved away from her family in Stockport to live in London, which she said she found difficult. “I felt very lonely because I was the youngest. I was considered a kid — and a pain-in-thearse of a kid,” she added. She was also told to look after Bonnie, the show’s one-year-old golden retriever, who went on to feature in more than 1,000 episodes over 13 years. “It got to the point where I’d just had enough. Being made to live with the dog, I had no say in it. Poor Bonnie was pining for her owner, scratching at the door every night. It was too upsetting.” Fielding, who later presented the Vaping girl, 12, warns children after suffering collapsed lung Steven Swinford Political Editor Poppy Koronka A 12-year-old girl who suffered a collapsed lung and was put into coma for four days has urged children never to start vaping. Sarah Griffin, who was a heavy vaper, was admitted to hospital a month ago when she started experiencing breathing problems. She had been vaping since the age of nine and was getting through a 4,000puff vape in a few days. A normal vape usually contains 600 puffs. A head cold combined with Griffin’s asthma caused her to deteriorate quickly. An x-ray of her lungs showed that one had been damaged. Her mother, Mary, said that when Sarah was placed in an induced coma to aid her recovery, she thought her daughter was going to die. “It has been a traumatising experience for Sarah,” she said. “It has traumatised me, and it didn’t happen to me. The day she went to hospital, Sarah thought she would be admitted, be put on a nebuliser for a while and then go home again. For her to end up in ICU was a terrifying experience and she’s still trying to make sense of it all.” She added: “Sarah hadn’t been vaping heavily but that, coupled with her asthma was such a dangerous combination. Young people are attracted to the bright colours and flavours of vapes. They might smell and taste sweet, but people need to know about the potential dangers associated with them.” In her daughter’s case, Mary said, vaping made her more vulnerable to infection. “The doctors explained that if Sarah hadn’t been vaping, she would have been in a better position to fight off the infection,” she said. “Vaping had left her lungs very weak.” Sarah is now recovering at home but the effects of vaping may be long-term. “Sarah has been left very lethargic,” her mother said. “She is usually full of energy, constantly talking and on the go but she is still recovering and isn’t back to her usual self yet. The mental impact has been as big as the physical impact. She has been through such a trauma. She still has a long road ahead of her, but we are just so grateful to have her back home with us.” The health secretary has announced plans to restrict the sale of vapes and to introduce plain packaging. Steve Barclay said it was “not right” that vape companies used cartoon characters and “bubblegum” flavours to sell their products. The government is proposing to restrict vape flavours and increase their price. It could also bar companies from using terms such as “candy floss” and “muffin”. Other proposals include prohibiting paranormal programme Most Haunted, singled out the “incredibly cruel” Biddy Baxter, 90, who edited Blue Peter for 26 years until 1988. “She’d just berate me in front of other people . . . it was just absolutely soul-destroying,” she said. Fielding also claimed she almost quit, and that Baxter forced her to reveal her skin condition on air against her will. After Baxter left, she said her time on the programme was “an absolute blast”. The BBC and Baxter have been contacted for comment. Bank to pay £1.1m over work from home firing Jonathan Ames Legal Editor One of the UK’s digital “challenger” banks must pay an asthmatic solicitor more than £1 million in damages after she was sacked for not being “a Starling person”. Gulnaz Raja won a disability discrimination claim last year against Starling Bank after she had been criticised by her boss, who was said to have “valued” staff who worked late in the office. An employment tribunal in London ruled that Raja’s boss, Matthew Newman, became impatient with the 37year-old solicitor when she fell ill and asked to be allowed to work from home. Raja, who qualified as a solicitor in 2010, was then sacked from her £76,000 role as deputy company secretary. At a damages hearing, the judge, Natasha Joffe, ordered the bank to pay Raja £540,000 for past and future loss of earnings and £15,000 for injury to feelings, plus interest, amounting to a total of about £658,500. The tribunal also said that the bank must make an additional payment, bringing the total to more than £1.1 million, to account for the tax that Raja would be required to pay. Raja started working at the bank in Gulnaz Raja’s boss said she ‘was not a Starling person’ Sarah Griffin, above with her mother Mary, has been using vapes since she was nine. Her lung collapsed and she was put into a coma for four days the use of cartoons and “child-friendly” images on vape packaging and on the device. Barclay told Times Radio: “I’m a parent of young children, so I absolutely get your concern. It’s not right that we’ve got cartoon characters or bubblegum flavours or these things marketed in the way that sweetshops would market. Clearly that’s wrong. That’s why we’re clamping down on it — but what we don’t want to do is cut across the fact that for people that smoke, vaping is better.” Some experts, including the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and Dame Rachel de Souza, the children’s commissioner, have called for a ban on disposable vapes after data published in May showed a 50 per cent rise in the past year in the number of children who try vaping. Figures show that disposable vapes are the e-cigarette of choice among youngsters, and that vapes are purchased mostly from corner shops. The Department of Health and Social Care said it would consider “restricting the sale of disposable vapes, which are clearly linked to the rise in vaping in children”. It added: “These products are not only attractive to children but incredibly harmful to the environment.” The government has said that it wants to tackle vaping in a way that continues to support adult smokers to switch from smoking to vapes. The UK-wide consultation will also examine whether powers could be brought in for local authorities to issue fines for those selling vapes to children and teenagers. It is illegal to sell vapes to under-18s but posts on social media show teenagers vaping with coloured devices using flavours such as pink lemonade. Many vapes contain nicotine, which is highly addictive. 2019. Newman, who is also a solicitor, was the chief administrative officer and company secretary, and was said to have become dissatisfied with her performance. Raja told the tribunal that she developed a cough owing to the air conditioning in the office being very cold. She asked to be moved to a desk that was not near a vent. The tribunal ruled that the bank had demonstrated a “total failure” to respond to Raja’s concerns about her health or to support the solicitor. It also found that the bank discouraged staff from taking sick leave and working from home and therefore backed the lawyer’s claim of unfavourable treatment owing to a disability. The tribunal ruled that Raja’s “illhealth absences and need to work from home and her likely requirement for further time off in particular were a material reason for her dismissal”. However, the solicitor’s claims for unfair dismissal and victimisation were dismissed. Since leaving the bank, Raja has launched her own specialist employment law practice.
10 Friday October 13 2023 | the times News News Politics Gove rounds on Tory right with Chris Smyth Whitehall Editor Michael Gove has warned that Britain’s social and economic model has “run out of road” as he launched an interventionist Tory fightback against the party’s libertarian right. The levelling-up secretary said: “Conservatism will need to change”, and called for an “active” state to tackle inequality, rebalance the economy and help young people afford children. A Gove-backed report on the future of Conservatism by the Onward think tank dismisses Trussite libertarians as being out of touch with voters, warning that only 5 per cent back social and economic liberalism and urging a move towards the “real centre ground”. Calling for “pro-family” tax reforms to incentivise couples to have more children, the report says that the state should not be afraid to encourage higher birth rates when young people are being priced out of parenthood. “The world is changing around us at breakneck speed and our politics must follow,” Gove writes in a foreword to the report. “Structural weaknesses in our economy and our society need addressing as existing models run out of road.” Calling for a “state that is active, not absent”, Gove rejects “the undemocratic dominance of markets” and looks to set out the “intellectual case for a reformed, modern conservatism” focused on community rather than economics. “Individual freedom can only find its fulfilment in the bonds of community,” he writes. After last week’s Conservative Party conference was dominated by the right, with ministers positioning themselves for a post-election leadership contest, the paper sets out a counter-case made by self-described Tory “pragmatists”. Co-authored by Nick Timothy, Theresa May’s former chief of staff and now the Tory candidate for West Suffolk, the report sets out the case for the socially conservative but economically left-leaning version of the centre ground that he has long espoused. While backing Rishi Sunak’s call to “move on from decades of consensus politics”, the report sets out a distinctive vision for the centre-right that would involve a “muscular state” intervening in key industries. “We do not seek to conserve the economic consensus that has, over the course of decades, led us to an age of deindustrialisation, trade deficits, high debt, low growth and the ever-greater concentration of wealth in the hands of a few,” it says. “Nor do we seek to conserve an ‘anything goes’ liberalism that has delivered mass immigration, divided communities, diminished social trust, a frayed social fabric and widespread anxiety.” Along with Gavin Rice, the report’s co-author, Timothy bemoans an economy in which “wealth is concentrated in the hands of too few, with younger people priced out of homeownership” and rejects Liz Truss’s dismissal of the problem of inequality, saying: “When growth has stalled, distributional questions matter more.” The authors say there is little evidence for the widespread view on the Conservative right that tax cuts produce growth, arguing instead that cutting back on state capital investment actually harms the economy. They are also relaxed about a tax burden that alarms many Tory backbenchers, saying that the British state is “not especially large relative to comparator economies”. Praising the South Korean and Taiwanese models of supporting key industries, they insist that “governments can and do engage in highly productive public-private partnerships all the time”, adding that “industries with the most capacity for productivity growth should be prioritised”. “National security in supply chains is essential,” they note. Citing Conservative thinkers from Bolingbroke and Burke to Oakeshott and Scruton, the report’s authors make “the case for a conservative politics of community rather than individualism”. They complain: “British families have fewer children than they would like and the UK is unusual in its lack of recognition for families in the tax and benefits system.” As part of a “much more pro-family policy framework”, they suggest permitting couples to share their tax allowances, encouraging people to form stable families, while praising a German model whereby couples with two children do not pay any income tax until they earn €52,000 between them. “The state should seek to support family formation, as we all have a direct interest in the progeneration and wellbeing of the next generation,” Timothy and Rice argue. While acknowledging that “the term “natalism” could make some uncomfortable”, they say this would increase choice for couples and call for a “a much higher level of esteem” to be given to parenting. Rishi Sunak, in a meeting with Suella Braverman, the home secretary, yesterday, has suffered a five-point drop in his A debate the party doesn’t want but can’t avoid Sunak called Analysis T he Tory party has not lost the next election yet (Chris Smyth writes). However, across the party there is a pervasive sense that Conservatism has lost its way. Rishi Sunak used his conference speech to attack a “false consensus” holding Britain back, and from the prime minister downwards there is a desire to do things differently. Yet there are profoundly different views in the party about what that means. “The right” is seen to be on the ascendant, but even here there are disagreements that have yet to be hashed out. Liz Truss’s libertarians make the argument for a smaller state, while the “new Conservatives” of Miriam Cates and Danny Kruger have a much more socially conservative platform centred on lower immigration. Suella Braverman and Kemi Badenoch, often spoken of as the two main contenders for a post-Sunak leadership election, are seen as potential leaders of the right. However, it is a function of the lack of clarity that neither fit entirely comfortably in to this ideological split. Indeed, Badenoch, a selfdescribed “classical liberal” who has shown a notable pragmatism in government on issues such as retained EU law, may yet end up as the compromise candidate of the centre. The old “left” of the party, decimated during the Brexit wars, barely exists any more but it is striking that factions beyond the right lack a coherent platform and an obvious standard-bearer. Tom Tugendhat, once thought of as a possible liberal candidate, is seen to have done little to advance his case since entering government. Nor is there a “continuity Sunak” contender, although some still harbour hopes for Gillian Keegan, despite her struggles over Raac concrete in schools, or Claire Coutinho further in the future. Michael Gove’s alternative vision, the Onward future of Conservatism project, sets out a communitarian Gove’s ideas are left on the economy, right on culture argument for the state as a “muscular” participant in the economy and society: left on the economy, right on culture. A dense argument drawing on the rich history of Conservative thought, it will be hugely unpopular with many MPs. For all Sunak’s frustration with anything that looks like anticipation of defeat, Gove has done his party a favour by starting a debate that will intensify over the next year. If the Tories lose, it will flare into open war. If they are to win, however, it is all the more urgent that they come up with a clear answer to the question: What is the point of the Conservatives? SNP MP to help her cross floor John Boothman Rishi Sunak helped to broker the deal in which an SNP MP resigned from the party and joined the Conservatives, making claims of “toxic and bullying” treatment from colleagues. The prime minister telephoned Lisa Cameron personally on the eve of her defection to finalise the announcement. She would have faced a selection contest yesterday that could have led to her being ousted as the SNP candidate for East Kilbride, Strathaven & Lesmahagow at the general election. Cameron, 51, had revealed that she felt insufferable loneliness, endured
11 the times | Friday October 13 2023 News News call for ‘active, not absent’ state Conference speech fails to stop plunge in PM’s popularity Oliver Wright Policy Editor popularity in a week. The rating of Sir Keir Starmer, with Sue Gray, his chief of staff, was down by two points, the poll found panic attacks and anxiety, and eventually referred herself for counselling after she was ostracised by the SNP, blanked by former colleagues and attacked online by party members. In 2019, Cameron voted with her conscience at the end of an abortion debate. Three years later she stood up for the victim of unwanted sexual advances from Patrick Grady, a leading SNP figure, and this year she wrote to the Scottish secretary, Alister Jack, passing on constituents’ fears about the impact on women’s spaces of Scotland’s proposed gender ID reforms. She said she had received support from the prime minister in recent weeks after opening up about her mental wellbeing, but that there had been no contact from the SNP leadership. Lisa Cameron called the SNP MPs’ group “toxic” Sunak said: “I am delighted that Lisa Cameron has decided to join the Conservatives. She is a brave and committed constituency MP.” Cameron said that the SNP’s pursuit of independence had caused “division” for “families like mine” and that she would now concentrate on policies to benefit everyone across the four nations of the UK. “I do not feel able to continue in what I have experienced as a toxic and bullying SNP Westminster group, which resulted in my requiring counselling for a period of 12 months in parliament and caused significant deterioration in my health and wellbeing . . . including the need for antidepressants,” she said. “I will never regret standing up for a victim of abuse at the hands of an SNP MP, but I have no faith remaining in a party whose leadership supported the perpetrator’s interests over that of the victims and who have shown little to no interest in acknowledging or addressing the impact.” Humza Yousaf, the first minister, called on Cameron to resign her seat, adding that her defection was the “least surprising news I’ve had as [SNP] leader”. He said: “She should do the honourable thing by her constituents, who voted for an SNP MP, did not vote for a Conservative MP. “To see somebody who claims to have supported Scottish independence cross the floor to the Conservative and Unionist Party betrays the fact that she probably never believed in the cause in the first place.” Cameron defected as a boundary review led to some SNP MPs losing their seats at the next election. Alison Thewliss, the SNP frontbench spokeswoman, has lost out in her attempt to stand in the Glasgow East constituency, but will stand for the SNP in the Glasgow North seat after Grady, the sitting MP who was suspended for making unwanted sexual advances towards a teenage party worker, failed to be vetted as a suitable candidate for the party. Rishi Sunak’s popularity has fallen to a record low since the Conservative Party conference, according to polling for The Times. The YouGov survey found that only 20 per cent of voters believed Sunak would make the best prime minister, down five points in a week. This is his lowest approval rating since he entered Downing Street last year and will concern Tory strategists trying to present him as the candidate of change at the next election. Sir Keir Starmer’s rating fell by two points, to 32 per cent. Highlighting the uncertainty among voters a year before the likely date of the next election, 43 per cent of voters said they were not sure who would make the best leader. The poll, conducted after Starmer’s keynote speech at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool on Tuesday, suggested that, overall, Labour had seen a modest bounce in support. Asked whether they thought Starmer had a clear plan for the country, 28 per cent of voters said that he did — up six points on last week. This compared with 19 per cent who said that Sunak had a clear plan, down two points. On the question of whether a Labour government would make a significant change, 47 per cent agreed that it would compared with 37 per cent who said it would not. Only 25 per cent said that Sunak’s plans would represent a change — down five points in a week. Labour has increased its overall poll lead on the Tories by two points. Just under half of all voters, 47 per cent, said that they would vote Labour in a general election tomorrow, compared with 24 per cent who they would back the Tories. This increase in Labour’s vote share was at the expense of the Liberal Democrats, who were down two points to 9 per cent. The poll will worry senior Tories who had hoped to use Sunak’s speech last Last among equals Which of the following do you think would make the best prime minister? Q Rishi Sunak 20% (-5) Keir Starmer 32% (-2) Not sure Refused 43% (+5) 4% (-) Source: YouGov/The Times Survey. 2,067 adults in GB, Oct 11-12, 2023 (Oct 4-5 in brackets) week to contrast him favourably with Starmer. The prime minister laid out policies on net zero, education and transport policy that will form an important part of the Tory general election campaign. In contrast, Labour announced only a few policies and tried to explain Starmer’s beliefs to the electorate. Forty per cent backed Labour’s plan to loosen planning laws to build new towns, and 43 per cent were opposed. Forty-seven per cent backed building more homes in their own areas, against 42 per cent who were opposed. There was also backing to increase government borrowing to pay for new infrastructure — 43 per cent supported the idea, and 21 per cent said reducing borrowing should be the priority. Labour’s most popular policy was a plan to pay NHS staff a higher rate of overtime to tackle waiting lists. This was supported by 81 per cent of voters and opposed by only 12 per cent. Asked which party they trusted to handle the economy, 31 per cent said Labour, 25 per cent the Conservatives and 39 per cent said they did not know. Conservative strategists had hoped that the conference in Manchester and Sunak’s focus on easing the transition to net zero would shift the polls with an aim of reducing Labour’s lead to ten points by Christmas. The latest poll suggests that this has not happened. Green belt increases to cover 12.6% of England Steven Swinford Political Editor The green belt covers 1.6 million hectares or 12.6 per cent of land in England, official figures show. That is a slight increase on the previous figure after some local authorities added to the green belt and others reduced it. Rings of protected countryside surround 16 towns and cities, including London, Manchester, Birmingham and Liverpool, in a policy designed to stop urban sprawl. Some critics say it favours the affluent in country towns while preventing housebuilding. Labour has said it will review the rules on greenbelt restrictions to allow more houses to be built. Sir Keir Starmer has said some “dreary” greenbelt land, such as disused car parks, should be termed “grey belt”. He wants to build 1.5 million homes in the first five years of Labour taking office and build entirely new towns, just as Milton Keynes and Stevenage were built after the Second World War. Just over 22 per cent of London’s land area is designated green belt, according to figures released by the levelling-up department. That amounts to 34,770 hectares, which makes the capital the city with the highest proportion of land designated green belt. The department said about ten local authorities make annual changes to the size of their green belt for various reasons. This year, North Hertfordshire expanded its green belt by 24 per cent, with nine other local authorities decreasing theirs, to give a net 0.1 per cent increase. After London, the region with the largest proportion of greenbelt land is the West Midlands, followed by the northwest of England, Yorkshire and the Humber and the southeast.

13 the times | Friday October 13 2023 News White actors can’t find work, says former RSC boss Constance Kampfner White male actors are finding it harder to get parts, according to a former artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Gregory Doran, who led the RSC from 2012 until last year, said that giving more opportunities to previously under-represented groups meant those who had traditionally dominated theatre were now “finding themselves with very little work”. During his decade at the helm of the theatre company, based in Stratford-upon-Avon, Doran was renowned for making bold casting decisions. A 2018 production of Troilus and Cressida was “gender-balanced”, with female actors playing several male characters. Doran cast the first disabled actor to play Richard III, set Julius Caesar in sub-Saharan Africa and introduced the RSC’s first season of female-only directors. Appearing at The Times and Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival, Doran said that he hoped theatre would now see “a sort of balancing”. “I think the importance was to give those opportunities to . . . black actors, or actors from the Asian community, or women who weren’t getting the scale of roles, or disabled actors like Arthur Hughes playing Richard III,” he said. “So I thought it was really important to champion it, to level the playing field, and ultimately the pendulum will swing, but it will also swing back and it will balance. I know a lot of male, white actors who are certainly finding themselves with very little work. But in a way, a lot of those other communities were in that position for a very long time.” Doran, who left the RSC in part for personal reasons, as the health of his husband, Sir Antony Sher, declined before his death in December 2021, said many of his peers were struggling to respond to both the financial climate post-Covid and the culture wars. Since the pandemic, artistic directors at small and large theatres across the UK have been quitting in droves. Some left after many years at the helm, such as Rufus Norris at the National Theatre and Vicky Featherstone at the Royal Court. But others appeared to have cut TMS diary@thetimes.co.uk | @timesdiary Picard’s own barren planet As a graduate of the RSC who lost his hair as a teenager, Sir Patrick Stewart often faced an existential dilemma at auditions: toupee or not toupee? In his new memoir, Making it So, Stewart writes that when he went for the lead role in Star Trek: The Next Generation, his agent was concerned that Americans might not go for a smooth-scalped captain of the USS Enterprise and told him to wear a wig. Well, it had worked for William Shatner. Stewart, below, got his wife to courier a hairpiece to Los Angeles and did his scene under fake hair. It was only when the executives saw him in the dressing room later in his natural state that they decided they were ready for a captain to baldly go where no one had gone before. David Mitchell fancies himself as a historian these days but he is disappointed to find out that it’s not like in the movies. The comedian told the Cheltenham festival that he was miffed to learn that Vikings never had horns on their helmets. “I think it’s not too late for the Scandinavian governments to apologise for letting us all down aesthetically,” he said. stratford bond villain When Dame Judi Dench appeared in All’s Well That Ends Well in 2003, it was her first role in Stratford for 24 years. She had become an Oscar-winning film star in the meantime and it quickly became apparent that Hollywood had changed her, just a little. The play’s director recalled yesterday that he used to fine the cast £5 if their phones went off during rehearsals. The first one was disturbed by a loud fanfare. Even if Dench hadn’t darted for her handbag, they all knew who was the culprit. It was the James Bond theme. football boss’s sweet fa Kenneth Tynan’s claim to be the first person to say the f-word on British television has been debunked by Duncan Hamilton. In his book about England’s World Cup triumph in 1966, Answered Prayers, Hamilton reveals that John Cobbold, the eccentric chairman of Ipswich Town during Alf Ramsey’s time as manager, got there three years before Tynan in an interview for local television. A reporter asked what exactly he did at the club. “F*** all,” Cobbold replied. Unlike Tynan, whose lapse led to four parliamentary motions and Mary Whitehouse writing to the Queen, Cobbold escaped censure. Ramsey also had problems with words. Hamilton lists some of his best malapropisms, such as “There is a great harmonium in our dressing room”, “We were pushing at an open jar” and “It’s so hot the compensation is running down the walls”. That may explain why he could be terse with journalists. One asked for a quick word. “Goodbye,” Ramsey said, “but I suppose that is not the word you were hoping for.” wrong kind of filth The comedian Robin Ince is a lover of libraries and delighted when they adapt to changing times. He tells Clive Anderson’s My Seven Wonders that a librarian friend posts audiobooks on CD to those who can’t venture out. One elderly lady asked for Fifty Shades of Grey, despite being warned that it was rather racy. A few days later, she rang to complain. “CD 3 is filthy!” she said. “I did warn you,” the librarian began, but there had been a misunderstanding. It turned out a previous borrower had got marmalade on the disc and it had interrupted her enjoyment of the sex. patrick kidd their tenure short, including the directors of the Hampstead Theatre and Brixton House in London, Manchester’s Royal Exchange and Liverpool’s Everyman and Playhouse. “I think a lot of people went through a really tough time in all sorts of ways enduring the pandemic and . . . what that did to their organisations, however big or small,” Doran said. “And then . . . the various divisions that seem to be thrown up around them with Brexit or Me Too, or Black Lives Matter, or the climate crisis. Suddenly everything seems to have been heightened, in a way. I think it takes a different kind of energy to deal with that.” Doran’s interim successor at the RSC, Erica Whyman, recently became the first theatre boss to speak on the record about whether Kevin Spacey, the former artistic director of the Old Vic, ought to lead a new theatre following his acquittal on multiple sexual assault charges. Spacey has always denied wrongdoing. “I can’t . . . comment with full knowledge of what actually happened but it would seem Gregory Doran was known for his bold casting decisions to me we know enough to prefer artistic leaders with a different track record,” she told The Sunday Times. Asked for his thoughts about a potential comeback for the Hollywood actor, Doran said: “I don’t think I have an opinion on it. It’s such a difficult situation. Erica has very strong and very sure opinions. “The difficulty is that often we’re being asked for a polarity of black and white when in fact it’s infinite congruities of grey.”
14 Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Bishops halt decision on gay blessings Kaya Burgess Religious Affairs Correspondent Portraits of ladies Picasso’s Femme en corset lisant un livre, left, is to be sold at auction in New York next month with his Femme Accroupie and Severini’s Ballerina Apps with exercises for back pain aim to ease pressure on the NHS Eleanor Hayward Health Correspondent Millions of Britons with lower-back pain will be prescribed apps that provide video exercises and reminders to do them, under new NHS guidelines. The treatment watchdog Nice has recommended seven new online platforms designed to help with back pain and told GPs to prescribe them to as many as 9.1 million patients a year. Lower-back pain is the biggest cause of disability and one in four GP appointments for musculoskeletal problems are due to back pain. However, treatment options are limited, and doctors have been warned not to prescribe opioid painkillers because they can cause addiction. The new apps are designed to help people treat their symptoms at home, reducing demand on GP surgeries and relieving pressure on NHS waiting lists. Some provide video tutorials and a plan of stretching or other physiotherapy exercises, while other apps focus on psychological support including mindfulness to manage pain. Mark Chapman, interim director of medical technology and digital evaluation at Nice, said: “More than two million people suffer from low-back pain each year and there are considerable pressures on NHS services to provide the treatment and care to those needing support with this debilitating condition. The digital platforms our committee has recommended could provide the NHS with extra capacity to get those affected off waiting lists, which vary in length across the country, and into treatment. “We believe these technologies have the potential to offer value for money for the taxpayer, while offering people with low-back pain quicker access to get the care they need at a time and place of their choosing.” The apps can help people with new recent back pain, caused by injuries such as pulled muscles, as well as those with chronic back pain, meaning it has lasted for at least three months. Will Quince, the health minister, said: “These apps are yet another example of how technology can be used to help patients get the care they need, when they need it. “They offer a range of services that will allow patients to manage lowerback pain from the comfort of their homes by improving access to musculoskeletal services, which will form a key part of our major conditions strategy. This will help to reduce pressures on the NHS and can help to cut waiting lists — one of the government’s top priorities — and will help people to live happier, healthier lives.” The seven platforms recommended for NHS use are Act for Pain, getUBetter, Hinge Health, Kaia, Pathway through Pain, SelfBack and SupportBack. Denice Logan Rose, executive director of BackCare, formerly the National Back Pain Association, said: “Very many people living with non-specific low-back pain feel that they have nowhere to turn for help, they are desperate and are at a complete loss about what they can do to help themselves. “Apps form a significant part of the technology-driven world we live in and if they can be used to help people living with back pain to lead more pain-free and active lives, this is a huge step forward.” One of the recommended apps, Act for Pain, is a psychological self-management programme for chronic pain, supported by pain specialists and psychologists who provide email advice and guidance. Another, SelfBack, provides participants with weekly tailored plans that include recommendations on a suitable number of steps per day and an exercise programme for strength and flexibility. Smartphones will detect dementia ‘well before doctors’ Constance Kampfner Smartphones will be able to detect dementia “long before humans can” thanks to artificial intelligence, a leading academic has said. Michael Wooldridge, a professor of computer science at the University of Oxford, explained that the technology could spot increased hesitancy in the person using the device, a possible indication of the condition. At an event at The Times and Sunday Times Literature Festival discussing the pros and cons of AI, Wooldridge said he was “very optimistic” about the opportunities AI could provide in healthcare. He added: “I have colleagues at Oxford who think that AI is going to enable us to identify the onset of dementia, just from the way that people use their mobile phones. “When you use your mobile phone and you’re trying to find a contact, people with early-onset dementia and the early stages of dementia, they find that they are much slower and clumsy at doing that.” AI, he said, “can identify that potentially long before other human beings around them would be able to identify it”. He emphasised that although the technology was in its early stages, it would have “huge consequences, if we were able to do that. So I am very optimistic about AI and healthcare.” AI is already being used to spot earlyonset dementia by analysing people’s speech patterns and eye movements. Researchers say these tools will play a significant role in reducing the burden on dementia-assessment services. The average waiting time from referral to diagnosis increased from 13 weeks in 2019 to 17.7 weeks in 2021, a Royal College of Psychiatrists’ survey found. However, Wooldridge warned that AI large language models, such as ChatGPT, could be exploited by hackers to launch cyberattacks on large institutions such as the NHS. Days after the Church of England said priests could start offering blessings to gay couples, 11 bishops have rebelled in a rare move to “dissent publicly” against the decision, urging archbishops to change their minds. The Church of England has spent the past decade debating whether to accept and recognise same-sex relationships, since holding a nationwide consultation in 2013 and another in 2017. The debate appeared to have reached a conclusion in February when bishops said they would not permit same-sex weddings in church but would allow priests to bless gay couples. However, the debate now looks set to rumble on for at least another two years after the group of conservative bishops sought yesterday to stop the plans from being implemented. There are now calls for another series of debates and votes to be presented to the General Synod, the church’s assembly, that would last until at least 2025. The church’s House of Bishops said on Monday that they would permit priests to bless same-sex couples, as long as they took place only during “public worship” services. This could mean couples receiving a blessing during a general Sunday service. In an open letter, the group of 11 within the House of Bishops , said: “We have participated in good faith in attempts to find consensus but were unable to support the decisions taken on Monday. There was deep disagreement within the House. With heavy hearts we find it necessary to dissent publicly from the decisions of the House.” It is understood that the Archbishops of Canterbury and York will write to the House of Bishops in response. New hope of ending pain of Raynaud’s Scientists have identified two genes linked to a circulatory condition that affects millions of people. Raynaud’s phenomenon stops blood flowing properly to the fingers and toes, which can cause the skin to turn white or appear blue. Symptoms of pain, numbness or pins and needles can last from a few minutes to a few hours. Academics from Queen Mary University of London’s Precision Healthcare Research Institute and the Berlin Institute of Health compared genetic data from 5,147 people with Raynaud’s with that from more than 400,000 people without it. They they found that two genes were linked to Raynaud’s. The first, known as ADRA2A, is a “classic stress receptor” that causes the small blood vessels to contract; the second, IRX1, may regulate the ability of blood vessels to dilate. The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, said that low blood sugar levels might also have a “detrimental effect” on people with Raynaud’s. The team said their findings could help to lead to the first effective treatment for sufferers. In the paper they suggested that a widely used antidepressant called mirtazapine could be repurposed and tested as a treatment for Raynaud’s.
the times | Friday October 13 2023 15 2GM News Ex-footballer faces US arrest warrant over ‘unpaid reward’ for lost pet Kieran Southern Los Angeles Ali Mitib An arrest warrant has been issued for the former footballer Daniel Sturridge after he failed to appear at a American court hearing over a £24,000 reward for a missing dog. The former England and Liverpool striker, 34, said that his pet Pomeranian, named Lucci, was stolen from his Los Angeles house in 2019 and offered a reward for its safe return. Foster Washington, a rapper known as Killa Fame, took credit for helping to reunite Sturridge with his missing pet but said that he had not received a reward. Washington brought a civil action and in 2021, the footballer was ordered to pay him £24,000 following a default judgment after he did not respond to the complainant. Sturridge failed to appear before a Los Angeles court last month to answer questions about his finances, Daniel Sturridge failed to appear at a court hearing resulting in the issuing of an arrest warrant. A subsequent hearing is scheduled for November 30 to attempt to resolve the issue. He was announced as a new pundit by Sky Sports at the start of this season but viewers have been left wondering why he has not appeared since the opening weekend in August. Following the 2021 judgment, Sturridge, who also played for Chelsea and Manchester City, said that he was “grateful” to have Lucci back with him and claimed that he had paid a reward to a “young boy who found my dog”. He wrote on Twitter at the time: “Other people are trying to benefit for their own personal gain. Thank you to the young boy once again. This was 2½ years ago and a crazy 24hrs. I’m very grateful Lucci is back with our family. Love to all.” Following the decision, Washington told The Guardian he felt let down by Sturridge, adding: “Hopefully he pays up and doesn’t try to appeal it. When we found the dog, I thought my life was going to be better.” Representatives for Sturridge were approached for comment. Ecclestone, 92, avoids jail after paying £653m for tax fraud David Brown Bernie Ecclestone has been given a 17-month suspended jail sentence after admitting fraud in a tax investigation. It can now be reported that the former Formula One boss, 92, had already agreed to pay a £652,634,836 civil settlement over unpaid tax, including interest and penalties. He was due to stand trial next month but changed his plea after a judge dismissed his claim that it was unfair to prosecute him because he had a greater chance of dying than surviving the case. Ecclestone’s lawyers claimed at an earlier hearing that the former racing driver was being prosecuted only Bernie Ecclestone was given a more than 50 per cent chance of dying during a trial because he said during a television interview that he would “take a bullet” for President Putin of Russia, whom he described as a “first-class person”. The tycoon made a fortune by transforming motor racing, having seized control of F1 in the 1970s. He is 73rd on The Sunday Times Rich List with a fortune calculated as £2.5 billion. A week after making the Putin comment, in August last year, Ecclestone, of Knightsbridge, central London, was charged with concealing from tax officials a Singapore-based trust with a bank account containing £400 million. He admitted fraud for the year 200708, which led to a loss of tax over a property deal, Southwark crown court heard. A new HM Revenue & Customs investigation was opened after allegations were made in Germany in 2011 that he paid a bribe to a banker linked with F1. In 2015 he had replied “No” when asked by HMRC investigators if he were involved in any trusts of which they were unaware. He accepted in court yesterday that he should have responded: “I don’t know.” Tax investigators then discovered the Singapore-based Kinan Trust, which was used by Ecclestone to trade foreign currency, making or losing tens of millions of US dollars a year. The civil settlement Ecclestone has agreed to pay includes a £330 million penalty. Mr Justice Bryan told Ecclestone: “The seriousness of your offending does not mean that appropriate punishment can only be achieved by immediate imprisonment, and weighing all of the factors in the balance, I am going to pass a suspended sentence order.” Professor Charles Knight, a cardiologist, told an earlier hearing that, given Ecclestone’s age and medical history, there was a 30 per cent chance he would die within 12 months. The stress of the trial could double the risk, Knight added, meaning “on the balance of probabilities the chance of death during the period of the proceedings is over 50 per cent”. The judge dismissed the application to halt the prosecution and said special provision would be made for Ecclestone, including allowing him to appear in court via video link. The Formula One Group said Ecclestone has had no official role within F1 since 2018, the year after he stepped down as its chief executive. Mind games The Princess of Wales marked World Mental Health Day yesterday by taking part with the Prince of Wales in a mental fitness workshop run by SportsAid at Bisham Abbey National Sports Centre, near Marlow, in Buckinghamshire. Activities included playing goalball, a sport designed for athletes with vision impairment, which participants play blindfolded Former Barclays chief fined £1.8m over Epstein relationship Kieran Gair Jes Staley, the former chief executive of Barclays, has been fined £1.8 million by the City watchdog for misleading it over his relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) also banned Staley from “holding a senior management or significant influence function in the financial services industry”. The regulator said it had found that Staley “recklessly approved” a letter sent by Barclays to the regulator containing “two misleading statements” about his relationship with Epstein. Staley, who stepped down from the bank in November 2021, would appeal against the decision, the FCA said. It emphasised that the findings were provisional. The Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority said: “We support the FCA’s decision. It is imperative that senior managers act with integrity and are open and cooperative with the regulators.” Therese Chambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA, said: “A CEO needs to exercise sound judgment and set an example to staff. Mr Staley failed to do this. We consider that he misled both the FCA and the Barclays Board about the nature of his relationship with Mr Epstein. It is right to prevent him from holding a senior position in the financial services industry if we cannot rely on him to act with integrity by disclosing uncomfortable truths.” In August 2019, the same month that Epstein died by suicide in a New York jail awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, the FCA asked Barclays to explain what it had done to satisfy itself that there was no impropriety in his relationship with Staley. Barclays’ letter said Staley did not have a close relationship with Epstein. In emails between the men, however, Staley had described Epstein as one of his “deepest” and “most cherished” friends, the FCA said. Barclays also said that Staley had ceased contact with Epstein well before he joined Barclays. However, the FCA found that Staley had been in contact with Epstein in the days before his appointment in October 2015.
16 V2 Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Sunak’s green retreat ‘will add to energy and car bills’ Adam Vaughan Environment Editor Rishi Sunak’s weakening of green policies has made it harder for Britain to hit targets for net-zero emissions, the government’s climate advisers say. The Climate Change Committee concluded that future energy bills and motoring costs were likely to be higher because of the changes. The independent group said that renters faced energy bills up to £325 a year higher because of energy efficiency rules for landlords being scrapped. In a major speech last month, the prime minister announced a “pragmatic” rethink of policies to reach net zero by 2050, delaying a 2026 ban on oil boilers in off-grid homes and the 2030 ban on new petrol and diesel car sales. Professor Piers Forster, interim chairman of the committee, said he was “mostly concerned” by the signals the retreat sent to consumers and businesses by undermining confidence in the switch to greener technologies. “I would say it has made the 2030 date more challenging,” Forster told The Times, referring to Britain’s target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 68 per cent by then. Since 1990 they have fallen 46 per cent. While much of the focus on Sunak’s speech was on his postponement of the ban on sales of new petrol and diesel cars, the committee thinks that will have relatively little impact on emissions because the prime minister later passed into law targets requiring 80 per cent of new cars to be electric by 2030. However, Sunak’s decision to make a fifth of households exempt from a ban on new gas boiler sales by 2035 had made meeting the net-zero target by 2050 “considerably harder”, the committee said. It added that Sunak’s undermining of measures to speed up the move to electric cars “will ultimately increase costs” because they are cheaper than petrol and diesel models over their lifetimes. The advisers did welcome some positive steps, including a government deal with Tata Steel that will result in the electrification of Port Talbot’s steelworks. Overall, the group said it was “unhelpful” that the government had offered no evidence to back up Sunak’s claims that carbon targets would still be met despite the policy changes. A government spokesman said: “We are taking a fairer and more pragmatic approach to meeting net zero that eases burdens on families — saving households up to £15,000 on upfront costs to upgrade their homes.” Hope of new life as Hadrian’s Wall tree exits Kieran Gair The Sycamore Gap tree has been removed from its spot on Hadrian’s Wall after it was cut down by vandals two weeks ago. The 50ft sycamore was too large to be moved in one piece and had its limbs removed before a crane lifted it off the wall. The stump was left in place protected by a temporary fence, the National Trust, which looks after the historic Northumberland site, said. Conservationists are hoping that it will sprout new shoots. There will be a public consultation about plans for the site, which is part of the Unesco-designated Hadrian’s Wall and marks a frontier of the Roman Empire. Seeds have been collected that could be used to propagate saplings and the trunk may go on display. The lone sycamore stood beside the wall for 300 years. Northumbria police arrested a boy aged 16 and a man in his sixties. Both have been released on bail pending further inquiries. It’s all over for Varsity match at Twickenham T he Varsity rugby matches are to move from Twickenham, which has hosted the fixtures for more than 100 years, after the event frequently failed to fill the 82,000-seat stadium (Ali Mitib writes). Instead, the StoneX Stadium in Hendon, northwest London, home of Saracens Rugby Club, will host the matches between the universities of Oxford and Cambridge from next March. The games will be the 142nd between the men and the 36th for the women. The fixture has been held since 1872 — with interruptions only for the two world wars and the pandemic — and at Twickenham, the home of English rugby, since 1921. It is watched by more than 500,000 television viewers and attended by more than 25,000 spectators. Demand for tickets is expected to be high following the move, with the StoneX stadium holding only 10,500 spectators. A spokesman for the Rugby Football Union (RFU), the governing body for the sport in England, said: “We are proud to have hosted the VMs at Twickenham for over 100 years but recognise that in
the times | Friday October 13 2023 17 V2 News Cambridge, for whom Jamie Roberts once played, won this year. Far left, the 1981 game today’s environment, the event will be more sustainable at a smaller venue in keeping with crowds attending this historic fixture.” In a joint statement, Jack Glover and Sophie Shams, the captains of Oxford University Rugby Football Club, and Ben Gompels and Emilia Bushrod, their Cambridge University Rugby Union Football Club counterparts, said: “It will be a privilege for all our players to play at StoneX and the rivalry between the two clubs will be as great as it has ever been.” Lucy Wray, chief executive of Saracens, said: “The Varsity matches are an intrinsic part of the rugby landscape.” A number of prominent rugby players have featured in the fixture, including Jamie Roberts, the Welsh centre, who played for Cambridge, and Anton Oliver, the hooker who captained the All Blacks before studying for a postgraduate degree at Oxford. Cambridge men have 65 wins and Oxford 62 with 14 draws over the 141 fixtures. For the women, Oxford has 21 wins, with Cambridge trailing 13 and one draw over 35 matches. Blair helps billionaire open Oxford institute Nicola Woolcock Education Editor One of the world’s richest men is setting up a research institute in the UK with the help of Sir Tony Blair to help solve the challenges faced by humanity. An Oxford branch of the Ellison Institute is being established by Larry Ellison, the US tech billionaire who founded Oracle in the 1970s, and is due to open in 2025. The original institute was created eight years ago in Los Angeles by Ellison and Dr David Agus, an American cancer researcher. Blair said that the site would “be an enormous boost to the growth of the UK’s technology sector”. It will also establish a scholarship programme for 20 students each year. The American institute initially focused on cancer and global public health, but has broadened its mission to cover four key areas: food security and sustainable agriculture; medical science and healthcare; clean energy and climate change; and government policy and economics. Ellison, 79, is worth $139.5 billion (£114.46 billion) according to Forbes. The Oxford campus will be based partly at the city’s science park and will comprise almost 323,000 sq ft of research laboratory space, an oncology and wellness patient clinic and education space. It will expand research collaborations with the university. The institute will be led by a “faculty of fellows”, including Blair, who is chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI). He will work with Agus and Professor Sir John Bell, regius professor of medicine at the University of Oxford. Applications for the Ellison Scholars programme will open next year, and the first cohort will start in 2025. The campus is scheduled for completion in 2026. The former prime minister said the institute would “push the boundaries of invention” and that the scholarship programme would “find and fund the best young minds from the UK and around the world”. He added: “The Oxford facility will be an enormous boost to the growth of the UK’s technology sector and will further the advancement and ambition of using science and technology to improve the lives of citizens globally.” Professor Irene Tracey, the vicechancellor of Oxford University, said: “Our university has a longstanding tradition of bringing together great minds, fostering innovation, entrepreneurial spirit and harnessing technology to solve global problems. “The creation of an Ellison Institute campus in Oxford chimes with that tradition.” Bell said: “This is remarkable new initiative will contribute to solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. Locating this in Oxford will provide exceptional opportunities to attract some of the [world’s] best minds.”
18 Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Neanderthal hunters could take down lion A bout 40,000 years ago, a Neanderthal crossed paths with an old cave lion (Rhys Blakely writes). The big cat would have weighed as much as a third of a tonne. Equipped with bonecrushing jaws, it was the apex predator of its day. Unsurprisingly, only one of them walked away. Surprisingly, it was the Neanderthal. Evidence of the encounter has been unearthed in Siegsdorf in Bavaria, in the form of a lion skeleton with one rib showing signs of damage by a weapon, probably a wooden spear, according to archaeologists. Other cut marks suggest the Neanderthals butchered and ate the lion found in Germany after killing it with a spear like the one above, evidence from the bones suggests hunters not only killed the big cat but also butchered and ate it. The find sheds new light on Neanderthals, a type of human closely related to Homo sapiens that vanished about 40,000 years ago. While they were known to be intelligent tool-makers and skilled hunters, this is said to be the first good evidence that they took on lions. Eurasian cave lions, bigger than African lions, were hunted to extinction about 11,000BC. The study was led by Gabriele Russo, of Tübingen University in Germany, and published in Scientific Reports. Russo said it was possible the male lion, which was past its prime, had been driven from its pride, making it more vulnerable. Until now, the earliest evidence for humans interacting with lions related to Homo sapiens. It included a small ivory figure of a “lion man”, carved about 40,000 years ago and found in a cave in Germany’s Swabian Alps. Moondust roads to pave the way for lunar colony Kaya Burgess Science Reporter The lunar surface could one day be criss-crossed by roads built with paving slabs made from moondust melted by a giant lens, scientists have claimed. In a study that could literally pave the way for future moon missions, scientists have found there will be no need to bring construction materials from Earth to build solid pathways for transporting astronauts and equipment when humans establish a more permanent presence on the moon. Using simulated moondust, scientists tested laser beams and found that they could precisely melt the dust so that it cooled into hollow-centred slabs in a triangular, trefoil-shape that could be interlocked to form paving. Neil Armstrong described the fine dust on the surface as “like a powder” moments after he set foot on the moon for the first time in 1969. The motion of rover or buggy wheels throws up the dust and can damage equipment. In 2025, 53 years after humans last walked on the moon, Nasa plans to send a crew back there as part of its Artemis mission. There are plans to build a space station orbiting around the moon and to establish a base on it by the end of the decade. A study in Scientific Reports says: “One of the first steps towards establishing a lunar base is the creation of infrastructure, such as roads for rovers and landing pads, as these constructions can help with dust mitigation.” Scientists from Germany, Austria and the Netherlands aimed to show that “molten regolith”, or melted moondust, “could be used during human and robotic lunar explorations to pave large areas and help to solve dust attenuation problems”. Using dust called EAC-1A, approved by the European Space Agency as an accurate substitute for moondust, the scientists tested different strengths and How it would work Sunlight 20cm Lens Moon dust Interlocking paving slabs sizes of laser beam. They found that a beam 45mm in diameter and 3kW in power could melt the dust to produce slabs about 250mm in width. A release from the journal noted: “To reproduce this approach on the moon, the authors calculate that a lens of approximately 2.37 sq m would need to be transported from Earth to act as a sunlight concentrator in place of the laser.” This would operate in the same way that a magnifying glass can concentrate the sun’s rays. “The relatively small size of equipment needed would be an advantage in future moon missions,” the scientists noted. However, they found that the slabs had a glassy surface, and warned that “sharp fragments of broken glass could be generated posing a risk to the space mission”, noting that this obstacle would need to be overcome. The paper concluded: “The results of this study proved the viability of this technique for manufacturing large [slabs] with interlocking capabilities in situ that can be fabricated directly on the lunar surface and arranged for paving applications, without the need of additional manufacturing equipment like furnaces or moulds.” The researchers said: “Given the extreme costs of shipping materials from Earth, a prerequisite for future human exploration will be the fabrication of objects on the surface of the moon.”
19 the times | Friday October 13 2023 News Charles coins are climate change in your pocket Lucy Bannerman They are coins for “the climate change era”. Expect puffins, salmon, red squirrels, capercaillies and dormice soon to be jangling in the nation’s pockets. The Royal Mint has revealed the eight new designs that will appear on official British coins — and for the first time, all feature nature and animals. The new design of the coins, officially known as “definitives”, marks the final chapter of Charles III’s transition onto our currency. Instead of the heraldic images that have been a traditional inspiration, the first set of the King’s reign will celebrate the flora and fauna of the British Isles. It is unsurprising, perhaps, given that the nature-loving monarch has come to the throne at a time when one in six native species is at risk of extinction. His kingdom has the unenviable title of one the most nature-depleted countries in the world. It is hoped the new coins will help spark conversations on how best to preserve these vulnerable species. “A coin says something about the era it comes from, and these coins are from the climate-change era,” said Chris Barker, information and research manager at the Royal Mint. “These are designs for a modern audience.” The 1p coin will feature a hazel dormouse, whose population has halved since 2007. The red squirrel’s coat blends perfectly with the copper hue of the 2p. The 5p displays a leaf taken from an oak tree, signifying its role as a rich habitat for biodiversity in British woodlands. As well as supporting more life than any other native tree species in the UK, the oak has a historic link, as ancient kings wore crowns of oak leaves. The 10p features the capercaillie, hunted to extinction in the UK, with many stuffed and on display in aristocratic homes: there was a room of them in Glamis Castle, the childhood home of the King’s grandmother. The population in the Scottish Highlands are descendants of birds reintroduced from Sweden in 1837. There are feared to be as few as 500 left. Puffins, classed as a “redlist” threatened species, appear on the new 20p coin, and a leaping Atlantic salmon on the 50p. It is a priority conservation species due to threats from river pollution, habitat loss, river heating and overfishing. The £1 celebrates the 250 bee species of Britain, while the £2 shows flowers symbolising the four nations: rose, daffodil, thistle and shamrock. But are the coins themselves not in danger of going extinct in a cashless economy? Nicola Howell, chief commercial officer of the Royal Mint, said: “We recognise that coin use is in decline, but they are still powerful symbols and there is still a huge global following for coin collection, especially after the coronation.” Anne Jessopp, the Royal Mint’s chief executive, said: “A unique pattern of interlocking Cs adorns each design. This gives a nod to history through the cypher of Charles II while celebrating King Charles’s commitment to conservation.” The Royal Mint’s new King Charles coins feature endangered British plants and animals, including salmon, bee and puffin Last orders for the King’s head Commentary W hat’s a coin, grandad? We haven’t quite reached the stage when that question pops out of infant mouths. But the day cannot be far off when the jingle of loose change no longer causes grief to washing machines up and down the realm (Richard Morrison writes). So it’s conceivable that King Charles may be the last, not just the latest, of the English, Scottish and British monarchs to have donated their heads to our coinage since the Royal Mint rolled out its first pennies for Alfred the Great. When Prince William ascends to the throne he may need to find another way of stamping his mug on our daily transactions. A deal with Visa? It’s not surprising, then, that the King has taken the design of these new coins very seriously. If they are to be the last in a 1,100-year tradition, they certainly make a statement about the King’s favourite topic: saving the natural world from destruction. Seven of the eight denominations feature a different (usually endangered) native species of animal or plant. The crowning glory — the £2 coin — displays the national flowers of the United Kingdom’s four constituent parts. On the other side of the coins is Martin Jennings’s slightly jowly portrait of Charles. Unlike his mother (who reigned for so long that her coin portrait was updated four times) Charles doesn’t wear a crown. Kings don’t on coins, apparently.


22 Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Average household income tops £100k in not so common Clapham Poppy Koronka Trainspotting The Jacobite steam train crosses Glenfinnan Viaduct, as seen in Harry Potter films, for one of the last times this month before it stops for winter Clapham Common and the City of London have become the first areas in the UK where the average household income exceeds £100,000, as rising house prices force young professionals to live in shared housing. Clapham Common West in south London was the area with the highest average household income, at £108,100 at the end of 2020, according to estimates from the Office for National Sta- tistics (ONS). This is about three times the average nationally and nearly five times that in the poorest neighbourhood in England and Wales, Grimsby East Marsh & Port, where the average household earning is £22,200. One in eight of all adults in Clapham Common West, as well as in other parts of south and east London, are young professionals aged between 25 and 34. More than two thirds of this age group in Clapham are renting, often sharing with others earning high salaries, which may have pushed the average household income higher than anywhere else in the country. The average household income in the City of London stands at £101,800 according to the ONS. However, once housing costs, taxes and different household sizes are accounted for, Hans Town in Kensington & Chelsea, west London, has the highest average disposable income per household. More than a third of people living in Clapham Common are employed in higher managerial positions and professional occupations. The figure is 35.6 per cent, which is 22.4 percentage points higher than the average for other London wards, according to census data. With its professional population, green spaces and fast connections to central London and the City, the area has acted as a magnet for wealthy young families. According to the Great- er London Authority, average renting costs around the common are £2,500, which far exceeds the city’s average of £1,800 a month in the private sector. Even young people renting a bedroom in a house-share are facing extraordinarily high costs. Londoners pay an average of £971 a month for a room in a shared flat, which is more than £200 more than the national average, according to the flat-sharing website SpareRoom. As Clapham has become more popular with young professionals, house prices have also soared, with detached houses near the common selling for more than £3 million. Of the 50 areas with the highest incomes after housing costs were taken into account, only six were outside the capital. These neighbourhoods included several in Cheshire, such as Scholar Green, Rode Heath and Brereton, which have become popular with footballers from Manchester and Liverpool. While the figures highlighted extreme income inequalities across the country, they also revealed inequalities closer to Clapham. In the south London borough of Wandsworth there is a £69,200 gap between the richest and poorest neighbourhoods, with average incomes in Roehampton coming in at nearly a third of those in Clapham Common West. GPs back healthy homes plan Eleanor Hayward New housing developments must be used to improve the nation’s health and tackle chronic illnesses that keep millions out of work, doctors have said. Campaigners are urging MPs to back a legislative amendment introducing health standards for all new houses. They say better housing is vital to tackle a rising tide of chronic illnesses that is putting pressure on the NHS and contributing to record levels of longterm sickness in the workforce. Conditions caused by poor housing cost the NHS £1.4 billion a year, and GPs report a rise in illnesses caused by mouldy, cold and cramped houses. Labour promised this week to build 1.5 million homes if it takes office after the next general election. Health leaders have said that regulation will be essential as present planning regulations do not take health into account. Lord Crisp, a former NHS chief executive, has tabled amendments to the Levelling-Up Bill. They will be debated in the Commons on Tuesday, and cover 11 principles including air pollution limits, noise and heat insulation, and access to daylight and green space. Professor Kamila Hawthorne, chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs, said: “In deprived areas, a lot of GPs say that up to 50 per cent of the patients they’re seeing have got illnesses that are caused by adverse social conditions, including poor housing.” I N T H E T I M E S T O M O R ROW BUSINESS DOMINIC O’CONNELL Back to the 1970s MAIN PAPER SPORT THE SCRUM Your guide to a sensational World Cup quarter-final weekend PULLOUT MAGAZINE SIR MICK JAGGER AT 80 Exclusive interview PULLOUT
the times | Friday October 13 2023 23 2GM News Director given demotion after refusing boss’s diamond ring Jonathan Ames Legal Editor A finance executive suffered a campaign of harassment as her married boss bought her a diamond ring and demoted her when she turned him down. Louise Crabtree was swamped with messages from Marc Bandemer in which he described her as his “second wife” and the “belle of the ball”. An employment tribunal has ruled that Bandemer, 59, engaged in an “excessive attempt to engage in a romantic relationship” with Crabtree, including buying her a diamond solitaire ring and suggesting that he would buy a “love nest” in Cyprus for them. Crabtree, 49, sued Bandemer, who is chairman of the UK office of a Luxembourg investment management company. The tribunal in Southampton has found that she was the victim of a “campaign of sexual harassment”. She will now be paid damages. At the hearing, the tribunal was told that Bandemer often would refer to Crabtree as “girl”, “honey” and “naughty” in suggestive messages. Crabtree said that Bandemer’s persistent harassment had left her in a helpless position and she was ultimately punished with a demotion after failing to reciprocate his advances. In his ruling Judge James Dawson said that Bandemer’s use of the words “girl” and “naughty” were discriminatory as he would not have used them in reference to a male member of staff. Crabtree joined Integer Wealth Global as executive director in 2021. She told the tribunal that her relationship with Bandemer was initially “friendly with banter”, but that in an online meeting several months after Crabtree joined Bandemer asked her: “Why did God make you so naughty?” The boss went on to quip that he was “way too arrogant” to care what other colleagues might have thought about his remark. In its ruling, the tribunal noted that as a single mother to three children Crabtree “required” an income and had not wanted to “damage her employment prospects”, so her failure to “strenuously object” to the comments did not mean that she “welcomed them or that they were wanted”. The tribunal was told that in 2021 Crabtree received a formal warning after sending an allegedly “flippant” email. The panel noted in its finding that she maintained that it was “very difficult” to communicate with someone who Grandson of PoW wins fight over dairy herd Jonathan Ames Louise Crabtree, 49, was regularly harassed by her boss, Marc Bandemer, 59, who engaged in an “excessive attempt to engage in a romantic relationship” is “one day her boss, another day her friend”. She told the hearing that she was called a “very pretty underling”. Crabtree ultimately emailed Bandemer to make it clear that comments of a sexual nature were “no longer welcome”. About a month later, Bandemer sent her a message saying that she looked “absolutely gorgeous”. At one stage, Bandemer told his colleague that she had “really gorgeous feet [and] candy toes”. The tribunal pointed to Crabtree’s response, in which she said it had affected her “deeply” for him to change from “friend to foe in seconds” and that she had tried to “tread a cautious line between not wanting to offend him, but not wanting to encourage him”. Bandemer was said to have persisted, sending another message that asked why she was working in finance when she “could be a top-ranking fashion model”. The judge said that “the genderspecific language used on a large number of occasions” by her boss amounted to sex discrimination and harassment. A hearing will be held at a later date to decide the amount of compensation. A court row over an award-winning herd of dairy cows has resulted in victory for the descendant of a former prisoner of war who settled in Wales. Tony Hack is the grandson of Antonio Vasami, an Italian captured by the allies during the Second World War and sent to work on farms in Wales. Vasami was repatriated after the armistice, but he eventually returned to Wales to start his own farm. The High Court in Swansea heard that Hack, 60, subsequently became involved in a dispute with his uncle, Luigi Vasami, 76, son of the prisoner of war, over the business, which grew from a five-acre rented holding near Llandysul, Ceredigion, with four donated cows, into a thriving business at several sites. Antonio died in 1992, and Luigi and Hack have been battling over the business, including a mixed herd of Holsteins, pedigree Brown Swiss and Ayrshire cattle. A judge has now ruled that Hack can keep the 80 award-winning cows and their offspring because they had been legitimately transferred to him. But Milwyn Jarman KC rejected Hack’s claim that he had worked long hours from an early age on his uncle’s farm on the promise that the £1.4 million holding would eventually be handed to him. Instead the judge said Hack had remained on the farm because he “loved” the work and he earned substantial profits over the years. Hack had no right to expect that the farm would be transferred to him. When Antonio retired, the farm business was carried on by Luigi, with Hack helping him. As the business expanded Luigi bought the 93-acre farm in Glasfryn in 1988, transferring the milking stock there to be looked after by his nephew. Hack enjoyed success with the herd and some of the animals featured in the national milk records in 2013. In his ruling, the judge said that the uncle could throw Hack and his wife, Arlene, off the farm but that they were entitled to retain ownership of the cows.
24 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times News Seductive but not quite ready for her close-up Theatre Clive Davis Sunset Boulevard Savoy, WC2 HHHII If a real-life Norma Desmond were around today, she might well be killing time in her mansion by posting idealised images of herself on Instagram. So perhaps the idea of Nicole Scherzinger — Pussycat Doll veteran and selfie queen — playing the imperious relic of Hollywood’s silent era isn’t quite as odd as seems. You have to salute her courage in taking on the legacy of Patti LuPone et al. This audacious production from the enfant terrible Jamie Lloyd will no doubt pull in audiences purely on the strength of Scherzinger’s name. She looks fantastic, although that isn’t necessarily an advantage when you On a stark set bathed in monochrome, Nicole Scherzinger plays Norma Desmond like a hyperactive Morticia Addams are portraying a star whose best days are far behind her. But in the end this is a show that exposes her limitations as an actress and a singer. We’ve come to expect the unexpected from Lloyd, and this revival of the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical certainly delivers on that front. You can quite easily find yourself spending much of the show watching the black-and-white video camera close-ups while ignoring what’s actually happening on designer Soutra Gilmour’s starkly furnished set, a forbidding space in which everything is bathed in monochrome, illuminated by Jack Knowles’s unyielding lighting. In the end, though, the camera trickery becomes overbearing. In a bravura sequence at the start of Act Two, we see Tom Francis, as the doomed screenwriter Joe Gillis, make his way from his dressing room to the stage, passing through corridors before he enters the auditorium via a door in the stalls. It’s clever, yes, but to what purpose? And all the little in-jokes, the cardboard cut-out of Lloyd Webber and the off-duty actors goofing around, only serve to undercut the show’s tragic aura. It doesn’t help, either, that Scherzinger, who, at 45, cuts a seductive cat-like figure, plays Norma less as a monarch in exile and more like a hyperactive Morticia Addams. What about her singing voice? Scherzinger, who studied musical theatre in her youth, possesses the lung power, but too often you can hear her grinding through the gears. The anthemic As If We Never Said Goodbye starts promisingly, but soon lapses into overkill. Still, there’s plenty to enjoy in Francis’s performance, and Grace Hodgett Young wins our sympathy as Joe’s romantic partner, Betty. A young ensemble, choreographed by Fabian Aloise, generates something of the energy that we saw in Lloyd’s brilliant Cyrano de Bergerac. Best of all, the musical director Alan Williams oversees a lush orchestral backdrop. Perhaps the best way to enjoy the evening is to just close your eyes. Until January 6. sunsetboulevardwestend.com Billy Connolly reveals his Loch Lomond burial wish Lizzie Roberts Billy Connolly says he is considering being buried on an island in Loch Lomond, with his grave marked by a table for “fishermen to picnic on”. The Glaswegian actor and comedian, who had Parkinson’s disease diagnosed on the day ten years ago that he learnt he had prostate cancer, said he would prefer a “nice” memorial rather than a headstone. In an extract from his new book, published in The Daily Telegraph, Connolly, 80, said his life had changed “radically” in the time since his diagnosis, revealing that his wife, the psychologist and actress Pamela Stephenson, dressed him in the morning and that he once forgot the name of one of his dogs. Discussing how Parkinson’s had changed him, he told BBC Radio 4’s Today: “I walk with a stick and at airports I have to get the wheelchair. I hate being dependent to that degree and I feel Billy Connolly is determined to have the last laugh, with a joke inscribed on his gravestone at Loch Lomond sorry for other people who are in wheelchairs and who have it worse than me. But it’s a thing I just have to put up with. “My wife puts my clothes on in the morning. It’s not very manly. Your mum puts your clothes on. I’m clumsy and I lose my balance. I’m out of balance a lot and I fall. I’m fed up with it. I think I have a good attitude to it. I say to the disease, ‘I’ll give you a break if you give me a break’. We’re nice to each other.” Connolly said his memory was short and he sometimes forgot the name of one of his dogs, “which is really awkward when you’re shouting to it in the street. You have to say ‘Hey, doggy doggy’, which is terrible. I felt embarrassed for the dog. You could tell it knew.” He said: “I shake a bit. I don’t shake every day, all the time. But for about an hour or two I’ll shake and when I’m drawing it spoils it. Then I conquered it. I draw with shakes in it and it works. I think most things can be conquered and especially the depression.” He added: “I am a lucky man with my sense of humour. I can laugh myself out of most things.” In the extract, Connolly wrote that he had considered what he wanted written on his gravestone. “I was thinking I’d like: ‘Jesus Christ, is that the time already?’ on mine, but Pamela was shaky about it, so we settled on ‘You’re standing on my balls!’ in tiny wee writing. “I’m thinking that instead of a headstone, a table on an island in Loch Lomond for fishermen to picnic on would be nice.” Teenager faces far-right terror charges David Woode Crime Correspondent A teenager suspected of far-right terrorism was detained in a supermarket car park after allegedly being caught with a handgun and 200 rounds of ammunition, according to court documents. Alfie Coleman, 19, from Great Notley in Essex, appeared at Westminster magistrates’ court yesterday, accused of 13 terror-related offences. He spoke only to confirm his name, address and date of birth. He faces one charge of intending to commit acts of terrorism on or before September 29 this year, and is also accused of possessing a prohibited firearm and 200 rounds of 9mm ammunition without a firearms certificate. He is also charged with possessing terrorist material including the White Resistance Manual. His defence lawyer did not seek bail. The judge transferred the case to the Old Bailey. The Metropolitan Police said that Coleman was arrested in a planned operation related to far-right terrorism. Commander Dominic Murphy said: “While we can’t comment on the details of the case now legal proceedings are active . . . we do not believe there is any enduring threat. “Our officers work around the clock to identify and disrupt terrorist activity, but we can only do that with the public’s support and we would ask them to continue to remain vigilant.”
25 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Hamas does not deserve Israeli ‘restraint’ Gerard Baker Page 27 Comment Starmer channelled Thatcher for his big day One of the Tory leader’s lesser-known speeches from 1978 helped shape Labour’s vision for the decade ahead Patrick Maguire @patrickkmaguire S ometimes, even as the stars align, it is still possible to miss one’s moment. On the corner of a residential street in Merseyside, about 40 minutes from where Sir Keir Starmer gave the speech of his life this week, is a bar called Taylor’s. For years it was a butcher’s shop. Among porcelain cows and pigs hang old posters advertising its namesake. Kingsize Taylor was 6ft 5in. He had the most soulful voice of any Liverpool singer. He played with the Beatles in Hamburg. When Britain went mad for Merseybeat he should have become an icon. But he hung around in Germany playing covers for a little too long and never made it. Instead, as his obituary in The Daily Telegraph noted in February, “he returned to the northwest as Southport’s tallest butcher”. There are worse things to be — like a Labour leader who didn’t win a general election. They have a knack for missing the moments made for them: Hugh Gaitskell in 1959, Neil Kinnock in 1992, Ed Miliband in 2015. Before this past fortnight it was still possible to imagine Starmer bookending that list in 2024. Now? I don’t think so. Most Tory MPs don’t think so. Business doesn’t think so. On Sunday night I asked executives from big firms whether they thought Rishi Sunak would be prime minister after the next election. Not one hand went up. One can never go far wrong in following the money. For Starmer, the point of this Labour conference was to answer the question you are probably bored with reading: if not them, why us? From their sometimes lukewarm focus groups in marginal seats, I gather the Labour leadership this week heard people who had seen coverage of the leader’s speech say things such as, “He actually seems to want change”, “He is right with what he’s saying” and “They seem to be putting together a plan”. YouGov polling shows the number who feel they are clear about what he stands for is up seven percentage points, the number who aren’t down nine points. We shall see if that sentiment endures through the brutal campaign Labour rightly anticipate. If it does, Starmer will have answered two bigger, trickier questions. The first: if not them, what? His speech was an almost perfect opposite of the prime minister’s in its approach to policy. There was nothing resembling a It’s a break from the fatalistic language used by the shadow cabinet snappy retail offer. Read it alongside the one given by his shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, however, and for the first time we see the political and economic worldview that would guide a Starmer government articulated with a clarity and self-confidence that might start to convince Britain’s exhausted electorate. It is best summarised like this. Volatile geopolitics and climate change have made the world an insecure and scary place. Working people in Britain are insufficiently protected from the shocks it has in store. Conservative politicians don’t respect them. Political instability has put a low ceiling on economic growth. For these ills, the medicine is a government prepared to wield the power of the state — and borrowing capacity of the Treasury — to corral industry into making the big investments in critical infrastructure that could restore some sense of economic purpose and independence to this country and its workers. One close friend of Starmer puts it more pithily: “It’s an interventionist, corporatist government. It’s radical.” Unlike New Labour, it is not about gaming an existing economic paradigm but synthesising a new one. “Butskellism in one party,” is how a wise Labour MP describes it, evoking the postwar consensus: a bold attempt to build a mixed economy in which state, business and unions collaborate constructively in the national interest. It is a deliberate and decisive departure from the fatalistic language in which the shadow cabinet until recently spoke. That was a depressing vision of a Labour Britain in which government could only be “the onlooker oppressed by circumstance”, as Ramsay MacDonald despaired during the Great Depression, or the victim of “a permanent victory by bankers over democrats”, as Bryan Gould complained six decades later. Now they have set their sights higher. When Starmer took to his lectern on Tuesday he was thinking of Margaret Thatcher. Her 1978 conference speech is not especially well remembered but the Labour leader was making a conscious attempt to do the same thing in reverse. She diagnosed the problem (Labour governments that had lost control of industrial relations and thus inflation), identified her enemies (union leaders, James Callaghan, Harold Wilson) and offered a radical the answer to its next question: if not them, how us? As Starmer has heard from his focus groups, his speech was merely “the good prologue to the start of a book”. Now he has to tell voters the rest of the story. One of Sue Gray’s first initiatives as his chief of staff has been to set up a “star chamber” for frontbenchers under the supervision of Jon Ashworth, the shadow paymaster general and recovering Man Friday to Gordon Labour can choose to reject mean politics or attack and be meaner Sir Keir Starmer’s speech appears to have persuaded people he has a plan prescription (monetarist, free-market economics). “Our party offers the nation nothing less than national revival — the deeply needed, longawaited and passionately longed-for recovery of our country,” Thatcher said. Starmer’s language is strikingly similar. Advisers to Reeves were thinking of Callaghan’s conference speech two years earlier, in which he warned that Labour’s instinct to spend their way out of recession was a dead letter. “I tell you in all candour that option no longer exists,” he famously said. He was demanding discipline and patience from his party and did not get it. Judging by the seven standing ovations she received, Reeves might fare better. First, there is the small matter of a year-long election campaign. To win it well, Labour needs to be sure of Brown. They are grilling shadow ministers to ensure their policies can be sold to voters and then implemented. The promised new towns are to be given close attention by Miliband, the shadow climate secretary, and Jonny Reynolds, the shadow business secretary: where will they put the new factories and infrastructure that will give them a point? And Starmer will also have to settle an emerging debate among his advisers on how best to attack Sunak’s Conservatives. Some urge him to denounce them for degrading and cheapening politics; others call for an aggressive campaign that discredits them as weirdos and extremists — a choice between rejecting mean politics or being meaner. Britain may well have decided that this is his moment. Time to decide how to seize it. red box For the best analysis and commentary on the political landscape
26 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Comment Economic timing means Labour’s in luck Responsible Tory chancellors have done the dirty work for Starmer and Reeves by raising taxes Emma Duncan I don’t normally lean heavily on the wit and wisdom of John McDonnell, but Jeremy Corbyn’s shadow chancellor made a good point at the Labour conference. Quoting Napoleon, who said that he would rather have lucky generals than good ones, he pointed out that Sir Keir Starmer was a “lucky general”. McDonnell was referring to the choice that voters will face at the next election. On the one hand, there’s the Nth prime minister thrown up by a party that resembles a bunch of rats in a sack and has thrown its reputation for fiscal prudence into the air with the £50 notes it is scattering over the remnants of the half-built HS2 track. On the other, there’s a sensiblesounding chap who has got a normally rebellious party under control. Among those voters who have not had “Maggie” tattooed on their foreheads since adolescence, the contrast is making Starmer’s job easier. But Starmer is lucky in subtler ways, too. Given the economic shocks of recent years and the Horlicks that the government has made of pretty much everything, the economy is widely believed to be in such a dire state that, should the electorate decide to throw the ratsack overboard, a future Labour government would have to inflict considerable pain to bring it back to health. Yet the fiscal position Labour will inherit won’t be as dreadful as all that. Because although the Tory party has thrown up a series of record-breakingly disastrous prime ministers of late, its chancellors have not done too badly. Indeed, the last two (for politeness’ sake, I pass over the Zahawi and Kwarteng tenures) have been competent chaps. On the Peter principle, Rishi Sunak was promoted to his level of incompetence and will be remembered mostly as a feeble prime minister gnawed to death by vicious colleagues; but if he had stayed in No 11, his reputation would Inflation and interest rates will be falling if Starmer takes power have remained high. Jeremy Hunt is equally impressive. The debt pile that we have accumulated as a result of the financial crisis and Covid, plus the burden that a sick, ageing population imposes on the state, means that the tax take needs to be higher than it used to be. Normally it’s Labour that puts up taxes. This time, the Conservatives have done it for them. In 2021, Sunak froze tax thresholds for four years; Hunt then extended the freeze for a further two. The result is the largest tax rise since the Second World War. By 2028, according to the Resolution Foundation, the tax take will be £40 billion higher than it would have been had Sunak not frozen thresholds. That’s the equivalent of nearly 6p on the basic rate of income tax. Imagine if Starmer raised income tax by 6p in the pound: his head would be on a pike outside No 10 before you could say “fiscal responsibility”. Starmer’s other piece of luck is monetary. When David Cameron came to power in 2010, the economy was in a post-financial-crisis mess, interest rates were near zero and the Bank of England therefore had no lever with which to boost growth. Inflation, which has driven the base rate up to 5.25 per cent, is now coming down. Unless something goes very wrong, inflation and interest rates will be falling if and when Starmer comes to power, which will make people feel better off. But rates will still be high enough that, if something does go wrong, the Bank of England has a lever to pull. The flipside of higher interest rates, though, is higher debt-service costs. They will, over time, weaken the government’s fiscal position. Which is why Starmer needs to be a clever general as well as a lucky one. His strategy suggests that he is. In order to avoid cutting spending or raising taxes further, he needs to boost revenues by raising the growth rate. Leftish governments normally do so by increasing government spending. Starmer is instead opting for a classic “supply-side policy”, usually favoured by the right, designed to deliver growth by removing constraints that were holding the economy back, without costing the Treasury a penny. Rather as Margaret Thatcher freed the economy from the unions in the 1980s, so Starmer intends to liberate it from the Nimbys. His plan to “bulldoze” planning rules to build more houses is not only good economics, it is good social policy too, in that it should right a generational wrong. By using the planning system to resist new development, the old have prevented the young from getting on the housing ladder. Starmer’s plan should give the young the foothold they need. It’s good politics, too. Opponents of the new towns that Starmer plans will protest but in many constituencies in the southeast, where housing is most urgently needed, the principal competition is between the Tories and the Lib Dems. Since Labour has little chance of victory in such seats, the political cost of angering Nimbys is likely to be small. At a national level, meanwhile, the benefits could be sizeable. Starmer doesn’t need to change young people’s minds — a recent YouGov poll put Conservative support among 18 to 24-year-olds at 1 per cent — but he does need to motivate them to vote. Defining Labour as the party that will build houses for them might do exactly that. It won’t be a quick fix. New towns take many years to build but Starmer is calculating that he will have more than one term in power, and he’s probably right. History suggests that defeat will fuel Tory infighting, so it could be a long time before Starmer faces an effective opposition. Luck may be on his side for years to come. what would have seemed mawkish to say yesterday face to face: I regret the harshness of some of the editorials that I wrote about Major 30 years ago, and respect him for qualities of which today’s Tories seem almost bereft. enthused. Unlike the club to which I belong in St James’s Street, this one welcomes open-necked shirts. In my clothes cupboard I survey a lifetime’s accumulated neckwear, nowadays summoned into service only a handful of times a year. When I am asked to appear on TV, Penny warns me against ties and pinstripe suits, both of which she says brand a man in viewers’ eyes as belonging in the same museum as that which exhibits Jacob Rees-Mogg. Pallbearers will soon be the only tie-wearers left. Max Hastings Notebook Party could use Major’s honesty and decency L unch with Sir John Major. I invited him by way of returning his kindness in having entertained me a while back. “We had our differences when I was prime minister and you were an editor,” he said. “But now it feels like we’re on the same side.” Which is true. Robert Harris says: “The further we get from David Cameron’s premiership the worse it looks, but the further we get from John Major’s the better it appears.” This is partly because the latter is so obviously a decent human being, who since leaving office in 1997 has conducted himself with unfailing grace. Moreover, we can now see how intractable is the Tory right, which contrived Major’s humiliation and much worse things since. In the 1990s many of us viewed the “bastards”, to use his contemporary word — such figures as John Redwood, Bill Cash and Iain Duncan Smith — as ridiculous rather than menacing. Yet today their legatees dominate the party. Duncan Smith is sometimes billed as a “Tory elder statesman”. Major, three decades ago, attempted to stem a tide that has proved irresistible, sweeping away the centre and expelling its adherents as Thatcher never did. Michael Heseltine believes that next year’s almost inevitable election defeat will oblige Tory members, in the country as well as in the Commons, to rejoin planet Earth, because only on the centre ground can the party hope to regain power. His optimism is impressive, but I doubt whether Penny or I will ever see reason to vote Conservative again. Fears about immigration and hostility to our European neighbours will remain rocks on which would-be Tory moderates face shipwreck. A party that welcomed Nigel Farage at its conference, where its leader was too fearful to denounce him, seems far from any prospect of redemption. I can write here Words of warning S ir Michael Howard, the historian, never attended a synagogue but never forgot the Jewishness of his German mother. He said 15 years ago: “Israel has made a choice, whether conscious or unconscious, that it prefers to exist in a state of permanent war rather than to make such concessions to the Palestinians as might offer a possibility of peace. Yet it is perilous to base one’s entire polity upon an assumption of indefinite military superiority.” Knot for long P enny and I recently joined a charming club in Chelsea, where I took my son for lunch. He Law of the jungle A solicitor friend whose family partnership has flourished in the north of England for two centuries reports on the difficulty of recruiting new talent. Young practitioners, he says, are reluctant to act for private clients. If they instead join a partnership that favours corporate work, they can charge £600 an hour. Slumber party C hildren are seldom impressed by their parents’ friends. I chanced on a remark of the young Goethe after a dinner party of his mother’s at which he found the guests unrewarding: “They were agreeable enough people, but if they were books I should not trouble to read them.” Hamas shows us what anti-Zionism means in practice Dave Rich W ith sobering timing, given the horrific events in Israel, an employment tribunal next week between Professor David Miller and his former employer, the University of Bristol, gets to the heart of whether anti-Zionism can ever truly be detached from antisemitism. Miller claims he suffered discrimination when he was fired two years ago because his antiZionism counts as a philosophical belief under the Equality Act. This is no mere critique of Israeli policy. Miller believes that Israel should disappear completely. “Our cause is not to establish a Palestinian state but to dismantle Israel”, is how he put it. It feels like an appropriate moment to be asking whether such a belief can ever be, as the law states, “worthy of respect in a democratic society, compatible with human dignity and not conflict with the fundamental rights of others”. It was Miller’s comments about Jewish students that got him in trouble. He said the head of Bristol’s Jewish Society and the president of the Union of Jewish Students were censoring him in “an all-out onslaught by the Israeli government”. Jewish students are “political pawns” for “a violent, racist foreign regime”, “directed by the state of Israel” to use “manufactured” complaints of antisemitism. Miller says “every single Zionist organisation, the world over, needs to be ended”, a demand that, by his definition, would shut thousands of synagogues, charities and other Jewish community groups. It is impossible to ignore the antisemitic echoes in his depiction of ordinary Jewish students as agents of a global conspiracy directed from Jerusalem. More recently, Miller’s mask has slipped completely. “If you are not Jewish, do not be cowed by racial supremacists who want to hector you into political subservience,” he tweeted earlier this year. This caused even some of his supporters to distance themselves. Miller’s claims about Jewish students were in a call to arms against “the enemy we face” — Zionism and the state of Israel — which must be “defeat[ed]”. The anti-Zionist theories he taught in seminars may not have envisaged this but Hamas has just demonstrated what trying to defeat the Zionist enemy entails: mass murder, rape, kidnapping, babies slaughtered in unspeakable ways. Anti-Zionism has a very different meaning this week from whatever it may have meant in the past. Even academic free speech has its limits. At a time when Jews have been massacred in Israel and are being held hostage in Gaza, are these views really worthy of respect in modern Britain?
27 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Comment Buy prints or signed copies of Times cartoons from our Print Gallery at timescartoons.co.uk or call 020 7711 7826 Hamas does not deserve Israeli ‘restraint’ Nobody wishes to see innocent lives lost but the Jewish state has the right to respond as aggressively as it sees fit Gerard Baker @gerardtbaker I have some questions for those urging Israel to exercise restraint as it responds to the worst singleepisode massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, to those insisting its reprisals be no more than is “proportionate”. What exactly is proportionate to genocide? What restraint is someone obliged to show towards an enemy who has as his stated objective the elimination of your entire race? Hamas is institutionally committed to the eradication of every last Jew from the Earth. Last weekend it made a significant down payment on that commitment by machinegunning young partygoers at a peace concert in the desert; slitting the throats of family members waking up on a Sabbath morning; murdering dozens of babies in a kibbutz; seizing and gleefully parading Holocaust-survivor grandmothers for the cameras before absconding with them to hold them hostage in some dark pit in Gaza. All in all, as many as 1,200 Jews were slaughtered in acts of savagery that the darkest demons of Isis and alQaeda can only ever have dreamt of. I had — foolishly — imagined that, after an atrocity of this scale, the usual chorus of media and political figures seated comfortably far from the killing fields of the Levant, ready to take up their pens to issue stern warnings to Israel not to overreact as it goes about avenging its losses, might just sit this one out for a few days. Evidently, I have an overly vivid imagination. The calls for Israel’s military to stay its hand in pursuit of the malefactors began even as it was still trying to mop up the remains of the thousands of Hamas sociopaths — “militants” is a media euphemism, “terrorists” (forbidden by the same media) doesn’t really convey the full extent of the psychosis — who invaded, raped and murdered a people last weekend. Diplomats in President Biden’s administration rushed out two statements at the weekend that called for an immediate “ceasefire” and urged “restraint”. Their statements were both eventually deleted but the instinctive urge to issue orders to Israel on how to conduct its own defence was instructive. Much worse, of course, are the large numbers of people and organisations who don’t believe Israel has the right to respond at all, “disproportionately” or otherwise, since — apparently — the annihilation of its own civilians is mainly Israel’s fault. The depths to which putrid antisemitism has penetrated the consciousness of the political left in much of the West has been on vivid display this last week, including, perhaps most unexpectedly, here in the United States. American university administrations — the same ones that instantly issued passionate statements of support for the Black Lives Matter movement and denounced so-called white Now is a time for war, to tear down before — some day — rebuilding supremacist violence in the wake of the George Floyd murder in 2020 — fell oddly silent as the campus radicals they coddle issued bloodcurdling denunciations of the Jewish state. One organisation representing Harvard students said it held “the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence”. The Black Lives Matter chapter of Chicago was more vivid, posting a silhouette of a Hamas terrorist paragliding toward his target, under a flag bearing the message: “I stand with Palestine.” To his credit, Biden gave a clear indication that he at least gets what’s at stake for Israel. On Tuesday he issued one of the most morally unambiguous declarations any president has uttered. In remarks that seemed addressed as much to some in his own party as to the world, he described the attacks as “pure unadulterated evil” and said: “Let there be no doubt. The United States has Israel’s back.” The question is, for how long? We know from previous Israeli wars against terrorists that western support for its struggle — first in Europe, then in the US — crumbles quickly. Under relentless barrage from a credulous media, the West quickly turns against Israel’s efforts to defeat its enemies. This is because Hamas murders twice over: they kill Jews to prompt a response from Israel that will kill Palestinians. They position innocents by military targets then wave the bloody shrouds in front of the world’s TV cameras. The irony is that Israel does, of course, exercise restraint. If they could, the Israel Defence Forces would pursue their military objectives while avoiding any loss of noncombatant lives. But last weekend was a searing reminder of a truth many of us had almost forgotten: the Jewish state is surrounded by people who want it eliminated. Ah, but the restrainers say, that will only play into the hands of Hamas. As William Hague, the former foreign secretary, wrote in these pages, Hamas wants to make Israel lash out in a way that starts a conflagration. But does this mean Israel is obliged to play by Hamas’s rules? Because Hamas deliberately exploits its own people’s lives — and deaths — for propaganda purposes, must Israel back off? No one wants a single innocent life lost but we know from our own history that sometimes, try as we might, when faced with an existential threat from psychopaths who want to destroy us, sadly the innocent do die. Israel has learnt bitter lessons from exercising restraint in response to international demands. As Michael Oren, former ambassador to the US and a historian of Israel’s wars, told me, in 1967 it “tried to gain American and international favour by not launching a pre-emptive strike against Egypt and Syria. And Israel has regretted that decision every single day since.” As Israel goes about its righteous task in the weeks ahead, as Hamas manipulates the watching world, all of us — including those who are not Jews — should heed the timeless words of Ecclesiastes: “For everything there is a season.” For Israel, this last week has been a time to weep and a time to mourn. What comes now is a time for war; a time to tear down before, some day, a time to build up again. For the rest of us, it is a time for silence.
28 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Letters to the Editor should be sent to letters@thetimes.co.uk or by post to 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF Letters to the Editor Freedom of speech and defending terrorism White pupils fall even more behind Sir, You highlight a report by the Educational Policy Institute showing a widening educational attainment gap of the country’s largest disadvantaged ethnic group: white pupils who are eligible for free school meals (“White pupils slip further behind”, Oct 12). This worrying trend, identified in many reports over the years, has clearly accelerated since the pandemic. Given these hard data, urgent efforts must be made in understanding why this vast untapped pool of potential talent is now also the most educationally disadvantaged group in the country. This review cannot come soon enough. My own efforts to try to identify the same issue in university admissions have invariably been met by the claim that the data are hard or impossible to extract. That, in complete contrast to data for any other ethnic groups, which seem to be readily accessible. Even more concerning has been a pervading attitude that the lack of success for white disadvantaged young people (notably boys) is simply down to individual failure, they being cast as authors of their own misfortune. A distasteful exemplar of the phrase (first attributed to George W Bush) about “the soft bigotry of low expectations”. Professor Peter Edwards FRS Oxford University; past member, Royal Society of Chemistry, inclusion and diversity committee revel in this elegant book showing times readers at their most whimsical and droll Corrections and clarifications 6 Akshata Murty is now paying UK taxes on worldwide income because she no longer claims the “remittance basis”, but she has not given up her non-dom status as we wrongly said (News, Sep 28). The Times takes complaints about editorial content seriously. We are committed to abiding by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (“IPSO”) rules and regulations and the Editors’ Code of Practice that IPSO enforces. Requests for corrections or clarifications should be sent by email to feedback@thetimes.co.uk or by post to Feedback, The Times, 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF Sir, Like Juliet Samuel (“Why is UK tiptoeing around hate merchants”, Oct 12), I find it alarming and depressing to see the hostility towards Jews in the aftermath of the Hamas attack. As for hoping for some genuine historical perspective of how things got to this point, well good luck with that. She should look no further than the BBC, an institution that manages publicly to wring its hands at Fiona Bruce saying “the black guy” while maintaining its description of Hamas as militants rather than terrorists. One hopes that Israel can somehow take a measured response to ensure its improved relationship with other Arab nations is not compromised, but when faced with such atrocities it must indeed be hard to resist the temptation to mete out an “eye for an eye”. Christopher Jackson Harrogate, N Yorks Sir, Freedom of speech is fundamental to our universities and while views expressed by some students and academics may be considered abhorrent and profoundly uncomfortable, if legal, they have the right to be said (British academics provoke anger by defending assault”, Oct 12). University leaders defend this VAT on school fees Sir, Your report on Labour’s plan to impose VAT on private schools highlights how Labour will penalise children and their educational needs while damaging a successful part of our economy (“ ‘Arrogant’ heads won’t stop VAT on school fees”, Oct 12). This ideological attack fails to recognise why parents send their children to private schools. Successful schools that provide a good education are always oversubscribed and if you are unable to secure your preferred school for your child, you face some hard choices. You can either send your child to a school with poorer educational outcomes or you can send them to a private school. To penalise parents because of poor leadership and inadequate teaching is grossly unfair and will simply drive down educational standards. The money raised from this tax will not improve the quality of teaching in schools. For the private education sector, the imposition of VAT will irreparably harm a successful part of our economy and our international reputation. Justin Richards Hitchin, Herts USE AND ABUSE OF THE ROADS from the times october 13, 1923 The circular sent by the Ministry of Transport to the county councils ought to open a new chapter in the struggle for the protection of the roads from ugly advertisements. The Ministry is a young body, and the importance of the roads is a new importance. Both are due to the arrival of the motor, and the hugely increased use of the roads as its result. That increase has brought its evils as well as its advantages. It has brought new dangers to life and limb, and the abominations which have now produced this circular. “The Minister of Transport has right, acutely aware that it is also their duty, under the Education Act 1986 (section 43) to “take such steps as are reasonably practicable to ensure that freedom of speech within the law is secured for members, students and employees”, a duty strengthened significantly, only five months ago, by the passing of the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Act 2023. Professor Sir Paul Curran President, City University of London 2010-21; London N1 Sir, I suggest that Dr Maryam Aldossari of Royal Holloway University of London communicates with her colleague Professor Dan Stone, director of the Holocaust Research Institute at that university, before asking why the attack on the desert rave was defined as terrorism, rather than self-defence (“British academics provoke anger by defending assault”, Oct 12). In the past Israel has offered the two-state solution but Hamas is intent on the annihilation of one. Having academics defending Hamas while decrying Israel is inflammatory, discriminatory and inciting antisemitism. Janice Ketley Englefield Green, Surrey Sir, The debate thus far has overlooked the potential plight of pupils from low-income families who receive bursaries. At many private schools these bursaries represent a significant percentage of their fee income so as to qualify for charitable status. In the event that VAT were to be chargeable on school fees, it would be foolish not to expect schools to consider the continuing benefit of their charitable status and funding a change through cutting bursaries. Piers Monckton Stafford Tilting at limits Sir, Further to your report that Pendolino trains tilt, “enabling them to move at 125mph” (“Older tilting trains may outpace HS2”, news, Oct 9), the Alstom Pendolino is actually designed to operate at up to 140mph. However, where in-cab signalling has not been installed the train speed is limited to 125mph for safety reasons. That is the case on the west coast main line (WCML) between London Euston, Birmingham and Manchester Piccadilly. The WCML modernisation programme noticed with concern the extent to which the countryside is becoming disfigured by the erection of unsightly hoardings and advertisements on lands and buildings adjacent to public highways.” This has gone so far, we are told, that large hoardings are being erected by the side of some of the new roads even before the roads are completed. The Minister thinks it “lamentable” that “the wayfaring public should be in this way deprived of the enjoyment which public highways should afford,” and invites the councils to consider whether they cannot take further action. This is by far the most important step taken to deal with this evil. Indeed, it is the first time that the evil has been denounced, as an evil, and the rights of the public, to whom the roads belong, officially championed. There is no doubt whatever of the feeling of the public. The nuisance is intolerable and must be abated. Everybody, motorist, bicyclist, or pedestrian, who Sir, The four eminent lawyers who have complained to Ofcom that the BBC has “abandoned impartiality” by choosing not to call Hamas “terrorists” are overlooking key points of both balance and accuracy (“Top barristers accuse BBC of taking sides in Hamas terrorist row,” Oct 12). “Terrorist”, a vague and emotive word, is inherently partial, one that the BBC wisely avoids when even official bodies do otherwise. I would refer the honourable gentlemen to a BBC News Online article of August 28 entitled “Palestinian fears grow amid rising Israeli settler attacks”. It reports the killing in the occupied West Bank of an unarmed teenage Palestinian resident by an armed Israeli civilian, an act described by the US officials as “a terror attack” and one of several which even Israel’s own security service Shin Bet refers to as “Jewish terror”. Yet the BBC refrains from using such inflammatory terminology, preferring to describe those responsible as “settlers” and “radical Israelis”. Have the four KCs complained to Ofcom about those descriptions I wonder? Peter Grimsdale Ex-BBC executive; former Channel 4 head of religion; London SE21 undertaken between 2000 and 2005 was intended to enable the tilting Pendolinos to operate at up to 140mph. In-cab signalling was planned as part of the project but was removed from the scope later on to relieve pressure on the £9 billion budget. This sum seems peanuts when compared with the figures for HS2. For the past 19 years, the operating capabilities of the Alstom Pendolino has never been fully utilised on the WCML. What a great train it has been though. John Osborne West Kilbride, North Ayrshire Women’s rights Sir, Given that prisons are full and judges have been told not to jail rapists (report, Oct 12), Lisa Nandy need not worry about trans women rapists not getting the prison of their choice — they won’t go to prison at all. JK Rowling is, as usual, absolutely right: women need all the safe spaces they can get and all their refuges protecting (“Rowling takes swipe at Nandy over trans views”, Oct 12). Jenny Blount Cowes, Isle of Wight has been in the country this summer has been disgusted by it. All have come back with the feeling that they have a right to use their roads without being bombarded with ugly puffs of undesired and perhaps undesirable articles. The least the Government can do is to find time in the House of Commons for the passing of Lord Newton’s modest Bill now before it, and if the county councils are too overworked or too indifferent to take the powers offered them then the Ministry of Transport must itself impose a comprehensive national measure. By one means or the other an end must be put to the present abuses. Meanwhile one county council has approached the principal advertisers of motor spirits, probably the worst offenders, with a view to their agreeing to abandon these methods. thetimes.co.uk/archive Snacks prohibited Sir, The sub-heading to your editorial “Snack Attack” (Oct 11), “The state has a role in helping people to resist the foods that make them fat”, could not be more appropriate. Last week I was at a supermarket checkout and the young family in front of me paid £139 for a trolley-load of food. In it was three small tins of tuna and a packet of pasta; the rest was bars of chocolate, chocolate biscuits and packets of crisps. If as you say there needs to be a limit on consumption there also needs to be a limit on purchases. Stephen Hogben Chelmsford, Essex Sir With regard to ultra processed foods (letters, Oct 11 & 12), I remember advice, given to me at least two decades ago, not to eat anything that one’s grandmother would not recognise. Sadly mine would not have recognised an avocado. Environmental issues aside, this rule is remarkably limiting. Sue Pheasey Amberley, W Sussex Barring shoplifters Sir, Carol Midgley’s experience with the shoplifter (“I saw the thief walking out of Asda. I did nothing and I’ll tell you why”, Times2, Oct 11) seems to be a frequent occurrence. Surely part of the answer, for larger retailers at least, is some form of access control. In order to leave the store you would need a till receipt printed with a barcode. A scanner at the exit would read the presented receipt and release the door. Anyone without a receipt could either hand the stolen goods back to a security guard and be allowed to leave or remain inside and wait to be arrested. John Gardner Romsey, Hants Play Wisty for me Sir, How I agree with James Marriott (“If only Rishi and Keir were easier on the ear”, Oct 12). It is of course entirely up to Sir Keir Starmer if he wants to sound like Peter Cook’s EL Wisty character. I am sure a speech therapist could teach him to speak from his diaphragm and allow him to project rather than sound like an adenoidal castrato. It would also reduce the wear on the mute button of my television. Jon Hawkins Caerphilly Crusts for curls Sir, Matthew Parris rightly takes issue with police officers discarding the crusts from their sandwiches (Notebook, Oct 11). My mother never admonished me with reminders of the starving but told me that if I ate my crusts it would make my hair curl (letter, Oct 12). I am a living embodiment that it is true. Penny Braithwaite Winslow, Bucks Fiddler on the roof Sir, Further to the correspondence (Oct 9-11) about cracking walnuts, last year we found a number of neat round holes in our polycarbonate conservatory roof. The culprit? Local jackdaws sitting on the chimney, which dropped walnuts to crack them for their lunch. Maybe we should re-roof with plate glass. Ruth Fearnley Drayton, Oxon
29 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Leading articles Daily Universal Register UK: Statistics on homelessness for 2022-23; World: The US secretary of state Antony Blinken is due to visit Jordan; Secondary Breast Cancer Awareness Day. Nature notes No need to go to New England to enjoy the colours of autumn: a journey on the Tyne and Wear Metro will do just as nicely. Most of the trains run between tree-lined embankments. The gold of birch and aspen; the copper of beeches and sweet chestnut; the scarlet of guelder rose and field maple. All can be viewed on a few short stops between Byker and Meadow Well. And if passengers would like to see a contrast to all this October splendour, they can look out of the window as the Metro passes high over Willington Gut. In one of the trees above this muddy burn, a bright white little egret is in residence. jonathan tulloch Birthdays today General Sir Nick Parker, pictured, chairman, TX-Net and RE:ACT Disaster Response, Step Up to Serve (2014-21), commander, Land Forces (2010-13), 69; Stephen Bayley, founding director, Design Museum (London), 72; Doug Beattie, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party, MLA for Upper Bann, 58; Aleksander Ceferin, president of Uefa, European football’s governing body, 56; Sacha Baron Cohen, actor and comedian, Borat (2006), 52; Baroness (Angie) Bray of Coln, Tory MP for Ealing Central & Acton (2010-15), 70; Edwina Currie, Tory MP (1983-97), health minister (1988), 77; Michael Ellis, Tory MP for Northampton North, attorney-general (2022), 56; Stephen Flynn, SNP MP for Aberdeen South, SNP Westminster leader, 35; Sir Michael Gooley, founder (1970) and chairman of travel company Trailfinders, 87; Sir Paul Grice, clerk and chief executive, Scottish parliament (1999-2019), now principal and vice-chancellor, Queen Margaret University, 62; David Haye, boxer, former world cruiserweight and heavyweight champion, 43; Michael Heath, cartoons editor, The Spectator, 88; Nigel Huddleston, Tory MP for Mid Worcestershire, international trade minister, 53; Dame Beverley Lang, High Court judge, 68; Nana Mouskouri, singer, The White Rose of Athens (1969), and former MEP, 89; Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, youngest woman elected to the US House of Representatives, 34; Sir Ken Olisa, lordlieutenant for Greater London, 72; Marie Osmond, singer, Paper Roses (1973), 64; Ed Parker, co-founder and chief executive, Walking with the Wounded (2010-21), 58; John Regis, athlete, former British 200m record-holder, 57; Paul Simon, singersongwriter, The Sound of Silence (1966), Mrs Robinson (1968), 82; John Snow, cricketer, England (1965-76), 82; Ian Thorpe, swimmer, nine-time Olympic medallist (2000, 2004), 41; Mordechai Vanunu, former nuclear technician who provided details of Israel’s nuclear weapons programme to The Sunday Times in 1986, 71. On this day In 1954 Chris Chataway broke the 5,000m world record by five seconds at the White City athletics stadium in west London. The last word “Propaganda is a monologue that is not looking for an answer, but an echo.” WH Auden, Anglo-American poet, A Short Defense of Poetry (1967) The T Word The BBC refuses to use the word “terrorist” to describe Hamas, citing the need for impartiality. But if the cold-blooded slaughter of a child is not terrorism, what is? The BBC had one of its periodic bouts of soulsearching recently when during the filming of Question Time the presenter Fiona Bruce referred to a member of the audience she was trying to pick out to ask a question as “the black guy in the middle, you sir”. Cue much agitation in the corporation’s corridors. Ms Bruce was forced to issue a statement explaining that the audience member’s clothing — a useful identifier when guiding the microphone engineer — was hidden from her. She had, of course, intended no offence. The BBC issued its own apology, saying that the version produced for iPlayer had been edited and the remark expunged. Such sensitivity, such courtesy is not, however, to be extended by the broadcaster to the men, women and children slaughtered in Israel at the weekend by Hamas. The more than 1,000 people who perished in the attacks were, by any sane definition, victims of terrorism. The Oxford English Dictionary describes terrorism thus: “The unofficial or unauthorised use of violence and intimidation in the pursuit of political aims.” Slitting throats in a kibbutz is, safe to say, violence; it is also reasonable to assume that the young people fleeing from the massacre at the Supernova pop festival felt intimidated. And someone who perpetrates terrorism is a terrorist. The BBC’s coyness in not using terrorism as a descriptor stems, according to John Simpson, its world affairs editor, from the desire to be “impartial” and not to take sides. But this is an issue not about fairness but precision. News organisations as a rule should be careful in their use of language, especially in cases of great sensitivity. But that should not preclude them from designating an act in terms that its nature merits. The Hamas gunmen spraying bullets into civilians or lobbing grenades into homes were not carrying out a military operation in any meaningful sense. They were not trying to erase a threat to the Palestinian people. Babies are not normally regarded as threats. They were there purely to inflict mayhem on those whose nationality and religion marked them out for destruction, and the purpose was to spread fear and dismay in Israel. The Hamas terrorists defined themselves by their own acts. Eminent lawyers have explained why the corporation’s position, which it clings to fiercely, is illogical. In a letter to Lord Grade of Yarmouth, chairman of Ofcom, Jeremy Brier and Lords Grabiner, Pannick, Polak and Wolfson, four of them KCs, explain that the BBC is being anything but impartial in excluding terrorism from its news lexicon. They argue, convincingly, that it is a precise term rooted in statute in this country. The crimes perpetrated in Israel, while not within the jurisdiction of England and Wales, satisfy the terms of the Terrorism Act 2000. Hamas, they point out, is a proscribed organisation under the terms of the act. Its nature as an organisation is not a subject of debate in this country; it is a matter of legal fact. They conclude that by persisting in refusing to describe Hamas as such, and by using “watered down” terms as a substitute for terrorism, the corporation is being the opposite of impartial. It is being sympathetic to Hamas in a way not justified by its legal status. The BBC is, in effect, cloaking the evils committed by Hamas in euphemism. It is not only lawyers who beg to differ with the broadcaster. The prime minister and leader of the opposition have called upon it to stop dancing around the terrible events of the weekend. This should not be seen as an attempt to intimidate an organisation that produces some of the finest news reporting in the world. BBC journalists are playing a vital role in conveying the issues in a rapidly developing story. The Israel-Palestine conflict is one that divides opinion like no other. Reporting from both sides of that divide and maintaining objectivity is not easy. But a desire for neutrality is no excuse for imprecision. Terrorism is terrorism. Give Jail a Break Thorough reform of Britain’s overstretched prisons system is long overdue The increasingly dire state of Britain’s prisons has become a slowly-developing national scandal. Now the system is at breaking point. Jails are understaffed, insanitary and overcrowded. Official predictions show the prison population could exceed operational capacity as soon as next month. This week, The Times reported that Crown Court judges have been ordered to pause sentencing hearings for convicted criminals because there is no longer space to incarcerate them. The government is expected to announce emergency measures designed to keep the prison estate from being overwhelmed: judges are to be issued with guidance to give fewer short sentences and avoid issuing custodial sentences of less than 12 months wherever possible. Such provisions, though undoubtedly short-term necessities, are no replacement for the urgent and thorough reform of Britain’s failing penal system. Prisons have for too long been a low political priority. Since 2018, there have been nine prisons ministers: none has got a grip on the system’s underlying dysfunction. Swathes of the prison estate are no longer fit for purpose. Outstanding maintenance costs were estimated in 2021 to be about £1 billion. In England, two thirds of prisons are overcrowded. Stop-gap measures, such as the use of police cells to house prisoners, are increasingly resorted to, and at this year’s Conservative Party conference the justice secretary, Alex Chalk, said the government was even considering changing the law so that inmates could spend their sentences in less crowded prisons overseas. Worse still, even as the number of prisoners has increased, staffing levels have fallen. Austerity-era budget cuts reduced the number of frontline officers by 26 per cent between 2010 and 2017. Today’s prisons show all the signs of a shortage of experienced personnel. A recent Independent Monitoring Board report into Wandsworth prison found that available staffing levels rarely exceeded 50 per cent, conditions were “unsafe and inhumane”, and contraband rife — all conditions representative of “the failures of the prison system as a whole”. There is little point in politicians striking tough poses on sentencing and conviction rates if they fail to support prisons in meeting their basic duty to house prisoners. And in the long run, there is no way to contain a growing prison population without more infrastructure. Here, too, the government’s record is dismal. The Conservative 2019 manifesto commitment to create 20,000 new prison places by the mid-2020s is going unmet, and proposals for three new prisons have all been obstructed by delays in gaining planning permission. Politicians must also acknowledge the possibility that Britain overuses its prisons. At 159 per 100,000, the UK’s incarceration rate is the highest among western European jurisdictions. The number of prisoners being held on remand reached a two-decade high in June. Many prisoners, especially women, are serving comparatively short sentences for non-violent crimes: such sentences are typically disruptive enough to cause a person to lose their house or livelihood, but too short to provide any serious rehabilitative function. These are obvious grounds for reform. A prison system that does nothing but house prisoners in inhumane conditions, without attempting to help them reintegrate into society, is failing to perform its basic function. Clapham Uncommon The south London neighbourhood has the UK’s highest household income At the end of 2020, according to the Office for National Statistics, the average annual household income in Clapham Common West in the London borough of Wandsworth stood at £108,100, the highest such figure in the UK, about three times the national average. Yet, while the young professionals resident in the Georgian and Victorian streets of SW4 are undoubtedly well-remunerated compared with most of their peers living elsewhere, their disposable incomes are not as considerable as the figure suggests. Rather, the six-figure total reflects London housing costs forcing even high-flyers to share accommodation: accountant in one bedroom, IT whizz in the other, budding tax lawyer getting the short straw on the sofa, their aggregated salaries looking good on paper but not stretching far in practice. The average rent for a two-bedroom flat in Clapham is about £2,500 a month, which is barely affordable even on two decent pay packets. The average price of a two-bedroom flat in the same area, meanwhile, is almost £600,000. Once designated as a reliable barometer of lower middleclass opinion, it is a long time since a clerk or secretary could afford to buy in Clapham. Nonetheless, the hypothetical “man on the Clapham omnibus,” an unremarkable, passably well-educated, ordinary person, remains a concept in English law, when courts are trying to determine whether certain behaviour is reasonable or not. The phrase dates from the early 20th century, when buses were still called omnibuses and Clapham was still the quintessential commuter suburb, although ironically the mode of transport that bestowed this status was the railway. Canvass the views of any locals taking the No 35 bus to the City these days and one opinion is guaranteed: the cost of their accommodation feels not merely profoundly unreasonable, but borderline bonkers.
30 Friday October 13 2023 | the times World Republican squabble about Speaker leaves Congress in limbo United States David Charter Washington Rebel Republicans refused to unite behind their party’s choice for the top job in Congress as their infighting paralysed the US House of Representatives for a ninth consecutive day. Steve Scalise narrowly became the Republican nominee for Speaker in a secret ballot of members but more than a dozen of his colleagues said yesterday they would not back him in a vote against Democrats to take up the post. His predecessor, Kevin McCarthy, was removed when eight Republicans voted against him. Instead of conducting their factional disputes in public, as they did in January with 15 rounds of voting in the lower chamber to elect McCarthy, the 221 Republican representatives were called into a second private meeting in two days to air their differences. Frustration at the impasse and the spectacle of Republican divisions flared up behind closed doors when members turned on each other for plunging Congress into limbo, delaying votes on government budgets and emergency support for Israel. No business can be conducted without a Speaker to preside over it. “Clearly, this does not look good for the House or for the country,” Dusty Johnson, a Republican member from South Dakota, said. “We have incredibly tight margins, and frankly, some members who have a hard time getting to ‘yes’ on almost anything.” Michael McCaul, a Republican who chairs the foreign affairs committee, said that the squabbling was undermining democracy and security. “It’s very dan- gerous what we’re doing, I just wanted them to know that. We’re playing with fire,” he added. Hardline conservatives who back Jim Jordan — the judiciary committee chairman, endorsed by the former president Donald Trump, who lost to Scalise in the secret ballot — seemed determined to sink Scalise’s nomination, even though sources close to Jordan said he would now support his rival. “While this process will take more time, it is essential that we fight to get this decision right,” Andrew Clyde, a recalcitrant Jordan backer from Georgia, said. Chip Roy, a hardline member from Texas, told the radio host Glenn Beck that Scalise was part of “the swamp” — right-wing shorthand for everything detestable about Washington — as he vowed to continue backing Jordan, adding: “We’re in a game time decision. Who is going to be the face of the Republican Party?” Another adamant opponent of Scalise, Nancy Mace from South Carolina, who also voted to bring down McCarthy, said she could not back Scalise because he spoke at a forum founded by white supremacists in 2002 while he was a state representative in Louisiana. Scalise has denied knowing that the event was affiliated with neo-Nazis. Mace told CNN: “I personally cannot, in good faith, vote for someone who attended a white supremacist conference and compared himself to David Duke [a former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Steve Scalise is now scrambling for votes Klan]. I would be doing an enormous disservice to the voters I represent in South Carolina if I were to do that.” Scalise reportedly once called himself “David Duke without the baggage”. Carlos Giménez, a Republican member from Florida, said he would renominate McCarthy, saying: “I just choose not to participate in what I consider to be an injustice.” Ken Buck, a representative from Colorado, said he could not vote for either Scalise or Jordan because they refused to say clearly that President Biden won the 2020 election, claiming they were worried about paying a “political penalty” for going against Trump’s false claims the presidency was stolen. “If we don’t have the moral clarity to decide whether President Biden won or not, we don’t have the moral clarity to rule in this country, period,” Buck said. As he went into yesterday’s private meeting, Scalise said: “Let’s have this done in full view of everybody. No side deals. No secret meetings.” Like McCarthy, Scalise is finding it impossible to work with a band of refusniks on his own side because of his party’s narrow majority in the House. Jake Sherman, of Punchbowl News, tweeted: “Scalise’s woes are similar to McCarthy’s — but worse. The stakes are higher, the time frame is shorter, the opposition is larger and the House Republican Conference is angrier.” Having united to remove McCarthy last week, Democrats indicated they were open to discuss a compromise candidate. “It means partnering to reopen the House and changing the rules that were enacted in January that empower extreme members,” Hakeem Jeffries, the minority leader, said. Karine Jean-Pierre, Biden’s press secretary, said it was “not for us to fix” but up to the House Republicans to “figure this out”. She added: “It is certainly shambolic chaos. We want to see the chaos be done with so that we can deliver for the American people.” Putin makes rare trip outside Russia Kyrgyzstan Tom Parfitt President Putin arrived in the central Asian state of Kyrgyzstan yesterday, vowing to strengthen military ties and influence in a rare foray outside Russia. It was the first time this year that Putin had travelled beyond the country’s border or territories occupied by Russia in Ukraine. He is trying to shore up support in central Asia amid global opprobrium and sanctions over the war against Ukraine. “I expect that military and militarytechnical co-operation between Russia and Kyrgyzstan . . . will continue to strengthen and expand,” Putin said as he met President Japarov. He was speaking at the Kant military airbase, close to the Kyrgyz capital, Bishkek, where Russian troops have been deployed for the past 20 years, giving Moscow a platform for influence in the area. “This military outpost significantly contributes to boosting Kyrgyzstan’s defensive power and ensuring security and stability in the whole region of central Asia,” he said. The International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Putin in March over the illegal deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia, meaning a large part of the world is out of bounds to him. Kyrgyzstan is not a signatory to the ICC, and neither is China, which Putin is expected to visit next week for a Belt and Road forum. Today, he will attend a meeting in Bishkek of leaders from the Commonwealth of Independent States, a bloc of former Soviet countries. Rich in natural gas and other resources, central Asia is a zone of growing competition between Russia, China and the US. According to polls, many central Asians — particularly in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan — are against the Ukraine war but the region’s leaders are cautious of losing trade by criticising Russia and have mostly stayed silent. The ICC warrant has already obliged Putin to adapt his foreign travel. He planned to attend a summit in South Africa in August, but called off his visit at the last minute. Parading princess advances on throne P rincess Leonor, heir to the Spanish throne, has officiated at a national day ceremony for the first time, taking part in the annual military parade in Madrid (Isambard Wilkinson writes). The formalities underscored the increasing profile of the crown princess as she approaches her 18th birthday on October 31. Cadet Borbon, as she has been known since August when she embarked on a threeyear military career, stood alongside her parents, King Felipe and Queen Letizia, wearing dress uniform. She also took part in the besamanos, the handkissing ceremony, for the first time. It is held in the throne room of the royal palace in Madrid, in which the king and queen receive the greetings of their guests — some 2,500 representatives of the government and civil society. According to El Pais, it was “the Japan takes the axe to Japan Richard Lloyd Parry Tokyo Japan is to cut down and replant vast forests in an effort to overcome an epidemic of hay fever that causes misery to tens of millions of people every spring. The government has announced a programme that will target forests in “priority zones” close to the country’s biggest cities. It will invest in new log- ging technology and on therapies to alleviate kafunsho, the malady that affects two out of five people in Japan. “In order to ensure the safety and security of Japanese people, the government intends to take vigorous measures against hay fever in line with the package,” Fumio Kishida, the prime minister, said after the cabinet meeting at which the programme was agreed. The problem is caused by cedar and cypress trees, forests of which were
31 the times | Friday October 13 2023 ‘Crypto king’ claimed he could become president Page 32 Poland’s angry young rightwingers ready to become kingmakers A party whose leaders once made Nazi salutes in the EU parliament is doing well in the polls, says Paulina Olszanka symbolic presentation in society of [the princess] who, starting next month, will automatically become head of state in the event of the king’s absence”. On her 18th birthday the princess is due to swear loyalty to the constitution. Her grandfather, the disgraced former king Juan Carlos, is Princess Leonor wore dress uniform for the ceremony at which she stood with her parents, the king and queen expected to attend a private party after the event. It will be the first formal royal family gathering at which he will have been present since going into exile amid investigations into his financial affairs. At the military parade Pedro Sánchez, the Socialist caretaker prime minister, faced abuse for his planned amnesty deal for Catalan separatists in return for their votes after July’s inconclusive election. In preparation for eventually becoming commander-in-chief and head of state, Leonor will spend a year in each section of the armed forces. Five months ago she finished her baccalaureate studies at Atlantic College in south Wales. forests in battle against hay fever planted after the Second World War for use in construction. Rising labour costs soon made it cheaper to import foreign timber. Every spring pollen billows invisibly from the unharvested trees and drifts across densely populated cities. Approximately 40 per cent of the population — about 50 million people — suffered from pollen allergies in 2019, up a fifth from 20 years ago. Traffic pollution makes the situation worse in cities. Even Japan’s monkeys have been found to suffer from sneezes and watering eyes. Last spring’s pollen count was close to three times that of 2022. The DaiIchi Life Research Institute estimated that it suppressed consumer spending by 0.7 per cent because people stayed indoors to escape the pollen. Under the plans, cedar forests in the priority zones will be felled and replaced with varieties that generate less pollen. The idea is to cut down 70,000 hectares a year, especially in mountain areas close to Tokyo and Osaka. Over the next decade cedar forests are to be reduced by one fifth, and 90 per cent of those that remain will be of the low-pollen type. This, it is intended, will halve the amount of pollen produced in 30 years’ time. The plan also contains provision for promoting the use of immunotherapy medicines to ease the symptoms of allergy sufferers. Flames erupted as two men strutted across a stage, to a backing of rock music. The overwhelmingly young male audience were in raptures as they were showered with fake banknotes. “I like that they tell it like it is, rather than how it should be,” said Zygmunt Zlotopolski, 27, at a rally for Confederation, the upstart far-right party that has inflamed Poland’s election campaign. “They know what normal people want.” He added at the campaign event in Opole, in southern Poland: “We shouldn’t be forced to do anything we don’t want to do. I don’t want to be forced to drive electric cars. My children shouldn’t be exposed to mandatory LGBT programmes at school. I don’t mind if someone is gay, just don’t force it on me.” The men on stage were the leaders of Confederation, which threatens to upset the established political order in an election that may prove to be the country’s most divisive since the collapse of communism in 1989. The ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, which has been in power since 2015, is faced with a concerted opposition campaign stretching from the hard left to the centre right. If it is to cling on to power, it will need the backing of Confederation, catapulting the eccentric fringe group and its devout fanbase of angry young men into the role of potential kingmakers. This reinvention has been remarkably effective: over the summer Confederation peaked in the polls at third place with as much as 17 per cent of the vote, although it has since dipped. Some surveys have found that up to 50 per cent of men under the age of 40 plan to vote for the party, including 46 per cent of those under 21. Confederation is notorious for the extreme antics of its politicians, who have in the past argued that women should be kept on a chain in the kitchen, called for a national register of gay people to keep them away from children and made Nazi salutes in the European parliament. One of its leaders once issued a five-point plan calling for a Poland without “Jews, gays, abortion, tax or the European Union”. Lately, however, it has made a determined effort to clean up its act and rebrand itself as a protest party for voters frustrated with conventional politics and the economic system. It now trades on a heady blend of nationalism, small-government libertarianism and Brussels-bashing Euroscepticism. It has also tried to capitalise on increasing criticism in Polish society of the country’s support for Ukraine. “The pillars of our programme are traditional values, defence, civic freedom, especially participating in the free market, less regulation and defence of the sovereignty of Poland,” Krzysztof Krzysztof Bosak has become the focus of attention as his party gains support Latest polling Law and Justice 36.7% Civic Coalition 30.1% Third Way 10.5% The Left 10.1% Confederation 9.7% Source: Politico, Oct 11 Bosak, the leader of Confederation, said. “We are not a party that uses antisemitic rhetoric to draw in voters.” Kastor Kuzelewski, an analyst at the Polityka Insight think tank, said Confederation was profiting from an intensely individualistic streak among young people in Poland, although young women were more left-leaning. “They don’t want the state to interfere in their finances, but they also don’t want the state to interfere in their personal lives,” Kuzelewski said. “The difference is that the left with its reproductive rights serves women more, and the right serves the interests of men, which are more economic.” Many supporters of Confederation said they were overwhelmed by the burden of taxation and the rising cost of living, with inflation in Poland still hovering at about 10 per cent. “I have three children, a house, a mortgage. Instead of my life getting better and better, it’s getting worse and worse,” said Piotr Jockel, 39, a business owner from near Opole. “We can talk about social values, like abortion, LGBT issues, later. For now, my family, my existence is more important.” The party has not entirely shaken off its chauvinistic past and several skeletons have come tumbling out of its closet in recent weeks. Janusz KorwinMikke, the party’s 80-year-old founder, said last month that women should not vote. Grzegorz Braun, 56, another member of Confederation’s old guard, recently stormed into a meeting featuring a Holocaust historian and shut it down in order to defend “the Polish nation”. Bosak declined to condemn him, saying: “Although these are not the views of the party, everybody in our party is free to have their own views.” At the rally in Opole, Zlotopolski said: “If I choose to discipline my child, if I choose to beat my wife, whatever I choose to do, that is my personal matter, and not that of the state’s or anyone else’s.”
32 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times World ‘Crypto king’ claimed he could become US president United States Will Pavia New York Sam Bankman-Fried, the cryptocurrency exchange founder accused of diverting billions of dollars from customer accounts, felt that he had a 5 per cent chance of becoming president of the United States, his former girlfriend has told a court in New York. He also thought that his voluminous hair had been “very valuable”, both on the trading floor where it helped him get higher bonuses, and later as the face of FTX, Caroline Ellison said. Ellison, 28, is the star witness in the trial of Bankman-Fried, 31, who is accused of ordering her to divert billions of dollars from customers’ accounts on the exchange to fund risky investments and pay off loans to Alameda Research, the trading company he founded a few years before FTX. He has pleaded not guilty to fraud, Caroline Ellison is giving evidence in the trial of her former boss and boyfriend conspiracy and money laundering. Ellison said she had started working at Alameda in 2018 and that not long afterwards she and Bankman-Fried, her boss, “started sleeping together on and off” before dating from 2020 to the summer of 2021, and again from the autumn of that year until early 2022. In the summer of 2021 he made Ellison co-chief executive of Alameda, she said. He was “very ambitious”, she said, both for his companies and politically, spending millions on political donations. “He said at one point he thought there was a 5 per cent chance he would become president some day.” Bankman-Fried “scoffed” at some of Ellison’s testimony, prosecutors complained in a conference with Judge Lewis Kaplan, suggesting that it was an attempt to intimidate her. “The defendant has laughed, shaken his head and scoffed,” Danielle Sassoon said. “It’s possible it’s having a visible effect on her, especially given the history of this relationship, the prior attempts to intimidate her, the power dynamic [and] their romantic relationship.” Bankman-Fried was extradited to the US from the Bahamas, where his companies were headquartered, last December and was put under house arrest at his parents’ home in Alameda, California. In August he was jailed after he acknowledged leaking entries from his former girlfriend’s private diary to The New York Times. The judge said then that there was “probable cause to believe the defendant tried to tamper with witnesses at least twice”. In the conference with the judge this week, his defence lawyer, Mark Cohen, referred to Ellison’s apparent struggle at the start of her testimony to recognise Bankman-Fried in court — he had had a hair cut and was wearing a suit, rather than his usual T-shirt and cargo shorts — and said: “The notion that someone who she couldn’t even pick out in the courtroom . . . is trying to intimidate her is ridiculous.” Kaplan said he had not seen what the prosecutor described but asked Cohen to speak to his client, saying: “If he’s doing anything it should stop, and if he’s not then no harm, no foul.” Cohen has argued that BankmanFried was simply the founder of startup companies that went bankrupt when the cryptocurrency markets crashed. He said his client had warned Ellison to hedge Alameda’s positions and that she had not done so. “He relied on her and he trusted her,” he said. Cross-examined by Cohen yesterday, Ellison said that Bankman-Fried had talked to her about hedging. “I was more sceptical of that idea, we didn’t end up doing anything,” she said. She has said that Alameda’s failure had more to do with the billions Bankman-Fried used on venture capital investments, but has acknowledged that she had doubts about her ability to lead the company. The trial continues. Twin treasures Giant panda cubs that were born at Everland zoo in South Korea 98 days ago have been named Rui Bao and Hui Bao, meaning “wise treasure” and “shining treasure”. Their parents were a gift from President Xi of China in 2016 Tunisia rejects EU cash in migrants row Tunisia Tom Kington Rome A plan hatched by Italy and the EU to pay Tunisia to stop migrants sailing across the Mediterranean is in tatters after Tunis angrily sent back €60 million of EU money, accusing Brussels of treating it like a vassal state. Claiming that his country’s national sovereignty was a source of “dignity and strength”, Nabil Ammar, the Tunisian foreign minister, said the cash had been wired back on October 9, six days after it had been received. In a strong attack on Europe, Ammar said: “We have not started wars and we have not plunged humanity into world wars as you have done.” His outburst came after a statement this month by President Saied, the increasingly autocratic leader of Tunisia, that “the treasures of the whole world are not worth a single iota of our sovereignty”. The insults aimed at Brussels have imperilled an initiative launched by Giorgia Meloni, the Italian prime minister, and backed by Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, to pay Tunisia €105 million to fight migration, €150 million for direct budgetary support and lend it €900 million for macroeconomic aid. A deal struck in July envisaged money being spent on patrol boats and vehicles and resettlement programmes for migrants. Most of the 139,000 migrants who have sailed to Italy this year have come via Tunisia, including 14,700 Tunisians as well as thousands of sub-Saharans who use Tunisia as a departure point. This month Sudanese migrants arrived in Rome after crossing the Libyan desert and sailing from Tunisia. Despite the promises of aid made by Meloni and von der Leyen, migrant sailings from Tunisia increased sharply this summer amid allegations that Tunisian officials were waiting to see if and when the cash arrived. Migrants who were intercepted before they could set sail were dumped in the desert on Tunisia’s borders with Libya and Algeria, and 27 of them died. A European Commission spokesman said the return of the money would not affect the planned collaboration with Tunisia on combating illegal migration. Wine connoisseurs ‘in €95,000 con’ Student forces ministers France Adam Sage Paris Three alleged fraudsters have been arrested after a wine merchant was duped out of 20 of France’s finest bottles worth €95,000 when he was paid with fake bank notes. A gang, said to be of Serbian origin, got away with 18 bottles of Petrus, the claret from the Pomerol area of Bordeaux that is among the most expensive wines in France. Two men and a woman were arrested this month after a police investigation but detectives have been unable to lay their hands on the bottles. The inquiry comes with police in France and other EU states warning of an upsurge in so-called rip deals, which involve people offering to buy luxury goods in cash and then using fake notes. Vendors are often tempted to accept the cash offers to avoid paying tax, only to find themselves more out of pocket. The Petrus scam began in February when a man contacted a wine merchant in the Paris region to say that he was working for a Russian couple planning to spend a weekend in the capital, where they wanted to buy bottles of Petrus made with grapes harvested in 2000. The vintage is considered to be particularly remarkable and sells for at least €4,000 a bottle. The middleman seemed like a connoisseur, according to the merchant, who was quoted by Le Parisien but did not give his name. “He talked about a Petrus 2000,” the merchant said. “It’s not any old wine.” The middleman said the “Russians” initially wanted 12 bottles of Petrus before increasing the order to 18 along with two bottles of champagne. The merchant used his contacts to acquire the bottles, hoping to sell them for a profit. “That represented a colossal investment for me. But I didn’t imagine for a second that it was a fraud. The guy was clever. He had real knowledge.” The merchant met the “Russian” couple in a chic bistro in Paris, convinced that they were bona fide purchasers. He then exchanged the bottles in the back of his car for a bag of what he thought was €95,000. He quickly realised that the notes were fake but the bottles had already been wheeled away around a corner in a trolley. “I got out of the car and ran like a donkey in the road to find my bottles,” the merchant said, but with no luck. The three alleged gang members were held eight months later and are due to go on trial next month. to stub out cigarette rule David Chazan Paris A student has won a legal battle against the French government for the right to bring 800 cigarettes into the country when returning from other EU member states where they cost less. Officials had set the limit at 200 but the Council of State, France’s highest court for litigation involving the state, has ruled that it must comply with an EU regulation allowing 800. The court has given the government six months to change the rules. A packet of 20 cigarettes costs about €10 in France, compared with about €8 in Belgium, €6 in Italy and €5 in Spain. In the UK, the average cost after the March budget was £14.39, or €16.70. Sami Gam, 22, who has a law degree and is taking a postgraduate course in European studies, said the issue was not saving money but a question of principle. Before going to court, he wrote to Élisabeth Borne, the prime minister, saying the French rule breached EU regulations and was therefore illegal. He never received a reply. “If you run a red light, you can be fined because you’ve broken the law. In the same way, the state must obey the law,” said Gam, who represented himself. Travellers who return with more than 200 cigarettes are liable to pay excise duties and a fine of up to €750, and their cigarettes may be confiscated. In extreme cases, their car could be seized and they could be jailed for up to a year.
33 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Business world markets (Change on the day) Sep 14 21 28 commodities Oct 5 12 currencies Gold $1,872.18 (-3.11) Dow Jones 33,631.14 (-173.73) FTSE 100 7,644.78 (+24.75) Brent crude (6pm) $85.88 (-0.76) $ $ £/$ $1.2211 (-0.089) £/€ €1.1574 (-0.0015) $ ¤ 8,500 37,500 2,200 120 1.400 1.300 8,000 35,000 2,000 100 1.300 1.200 7,500 32,500 1,800 80 1.200 1.100 7,000 30,000 1,600 60 1.100 Sep 14 21 28 Oct 5 12 Sep 14 21 28 Oct 5 12 Sep 14 21 28 Oct 5 12 Sep 14 21 28 Oct 4 12 Sep 14 21 28 Oct 5 12 1.000 Day of shame for the City Ex-Barclays chief Jes Staley banned for ‘recklessly’ misleading regulators over links to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein KPMG fined £21m over Carillion audit fiasco Patrick Hosking, Ben Martin Jes Staley, the former chief executive of Barclays, will forfeit £17.8 million after misleading the bank’s board and regulators over his relationship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. In one of the biggest examples of potential rewards taken back from a listed company boss, Barclays said Staley would no longer qualify for a number of share awards and other bonuses promised to him but not yet paid out. The announcement came five minutes after the Financial Conduct Authority fined Staley £1.8 million and banned him from future senior roles in the City for “recklessly” misleading it and a “lack of integrity”. Staley, 66, has denied the findings, which are only provisional, and yesterday said he would appeal against the conclusions in the Upper Tribunal, where he plans to present his case. The FCA’s findings centre on a letter sent by the Barclays board to the regulator which was approved by Staley but contained misleading statements about his relationship with Epstein. The letter claimed that Staley did not have a close relationship with Epstein, while in reality Staley had described Epstein as one of his “deepest” and “most cherished” friends in emails between the two men, the authority said. The letter also claimed that Staley had ceased contact with Epstein “well before” he joined Barclays in 2015, the FCA said. In fact, Staley was in frequent contact with Epstein at the time of his appointment and gave him a number of updates on how the recruitment process was going. “While Mr Staley did not draft the letter there was no excuse for his failure to correct the misleading statements when he was the only person at Barclays who knew the full extent of his personal relationship with Mr Epstein and the specific timings of his contact with him,” the FCA said. The FCA report quotes from dozens of emails between Staley and Epstein, revealing their close relationship and latterly their need to cover it up. As Staley confides in Epstein about being approached for the Barclays job, Epstein responds, “better if you not email me. phone only”. In early October 2015, as Staley appears hopeful of landing the job, he writes in an email entitled “Friendship”, “You never wavered in our friendship these last three years. That means a lot too [sic] me [. . .] Cross your toes!!!” The FCA, which with the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority had already fined Staley £642,430 for improperly trying to unmask a whistleblower, began an investigation into whether he was fit and Robert Lea Industrial Editor Jes Staley with Larry Summers, the former US secretary of the Treasury, Jeffrey Epstein and the Microsoft founder Bill Gates. The former Barclays chief executive will miss out on millions in share awards and bonuses after a highly critical FCA report proper to be a senior banker in 2019. Staley left in November 2021 to fight the FCA’s provisional findings, which were not made public until yesterday. Epstein was found dead in a New York prison cell in August 2019 while facing sex-trafficking charges involving underage girls. He was given an 18month prison sentence in 2008 after pleading guilty to soliciting prostitution from a minor. It is the first significant ban handed down by the FCA under the senior managers regime, a set of rules introduced following the 2008 financial crisis to hold City bosses accountable for their actions. The fine, while substantial, is nevertheless dwarfed by the £76 million penalty imposed on Stewart Ford, the founder of Keydata, by the FCA in 2015. Therese Chambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA, said: “A CEO needs to exercise sound judgment and set an example to staff at their firm. Mr Staley failed to do this. We consider that he misled both the FCA and the Barclays board about the nature of his relationship with Mr Epstein. Mr Staley is an experienced industry professional inside today Staley’s deceit exposed by his own words and held a prominent position within financial services. It is right to prevent him from holding a senior position in the financial services industry if we cannot rely on him to act with integrity by disclosing uncomfortable truths about his close personal relationship with Mr Epstein.” The Prudential Regulation Author- ity said: “We support the FCA’s decision announced today against Jes Staley. It is imperative that senior managers act with integrity and are open and co-operative with the regulators.” Last month Staley settled with JP Morgan, his former employer which was suing him over his relationship with Epstein. The US bank also agreed to pay the US Virgin Islands, where Epstein had a home, $75 million. Staley said yesterday: “I have worked tirelessly over the last 43 years and have genuinely supported many people/ social causes, where others might not have done so. I am very disappointed by the FCA’s decision and I will continue to challenge it.” Barclays said Staley would no longer receive a bonus award in respect of the 2021 performance year, his unvested share awards with a face value of £15.7 million and other unvested bonus awards with a face value of £2.1 million. KPMG, the accountancy firm, has been fined a record £21 million for “exceptional” failures in audits of Carillion, whose collapse in 2018 was the biggest ever in British corporate history. It is the ninth time KPMG has been fined by the Financial Reporting Council, the accounting regulator, in a little over two years, with penalties reaching a total of £47 million. Those previous failures have included a £13 million fine for its work on Silentnight and fines of more than £3 million each relating to Rolls-Royce, Quindell and Conviviality. The FRC said KPMG’s failings over Carillion, the £5 billion construction and facilities management company which was a favoured contractor of multiple government departments, were “exceptional” and undermined public trust in the independent auditing of companies. KPMG had to pay the £5.3 million costs of the inquiry. Peter Meehan and Darren Turner, the firm’s two lead partners on audits of Carillion, were fined £350,000 and £70,000 respectively. Meehan had a previous ten-year exclusion, giving up his licence to practise as a chartered accountant, ratified. The FRC found in the audits of Carillion from 2013 to 2017 “an unusually large number of breaches” of basic audit practice; that Meehan’s work was “seriously deficient”; that he and his team “failed to gather sufficient appropriate audit evidence to enable it to conclude that the financial statements were true and fair”; that the firm did not exercise “adequate professional scepticism”; and failed to challenge or scrutinise Carillion’s management. In response, Jon Holt, chief executive of KPMG, said: “Our audit work on Carillion was very bad over an extended period. Some of our former partners and employees simply didn’t do their job properly. I am upset and angry that this happened at our firm.” Elizabeth Barrett, FRC executive counsel, said: “Many of the breaches involve failing to adhere to the most basic audit concepts such as to act with professional scepticism and to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence.”
34 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Business Need to know 1 Jes Staley, the former chief executive of Barclays, will forfeit £17.8 million in bonuses after misleading the bank and regulators over his relationship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The announcement came as the Financial Conduct Authority fined Staley £1.8 million and banned him from senior City roles for “recklessly” misleading it and a “lack of integrity”. 2 Rishi Sunak’s weakening of green policies has made it harder to hit targets for netzero emissions, the government’s advisers say. The Climate Change Committee concluded that future energy bills and motoring costs were likely to be higher because of the changes. 3 A south London district has become the first in the UK where average household incomes exceed £100,000, as rising house prices force young professionals to share accommodation. The average household income for Clapham Common West was £108,100, according to the Office for National Statistics, three times the national average. 4 KPMG, the accountancy firm, has been fined £21 million for “exceptional” failures in audits of Carillion, whose collapse in 2018 was the biggest in British corporate history. It is the ninth time KPMG has been fined by the Financial Reporting Council, the accounting regulator, in a little over two years. 5 The UK economy returned to growth in August after the wet weather in July hit output, prompting economists to roll back the chances of a recession. GDP rose by 0.2 per cent in August, according to the Office for National Statistics. 6 The Restaurant Group, the operator behind the Wagamama chain, has agreed to a £700 million takeover at 65p a share from the private equity firm Apollo Global Management after coming under intense pressure from activist investors. 7 Television production companies including the BBC and ITV face an investigation over possible cartel-like behaviour in their hiring of freelancers. The Competition and Markets Authority will investigate “in relation to the purchase of services from freelance providers, and the employment of staff”. 8 A record summer for easyJet has given Britain’s busiest airline the confidence to embark on a multibillion-pound investment in new aircraft, restore dividend payments and set a target to more than double annual profits to £1 billion by 2029. 9 Annual sales at Boots, the high street chemist, grew strongly last year, boosted by demand for skincare products and its essentials range. 10 Wise, the international money transfer business, has lifted its full-year profit guidance thanks to booming customer numbers and higher interest income on customer balances. Staley’s deceit exposed Close relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was laid bare in hundreds of emails, Ben Martin and Patrick Hosking report “He is a man of enormous integrity,” proclaimed John McFarlane, the chairman of Barclays, as he announced Jes Staley as the board’s choice of chief executive in October 2015. But integrity, according to the Financial Conduct Authority yesterday, was exactly what Staley lacked as it set out across 79 pages its decision to fine him £1.8 million and ban him from any future senior job in the City for misleading his own board and regulators about the nature of his relationship with the convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. the alleged falsehoods The crux of the FCA’s case against Staley lies in two claims made about his relationship with Epstein in a letter sent by Barclays to the regulator in October 2019. While Staley himself did not draft the letter, he “discussed, on several occasions, the information that Barclays might require in order to prepare a draft response” to the watchdog. Staley also “confirmed that he had reviewed the letter and was comfortable with it”, the FCA added. Yet the FCA found that the letter was misleading in two respects, “each of which was material”, and Staley had “recklessly approved” it. The first was the statement that Staley “has confirmed to us that he did not have a close relationship” with Epstein. The second was the claim that Staley’s last contact with Epstein “was well before he joined Barclays in 2015”. ‘i miss you’ Staley first met Epstein in either 1999 or 2000, when he was head of JP Morgan Chase’s private bank, of which the latter was a client. Evidence compiled by the FCA sheds light on the depth of their subsequent relationship, with “extensive” emails sent between them that were “written in a notably warm tone”. In June 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty to soliciting a minor and soliciting a prostitute, resulting in him receiving an 18-month jail sentence. Between July 2008 and December 2012, Staley and Epstein exchanged more than 1,100 emails, and these “suggest that they spoke often on the telephone, as well as meeting in person”, the FCA said. They were followed by almost 600 more between January 2013 and October 2015, when Staley was hired by Barclays. In an email sent while Epstein was serving his sentence in July 2008, Staley wrote: “I miss you. The world is in a tough place. Hang in there.” In another sent in March 2011, Staley wrote: “You have paid a price for what has been accused. But we know what u have done for us. And we count you as one of our deepest friends.” There were also numerous visits. Staley went to an island Epstein owned in the US Virgin Islands three times, travelling on one occasion in 2005 or 2006 on Epstein’s private jet along with members of Staley’s family, the FCA said. The last visit was in April 2015. In January 2010 Staley anchored his boat at a marina near Epstein’s island and in November 2009 he stayed at the paedophile’s New Mexico ranch. These trips “were for no obvious business or professional purpose”, the FCA said. Staley also joined a birthday dinner for Epstein in Florida, and regularly visited the latter’s home in New York. appointment to barclays Between July and October 2015, Staley discussed with Epstein his recruitment to the top job at Barclays, the FCA’s report revealed. In one email, Epstein told Staley that it was “better if you not email me. phone only”. Staley later sent blank emails on August 21 and September 4 with subject headings asking Epstein to call him. On October 4, Staley wrote to Epstein telling him to “Cross your toes!!!” and on October 8 he informed Epstein that the Barclays nominations committee had approved his appointment, saying: “I should have the contract by the weekend. We’re very close.” The FCA concluded that these discussions demonstrated that “at the time, Mr Staley felt able to confide in Mr Epstein in relation to this very significant matter regarding his career”. journalistic inquiries The FCA also found that Staley was misleading when approached by journalists about his relationship with Epstein shortly after being named chief executive. Lawyers working for Barclays drafted a statement to Newspaper A, which is believed to be The Mail on Sunday, saying Epstein was “at best an acquaintance”. While Staley asked for the phrase to be changed to “they are certainly not close friends”, the original statement still went out. Staley, when told, replied “no worries”. He also failed to correct an inaccurate statement that “Mr Staley and his wife Debbie. He had denied discussing the Barclays job with Epstein As well as communicating by email, Jes Staley visited Jeffrey Epstein on the ‘I owe you so much’ The extensive email communications between Jes Staley and Jeffrey Epstein (which continued while the latter was serving his custodial sentence), written in a notably warm tone, included the following messages from Staley to Epstein. November 1, 2009 “I owe you much. And I deeply appreciate our friendship. I have few so profound.” January 31, 2015 “The strength of a Greek army was that its core held shoulder to shoulder, and would not flee or break, no matter the threat. That is us.” August 13, 2015 “The counsel you have given [an individual connected to Staley] over the years has been a gift of great friendship.” October 4, 2015 “You never wavered in our friendship these last three years. That means a lot too [sic] me.” Staley confirms that he has had no contact with Mr Epstein nor discussion of this matter [his impending appointment] this year”. academic concerns The FCA also examined how in September 2019 Staley dealt with inquiries from an academic institution, of which he sat on the governing body, about his links with Epstein. Talking points prepared by the bank based on information supplied by Staley included the untrue statements, “At no time after his conviction in 2008 did I allow [Epstein] any connection with any aspect of my professional life” and “I had limited contact with him post his conviction”. The report did not name the academic institution. Staley is an alumnus of Bowdoin College in Maine and was on its board of trustees until 2021. Bowdoin was approached yesterday for comment. ‘very serious failure of judgment’ The regulator concluded that Staley had not only failed to correct the letter that Barclays had sent to the watchdog in October 2019, but that his handling of the October 2015 press enquiries and the presentation he gave to the academic institution in 2019 were evidence that he “consistently did not accurately set out the nature and extent” of his relationship with Epstein to Barclays. This “represented a very serious failure of judgment by Mr Staley and involved a failure to act with integrity”.
35 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Business Higgins by his own words Gullible should pay price Board under scrutiny for believing chief’s story Ben Martin For Barclays directors past and present, the Financial Conduct Authority’s report on the way Jes Staley misled them and the regulator over his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein will make for uncomfortable reading. It may also raise questions over whether the bank’s board, and other executives, did enough to investigate what Staley had told them was true. One of the conclusions made by the FCA was that Staley “recklessly approved” a letter sent by Barclays to the watchdog in October 2019 that included the misleading claim his last contact with Epstein had been “well before” joining Barclays in 2015. The regulator, which did not criticise the board in yesterday’s report, noted that an unidentified Barclays board member had told it that “at the time the letter was drafted, they did not know precisely when Mr Staley and Mr Epstein had last met”. A senior executive at the bank, who again was not identified, also told the FCA “that they never asked, and did not recall discussing, whether Mr Staley and Mr Epstein remained in contact by telephone or email after April 2015”, the Nigel Higgins, the Barclays chairman, supported Staley during the FCA’s investigation paedophile’s island, and in January 2010 docked his yacht in a marina nearby A long, steady climb to the top ends with a sudden fall Profile I t has been a relatively sudden downfall for James Edward Staley, affectionately called Jes from childhood, the son of the boss of a big chemicals company and the grandson of the boss of a chain of variety stores (Max Kendix writes). Born in Boston, Massachusetts, in December 1956, he graduated from Bowdoin, a small liberal arts college, with a degree in economics. Then he spent three decades rising to the top of what was to become JP Morgan Chase, including as a founding member of its equity business and head of the private banking division, before becoming chief executive of the asset management branch from 2001 to 2009 and heading the investment bank for the following four years. Staley was long tipped as a successor for Jamie Dimon as chief executive. Rumours also swirled that Staley would switch to Barclays when Bob Diamond was forced out after the Libor-rigging crisis in 2012. Neither would materialise — Dimon is still there and Barclays opted for the safer Antony Jenkins, already heading its high street operations, and not tied to a JP Morgan contract that would be financially and therefore politically hard to break. That barrier fell in 2013 when Staley left JP Morgan after a shakeup to become managing partner at BlueMountain Capital Management, starting at Barclays two years later. He had several run-ins with the Financial Conduct Authority. In 2018, Staley was fined almost £650,000 and ordered to repay £500,000 of his bonus after asking Barclays’ internal security team to unmask a whistleblower. In 2017, Staley caused a rift between Barclays and KKR, the American private equity firm, when he backed his brother-in-law, apparently in a personal capacity, in a legal dispute. Staley met his wife Debora Nitzan Staley while working in South America. “I was Unitarian Boston American and she was Jewish Brazilian Sao Paulo . . . I was her parents’ worst nightmare,” he said. They have two daughters. A Democrat, he would hold fundraisers in an apartment near the Guggenheim museum in Manhattan, when not relaxing in his Long Island mansion or on his yacht, the Bequia. Staley perhaps uncharacteristically played down its status. He said: “it’s not a big yacht . . . but it is a big boat.” regulator said. A Barclays spokeswoman did not comment. The FCA’s investigation into Staley’s dealings with Epstein was not his first brush with regulators, although he retained the board’s backing throughout. In 2018 he was fined £642,430 by British regulators and Barclays was fined $15 million by the New York State Department of Financial Services over an attempt to unmask a whistleblower who made allegations about another Barclays banker who was a friend of Staley. In 2017 Staley attracted controversy for backing his brother-in-law in a dispute with KKR, the private equity firm that was also a Barclays client. Staley was hired when the Barclays board was led by John McFarlane, who was chairman between 2015 and 2019. McFarlane was succeeded by Nigel Higgins, the former veteran of Rothschild, the investment bank. Higgins, who remains chairman, took charge of the Barclays board in May 2019, meaning the FCA’s investigation into Staley’s links to Epstein was one of his first big challenges. One of his first big decisions was to support Staley. In February 2020, when the bank revealed the FCA’s inquiry to the City, it insisted that Staley had the “full confidence of the board” and that it believed its chief executive had been “sufficiently transparent”. Other influential figures on the Barclays board in 2019, when the FCA started its investigation, included Crawford Gillies, a City grandee who at the time was the senior independent director but has since stepped down. business commentary Alistair Osborne S ome things can’t be expected of company boards — that their default position, say, is that the chief executive is an inveterate liar. Even so, people expect a bit of professional scepticism, not least from the directors of Barclays bank. So, how did they fail to apply any over the grotesque Jes Staley affair? The bank’s former boss, who the board credulously backed to the hilt, has been fined £1.8 million by the Financial Conduct Authority and banned from financial services for allegedly misleading the watchdog — a decision rubber-stamped by the Bank of England, even if it didn’t seem to know who he was, issuing a statement on “Jes Stanley”. Still, by now, most people are familiar with the bloke. Staley, who plans an appeal to the Upper Tribunal, is the one who posed the Barclays board, chaired by Nigel Higgins, an ethical dilemma odd even by the bank’s usual standards: not whether he used to hang out with a convicted paedophile but whether he gave directors the full lowdown on what went on. Staley never denied that, as the head of JP Morgan’s private bank, he’d had a professional relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, the child sextrafficker found dead in jail. And it didn’t stop Barclays from hiring him in October 2015, with Higgins’s predecessor John McFarlane calling him “a man of enormous integrity”. Yet alarm bells should have been ringing when the FCA and Prudential Regulation Authority asked the board in October 2019 “what it had done to satisfy itself that there was no impropriety” in the boss’s relations with Epstein. By then Staley had been fined £642,400 by regulators for trying to unmask a whistleblower. The board had seen a cache of emails between the pair from Staley’s time at JP Morgan, one with the line from him: “That was fun. Say hi to Snow White”. And the board knew he’d visited Epstein outside prison in 2008 while he was still serving an 18-month sentence from a Florida court for “procuring a minor for prostitution”, and again in April 2015, when Staley and his wife dropped in, on their yacht, at Epstein’s Caribbean retreat. Yet, read the FCA’s 79-page decision notice, and the best the “board member A” and “board member B” seem to have done is ask Staley a few questions and then sign off on his version of events. Who they are, no one is saying: Higgins and the former senior independent director Crawford Gillies maybe? Whatever, take the issue of whether Staley really did stop seeing Epstein “well before” he joined Barclays, as he claimed. Non-exec A admitted that was accepted without knowing “precisely” when the pair “had last met”. Did no one think to find out? As the FCA notes, the board then asked Staley to confirm its letter to the regulator was accurate. But he “recklessly” failed to correct “misleading statements”. Despite the board’s shambles of an investigation, it went on to declare in February 2020 that Staley had been “sufficiently transparent” and retained their “full confidence”. It instantly looked a terrible call, as pointed out here at the time under the headline “Enough is enough: it’s time to go”. Worse, Higgins doubled down on it in November 2021 when the regulators forced Staley out of the bank. Barclays said: “The board is disappointed at this outcome.” And now the FCA has unearthed a treasure trove underlining just how gullible the board was: emails from Staley to Epstein when he was in his Florida clink saying “I miss you”; another likening their friendship to the “strength of a Greek army”; another calling him one of his “most cherished” friends. Plus more meetings and the news that he told Epstein he was getting the Barclays job before it was announced. The board is docking £17.8 million of Staley’s deferred pay. But what about theirs? Five directors who made 2020’s fateful decision to back him are still there, including Higgins. There should be a price for such obvious failure. EasyJet’s flyer B ack in the day, only one thing would have greeted the news that easyJet was buying 157 new Airbus aircraft: an eruption at Mount Stelios. But nowadays Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou speaks for only 15 per cent of the shares, while he is also too busy with his main venture easyBully: abusing the courts to pick on anyone caught using the e-word. So, the airline’s boss Johan Lundgren can be confident that shareholders will approve the fleet expansion key to his growth plans. They’ve come on the back of record summer profits (report, page 39), reinstating the dividend and what he called an “ambitious roadmap” to reach £1 billion profits a year pre-tax within “three to five years”. Still, it’s a big step up. This year’s guidance is only a midpoint £450 million. And, while cheap on eight times forecast earnings, the shares fell 7 per cent to 406¼p: well below pre-Covid heights of £12.70. Lundgren will need more than new planes to reach cruising altitude. Apollo tucks in P ortions are getting smaller at The Restaurant Group. It was only in March 2021 that it tapped investors for £175 million at 100p a share. And now look, it’s recommending a bid at 65p, worth £506 million or £701 million including debts, from Apollo (report, page 37). Yes, the buyout firm famous for abortive missions at Morrisons, Pearson and Wood Group, which has somehow landed in a bowl of Wagamama soup. The timing looks cute, just when TRG is shipping out Frankie & Benny’s, Chiquito and Ken Hanna (the chairman, not another hasbeen brand). Apollo’s tied up the two troublemakers, Oasis and Irenic, together with 19.9 per cent, who’ve pledged to accept unless a rival bids 71½p. But, this is no blow-out meal, as implied by shares up 36 per cent to 65¾p. No need to tuck in yet. alistair.osborne@thetimes.co.uk
36 V2 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Business Economy returns to growth in August Jack Barnett Economics Correspondent The UK economy returned to growth in August after the wet weather in July delivered a blow to output, prompting economists to roll back the chances of a recession. GDP expanded by 0.2 per cent in August, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), in line with City analysts’ expectations. Although output has returned to growth, August’s expansion does not recoup losses generated in July, when the economy contracted by a worsethan-feared 0.6 per cent, mainly due to unusually wet weather in the month deterring consumer spending and construction activity. Across the three months to August growth came in at 0.3 per cent. Experts tend to focus on the quarterly estimates as they provide a more accurate snapshot of the strength of the economy. Thomas Pugh, an economist at RSM UK, said the return to expansion in August should “allay fears that the UK is slipping into a recession”. Darren Morgan, the ONS’s director of economic statistics, said: “Our initial estimate suggests GDP grew a little in August, led by strong growth in services, which was partially offset by falls in manufacturing and construction.” Services businesses, which generate about £2 in every £3 of Britain’s GDP, were the main contributors to the economy’s summer turnaround, providing growth in the sector of 0.4 per cent. Construction output, plagued by a reduction in housebuilding in response to the Bank of England raising interest rates aggressively, contracted 0.5 per cent in August. Industrial production was also weaker. Britain’s economy has outperformed analysts’ expectations this year, dodging a much-touted recession, but GDP is growing at a historically slow rate, leading to fears that the country is in the early stages of a prolonged period of stagnant economic activity. This week the International Monetary Fund said that the UK would be the worst-performing economy next year among the G7, growing only 0.6 per cent. Germany is poised to be the laggard this year, contracting 0.5 per cent. The UK economy has grown faster than Germany and France since the Covid crisis, with GDP 1.8 per cent larger compared with the final months of 2019, revisions to ONS estimates showed last month. Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has performed the worst since the pandemic, with output just 0.2 per cent higher. Inflation, which has gripped households and businesses for two years, fell unexpectedly to 6.7 per cent last month and is tipped to decline to around 5 per cent by the end of the year. Slowing price growth alongside wage increases of more than 8 per cent have strengthened families’ living standards, a trend which economists think will power an economic recovery. Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, the consultancy, said: “Our base case remains that GDP rises gradually in Q4 and into 2024. Prices now are rising substantially less quickly than wages, and households’ disposable incomes will be squeezed only gently by higher interest rates.” Others questioned that assessment, highlighting that a deluge of homeowners had yet to shift on to new mortgages with much more punitive rates. Unemployment also rose quicker than expected to 4.3 per cent, according to the latest data. Ruth Gregory, deputy UK economist at Capital Economics, said: “The drag from higher interest rates will continue to grow.” Rising prices give Federal Reserve a headache Decision on rates finely balanced, says Bank chief Jack Barnett Mehreen Khan Economics Editor Marrakesh Inflation in the United States held steady last month having risen in August, complicating the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decisions over the coming months. The rate of price growth in the world’s largest economy was unchanged at 3.7 per cent annually in September, above Wall Street expectations of a fall to 3.6 per cent, according to the latest data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics yesterday. Monthly inflation cooled to 0.4 per cent from 0.6 per cent, in line with expectations. Core inflation, which removes volatile food and energy prices and is seen as a more accurate gauge of underlying price pressures, dropped to 4.1 per cent from 4.3 per cent on an annual basis. The US economy has grown much more quickly than its peers in the G7 group of wealthy nations since the pandemic. Hiring is booming and a 336,000 increase in September payroll numbers smashed forecasts. Unemployment is low and wage growth strong, boosting consumer spending and economic growth. Although strong growth is good for Americans’ living standards, it complicates the Fed’s task in bringing inflation back to the 2 per cent target. The central bank is trying to discourage consumer spending and business investment in order to squeeze the labour Hiring is booming with a 336,000 increase in September payroll numbers. Unemployment is low and wage growth strong market. That, in turn, should put downward pressure on prices and wages. Today’s inflation overshoot, alongside the strong payroll figures, may steer the Fed towards leaving monetary policy in restrictive territory for longer. Analysts are convinced that the Fed has delivered its final interest rate rise and will adopt a strategy of leaving borrowing costs at their peak for some time to quash inflation. Jerome Powell, chairman of the central bank, and the rest of the federal open market committee (FOMC) have lifted the federal funds rate to a range of 5.25 to 5.5 per cent, the highest point in 22 years. Andrew Hunter, deputy chief US economist at the Capital Economics consultancy, said: “A more rapid decline in inflation and weaker eco- nomic growth [will] result in rates being cut much more aggressively next year than markets are pricing in.” Minutes of the FOMC’s last meeting in September, released on Wednesday, showed that all participants agreed to proceed carefully in setting monetary policy at coming meetings, adding that incoming data was consistent with inflation softening. Lenders fear surge in defaults by end of the year Jack Barnett Default rates for mortgages and credit cards by households are expected to rise by the end of the year, according to a Bank of England survey of lenders. The range of UK banks that have seen secured loans default over the past quarter reached its highest level since 2009, during the credit crunch after the financial crisis, the Bank’s data showed yesterday. The net percentage balance of defaults on secured loans to households jumped from 30.9 per cent to 43.3 per cent over the period, indicating that defaults had increased sharply across the banking sector. Defaults on secured lending are expected to rise further in the coming quarter, with banks anticipating an eventual net balance of 47.4 per cent. Secured loans are a form of credit which often entitle banks to the underlying asset in the event of the borrower defaulting. Mortgages are the most common form of secured lending, with the property backing up the loan. An aggressive campaign of interest rate rises by the Bank’s monetary policy committee has tightened financial conditions, with average mortgage rates at their highest level in 15 years. Rates on car loans and other forms of credit have also risen sharply. The Bank’s base rate stands at 5.25 per cent. Homeowners on floating rates have shouldered the bulk of the strain from the Bank’s tightening cycle as their contracts are tied to changes to the UK’s base rate, which has been increased 14 times since December 2021. So far, fixed-rate mortgage holders have been broadly shielded, although a large share of this group will roll on to new deals with higher rates over the next 12 months, raising the chances of more defaults. Ashley Webb, UK economist at Capital Economics, the consultancy, said: “The recent rise in the default rate is consistent with the economic weakness we’ve been seeing in the housing market.” He added: “Higher interest rates are not only weighing on house price affordability for new borrowers, they are also stretching the budgets of households with existing mortgages as their fixed deals end and are forced to refinance at higher rates.” Squeezed affordability and signs of growing defaults are likely to deter potential buyers from the housing market. House prices have dropped at their quickest pace since 2009, according to Nationwide and Halifax. The Bank’s data showed that demand for mortgages over the past three months dropped sharply to a net balance of minus 54.9 per cent from a positive balance of 52.7 per cent in the previous quarter. While moderating, mortgage demand is forecast to remain soft at a balance of minus 28.4 per cent over the next three months. The Bank of England’s next interest rate decision will be “finely balanced” as policymakers need to judge whether further monetary tightening is needed to contain inflation, the central bank’s chief economist has said. Huw Pill, a member of the rate-setting monetary policy committee (MPC), said members were weighing whether holding rates at 5.25 per cent was enough to bring down inflation, after the Bank kept the cost of borrowing steady last month. He said it would not be quick to cut rates, even if inflation came down faster than expected. “In the UK, inflation has been too high, it remains too high, and we need to return it to target. A lot of [the monetary tightening] has yet to come through, and whether we have done enough or have more to do is a finely balanced issue,” Pill told an audience in Marrakesh, on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Last month the MPC kept rates on hold for the first time since November 2021, citing falling inflation and a cooling labour market as reasons to pause the fastest tightening cycle since the Bank gained independence in 1997. Markets still expect one more rate rise from the Bank this year, with rates peaking at 5.5 per cent, and staying at high levels for most of next year. Pill said it was “premature” for investors to start pricing rate cuts when inflation was above the 2 per cent target. “The idea that the [monetary] policy stance will turn on a sixpence seems to be overdrawn,” he said. Pill said the Bank was monitoring three indicators to judge the strength of inflationary pressures: wage growth, the state of the labour market, and inflation in the services sector, a proxy for private sector wages. “They are not necessarily causal drivers . . . but things we can see in a timely and meaningful fashion and interpret. They are indicators rather than causes.” Latest inflation figures for October will be released next week, and economists expect another drop in headline annual consumer price inflation from 6.7 per cent to about 4.8 per cent, which would be the lowest since October 2021. The MPC will make its next decision early next month and will provide a new set of forecasts for growth and prices.
37 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Business Harry Wallop Wagamama owner backs takeover in £700m deal Make do and mend offers a handy fix to get our cities working again ‘‘ A few weeks ago my mother asked if I knew anyone who could mend her shopping basket. This makes it sound like a stylish Provençale over-the-shoulder number. It is not. It is a stiff, wicker basket on wheels with a long handle: a more rustic version of the devices that clichéd TV news reports use to illustrate a piece about pensioners. “Let’s have a look at it,” I said. It was completely bust. The metal axle between the wheels had snapped and sheared off from the basket itself. I sucked my teeth like a builder examining a damp patch and told her that she needed to bin it and get a new one. “But it was your grandmother’s,” she said, explaining that her mother-in-law had bought it in the late 1950s from a charity called the Lord Roberts Memorial Workshops, set up in 1914 to give employment to injured servicemen. “That means this basket has seen nearly 70 years’ service. You could buy a lighter, waterproof shopper on wheels from Argos for £25,” I said Googling away. My mother looked at me as if I had spat in her tea. To be clear, she could well afford a new Argos one. Money was not her objection, but her hatred of waste of any sort (which leads her to freeze cheese rinds until she has enough to whip up a soufflé) means she was determined that this basket would be rescued. And when she is determined she is quite difficult to say no to, so I took the broken parts home and told her I would try my best. There is an increasing awareness of the environmental impact from our consumption society and companies are starting to cash in, be it John Lewis, which now allows you to rent (rather than buy) clothes, and Nothing, a UK technology brand, which has produced a smartphone with a battery that it promises can be easily replaced once it wears out. But both these examples are online-only. You send off the dress or gadget to be given a second life. The economics of so many services now only make sense if they are digital and remote but I needed an analogue solution for an analogue problem. I then remembered that while walking the dog I had passed a sign pointing to a welder. Which seemed improbable as my north London neighbourhood’s level of gentrification is so advanced that there are not one but three delis selling sourdough at £5 a loaf. Crown Welding, I discovered, is a portal into another age. It is run by Leroy Anglin and his brother Michael as a rare example of light industry in the city centre. Leroy reckons that when his father took on the site in 1984 there were five welders within walking distance. Next door was a silversmith, who mended jewellery; along the road was a glazier and glasscutter and opposite there was a woodworker, which I remember: it was turned into (yet another) café selling flat whites only a couple of years ago after the rent shot up. How have you survived, I asked? The answer is easy: he owns the site, down an alleyway between two residential buildings. It is large, about the size of a tennis court, amid some of the most expensive property in the UK. Surely a developer has offered you a fortune to sell up? Leroy said: “Yes, the whole time, but then we’d have to move out to the middle of nowhere and that’s what all these other businesses have done and many of them have failed.” Why? Because then your profitability is entirely in the hands of a landlord. Plus, “We’re a drive-by and a walkby business.” Most of their work is railings, staircases, structural beams but they also do small jobs, repairing coffee tables, bicycles and prams: work generated from passing traffic. Environmentalists have embraced the concept of 15-minute cities, neighbourhoods where people can reach all the crucial services within a quarter of an hour’s walk or cycle: a GP surgery, schools, parks, food shops. It is a lovely idea for those young and fit enough to cycle. The idea, however, has been co-opted into our culture wars because many opponents believe that 15-minute cities are a way to limit our freedom and imprison us in our homes. That is clearly nonsense, but it is true that many proponents of 15-minute cities believe that the only way to achieve them is to dramatically reduce cars and vans on city roads. Carla Francome, an ecocampaigner, recently told Radio 4: “In 1949 there were less than 30 billion miles driven on Great Britain’s roads. By 2021 it was nearly 300 billion . . . we’ve tried freedom for drivers and it hasn’t worked.” If we want to reverse our cities back to 1950, when a mere 14 per cent of households had a car, fine but for that to truly work we have to embrace another aspect of that era: light industry sharing the high street with retailers. Welders, glaziers, furniture makers and invisible menders need to be part of the mix as much as a deli or café but some of these businesses occasionally need vehicles to make deliveries or allow their customers to collect. Also, for 15-minute cities to really work, local authorities need the buy-in of high street landlords, who will nearly always choose the certainty of a reliable rent from the likes of Tesco Express or Greggs over a craftsman who can breathe life back into used products. Leroy mended my mother’s basket with great skill for £30, more than a new Argos shopper. I did not resent the price, though, because, as he said: “Winning all those brownie points from your mother will be priceless, won’t it?” He was right. If only urban planners, and landlords, realised that city centre workshops like his were just as valuable as another Costa. ’’ Harry Wallop is a consumer journalist and broadcaster. Follow him on Twitter @hwallop Dominic Walsh The restaurant operator behind the Wagamama chain has agreed to a £700 million takeover from the private equity firm Apollo Global Management after coming under intense pressure from activist investors. The 65p-a-share bid for The Restaurant Group (TRG) values the share interests of Andy Hornby, the chief executive, at about £1.5 million to £2 million. He directly owns shares worth almost £700,000 and has restricted share plan awards, not all of which will vest. Hornby, best known for his spell at the head of HBOS when it had to be rescued by Lloyds Banking Group, is expected to stay on at TRG as chief executive, potentially earning several times the amount he has made since he joined in 2019. Apollo’s bid values the group at about £506 million, although after including debt that rises to £701 million. The price represents a premium of 67 per cent to the average price of 39p for the 12 months up until the bid, and a premium of 34 per cent to Wednesday’s close of 48p. News of the bid, which has been recommended by the TRG board, sent the shares sharply higher, up 17½p, or 36 per cent, at 65¾p, slightly ahead of the offer, suggesting that the market had not given up hope of a higher bid. Some analysts declared the bid to be too low. TRG had been under protracted pressure from a group of activist shareholders, which culminated in last month’s announcement that it had agreed to sell what was left of its loss-making leisure division to a rival. Big Table Group took the business off its hands after TRG agreed to pay £7.5 million. That sale, due to complete at the end of this month, will leave TRG with its successful Wagamama, Brunning & Price and concessions businesses. TRG has about 380 restaurants and pubs and about 60 franchises around the world. Apollo said that it had “closely followed TRG over many years and believes that TRG is a high-quality and leading company in the casual dining market with an attractive portfolio of concepts and brands and an experienced management team with a clear vision and strategy for the future”. Apollo managed to win over TRG after raising the initial offer three times. It assured the board that its intention was to continue growing the business.
38 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Business Business Email briefing Inflation may be starting to come down but the UK economy is still struggling to grow. Despite the latest decision to hold interest rates, markets remain wary has never been more important. Get our latest economics and business coverage at 8am and 12.30pm each weekday, direct by email from the Business Editor Richard Fletcher and the Business News Editor Martin of further increases and are Strydom. questioning whether the cost of borrowing will stay Sign up at higher for longer. Access to home.thetimes.co.uk/ the latest news and analysis myNews Watchdog inquiry into TV companies T elevision production companies including the BBC and ITV face an investigation over possible cartellike behaviour in their work with freelancers (Max Kendix writes). The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it would investigate the companies “in relation to the purchase of services from freelance providers, and the employment of staff ”, saying it had “reasonable grounds” to suspect breaches of competition law. The CMA named seven companies, which mostly specialised in scripted content. They include Hat Trick, which has produced Derry Girls and Father Ted; Hartswood Films, which co-produced the Sherlock series; and Tiger Aspect, which produced series of Bad Education and Peaky Blinders. The move comes under section 25 of the Competition Act 1998, which aims to Trader can appeal against conviction for rate-rigging Alex Ralph A former Barclays trader found guilty of rigging a key interest rate benchmark can appeal against his conviction following a review by the independent body that investigates possible miscarriages of justice. The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) has referred the case of Carlo Palombo to the Court of Appeal after the referral in July of similar convictions of Tom Hayes, a trader who became the face of the scandal. Palombo, 44, was convicted of conspiracy to defraud by rigging the Euribor (Euro Interbank Offered Rate) benchmark interest rate between January 2005 and December 2009. He was found guilty in March 2019 at Southwark crown court and sentenced to four years’ imprisonment. The commission’s decision to refer the case comes after a US court last year overturned the convictions of two former traders who were found guilty in similar circumstances. Helen Pitcher, chairwoman of the CCRC, said: “We concluded that there was a real possibility that the Court of Appeal would overturn the conviction of Tom Hayes in light of the legal approach to the definition and operation of the Libor rules taken by the US Court of Appeal in January 2022. The CCRC recognised that Mr Palombo’s case was not dissimilar to Mr Hayes’s case.” Hayes, 44, who worked at UBS and Citigroup, was found guilty in 2015 of multiple charges of conspiracy to defraud by rigging the London interbank offered rate (Libor). He was sentenced to 14 years, reduced to 11 on appeal, and was released in January 2021 having served about half of his term. Palombo said he was “delighted that Tom Hayes and I will both have the chance to overturn our unjust convictions. The past nine years have had a devastating impact on my life.”
the times | Friday October 13 2023 39 2GM Business High-flying easyJet targets £1bn profit after record summer Robert Lea Industrial Editor stop the “prevention, restriction or distortion of competition”. The act gives the CMA the right to fine organisations up to 10 per cent of global turnover. The informationgathering stage of the initial inquiry will end in March, when it will assess the evidence. Broadcasters often rely heavily on freelancers such as camera operators and sound engineers, who have long complained of seemingly flat rates across companies for skilled jobs. Sports programming is subject to a separate CMA inquiry, launched last year. The BBC said it noted the announcement and would “fully cooperate with the CMA’s inquiries”. ITV said: “ITV is committed to complying with competition law and The seven companies being investigated by the competition watchdog include Hat Trick, which has produced Derry Girls to co-operating with the CMA’s inquiries.” Red Planet and Sister, also named by the CMA, both said they were cooperating. Tiger Aspect and Hartswood did not respond to requests for comment. Virgin wins royalties claim against US train operator Jonathan Ames Legal Editor A judge has backed Virgin Group’s claim for unpaid royalty fees from a US train operator when a 20-year branding deal was ditched after just 18 months. But in a ruling at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, the judge awarded the British company less than the amount of damages it was seeking. Sir Richard Branson’s company sued Brightline for $250 million of royalties that Virgin Group claimed it was owed from a contract signed in 2018. The hearing at the High Court involved allegations by Brightline, which is owned by Fortress, a New York investment management company, about Branson’s reputation. Lawyers for the American company told the court that Branson was known to be a “tax avoider” who wanted £500 million in state-funded bailouts during the pandemic. They argued that the British tycoon’s image had irrepara- bly tarnished Virgin’s brand and that the company’s claim should have been dismissed because Brightline was justified in terminating the deal on reputation grounds. But the judge, Mark Pelling KC, rejected Brightline’s defence, saying that the Americans had “failed to prove that the [Virgin] brand had ceased to be a brand of international high repute” at the time it served its notice to terminate the deal. Pelling was particularly critical of the evidence from Ken Nicholson, a managing director at Fortress. He described Nicholson’s written evidence as “substantially exaggerated” and that under cross examination, the executive had conceded “the true scope of what occurred and its significance”. The judge awarded Virgin Group $115 million in damages — although he agreed to list a subsequent hearing at which a further $90 million in damages could be awarded. A record summer for easyJet has given Britain’s busiest airline the confidence to embark on a multibillion-pound investment in new aircraft, restore dividend payments and set a target to more than double annual profits to £1 billion by 2029. The airline’s recovery since the end of travel restrictions 18 months ago comes as its latest filings reveal that it is 34 per cent more expensive to fly easyJet than before the pandemic. Before the formal publication next month of its accounts for the financial year to the end of September, the carrier said it would report pre-tax profit of up to £670 million for the past quarter, making it the most profitable summer season in the airline’s nearthree decade existence. That takes to £870 million the pre-tax profits between April and September, again a record spring-summer for easyJet. Those boom times, however, only offset a heavily lossmaking winter and pre-tax profits for its financial year will come in at up to £460 million. While that is better than the pre-pandemic year of 2018-19 when it reported £427 million, it is short of its record year of 2017-18’s £578 million. The recovery of easyJet has two sources: the relaunch of package holidays, which accounted for more than a quarter of its annual profits; and the cranking up of fares and fees charged to passengers. During the summer , easyJet passengers were on average paying £105: £75 Share price £16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 Source: Factset 2019 20 0 21 22 23 on basic air fare and £30 on add-ons such as seat selection, priority boarding and baggage charges. That is nearly 11 per cent more than in the summer of last year. The carrier has emerged from the pandemic as a much more expensive airline than when it went into it. Over the past 12 months, average easyJet revenues per passenger came in at £89. In 2018-19, before the pandemic, that figure was £66, an increase in the intervening years of more than 34 per cent. While its great European short-haul rival Ryanair is carrying far more passengers than before the pandemic, easyJet remains some way behind. The 82.7 million passengers of the past financial year is 14 per cent down on the record 96.1 million prior to Covid-19. Johan Lundgren, easyJet’s chief executive, said: “We have delivered a record summer with strong demand for easyJet’s flights and holidays with customers choosing us for our network, value and service.” He set a new target of hitting record annual pre-tax profits of £1 billion within three to five years, with £250 million of that from its holiday business. To achieve this he aims to reduce winter losses by utilising aircraft and staff more efficiently, and to introduce more fuel-efficient, larger planes. A mixture of existing and new orders with Airbus means the airline expects to receive 315 new aircraft over the next ten years, as well as replacing its existing fleet of 318 planes. With many of those new planes being larger A321 aircraft, the average number of passengers per plane will rise by 2034 to 200 passengers from the present 170. The company, which has a market value of £3.3 billion and is a member of the FTSE 250, said it would be reinstating dividend payments. Shareholders can expect a distribution of 10 per cent of after-tax earnings for the year just closed, rising to 20 per cent in the present financial year. Announcing a 15 per cent increase in the number of flights this autumn, Lundgren said: “We are seeing good booking momentum in the current quarter as we serve Europe’s most popular destinations.” Shares in easyJet, which have been drifting down from a high of 528p in late spring and which are trading at just a third of their value before the pandemic, gave up 7 per cent in trading yesterday, down 30½p at 406¼p. National Express pulls into the slow lane as dividend is axed Simon Freeman Mobico, the recently rebadged parent company of National Express, saw almost a third wiped off its market value after it lowered its full-year profit outlook and scrapped the final dividend. Shares dropped by as much as 33 per cent yesterday, to the lowest level since the coach and train operator was floated on the London market in 1992, sharply reversing a gradual recovery in its share price since the pandemic. The sell-off came after bosses admitted that rising costs meant the company’s path back to profitability would take longer than previously expected. Full-year operating profit for 2023 is expected to come in up to 15 per cent lower than a previous forecast of £205 million, at about £180 million. As a result, it has appointed advisers to sell off its lucrative American school bus business next year, and is to shut two of five depots servicing its private hire business in the UK. The company has also identified annual savings worth £30 million and is targeting another £20 million of cuts. Ignacio Garat, chief executive of the FTSE 250 group, expects these “decisive actions” to accelerate debt reduc- tion and put the company back on track to profitability. He said the board was “keenly aware of the importance of dividends to shareholders and the decision to suspend the final dividend was not taken lightly”. The profit downgrade came despite a 10 per cent rise in group revenue year on year as passengers returned to work, school and travel across most of its 11 global markets, which span Europe and America. In the UK, revenues from its scheduled coach business were up 26 per cent in the three months to September 30, compared with the same period last year, and were now back to 96 per cent of pre-Covid levels. Mobico noted that 12 per cent of passengers who had switched to coach services during the summer’s train strikes had since booked again on nonstrike days. The private hire and contract side of the business has reRevenues from Mobico’s UK scheduled coach business are near pre-Covid levels bounded less strongly, and is failing to meet profitability thresholds: as well as closing two as yet unnamed depots, the ongoing return potential of the entire division is under review. In the US, Mobico expects profits to take a hit of up to £10 million from higher-than-expected costs of recruiting and training drivers as it reinstates the yellow school bus routes suspended during lockdowns. It said that selling off this division, which accounted for about £680 million of annual revenues, would “accelerate our deleveraging whilst enhancing the group’s financial flexibility”. Analysts at Peel Hunt revoked their Buy rating “given the latest disappointment”, and said: “We are sceptical that sufficient value can be realised from [US] student bus without a significant improvement.” Shares in Mobico, which since 2020 have lost 80 per cent in value, fell 23½p, or 27.5 per cent, to 61½p.
40 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times Business Skincare products give Recruiter encouraged chemist a healthy glow by demand for temps Alex Ralph Annual sales at Boots, Britain’s biggest high street chemist, grew strongly last year, boosted by demand for skincare products and its essentials range, amid upheaval at its US parent company and uncertainty over its future ownership. Retail sales rose 11.7 per cent in the three months to the end of August, its fourth quarter, with a tenth consecutive quarter of market share growth. Sales were up 12.5 per cent over the year. Boots said the number of shoppers was ahead of the wider market and volumes increased. Its major city centre stores, shopping centres and travel stores had the biggest footfall growth, the retailer said, and sales via its website rose 28.9 per cent in the final quarter. Quarterly skincare sales jumped by almost 25 per cent, while “value remains a key focus for shoppers” with sales of its “everyday” essentials label also up by a quarter. Seb James, managing director of Boots and the former boss of Dixons Carphone, said he was “encouraged to see continued strong performance as the work that we have done to expand our ranges, drive value and innovate in beauty seems to be resonating extremely well with customers”. The upbeat trading statement comes as Boots this summer moved to shut 300 shops over the next year as part of a cost-cutting drive by Walgreens Boots The positive trading update comes as the retailer plans to close 300 shops Alliance (WBA), its New York-listed parent company and one of the world’s largest pharmacy operators. Boots, which has about 52,000 staff, confirmed yesterday that the shop closure programme “progresses as planned”. It is reducing its estate from 2,200 to about 1,900 shops with a focus on outlets “in close proximity” to others. The company has already shut more than 200 shops since 2019. Boots, founded in Nottingham in 1849 when John Boot opened a shop selling herbal remedies, has been part of Walgreens since 2014. Its Illinoisbased owner shelved plans to sell Boots in June last year, citing a “dramatic change” in market conditions. Walgreens announced this week that it had appointed Tim Wentworth as its chief executive. He will take over on October 23, replacing Rosalind Brewer, who abruptly stepped down last month after two and a half years, during which its valuation halved. In June Walgreens downgraded its annual profit forecasts, hitting its shares, and pledged to cut costs and pursue profits “with a strong sense of urgency”. It said that trading had been hit by consumers searching for discounts amid higher inflation and a drop in Covid-19 vaccinations and tests, and warned that the impact was likely to extend into its 2024 financial year. In its results yesterday Walgreens forecast a lower-than-estimated adjusted profit per share for 2024 of $3.20 to $3.50, compared with analyst forecasts of $3.72 per share. Its 2023 earnings per share were down a fifth at $3.98. Ginger Graham, interim chief executive, said: “Our performance this year has not reflected WBA’s strong assets, brand legacy, or our commitment to our customers and patients. In just six weeks, we have taken a number of steps to align our cost structure with our business performance, including planned cost reductions of at least $1 billion, and lowered capital expenditures by approximately $600 million.” Shares in Walgreens closed up strongly with a gain of 7 per cent, or $1.59, to $24.19 in New York last night. Lottie Hayton A bias towards filling temporary over permanent positions has shielded the global recruitment group Hays from the worst of the slowdown afflicting its London-listed rivals. Net fee income at the FTSE 250 employment agency, which specialises in IT, accountancy and finance roles, dropped by 7 per cent in the quarter to September 30 compared with the same period last year. A 15 per cent drop in fees from filling permanent vacancies was blamed on market conditions and lengthening recruitment rounds. The fall was partially offset by a steady market for temporary and contract hires, which account for 58 per cent of the group’s business. Last week, rival recruitment firm Robert Walters posted a 17 per cent decline in net fee income for the same period. On Tuesday PageGroup issued a profit warning after reporting a 10.5 per cent dip in gross profit in its third quarter. Hays was founded more than a century ago and is headquartered in London with 12,000 staff operating in 33 countries. Germany generated a third of net fees, followed by the UK and Ireland at 21 per cent and Australia and New Zealand with 13 per cent. In the UK, fee income for the three months to the end of September was down 11 per cent on a like-for-like basis. A sharp 16 per cent drop-off in the private sector was driven by a 20 per cent fall in technology recruitment. Public sector income, however, was up by 4 per cent overall, boosted by strong demand for school staff following the end of the summer holidays. Germany had a 7 per cent increase in fee income overall, while Australia was down by 17 per cent. James Hilton, the group’s financial director, said: “The problem is volumes, as lower client confidence means those hiring are more choosy and run more 11% Fall in UK fee income for the three months to the end of September interview rounds. On the candidate side there is also more hesitation.” In welcome news to the Bank of England, which has warned of salary growth fuelling a second wave of inflation, he said there had been a noticeable cooling in pay offers to attract new starters. New staff are typically taking an average pay bump of about 5 per cent, against the 10-15 per cent premiums being offered last year, he said. Shares in Hays, which have fallen by 13.5 per cent this year, were down ¾p, or 0.78 per cent, to close at 102p.
41 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Business Accounting watchdog reveals full extent of KPMG ‘textbook failure’ Carillion’s accounts signed off as ‘true and fair’ six weeks before the audit was complete, Robert Lea reports Seven years after the collapse of Carillion with debts of £7 billion and the loss of 3,000 jobs, the full extent of KPMG’s audit shortcomings has been laid bare in what the accountancy regulator called a “textbook failure”. A report published yesterday on the failings of KPMG’s work by the Financial Reporting Council found that the 2016 accounts of Carillion were signed off as a true and fair representation by Peter Meehan, the KPMG partner on the audit, fully six weeks before the firm had finished the audit. In reality, according to the FRC report, all the KPMG audit work through from 2013 to 2017, the year Carillion imploded, finally winding up in the hands of the Official Receiver in early 2018, was a nonsense. KPMG, which has ended up paying £26.3 million in fines and settling the costs of the FRC, is offering no defence, having settled a £1.3 billion legal claim by Carillion’s liquidators, though the details of the settlement have not been disclosed. Jon Holt, chief executive of KPMG, knows what an audit should look like, as the leader of one of the most important accounting firms in the world, former head of its audit practice and a senior player at KPMG all the way through the Carillion fiasco as head partner at the firm’s Manchester office. kpmg reaction “These findings are damning,” said Holt of the FRC’s ruling. “I am very sorry that these failings happened in our firm. “It is clear to me that our audit work on Carillion was very bad, over an extended period. In many areas, some of our former partners and employees simply didn’t do their job properly. Junior colleagues were badly let down by those who should have set them a clear example, and I am upset and angry that this happened at our firm. Carillion had a turnover of £5 billion a year. It failed with £7 billion of liabilities, costing 3,000 staff their jobs and affecting 75,000 people in its supply chain. It is the largest corporate failure ever dealt with by the Official Receiver and cost the taxpayer more than £150 million. And KPMG’s failings in the oversight of Carillion’s finance were not just any old foul-up. In a litany of damning judgments across an astonishing array of failures in its audits of Carillion, the FRC said the company’s deficiencies were “exceptional”. The FRC said it had found “an unusually large number of breaches” of basic audit practice that ensured “that this very large public company, which had multiple large contracts with public authorities, was not subject to rigorous, comprehensive and reliable audits in the three years leading up to its demise”. It found that Meehan’s work was “seriously deficient” and that he “failed to respond to numerous indicators that Carillion’s core operations were lossmaking and that it was reliant on shortterm and unsustainable measures to support its cash flows”. KPMG has been handed a record fine over “exceptional” failures in accounting work for the collapsed construction group “As an auditor, I simply cannot defend the work that we did on Carillion. As the chief executive of KPMG, I am determined that we face up to this failure, and I am absolutely committed to continuing to work with my colleagues across the business to ensure that nothing like this can happen again.” Fine words but the question the accountancy profession’s regulators must begin to ask is whether they bear any relation to reality. kpmg failures Quindell. Silentnight. Conviviality. Revolution Bars. Rolls-Royce, Luceco. The Works. Eddie Stobart Logistics. These are eight further cases which the FRC has concluded just over the past two years in which the regulator has fined KPMG for accounting failures. The fines in total topped £26 million — swollen now to £47 million after the Carillion case — and including the previous record penalty of £13 million in what the FRC called the “deeply troubling” conduct of the firm during the sale of Silentnight. But this is not just about KPMG. That this is one of the darkest days for a profession whose controversies and failings are legion is evidenced by comments on the ruling by the FRC’s executive director, Elizabeth Barrett. “The credibility of reports and opinions issued by auditors in connection with financial statements depends upon beliefs concerning the integrity, objectivity and independence of auditors and the quality of the audit work performed,” she said. “The number, range and seriousness of the deficiencies in the audits of Carillion during the period leading up to its failure was exceptional and undermined that credibility and the public trust in audit. “Many of the breaches involve failing to adhere to the most basic and fundamental audit concepts such as to act with professional scepticism and to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence.” carillion collapse Carillion was not just any old construction or facilities management company. It had its tentacles in several government departments, was in charge of building three major hospitals when it failed, and was building the infrastructure in Doha for what would become the 2022 Qatar World Cup. frc ruling Its ruling states KPMG “failed to gather sufficient appropriate audit evidence to enable it to conclude that the financial statements were true and fair” because it failed to consider “adequately or at all” whether Carillion’s internal accounting was correct or reliable. It said KPMG’s audit work was done without “adequate professional scepticism” and failed to challenge or scrutinise Carillion’s management. Because of the 20-year length of KPMG’s role as Carillion’s auditor and its importance to the firm because of the size of its fees charged, the FRC questioned whether KPMG as a supposedly independent auditor had lost its objectivity. That appeared to be evidenced by, the FRC indicated, KPMG’s lack of “a rigorous and robust approach” to the oversight of Carillion. Of Meehan, who during a previous parliamentary inquiry into his conduct had insisted he and his team had done the “best job possible”, the FRC concluded he lacked integrity. Wise cashes in on rising interest rates Superstitious house buyers Patrick Hosking Financial Editor Wise, the international money transfer business, has lifted its full-year profit guidance thanks to booming customer numbers and higher interest income on customer balances. Shares in the London-listed fintech firm closed up 4½p, or 0.6 per cent, to 724½p after the second-quarter update, valuing it at more than £7.4 billion. However, there was still no verdict from the Financial Conduct Authority which is investigating the co-founder, chief executive and controlling shareholder Kristo Kaarmann, who was named as a deliberate tax defaulter by HM Revenue & Customs in 2021. Wise said it now expected to grow income in the year to March 31, 2024, by 33-38 per cent from last year’s £964 million. It had previously guided to growth of 28-33 per cent. The number of active customers in Wise chief Kristo Kaarmann is being investigated by the City watchdog the quarter to September 30 grew by 32 per cent to 7.2 million. Revenue was up by 22 per cent to £258.7 million. One major boost was the increase in income earned on customer balances as market interest rates soared. Wise earned a gross 3.8 per cent on balances, now worth £12.3 billion, while lifting in- terest payments to clients more modestly — from 0.9 per cent to 1 per cent. Wise specialises in cross-border payments by undercutting the mainstream banks. Founded in 2011, it was floated on the London Stock Exchange in 2021. “Our business performance, progress against our mission and the investments we’re making give us great confidence, and we’re pleased to signal this with our upgraded financial guidance for full-year 2024,” said Harsh Sinha, chief technology officer, who is interim chief executive while Kaarmann takes paternity leave. However, he warned that transaction volume growth had slowed to 8 per cent with less activity from high-value customers. In the quarter Wise launched a service for expatriates in China. It also resumed taking on new business customers in 13 European countries where it had paused recruiting clients while upgrading capacity. drive down prices at No 13 Lara Wildenberg It is just a superstition that breaking a mirror or putting new shoes on the table brings bad luck but homeowners living at No 13 really are worse off. Houses numbered 13 have the lowest average property value compared with others on the same street, research by Rightmove shows. The study by the property portal, which analysed valuations of more than ten million houses numbered 1 to 100, suggested that some buyers were influenced by their superstitions. Houses with the number 13 had an average valuation of £354,793 which was more than £5,000 lower than the average across the survey of £360,126. Edward Thomson, director at Strutt & Parker Sloane Street, the estate agency, said: “Whilst thankfully it is only a very small minority of buyers that are disaffected in this way, there will always be those who avoid 13. “If living at No 13 doesn’t faze you it is possible you could find yourself buying against a smaller proportion of the market and therefore do a better deal, but only if you’re lucky of course.” According to the study, there are almost double the number of houses numbered 14 than 13 across Britain as many roads skip the number. Homes with the number 1 typically had the highest valuation at an average of £393,690, nearly 11 per cent, or about £40,000, higher than homes numbered 13. Similarly, homes with the number 7, often considered lucky, had an average valuation of £365,590, 3 per cent more than homes numbered 13.
42 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Business Markets news in brief Dominic Walsh Tempus Buy, sell or hold: today’s best share tips Poundland coining it Something is cooking in hospitality the restaurant group Interim revenue £467.4m Half-year pre-tax profit £2.3m Taste test Share price 70p W sse Market cap £17.3 billion T Earnings per share 166p he weather has not been kind to SSE so far this financial year. The Perth-based group’s wind farms and hydroelectric plants have generated significantly less power than expected: 19 per cent below plan in the six months to the end of September (Emily Gosden writes). While SSE still expects to deliver earnings per share in line with its guidance of more than 150p this financial year, this remains “subject to weather conditions”. A lack of wind is not the only +31 60 50 40 30 20 Source: FactSet hen Fulham Shore accepted a £93.4 million takeover bid from Tokyo-listed Toridoll and Capdesia, the private equity firm, in April, there were some City folk who thought David Page had sold the Franco Manca and Real Greek operation too cheaply. One investment banker put it succinctly at the time: “Fulham Shore have thrown in the towel and are selling out at less than five times enterprise value to ebitda [earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation].” Seven months on and the same conversation is taking place, only with different protagonists. Apollo Global Management is paying a multiple of nine times ebitda for The Restaurant Group (TRG), yet a number of analysts have played the “too cheap” card. Even accepting that like-for-like comparisons are tricky, the wider market appears to be sceptical, having sent the shares sharply higher to 65¾p, above the 65p-a-share offer price. Tim Barrett, at Numis, the broker, said that the multiple being paid by Apollo was “relatively low for assets of this quality”, particularly Wagamama. He said the noodle bar chain stood out for its marketleading consumer satisfaction scores, Like-for-like sale (%) (34 weeks to August 27) +9 +10 10 2023 Jan Apr Jul Oct 0 -1 Wagamama Pubs Leisure Concessions consistently superior like-for-like sales, rollout potential both in the UK and America, and a growing international franchise business. Greg Johnson, from Shore Capital, argued that 65p failed to reflect the quality of the estate, the freehold asset backing and the progress the company had been making in improving its margins and reducing its debt. He said that, on a three-year view, these factors could be worth at least 100p to 120p (although the chances of TRG retaining its independence for three years look remote). The company’s exit from the underperforming leisure division — mainly Frankie & Benny’s and Chiquito Mexican restaurants — has removed a poison pill that would potentially have prevented suitors from having a tilt at the company. Some bankers who specialise in hospitality are questioning whether this could be the start of M&A in the sector after a decidedly fallow period — with the exception of Fulham Shore, of course. Sam Fuller, headwind. The company has benefited over the past two financial years from the energy crisis that inflated gas and electricity prices, boosting profits for its gas storage sites and gas-fired power stations. The crisis has eased, contributing to the forecast cooling in SSE’s profits, with its earnings per share guidance down from the 166p per share it made last year. The group says that “the lower price environment and more stable market conditions are expected to continue for the remainder of this financial year”. While fluctuations in the weather and other prevailing conditions are an inevitable variable in the business, they are of less significance than the lasting political and policy climate. SSE plans to invest up to £40 billion in low-carbon energy infrastructure by 2032, most of it in Britain: upgrading its electricity networks, building new wind farms and a pumped hydro storage site, and decarbonising its gas plants. Most of these proposed investments would be backed by regulated or inflationlinked support mechanisms. Progress has generally been slower than hoped, with planning gridlock and inadequate financial support on offer. But there are signs that things could improve. Despite rowing back from some of his net-zero commitments last month, Rishi Sunak vowed to reform planning ADVICE Avoid WHY Although a higher bid is possible, hospitality investors might do better casting their net wider managing director of Houlihan Lokey, said that with sector stalwarts like TRG and Loungers trading near all-time low multiples, despite strong numbers, it was “very hard to get a buyer to pay a multiple of eight for a business when those two businesses were trading on nearly half that”. Fuller added that with Fulham Shore and now TRG both being bid for, it was “finally starting to feel like buyers are calling the bottom in terms of valuations”, while the outlook for the sector was also on the up. “I don’t think it will lead to the floodgates opening but I do think 2024 will finally see deals in the sector start to move again.” The quality of the assets being targeted and their impressive growth potential is the key to the awakening of M&A. Credit to Andy Hornby, TRG chief executive, for recognising that he needed to perform some drastic surgery to cut out the poorquality, loss-making restaurants. By doing so, he knew he was turning a mixed bag of a business into a sharply honed operation that was likely to attract the attention of suitors. Barrett, at Numis, joined up the dots in his note on TRG yesterday, arguing that the situation demonstrated that buyers were finally being attracted to leisure and hospitality businesses trading on depressed multiples on the back of the pandemic. He said TRG provided read-across to quality multi-site businesses such as Mitchells & Butlers, Hollywood Bowl or Ten Entertainment Group. rules to speed up delivery of energy infrastructure. And if next year heralds a Labour government, as the polls suggest it will, prospects look even brighter for the company: Sir Keir Starmer has vowed to “rewire” Britain and is sticking by heroically ambitious plans to decarbonise the power sector by 2030. Achieving that is likely to require everything SSE hopes to build, and more. ADVICE Buy WHY Long-term growth prospects outweigh short-term headwinds PRICES Major indices London Financial Futures © 2021 Tradeweb Markets LLC. All rights reserved. The Tradeweb FTSE Gilt Closing Prices information contained herein is proprietary to Tradeweb; may not be copied or re-distributed; is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely; and does not constitute investment advice. Tradeweb is not responsible for any loss or damage that might result from the use of this information. Commodities The owner of Poundland says its annual revenue has grown by almost a fifth despite a “challenging market backdrop”. Pepco Group, which also owns Pepco and Dealz in Europe, reported full-year revenues of €5.6 billion, up 17.7 per cent, with an 8.4 per cent rise at Poundland Group. In a trading update, the group said it had opened a record 343 shops in the fourth quarter, with 668 opened over the year. The total number of shops in Europe is 4,629. Shares in the Warsaw-listed group closed up 12 per cent at 21.34 zloty. Clougherty to lead IEA Tom Clougherty has been appointed as the new executive director and Ralph Harris fellow of the Institute of Economic Affairs. Clougherty, 38, is currently research director and head of tax at the Centre for Policy Studies. He was executive director of the Adam Smith Institute from 2009 to 2012 and held roles at the Reason Foundation and Cato Institute in the US in 2012-18. He replaces Mark Littlewood, who will become senior economics fellow. Scampi merger is off Britain’s biggest scampi supplier has scrapped plans for a merger with a rival after the Competition and Markets Authority launched an investigation claiming it could raise prices and lower quality. Whitby Seafoods, which has almost 90 per cent of the UK breaded scampi market, will not acquire Kilhorne Bay Seafoods, based in Northern Ireland. “Sadly the resources required to engage in a CMA phase 2 investigation are out of all proportion” to the deal’s benefits, the company said. Ikea assembles savings Ikea has promised to pass on cost savings to customers by cutting prices over the next year as pressures in its supply chain start to ease. The Swedish retail company said that it had a “clear intention” to reduce prices this financial year, ending next August. It came as the UK arm of the business announced an 11.9 per cent rise in turnover in the past financial year to £2.5 billion with 38.5 per cent of its sales made online, up from 35.8 per cent a year earlier.
the times | Friday October 13 2023 43 2GM Markets Business Builders crumble as house prices continue to fall Helen Cahill Market report I nvestor fears of a slowdown in the property market were apparent yesterday amid signs of house prices falling and a drop in construction of new homes. Taylor Wimpey was the biggest faller on the FTSE 100 index as investors reacted to news of house prices falling at the fastest rate since 2009. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors reported that “house prices remain on a downward trajectory”, prompting Taylor Wimpey’s shares to decline by 5¾p, or 4.9 per cent, to 111p. Barratt Developments lost 4½p, or 1 per cent, to close at 425½p, while Persimmon, which has been relegated to the FTSE 250 index, was down by 27p, or 2.5 per cent, to £10.35. Smaller company shareholders Bad weather hits sales at N Brown T he online fashion group N Brown, which counts Davina McCall and Amanda Holden as brand ambassadors, is the latest retailer to blame the fickle British summer for slowing sales (Lara Wildenberg writes). The London-listed group, which owns clothing brands including JD Williams, Simply Be and Jacamo, reported a statutory loss before tax of £4.1 million for the 26 weeks to September 2. Revenue fell by 10.4 per cent to £297 million due to “challenging market conditions including unseasonal weather through spring and July to August” which meant fewer shoppers changed their wardrobes. Steve Johnson, chief executive, said: “The weather has been a little bit difficult to predict this year. If you want to sell transition stock into autumn you need the sun to go away . . . so I could do with a bit more rain.” Despite the seasonal difficulties, Johnson said N Brown was on track to meet full-year expectations and customer satisfaction had risen. He said: “We’re feeling reasonably positive, as positive as you can in a difficult market, looking forward into 2024.” The Manchesterbased retailer, founded in 1859, was one of the first to post products directly to customers. Since Johnson took over nearly five years ago, he has moved the business away from catalogue orders into ecommerce, which benefited trading during the pandemic. Shares in N Brown, down by a quarter this year, fell another 2.8 per cent to 19½p. The day’s biggest movers Gold/Precious metals Wall Street report Indices were lower as bond yields rose and data showed consumer prices rose more than expected last month, clouding the Federal Reserve’s rate outlook. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 173.73 points, or 0.5 per cent, to 33,631.14. were also spooked when SIG, the building materials merchant, issued a profit warning. The company said its maximum underlying profits were on course to reach just £55 million compared with previous hopes for up to £70 million. The group has been affected by a decline in new home building across the UK, France and Germany, prompting its shares to drop by 3p, or 8.8 per cent, to 31p. On Aim, Marks Electrical Group had a difficult day of trading as investors learnt its high-end home installation service was running at a higher cost than expected. The group has been taking market share, but analysts warned the run-rate of installations slowed in August and September. The shares closed 6p, or 5.5 per cent, lower at 103p. However, the broader picture was much more positive as London’s leading stock market was buoyed by hopes that the Bank of England’s actions on interest rates may be working. The FTSE 100 was up 24.75 Money rates % energy Supply fears send gas soaring G as prices surged by 15 per cent to hit highs not seen since February on continued concern over a potential squeeze on liquefied natural gas supplies globally. UK benchmark month-ahead prices topped 134p per therm, having ended last week at less than 100p, mirroring rises seen in the Dutch benchmark contract. Europe has become increasingly reliant on LNG since Russia curtailed pipeline gas supplies. On Monday, Israel shut its Tamar field in the Mediterranean, Europe is more dependent on LNG since the Ukraine war fearing it could be struck by Hamas rockets. This raised concerns that Israel could have to limit its exports to Egypt and Jordan, restricting Egyptian LNG exports and increasing Jordanian LNG points, or 0.32 per cent, to 7,644.78. The FTSE 250 rose in morning trading but lost momentum later and closed 40.55 points, or 0.23 per cent, lower at 17,835.69. Banks were knocked by data showing that more UK households had been defaulting on secured loans. The Bank’s credit conditions survey showed rising defaults and losses on mortgage lending in the second quarter. Barclays, which has a considerable consumer lending business, lost 5p, or 3.1 per cent, to hit 152¼p, and Virgin Money was down 4p, or 2.56 per cent, to 158p. BAE Systems’ shares continued their positive run as the Israel-Gaza conflict dominated headlines. The defence group’s share price was up by 14½p, or 1.38 per cent, to £10.69. On the FTSE 250, Oxford Instruments management told investors its full-year earnings would be at the lower end of its estimates. Shore Capital analysts have cut their estimate for earnings before interest Dollar rates imports. On Tuesday, Finland said a subsea gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea appeared to have been sabotaged. The Balticconnector had been shut on Sunday after concerns over a leak. Finland is also an LNG importer. Talks in Australia are dragging on between Chevron and trade unions over pay and conditions as the company seeks to avert more strikes affecting its LNG production facilities. Workers halted weeks of strike action late last month, but then accused Chevron of reneging on its commitments. by 4 per cent to £80 million due to “general caution over the macroeconomic environment”, and gave the stock a target price of £20.45. The company was one of the top fallers of the session as its shares lost 163p, or 8 per cent, to close at £18.82. Norcros shares continued to slide as its revenues in South Africa remained under pressure from energy blackouts. The company, which supplies bathroom and kitchen products, reported like-for-like sales down by 11 per cent in South Africa and said lower demand for tiles in the UK would force it to reduce capacity at Johnson Tiles. Norcros’ shares fell 2p, or 1.4 per cent, to hit 145p. On Aim, Brooks Macdonald Group reported its funds under management stable at £16.9 billion as outflows were offset by the strong performance of its investments. Executives have been focusing on service quality and acquisitions to drive growth, with shares rising 60p, or 3.8 per cent, to close at £16.50. Exchange rates Because of a technical issue, the gold fix prices are from Wednesday. Sterling spot and forward rates Other Sterling European money deposits % Data as shown is for information purposes only. No offer is made by Morningstar or this publication

45 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Unit Trusts Business The Times unit trust information service Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % British funds This is a paid for information service. For further details on a particular fund, readers should contact their fund manager. Data as shown is for information purposes only. No offer is made by Morningstar or this publication
46 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Business Equity prices Dividend yields Please note that the information in the dividend yields column has been suspended due to technical problems at Morningstar, the provider. 12-month high and low High/low prices for UK equities are based on closing prices. Investment trust high and low prices are based on intra-day figures. 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v v Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v v v Automobiles & parts 12 month High Low Company v v v 12 month High Low Company 12 month High Low Company v v v v v v Banking & finance v v v v v v v v v v Consumer goods v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Investment companies 12 month High Low Company Price Yld Dis(-) (p) +/- % or Pm v v 12 month High Low Company Price Yld Dis(-) (p) +/- % or Pm v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Health v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Engineering v v Construction & property v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v
47 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Equity prices Business 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company v v v v v v v v v v v Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v v v 12 month High Low Company v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Industrials v v v v v v v Professional & support services v v v v v Real estate v v v v v v v v Retailing v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Telecoms v v v v v v v v v v v v v Natural resources v v v v v v v Leisure v v v v v v v v v v v Transport v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Technology v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Utilities v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Media v v v v u t v v v v s v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Data as shown is for information purposes only. No offer is made by Morningstar or this publication

49 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Prisoner of war who survived Burma’s Death Railway Gordon Jamieson Page 50 Register Obituaries Christopher Miles Precocious film director who was nominated for an Oscar at 23 and worked with many acting greats, including his sister Sarah Miles Christopher Miles burst upon the film world in 1963 with a 30-minute short that he wrote and directed. It was called Six-Sided Triangle and it brought him, at the age of 23, an Oscar nomination. Starring his equally precocious sister, Sarah Miles, it satirised the cinematic styles and sexual mores of six different cultures in their approach to the eternal triangle of husband, wife and lover. The film, made for less than £6,000, was largely financed by the Boulting Brothers, arguably Britain’s leading film makers from the 1940s to the mid-1960s. They had been impressed by Miles’s earlier short, Vol d’Oiseau, which had won Best Short at the San Francisco Film Festival. Miles was a trim, compact figure who made up for any lack of physical size through his energy and force of personality. His slightly wicked smile was what most people first noticed about him, and he had a voice forever on the verge of a chuckle. Swept up by the Grade Organisation as a talent of the future, he was pitched, willingly but perhaps unwisely, into the job of exploiting leading pop-star clients. He made two films in quick succession, Rhythm ’n’ Greens, with Cliff Richards’s backing band The Shadows, and Up Jumped a Swagman with Frank Ifield. Not high art, but it made him at 25 the youngest feature film director in Britain. As he reflected in a Guardian interview some years later, “It was a baptism of fire, but it taught me a lot . . . you can’t make a celluloid purse out of a sow’s ear. You’ve got to get the script right first.” After this he returned to Paris, where he had been a film school student, and co-wrote, produced and directed a short comedy about a young English Miles with his sister Sarah in a shoot at Vogue studios in 1964 He was the first person to show 8mm film on TV, at the BBC’s invitation tourist (played by his other sister, Vanessa) getting caught up in a very French tangle while trying to visit the cathedral in Montmartre. Back in Britain, he embarked on a lifetime’s association with the work of DH Lawrence that would eventually lead to his appointment as a vicepresident of the DH Lawrence Society. The Virgin and the Gypsy, which he directed in 1969 from Alan Plater’s adaptation of a Lawrence novella, starred Honor Blackman. A critical and commercial success, it played for 18 months in the West End, where it was voted Best Film by the British Critics’ Circle. In New York it broke box-office records and won a New York Critics’ award and a Golden Globe nomination. His reputation firmly established, he made the faintly eccentric choice of returning to Paris again to direct a lightweight romantic comedy, A Time for Loving, written by the French playwright Jean Anouilh. Miles had agreed to the job on condition that he could meet Anouilh and suggest some changes to the script, which had been written some years earlier, that might bring it more up to date. He would later regale friends with the story of how he had met the great writer, a “60-year-old moustached man with gold-rimmed spectacles and a twinkle in his eye, who shook my hand and said, ‘Eh bien, I have re-read my screenplay, and find it enchanting’ ”. And that was the end of the matter. After that there was little Miles could do except shoot the movie. Despite a cast led by the great French actor Philippe Noiret and including Mel Ferrer, Britt Ekland and Susan Hampshire, it received lukewarm reviews and flopped at the box office. Miles then announced to his agent that he considered himself not cut out to be a hired hand on glossy, expensive productions, but would in future work only on projects he could have complete control over. Making his first foray into television, he directed Charlotte Rampling in Zinotchka, an adaptation by Melvyn Bragg of a Chekhov short story. On stage in Chicago he directed his sister Sarah in an acclaimed production of Thornton Wilder’s The Skin of Our Teeth. In London, on a poverty-row budget, he filmed Jean Genet’s The Maids, based on a stage production with Glenda Jackson and Susannah York. He also spent considerable time and money (his own) in an effort to set up a film from another DH Lawrence story, The Plumed Serpent. Despite a script by his then brother-in-law Robert Bolt, he did not succeed in raising the finance. Needing to refill the family coffers, he accepted an offer to direct Roger Moore, Susannah York, Shelley Winters and other glitzy names in a romantic comedy, That Lucky Touch. It was a competent genre piece, but little more. For his next project he returned to television and enjoyed success with Alternative 3. David Ambrose’s script was written in the form of a hurriedly assembled documentary exposing a secret international effort to escape a doomed Planet Earth (the “greenhouse effect” — not widely discussed in the mid-Seventies) and establish a survivors’ colony on Mars. The Guinness Book of TV Facts and Feats (1984) described it as “the biggest hoax in television drama. In a way reminiscent of the scare caused by Orson Welles’s radio spoof, War of the Worlds in 1938.” Many viewers telephoned TV stations, newspapers and even government offices in alarm. Books have since been written about the phenomenon. Miles then returned to his fascination with DH Lawrence, this time raising the finance for a lavish biographical film, Priest of Love, scripted again by Plater, charting Lawrence’s life and tempestuous marriage. Ian McKellen, in one of his first big-screen roles, played Lawrence, with Janet Suzman as his wife Frieda. The supporting cast included John Gielgud, Ava Gardner and Penelope Keith. Unusually, after a successful 1981 opening, Miles decided to re-cut the film, shortening it by 20 minutes and re-mixing some of the sound. The new version, released in 1985, drew widespread critical praise. Dilys Powell of The Sunday Times wrote: “With astonished delight one finds, watching a film which when seen four years ago seemed indeed reputable, now shows itself a work of deep understanding and devotion.” Christopher John Miles was born in London in 1939, the eldest of four children to Clarice Remnant, a councillor, and John Miles, a civil engineer and partner in Stewarts and Lloyds, one of the largest steelworks in the country. He and his siblings were encouraged to explore their artistic sides. His elder sister Sarah would go on to become a film star, his brother Martin an artist, and his younger sister Vanessa, an actress and writer of children’s books. At the age of nine Christopher dreamt of making films and converted one of the family’s old sheds into a cinema so that he could show their Essex neighbours his films, in which his siblings took part during the holidays. But his father made it clear that he expected him to join him at the Corby steelworks and that film making should remain a hobby. Christopher was sent to Winchester College, where at 15 he became the first person to show 8mm film on television at the invitation of the BBC’s children’s programme All Your Own. It involved him briefly filming his friend’s baby alligator so as to make it look as fearsome as possible. The dramatic impact was slightly lost when his friend let the little alligator out of its box and it merely nipped the presenter Huw Wheldon’s finger, reducing everybody in the studio to laughter. On leaving the school, Christopher was invited to make a film for a merchant shipping line, and embarked with a second-hand 16mm camera on a six-month voyage sailing around the world. He recorded many adventures, including being imprisoned by the Chinese and interrogated for 20 hours by their security services. On returning to England, he did his National Service in the East Anglian Regiment, but his commission in the Intelligence Corps was cut short after an assault course accident. After an unhappy six months working in the Corby steelworks, he secretly applied to study at the prestigious Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques in Paris and then brazened out to his father his life-changing decision. In 1967, he married the painter Suzy Armstrong in Chelsea, having met her on a school ski trip. They had a daughter, Sophie, who became a painter and potter but died in 2018 of cancer. Throughout the remainder of his career, Miles continued to work, as he had promised himself he would, on his own terms, on works including a docudrama, Lord Elgin and Some Stones of No Value, based on Elgin’s letters and starring a young Hugh Grant. From 1989 until 1993, when he moved with his wife to Wiltshire, Miles was professor of film and television at the Royal College of Art. In 2010, one of the oldest cinemas in Paris, Studio 28 in Montmartre, held a retrospective of four of his films with French connections. It was called Un Anglais de Paris, and that was how he saw himself. Christopher Miles, film director and writer, was born on April 19, 1939. He died of cancer on September 15, 2023, aged 84
50 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Register Gordon Jamieson Australian prisoner of war who was one of the last survivors of the Death Railway in Burma and campaigned for reparations Gordon Jamieson had just turned 19 when he chose “to go on an adventure”. In July 1940 he enlisted in the Australian army, serving with the 2/26th Australian Infantry Brigade, known as the Gallopers. “I cheated, you know. I put my age up,” he said. The minimum age for signing up was 21. During training he learnt to use a bayonet. “We had certain points on a bag that was like a human, tender points that you could bayonet anyone without going too far in,” he said. After 12 months he was posted to Malaya, seeing action deep in the rubber plantations. In January 1942 the 2/26th crossed into Singapore, which on February 15 fell to the Japanese. “It was quite eerie when the din of gunfire and high explosives ceased, to be followed by the cheering of the enemy soldiers at close proximity,” he said. “We became slaves and thus began, unexpectedly, a 42-month phase of my life, a period of tragic events the memories of which will remain for all time.” Jamieson was among thousands of prisoners held at Changi jail and used as forced labour. In April 1943, he was herded into a metal rice van and driven hundreds of miles north to Songkurai in Thailand, near the Burmese border, and put to work on the Siam-Burma railway. He described 18-hour shifts on what was known as the Death Railway in scorching sun, building embankments and bridges and digging cuttings with picks and shovels. “On the completion of a strenuous day at work our boys would commence the walk back to camp, several kilometres in pouring rain with little or no footwear,” he said. “Then someone would start to sing a tune . . . and others would follow, and the heads would be lifted proudly.” Food was minimal, usually a bowl of rice a day. Jamieson ate maggots for protein, but avoided flies because they carried disease. Despite the conditions, he remembered his comrades’ kindness and generosity of spirit — as well as their dark humour. If a soldier lost his mate, another would “adopt you”, he said, adding that their numbers were reduced by “illness and death, mostly caused from diseases and tropical ulcers resulting in limb amputations”. The worst cruelty was from Japanese officers. The regular soldiers would “sit with you and have a smoke,” he said. “Then, if an officer came, they’d jump up and start yelling at you. When we had refused to do something, you’d soon get a few claps around the ear.” On one occasion he and another prisoner were digging a pit when a Japanese aircraft flew low over the treetops before turning back. “We heard the bombs drop. One, two, three and the fourth one straight through our tree,” he said. “The concussion was immediate, but the body itself, you lost consciousness, but it was slowly. All the time you were sinking and gee, it was a lovely feeling.” Both men later regained consciousness, “but I’ve still got the tinnitus that was set off from it”, he added. He returned in December 1943 to Changi prison, “where we worked on the wharves and we also built the groundwork for Changi airport”. They were liberated in September By liberation Jamieson weighed six stone, but he considered himself lucky 1945. “I can recall a fellow yelling out ‘Shhh, shhh’. He’s coming in from somewhere telling us not to yell out, but ‘The war is over’. ” Although Jamieson weighed barely 6st (about 40kg), he considered himself fortunate: only five of his 16-strong platoon had survived. Gordon Leslie Jamieson was born in 1921 in Stanthorpe, southwest of Brisbane, and raised on an orchard at Amiens, ten miles away. “As children we always had to recite our prayers beside the bed,” he recalled. He won a scholarship to high school in Brisbane and found work with the War Service Homes Commission. His mother, Lucy (née Rolley), opposed him enlisting underage, but his father, George, who fought with the 2/26th in the First World War, helped. “I joined up with another young fellow. He got thrown out, but I managed to stay in by telling them I was 20 and a half,” he said. After the war Jamieson returned to Jamieson and his colleagues worked 18-hour days in the blazing sun in Thailand Australia, later recalling the crowds surging to greet his troopship as it docked in Brisbane. “We saw them all come through and then they knocked another fence down further along from the main entrance and in the lead was my dad,” he said. “They had cars ready with my parents, with my mother in it . . . She was in the front seat and I was in the back seat with another two blokes, holding on to my hand all the way. It was really a memory that you don’t lose, that day with Mum.” He resumed the job he had had before the war, and was introduced by his sister to Shirley Souwer, whose Quaker-inspired pacifism he largely shared. “I couldn’t agree entirely with them because they would have definitely been suffering a heck of a lot under the Japanese,” he said. They were married in June 1948 and joined the Queensland Flying Saucer Research Bureau. As secretary, he was observed by the intelligence services, who saw him as a “communist influence” and a “fanatic pacifist”. During the Vietnam War the couple were members of the anti-conscription Save Our Sons movement. Shirley died in 2011 and he is survived by their children Chris, Paula and Jeanette. Jamieson bought a café, worked in a chicken slaughterhouse and owned an engineering business with his father. He retired in the 1980s when his wartime injuries re-emerged, the result of unpleasant dysentery tests undertaken in the camps. In later years he visited Thailand and Japan, taking part in ceremonies to honour PoWs. He was involved in reconciliation work and met Takashi Nagase, the interpreter during the beatings suffered by Eric Lomax (obituary, October 10, 2012), who wrote about his wartime experiences in The Railway Man (1995). “This fellow was very aggressive outwardly,” Jamieson said. “Inwardly, totally different because he knew that if he didn’t do it he’d be shot, because he had the riflemen around him.” He also campaigned for reparations, taking his case to the Japanese and Australian governments. In 1990 he brought a A$250 million claim to the UN on behalf of the Queensland Ex-Prisoners of War Association, offering to drop it if Japan would fund a tropical health and medical research centre on land donated by James Cook University at Townsville. “This would be a living tribute to our 22,000 PoWs, civilian internees and slave labourers,” he told The Age newspaper in Melbourne. Politics intervened and it was not to be. In 2013, Jamieson visited the set during filming of The Railway Man, starring Nicole Kidman and Colin Firth. “He was watching his step as he got out of the car, and when he looked up he saw one of the cast members — a really skinny guy in shorts, he was playing a PoW,” his daughter Paula recalled. “Dad just grabbed his hand and said, ‘Are you OK, mate?’. In his mind, he was back there for a moment, and that’s how they were. Mates until the end, looking out for each other.” Gordon Jamieson, Australian soldier, was born on June 14, 1921. He died on September 23, 2023, aged 102 Claus Wisser German entrepreneur and philanthropist who left school at 14, built a global company and became known as the ‘red capitalist’ It was to become Wisag, a German services and facilities management giant employing 50,000 people. Yet when Claus Wisser created his cleaning company in 1965, he was the sole employee, its working capital was 50 deutschmarks, and its equipment consisted of a brush, a bucket, a bicycle and a second-hand typewriter. Its greatest assets, however, were Wisser’s formidable work ethic and business guile — riding the wave of West Germany’s postwar “economic miracle”, yet also shaped by his character and personal experiences. He was born in 1942 in Wiesbaden and grew up amid the ruins of Nazi Germany. From the age of ten he helped in his father’s grocery shop, but saw it decline as newer forms of retail such as self-service emerged. When he was 14 the shop closed and his parents told him they could not afford his schooling. Wisser’s business ambition, he believed, stemmed directly from his father’s failure, and his response was remarkably assured. He worked on building sites to help pay for the family’s food. Then, aged 16, he left home, rented his own accommodation and financed that and his grammar school education with other jobs. After leaving school he spent a year in London to learn English, working at a publisher for a pound a week, supplemented by evenings serving in a Soho bar. When he returned to Frankfurt as a business student, one of his professors was concerned at how much time he was spending working in the day to earn money rather than studying, and suggested that he clean university offices in the evenings instead. Wisser realised the potential in such work and dropped out to form his own company. Competition for cleaning contracts was fierce. He began to apply what he called his heightened “practical intelligence”. Once he pretended to be a job applicant for an insurance company to get past the doorkeeper and pitch directly to the office manager. He also persuaded estate agents to tip him off about who had leased buildings so he could get cleaning contracts before anyone else. As he expanded, finding sufficient staff was difficult. He could not yet afford a telephone so he communicated sometimes by telegram, and advertised for recruits in local newsagents. A tall man with a ready smile and famously firm handshake, he quickly won the trust of many clients. Arriving one day to clean a sevenstorey building, he found that most of those due to work for him had not turned up. The building’s owner insisted it had to be shut at 10pm, when only three floors had been cleaned, so Wisser volunteered to be locked in overnight to finish all the cleaning. “You don’t always need new ideas,” he commented. “It’s enough when you do something that already exists with more enthusiasm than the others.” His mother, a believer in traditional male roles and resentful of her family’s fallen status, was dismayed that after all his education her son had become what she considered little more than a “cleaning lady”. Wisser, already earning far more than most people he had studied with, had no doubts. “Working with the handbrake on,” he once said, “is not my style.” Inspired by a visit to the US, Wisser moved into the new growth industry of facilities management and became a specialist supplier of services to the aviation industry. Once he had a secure middling income, further wealth, he insisted, was not his motivation. He remained a lifelong active member of and donor to the Social Democratic Party he had joined as a teenager. However, the man nicknamed in the German media the “red capitalist” did not endear himself to trade unions and the political left when, after a disastrous decision to invest in textile production in the 1980s, he had to sack 2,000 employees. Repaying the DM500 million debt, partly by sharp cost-cutting within Wisag and, as he put it, “working like an animal”, took 15 years. In 2003 he married his long-term partner, Doris. In 2007 he handed over formal control of Wisag to his son Michael, who had been born during a first marriage that ended in divorce. Wisser continued to make his opinions known, sitting on the supervisory board. There was more time now, though, for other interests. He had been a talented pianist until his parents’ poverty ended his lessons, and in the late 1980s he helped to establish and fund the Rheingau music festival. He also collected modern art and invested in historic properties requiring renovation. At times he indulged in good red wine and Cuban cigars, but traces remained of the frugality that had launched his career. He travelled second-class on the train, and refused to go to the hairdresser. His success, he said, was thanks to a combination of hard work, resilience, knowing how to recognise and seize an opportunity and relentless practical focus on, say, how to clean a window properly and efficiently — just with water, wiped in the right direction, first the frame, then the window itself. That was how Claus Wisser, armed with little more than a brush and a bucket, had started to create his own German economic miracle. Claus Wisser, entrepreneur, was born on June 30, 1942. He died of cancer on October 4, 2023, aged 81
51 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Register Court Circular Buckingham Palace 12th October, 2023 The King this afternoon held a Reception at Buckingham Palace and presented The Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering. His Majesty afterwards received the Chief Rabbi (Sir Ephraim Mirvis). Kensington Palace 12th October, 2023 The Prince of Wales and The Princess of Wales, Patron, SportsAid, this morning visited athletes and parents taking part in a mental fitness workshop at Bisham Abbey National Sports Centre, Marlow Road, Bisham, and were received by Mrs Felicity Rutland (Deputy Lieutenant of the Royal County of Berkshire). His Royal Highness, President, the Earthshot Prize, this afternoon received Prince Rahim Aga Khan (Chairman, Aga Khan Development Network’s Environment and Climate Committee) at Windsor Castle. The Prince of Wales, Patron, the Royal Foundation of The Births, Marriages and Deaths Prince and Princess of Wales, was represented by Mrs Rebecca Priestley (Extra Equerry to His Royal Highness) at the Memorial for Mr Alan Rind (Trustee, the Rind Foundation) which was held at Bushey Old Cemetery, Little Bushey Lane, Bushey, Hertfordshire, this morning. St James’s Palace 12th October, 2023 The Duke of Edinburgh, Patron, The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award Foundation, today attended the International Council at Missenden Abbey, London Road, Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire. The Duchess of Edinburgh, Global Ambassador, International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, this morning attended World Sight Day at Berhanena Selam Printing Enterprise, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Her Royal Highness afterwards called upon The President of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia at the Presidential Palace, Addis Ababa, and remained to Luncheon. The Duchess of Edinburgh this evening departed Addis Ababa Bole International Airport for the United Kingdom. St James’s Palace 12th October, 2023 The Princess Royal, Patron, the Campaign for Gordonstoun, this morning chaired a Cabinet Meeting at the Lansdowne Club, 9 Fitzmaurice Place, London W1. Her Royal Highness, Patron, English Rural Housing Association, this afternoon attended a Parish Council Rural Housing Conference at Eversholt Hall, Church End, Eversholt, and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Bedfordshire (Mrs Susan Lousada). The Princess Royal later visited the Aircraft Research Association, Manton Lane, Bedford, and was received by Mr Christopher SharwoodSmith (Vice Lord-Lieutenant of Bedfordshire). Her Royal Highness, Grand Master, the Royal Victorian Order, this evening attended Evensong and a Reception at The King’s Chapel of the Savoy, Savoy Hill, London WC2. Kensington Palace 12th October, 2023 The Duke of Gloucester today visited Kelvatek, Camlin Group, 31 Ferguson Drive, Lisburn, and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of County Antrim (Mr David McCorkell). His Royal Highness, Grand Prior, the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem, this afternoon attended the Investiture and Awards Ceremony of the Commandery of Ards at Hillsborough Castle and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of County Down (Mr Gawn Rowan Hamilton). The Duke of Gloucester, Colonel-in-Chief, this evening attended a Dinner at the Royal Army Medical Corps, Hydebank Army Reserve Centre, 4 Hospital Road, Belfast, and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of the County Borough of Belfast (Dame Fionnuala Jay-O’Boyle). The Duchess of Gloucester this afternoon visited Action Cancer’s Big Bus at Hillsborough Castle to mark the Fiftieth Anniversary of Action Cancer and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of County Down. Her Royal Highness later visited Mourne Stimulus, 1 Council Road, Kilkeel, and was received by Dr Robert Logan (Deputy Lieutenant of County Down). The Duchess of Gloucester afterwards visited Kilkeel Harbour, Rooney Road, Kilkeel. Her Royal Highness subsequently visited the Schomberg Society, Reivers House, 8-12 Newcastle Street, Kilkeel, to commemorate the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary. The perfect wedding gift newsukadvertising.co.uk 020 7782 7553 DEAR friend, you are faithful in what you are doing for the brothers and sisters, even though they are strangers to you. They have told the church about your love. Please send them on their way in a manner that honours God. 3 John 1.5-6 (NIV) Bible verses are provided by the Bible Society Deaths BLACKLOCK Lt Col. Michael, The Royal Scots Greys, died peacefully on Monday 9th October, aged 95. Devoted husband of Patsy, wonderful father of Jonathan and Lucinda, loving grandfather of Hamish, Adam and Rory and great-grandfather of Billie. Thanksgiving service at St James Episcopal Church, Muthill, PH5 2AR, at noon on 24th October. Family flowers only. BONALLACK Sir Michael died peacefully on 26th September 2023, aged 88. Adored husband to Angela for 64 years. A father, grandfather and great-grandfather to his large, loving family. His funeral will take place on Friday 27th October at 2pm at St Andrew’s Episcopal Church, St Andrews. There will be a memorial service in St Andrews in the spring. Donations, if desired, to the charity Gold Geese. CASEBOW Rev Ronald Philip died on 1st October 2023, aged 92. Funeral Requiem Mass at St Peter and St Paul Church, Eye, IP23 7BD, on Friday 3rd November at noon. All inquiries to Susan Whymark Funeral Service, 01379 871168, or www.susanwhymark.co.uk CHURCHER Mary Pauline (née Baillie-Reynolds) died peacefully on 30th September 2023. Beloved wife of the late Bernard George. Dearly loved aunt of Sarah and David. All inquiries to TH Sanders funeral directors, 020 8876 5255. DAVIES-JONES Martin died peacefully on 6th October 2023, aged 81. Beloved husband of Hilary, father to Louise and David (died 9th July 2001) and older brother of Hugh. A law graduate of Downing College, Cambridge (’60-’63). Martin spent his working life as a successful solicitor, first in London and subsequently in Bristol. Prominent in various new enterprise and charitable works. Martin enjoyed a tenure as chairman to the board of trustees at Bristol Zoo. A relentless squash player and keen aficionado of horse racing. Martin lived an active and fulfilling life. Memorial at Christ Church, Clifton, on Friday 20th October at 2pm. JONES College friends find a love to last ELEANOR EVE AND JAMES MARTIN WERE MARRIED ON NOVEMBER 12, 2022, AT APTON HALL, IN ROCHFORD, ESSEX. THEY FEATURED IN THE TIMES ON FEBRUARY 11, 2023 Sandra passed away peacefully on Sunday 1st October 2023, aged 84. Service to be held at Portsmouth Cathedral on Thursday 19th October at 3pm. Tea and light refreshments to follow the service in the Cathedral Hall. Family flowers only. If desired donations to Cancer Research UK. MACDONALD Maxwell Donald died on the 23rd September. A private family cremation has taken place. A service of thanksgiving will be announced shortly. STUART Cliff passed away peacefully on 22nd September 2023 at Eastridge Manor, Haywards Heath, joining Kay in eternal rest. Much-loved father and grandfather. Requiem Mass will take place at St George’s Retreat Chapel, RH15 0SF, on Friday 20th October 2023 at 11am. Inquires to RA Brooks & Son, 35 Wivelsfield Road, Haywards Heath, RH16 4EN, 01444 454391. www.brooksfunerals.co.uk ZAHARA Felicia Mary. Died on 1st October 2023. Very much-loved wife, mother, grandmother and friend. Memorial St David’s, Ashprington, on 20th October 2pm. No flowers. Donations to RNLI Memorial Services LONGE Nicholas at St Mary’s, Woodbridge, on 30th October 2023 at 11am. NB this is a change from previous location, St Andrew’s, Hasketon. Mark an unforgettable day with a feature in Readers’ Lives, a service in contracted tributes 50% discount for subscribers Call 020 7782 5583 or email readerslives@thetimes.co.uk LEGAL, PUBLIC, COMPANY & PARLIAMENTARY NOTICES To place notices for these sections please call 020 7481 4000 Notices are subject to confirmation and should be received by 11.30am three days prior to insertion Legal Notices
52 Legal Notices Friday October 13 2023 | the times
the times | Friday October 13 2023 Legal Notices 53




58 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Weather Weather Eye Paul Simons Today Rain and thunderstorms in the south, chilly with blustery showers in the north. Max 21C (70F), min 0C (32F) Five days ahead Around Britain Key: b=bright, c=cloud, d=drizzle, pc=partly cloudy du=dull, f=fair, fg=fog, h=hail, m=mist, r=rain, sh=showers, sl=sleet, sn=snow, s=sun, t=thunder *=previous day **=data not available Temp C Rain mm Sun hr* midday yesterday 24 hrs to 5pm yesterday Aberdeen Aberporth Anglesey Aviemore Barnstaple Bedford Belfast Birmingham Bournemouth Bridlington Bristol Camborne Cardiff Edinburgh Eskdalemuir Glasgow Hereford Herstmonceux Ipswich Isle of Man Isle of Wight Jersey Keswick Kinloss Leeds Lerwick Leuchars Lincoln Liverpool London Lyneham Manchester Margate Milford Haven Newcastle Nottingham Orkney Oxford Plymouth Portland Scilly, St Mary’s Shoreham Shrewsbury Snowdonia Southend South Uist Stornoway Tiree Whitehaven Wick Yeovilton 12 13 13 10 17 11 11 11 19 15 12 16 11 12 10 ** 12 18 13 13 20 18 12 13 11 9 11 11 13 14 11 11 19 13 11 11 9 12 17 17 16 19 12 11 16 11 10 11 9 10 14 S C S PC C M S C C S C D D PC B ** C C R PC C R S B S C S D S D C R D C S C D R C C C D C S C C D C S C D 0.0 0.6 0.2 0.0 18.6 11.0 0.0 2.2 6.2 0.0 9.6 4.8 14.6 0.0 0.2 0.0 6.6 10.4 50.2 0.0 7.2 0.8 0.0 0.0 0.2 4.2 0.0 4.0 0.2 9.4 9.4 0.4 7.4 0.4 0.0 1.8 0.2 6.6 3.8 6.0 7.2 7.0 0.8 0.8 7.6 0.4 0.4 1.4 0.0 0.2 4.0 7.7 0.0 0.0 4.8 ** ** 0.2 ** 0.1 ** 0.0 0.0 0.0 5.8 2.6 ** ** 0.0 0.4 0.0 ** 6.0 ** 5.8 ** 0.4 8.4 0.0 ** 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.3 ** ** 0.0 3.6 ** ** ** ** 0.2 0.2 ** 0.0 ** 3.5 4.5 0.0 ** 0.3 Largely dry and settled into next week, quite chilly with coastal showers at times Tomorrow A chilly day with a mixture of sunny spells and scattered blustery showers, heaviest and most frequent near northwestern coasts and wintry over higher ground. Max 15C, min -3C 10 PC S PC PC PC B C R S PC C R ** S B B R PC PC PC S B S R DU B PC S S PC S PC PC PC B PC S S PC S PC PC PC S R B S 40 Slight Temperature 30 Moderate Rough 28 (degrees C) 11 11 At 17:00 on Thursday there were two flood alerts in England and no flood warnings. There were no flood alerts or warnings in Wales or Scotland. For further information and updates in England visit flood-warninginformation.service.gov.uk, for Wales naturalresources.wales/flooding and for Scotland SEPA.org.uk 9 32 Aberdeen NORTH SEA Edinburgh Glasgow 27 25 Londonderry ATLANTIC OCEAN Sunday Galway Dublin Cork A mostly dry day across Britain and Ireland with a mixture of sunny spells and cloud. A few showers across northern Scotland and perhaps in the southeast later in the day. Max 14C, min -2C Bristol Staying largely dry with sunny spells and patchy cloud. Showers are possible in northern Scotland and across southeast England and East Anglia. Max 15C, min -1C 12 Tides eter Exeter 12 13 14 Wednesday Another dry day across most of Britain and Ireland and rather cloudy at times. A few showers are possible near southern and eastern coasts. Max 15C, min 1C 11 13 14 15 The Times weather page is provided by Today Aberdeen Avonmouth Belfast Cardiff Devonport Dover Dublin Falmouth Greenock Harwich Holyhead Hull Leith Liverpool London Bridge Lowestoft Milford Haven Morecambe Newhaven Newquay Oban Penzance Portsmouth Shoreham Southampton Swansea Tees Weymouth Ht 4.1 12.3 3.2 11.5 5.1 6.4 -4.8 -3.8 5.2 7.0 5.2 8.7 6.6 2.5 6.5 8.8 6.4 6.5 3.7 5.1 4.6 6.0 4.0 8.8 5.2 2.0 13:44 19:32 23:31 19:19 17:59 23:34 --:-17:35 12:55 --:-22:41 18:38 14:58 23:30 14:08 22:08 18:34 23:41 23:32 17:26 18:05 17:00 23:52 23:40 10:39 18:40 16:05 19:07 Ht 4.0 12.6 3.5 11.9 5.3 6.3 -5.0 3.3 -5.5 7.1 5.2 9.0 6.6 2.4 6.7 9.0 6.4 6.7 3.9 5.3 4.5 5.9 4.3 9.1 5.2 2.0 5 London CHANNEL day. Fresh southwesterly winds in the north at first, otherwise light to moderate northwesterly. Maximum 19C (66F), minimum 4C (39F). Lake District, IoM, NE Eng: A cloudy start with patchy rain clearing southwards in the morning leading to sunny spells and a few showers in the afternoon. Feeling chilly. Light west to northwesterly increasing moderate to fresh. Maximum 13C (55F), minimum 1C (34F). Scotland: Windy with frequent blustery 30 and heavy showers, wintry over higher ground although drier with sunny spells in the southeast. Fresh to strong west to northwesterly winds, gales in the north. Maximum 13C (55F), minimum 0C (32F). Republic of Ireland, N Ireland: Mostly dry with sunny spells, but a few showers spreading in from the north at times. Light west to northwesterly winds, increasing moderate to fresh and strong around the coast. Maximum 13C (55F), minimum 1C (34F). LOW HIGH 01:18 07:16 11:28 07:05 05:48 11:18 --:-05:22 --:-11:54 10:34 06:11 02:39 11:21 01:52 09:15 06:21 11:32 11:19 05:13 05:58 04:48 11:43 11:30 01:20 06:26 03:39 06:59 14 Brighton Noon today Tidal predictions. Heights in metres 23 -15 Southampton 22 Tuesday 32 21 21 20 13 0 -5 -10 19 Plymouth General situation: Heavy rain in the south, chilly with showers in the north. London, E Anglia, SE Eng, Cen S Eng, Channel Is: A cloudy, windy and mild day with outbreaks of showery rain, perhaps heavy and thundery at times. Fresh to strong southwesterly winds, easing later. Maximum 21C (70F), minimum 5C (41F). SW Eng, Wales, Midlands, E Eng, Cen N Eng, NW Eng: Cloudy with showery rain, heavy at times, but becoming drier and cooler later in the 41 Cambridge Oxford Cardiff CELTIC SEA 16 11 50 5 14 Birmingham Swansea 27 59 10 Nottingham 15 11 Channel Islands 68 15 Norwich 24 11 77 20 Sheffield Shrewsbury 10 25 Hull 16 14 Llandudno 12 10 Manchester Liverpoo Liverpool IRISH SEA 86 rk York 22 9 F 95 30 12 12 11 C 35 Newcastle Carlisle Belfast 13 A mostly dry, chilly day with long spells of sunshine. A few showers in northern and western Scotland and cloudier at times in the southwest. Max 14C, min -3C 10 30 Flood alerts and warnings 14 Monday Shetland 11 10 12 28 Madeira 24 Madrid 25 Malaga 28 Mallorca 27 Malta 11 Melbourne Mexico City 22 27 Miami 23 Milan 31 Mombasa 12 Montreal 10 Moscow 33 Mumbai 24 Munich 27 Nairobi 25 Naples New Orleans 19 20 New York 23 Nice 30 Nicosia 12 Oslo 20 Paris 23 Perth 19 Prague 4 Reykjavik 13 Riga Rio de Janeiro 27 37 Riyadh 26 Rome San Francisco 21 16 Santiago 30 São Paulo 22 Seoul 30 Seychelles 33 Singapore St Petersburg 11 11 Stockholm 30 Sydney 29 Tel Aviv 34 Tenerife 22 Tokyo 15 Vancouver 22 Venice 23 Vienna 17 Warsaw Washington 22 22 Zurich Orkney Calm 12 11 PC T PC C S PC SH PC S S S DU B S R S S B PC ** S B PC B PC ** S PC S PC B S PC SH PC B PC PC S PC ** S S M S PC S Sea state (mph) 11 All readings local midday yesterday 26 14 22 15 36 32 30 24 18 27 25 14 26 27 16 21 22 13 27 34 25 19 18 13 25 31 39 13 25 26 17 25 23 9 27 28 23 29 18 32 ** 25 29 18 29 22 32 34 11 The world Alicante Amsterdam Athens Auckland Bahrain Bangkok Barbados Barcelona Beijing Beirut Belgrade Berlin Bermuda Bordeaux Brussels Bucharest Budapest Buenos Aires Cairo Calcutta Canberra Cape Town Chicago Copenhagen Corfu Delhi Dubai Dublin Faro Florence Frankfurt Geneva Gibraltar Helsinki Hong Kong Honolulu Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Kuala Lumpur Kyiv Lanzarote Las Palmas Lima Lisbon Los Angeles Luxor Wind speed 992 1000 1024 1008 LOW 1016 1016 984 HIGH 1000 992 1016 LOW HIGH 1024 1016 1008 LOW Synoptic situation An area of low pressure near southwestern Britain will push a series of fronts and associated rain across southern areas. Another area of low pressure north of Scotland will push a strong cold front southeastwards, leading to another band of rain followed by colder temperatures and blustery winds. Heavy showers in the north and west. Highs and lows 24hrs to 5pm yesterday Warmest: Frittenden, 20.0C Coldest: Katesbridge, Co Down, -2.4C Wettest: Wattisham, Suffolk, 50.0mm Sunniest: Leuchars, 8.4hrs* Sun and moon For Greenwich Sun rises: 07.20 Sun sets: 18.12 Moon rises: 05.41 Moon sets: 17.55 New Moon: October 14th Cold front Warm front Occluded front Trough Hours of darkness Aberdeen Belfast Birmingham Cardiff Exeter Glasgow Liverpool London Manchester Newcastle Norwich Penzance Sheffield 18:42-07:09 19:01-07:20 18:48-07:01 18:54-07:04 18:57-07:05 18:52-07:15 18:51-07:06 18:42-06:52 18:48-07:03 18:43-07:03 18:35-06:48 19:06-07:12 18:45-07:00 T his weekend many households may turn on the heating for the first time this autumn. The warm spell this month has been remarkable, exceeding 25C for four days in a row, not seen in October since 1959. And this month has also been the warmest October on record up to the 11th, as well as the warmest autumn for the first 40 days of the season. October was also notably dry over the southern half of Britain, with barely any rain in places; in contrast, many places in Scotland have already exceeded their average rainfall for October. But the weather picture is now turning upside down. The northern half is turning largely dry and even sunny, while the south is turning wetter and in some parts drenched in heavy rain today and widespread downpours across much of England and Wales tomorrow. It is also going to feel much colder as Arctic air plunges southwards, and by Saturday night there will be a widespread frost, with sleet or snow over many of the hills and mountains of Scotland. Next week is likely to carry on frosty as temperatures dive well below average, but the weather will also turn dry to give some crisp, sunny days as well as frosty nights. How does this compare to 1959? That year a hot dry summer seemed to get even better during September and early October, and many people wondered if it would ever end. Temperatures reached 28C on October 3, and The Times reported that Eastbourne was extending its holiday season, “the bathing season would continue indefinitely and the band of the Royal Corps of Signals had been booked for another two weeks”. Much of the country was parched and the British Waterways Association warned that the drought was getting worse. Water supplies to some areas were restricted, and football at Eton was suspended because the ground was too hard. But around mid-October the weather went downhill, and the month ended thoroughly cold and stormy. Speak directly to one of our forecasters on 09065 777675 8am to 5pm daily (calls are charged at £1.55 plus network extras) weatherquest .co.uk
the times | Friday October 13 2023 59 2GM Sport Safe option will lead to National demise Brough Scott Comment A re the latest Grand National changes based on acceptability or appeasement? For in their essence they are as big a challenge to the Grand National’s status as they are necessary for the future of British racing itself. They have been made with admirable research and consensus. The endorsements, especially that from dual Grand National-winning rider Ruby Walsh, are impressive. The logic of their implementation is hard to refute once racing had to swallow the chaos of this year’s race, albeit much of that traceable to the antics of an obscure group whose stated aim is to dispatch all horses to sanctuaries. Widening the walkways in a crowded paddock and shortening the parade will certainly lessen nerves, and if a standing start has its problems, it’s preferable to what the present “trot into line” system produced last year with that swirling clock hand of revved-up horses and riders circling ever more rapidly as the tension torched their brains. Having the run to the first fence more than three times as far from the start — with a field four times as large — as in the average race never made much sense, and other measures, like better padding for the toe boards of fences, improved runout rails for loose horses and further veterinary checks for all equine participants are incontestable in themselves without need for all the painstaking trouble that has gone into the changes’ production. But — and for someone who rode Key changes 6 Reducing the risk of incidents by cutting the maximum number of runners from 40 to 34 6 Moving the first fence 60 yards closer to the start so the runners are not going so fast when reaching it 6 Providing the best possible ground conditions for the horses by bringing the start time forward 6 Improving the quality of the runners — the minimum rating for a horse running in the National will be raised to 130 from 125 6 Closer scrutiny of horses that have made jumping errors in 50 per cent or more of their last eight races before allowing them to run The National remains a unique test (and fell) in the race in 1965 and has now reported on it for over 50 years, it’s a very difficult “but” — there is a worry as to where we are heading. For while there is enormous authority in Ruby Walsh’s conclusion “that we have to evolve to ensure the future of our sport” it doesn’t attempt to answer where that evolution will take us. While one of the opening aims of the announcement is “to preserve the thrill, characteristics and challenges of the famous race”, and citation after citation welcomes the stress racing now makes on equine welfare, it is all much less clear as to where risk and safety should meet. While the support of the RSPCA’s director of policy, Emma Slawinski, is a welcome addition to the press release there is unfinished business in her sign-off: “We look forward to seeing this announcement pave the way for further changes and remain keen to work with them.” It is not credible to pretend that the hazards and indeed the dangers of the Grand National are not part of the attraction of the world’s most remunerative as well as most-watched equine event. The Grand National magic is built on the unbelievable and, as Chris Cook pointed out in yesterday’s Racing Post, numbers cut to 34 would have meant no Foinavon and no Rachael Blackmore and Minella Times. A smaller, higher-quality field may produce a better race but it will be dominated by a few juggernaut stables and only differ from any other long-distance chase in its prize money and historic setting. You don’t have to endorse the splendidly unrepentant stance of Walsh’s very own father Ted, himself a Grand National-winning trainer, to realise what the future may hold. For however necessary they may be to buy us a few more years, I fear that the mood of these changes searches for the oxymoronic myth of a “safe” Grand National. On that route only extinction awaits. Results Ayr Going: heavy (soft in places) 2.10 (1m 2f) 1, Bashful (William Pyle, 9-2); 2, Ayr Poet (17-2); 3, Stockbridge Tap (20-1). 12 ran. NR: Frankendael. l, 1l. I Jardine. 2.45 (1m) 1, Lava Stream (B A Curtis, 9-4); 2, Peace Walk (6-5 fav); 3, Deimos (17-2). 6 ran. ns, 9 l. D O’Meara. 3.20 (7f 50yd) 1, Sassoon (Andrew Breslin, 9-4 fav); 2, Darbucks (5-2); 3, The Gay Blade (6-1). 10 ran. ns, 1 l. B Haslam. 3.55 (6f) 1, Be Proud (P Mulrennan, 14-1); 2, Abduction (9-1); 3, Admiral D (10-3 fav). 12 ran. 1 l, l. J S Goldie. 4.30 (7f 50yd) 1, Kelpie Grey (P Mulrennan, 28-1); 2, Tremendous Times (11-2); 3, Jkr Cobbler (13-8 fav). 13 ran. Nk, l. J S Goldie. 5.05 (1m) 1, Banner Road (S H James, 4-1); 2, Temper Trap (5-1); 3, Two Rivers (33-1). 14 ran. 2 l, 4 l. J S Goldie. 5.40 (1m 5f 26yd) 1, Ebony Maw (P J McDonald, 10-1); 2, Tafsir (8-1); 3, Clansman (2-1 fav). 9 ran. l, 1 l. Ewan Whillans. Placepot: £20.40. Quadpot: £12.90. Chelmsford Going: standard 4.25 (7f) 1, Pressure’s On (Rossa Ryan, 15-8); 2, Al Shabab (11-10 fav); 3, Pinjarra (11-1). 13 ran. 1 l, 1 l. E A L Dunlop. 5.00 (7f) 1, Blue Flame (Marco Ghiani, 5-2 fav); 2, Done Decision (13-2); 3, Nubough (8-1). 11 ran. l, nk. S C Williams. 5.30 (1m) 1, Fantastic Fox (Oisin Murphy, 13-2); 2, Roman Dynasty (16-1); 3, Urban Sprawl (6-1). 10 ran. l, l. R Varian. 6.00 (1m) 1, Creme Chantilly (Hector Crouch, 17-2); 2, Lunarscape (11-2); 3, Got No Dollars (10-1). 11 ran. 3 l, l. M L W Bell. 6.30 (6f) 1, The Waiting Game (David Probert, 9-4 fav); 2, Cuban Breeze (15-2); 3, Champagne Sarah (18-1). 9 ran. NR: Kit Gabriel. Sh hd, 1l. Jack Jones. 7.00 (6f) 1, Jumira Bridge (Jonathan Fisher, 5-1); 2, Bluebells Boy (15-8 fav); 3, Sumac (18-1). 9 ran. NR: Kangaroo. 1 l, 2 l. D Shaw. 7.30 (6f) 1, Endless Season (David Probert, 9-2); 2, Q Twenty Boy (10-3); 3, Giddy Aunt (11-2). 8 ran. NR: Macho Mania. Sh hd, sh hd. P Charalambous J Clutterbuck. 8.00 (5f) 1, So Sleepy (Callum Shepherd, 11-10 fav); 2, Next Second (7-1); 3, Reckon I’m Hot (18-5). 7 ran. NR: Big Time Maybe. 1 l, nk. W Muir C Grassick. 8.30 (1m 2f) 1, Elshaameq (J Mitchell, 5-2 fav); 2, Letaba (17-2); 3, Shalfa (18-1). 13 ran. NR: Sea Of Elegance. Nk, l. K Frost. Placepot: £79.60. Quadpot: £46.60. Exeter Going: good to firm (good in places) 1.40 (3m 54yd) 1, Glengeever (Lorcan Williams, 2-7 fav); 2, Joyful Kit (5-2). NR: Coconut Splash. 11l, B Lund. 2.15 (2m 2f 111yd) 1, Jeudidee (David Bass, 13-8); 2, Amalfi Bay (5-1); 3, Post No Bills (5-4 fav). 7 ran. 12l, hd. K C Bailey. 2.50 (2m 3f 48yd) 1, Opening Bid (Bryan Carver, 11-10 fav); 2, Pink Eyed Pedro (11-4); 3, Romanor (6-1). 4 ran. NR: Quoi De Neuf. 6 l, 4 l. C J Down. 3.25 (2m 161yd) 1, Miss Marette (Bryan Carver, 11-2); 2, Newmill Getaway (6-4 fav); 3, Breccia (5-1). 8 ran. 1 l, 14l. C J Down. 4.00 (2m 161yd) 1, Cawthorne Cracker (Toby Wynne, 16-1); 2, Gerard Mentor (9-1); 3, Group I Andorra 0 Kosovo 3; Belarus 0 Romania 0. Pittsburg (4-1 jt-fav). 15 ran. NR: Dolly Bird, Time To Burn. Hd, 9 l. O Greenall J Guerriero. 4.35 (2m 3f 48yd) 1, Red Happy (J Tudor, 8-11 fav); 2, Getthepot (7-1); 3, Dan’s Chosen (16-5). 6 ran. NR: Fanzio, Gallow Ford. 4 l, 1 l. D Pipe. 5.10 (2m 2f 111yd) 1, Thahab Ifraj (Thomosina Eyston, 22-1); 2, Nibras Gold (11-4); 3, Copshill Lad (5-2 fav). 8 ran. NR: Byzantine Empire. 2l, 2l. Alexandra Dunn. Placepot: £40.10. Quadpot: £12.80. Football Worcester Morata 74, Sancet 86 P Scotland 6 Spain 5 Norway 6 Georgia 5 Cyprus 6 Going: good to soft (soft in places) 1.55 (2m 4f) 1, Lady Adare (J J Burke, 3-1); 2, Glimpse Of Gala (11-4); 3, Galice Macalo (6-1). 7 ran. 2 l, l. H Fry. 2.30 (2m 7f) 1, Meechlands Magic (Harry Reed, 11-1); 2, Bolintlea (8-1); 3, Faitque De L’Isle (13-2). 9 ran. NR: Debden Bank, Galop Du Bosc, Milanese Rose. 10l, 6 l. Mrs D A Hamer. 3.05 (2m) 1, Wellington Arch (Jonjo O’Neill Jr. 17-2); 2, Rickety Bridge (5-2 fav); 3, Wendigo (3-1). 10 ran. NR: Cool Style, Elyssia. Sh hd, 2 l. Jonjo O’Neill. 3.40 (2m 4f) 1, Steal My Sunshine (Harry Skelton, 7-2); 2, Elogio (5-1); 3, Rare Clouds (132). 10 ran. l, 8l. D Skelton. 4.15 (2m 7f) 1, Ikarak (Harry Reed, 11-4); 2, Doughmore Bay (11-8 fav); 3, Kick Up A Storm (12-1). 7 ran. 1 l, 28l. M F Harris. 4.50 (2m) 1, Kamsinas (P J Brennan, 5-6 fav); 2, R S Ambush (16-1); 3, Speaker Thomas (15-2). 6 ran. NR: New Order. 8 l, 7 l. F O’Brien. 5.20 (2m) 1, Aviewofthestars (Liam Harrison, 15-8 fav); 2, Lady Gwen (10-3); 3, Saddlers Quest (8-1). 10 ran. NR: Imperial Jade, Noonie. ns, l. F O’Brien. Placepot: £36.80. Quadpot: £3.80. Euro 2024 qualifying Group A Cyprus (0) 0 Norway (1) 4 Sorloth 33 Haaland 65, 72 Aursnes 81 Spain (0) 2 Scotland W 5 4 3 1 0 D 0 0 1 1 0 (0) 0 L GD Pts 1 9 15 1 15 12 2 3 10 3 -8 4 6 -19 0 Group D Latvia 2 Armenia 0. Croatia (0) 0 Turkey Turkey Croatia Armenia Wales Latvia P 6 5 6 5 6 (1) 1 Yilmaz 30 W D L 4 1 1 3 1 1 2 1 3 2 1 2 1 0 5 GD Pts 3 13 7 10 -1 7 -1 7 -8 3 Group E Albania 3 Czech Republic 0; Faroe Islands 0 Poland 2. Albania Poland Czech Rep Moldova Faroe Islands P 6 6 5 5 6 W 4 3 2 2 0 D 1 0 2 2 1 L 1 3 1 1 5 GD Pts 8 13 0 9 2 8 0 8 -10 1 Switzerland Romania Israel Kosovo Belarus Andorra P 6 7 6 7 7 7 W 4 3 3 2 0 0 D 2 4 2 1 5 2 L GD Pts 0 12 14 0 5 13 1 0 11 4 0 7 2 -7 5 5 -10 2 Euro Under-21 qualifying Group F Azerbaijan 0 Northern Ireland 1; England 9 Serbia 1. P W D L GD Pts England 2 2 0 0 11 6 Ukraine 2 2 0 0 4 6 Luxembourg 3 1 0 2 -5 3 Serbia 2 1 0 1 -6 3 N Ireland 3 1 0 2 -1 3 Azerbaijan 2 0 0 2 -3 0 Prudential Hong Kong Open Hong Kong Second round S Sorribes Tormo (Sp) bt (4) Wang Xinyu (China) 6-4, 4-6, 6-1; (6) M Trevisan (It) bt M Frech (Pol) 6-3, 6-7 (4-7), 6-3; (3) E Mertens (Bel) bt S Lansere (Russ) 6-3, 7-6 (7-5); A Pavlyuchenkova (Russ) bt (2) B Haddad Maia (Br) 7-5, 1-6, 6-1; LFruhvirtova (Cz) bt A Korneeva (Russ) 6-3, 7-5; L Fernandez (Can) bt M Andreeva (Russ) 3-6, 6-1, 6-3. Bank of Communications Zhengzhou Open China Second round L Siegemund (Ger) bt (11) L Samsonova (Russ) 3-6, 6-2, 6-1; (4) O Jabeur (Tun) bt L Bronzetti (It) 6-3. 7-6 (7-5); (8) D Kasatkina (Russ) bt Z Bai (China) 6-2, 6-4; (7) B Krejcikova (Cz) bt P Martic (Cro) 7-5, 6-1. Football fixtures Golf DP World Tour: Open de España Madrid First round scores: 63 M Pavon (Fr). 64 W Besseling (Neth). 65 P Figueiredo (Por), E Pepperell (Eng), M Lorenzo-Vera (Fr). PGA Tour: Shriners Children’s Open Vegas Early first-round scores: 63 J Poston (US). 64 L Griffin (US). 67 C Davis (Aus); N Echavarria (Col); S Ryder (US). Tennis ATP Tour: Rolex Shanghai Masters China Quarter-finals (16) H Hurkacz (Pol) bt F Marozsan (Hun) 4-6, 6-1, 6-3; (26) S Korda (US) bt (19) B Shelton (US) 6-7 (10-12), 6-2, 7-6 (8-6). WTA Tour: Euro 2024 qualifying (7.45 unless stated) Group B Holland v France; Ireland v Greece. Group F Austria v Belgium; Estonia v Azerbaijan (5.0). Group J Iceland v Luxembourg; Liechtenstein v Bosnia and Herzegovina; Portugal v Slovakia. Friendly international England v Australia (Wembley, 7.45). Euro Under-21 qualifying Group A Latvia v Ireland (1.0). Group B Scotland v Hungary (7.0). Group I Czech Republic v Wales (5.0). Cricket: World Cup Bangladesh v New Zealand (9.30 UK time; Chennai). Rugby union: Gallagher Premiership Bristol Bears v Leicester Tigers (7.45).
60 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Sport Racing 3.00 Newmarket Rob Wright Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards Challenge Stakes (Group 2) ITV4 4.45 Maiden Fillies’ Stakes (2-Y-O: £5,400: 7f) (10) (£70,888: 7f) (6) v v Mile test ideal for Shuwari Rob Wright Racing Editor 1.50 Newmarket Academy Godolphin ITV4 Beacon Project Cornwallis Stakes (Group 3) (2-Y-O: £34,026: 5f) (15 runners) 3.35 bet365 Old Rowley Cup Handicap ITV4 (Heritage Handicap) (3-Y-O: £61,848: 1m 4f) (12) 5.20 Maiden Fillies’ Stakes (2-Y-O: £5,400: 7f) (10) v v v 5.55 2.25 Godolphin Lifetime Care Oh So Sharp ITV4 Stakes (Group 3) (2-Y-O fillies: £34,026: 7f) (7) 4.10 bet365 Fillies’ Mile (Fillies’ Group 1) ITV4 Stakes (Fillies’ & Mares’ Group 3) (£45,368: 1m 2f) (12) (2-Y-O: £283,550: 1m) (8) v v v York 3.50 Rob Wright William Hill Autumn Mile ITV4 Handicap (£15,462: 1m) (13) Shuwari seems sure to relish a step up in trip and she can land a first group one success in the Bet365 Fillies’ Mile (4.10) at Newmarket today. She was given too much to do when a second to Carla’s Way over seven furlongs at this track last time and is better judged on her previous soft-ground success at Sandown, where she comfortably beat subsequent top-flight scorer Fallen Angel. Up to a mile for the first time, she will be tough to beat. Flora Of Bermuda is another who will relish the testing ground and she can take the Newmarket Academy Godolphin Beacon Project Cornwallis Stakes (1.50), while Alsakib won easily when stepped up to 12 furlongs at Ascot and he can strike again in the Bet365 Old Rowley Cup (3.35). The best bet of the day is Irish Nectar (4.25 York). He took a big step forward when winning at Nottingham last time, well suited by a change of tactics as he was held up for a late run and stormed past his rivals in the closing stages. There should be more to come. Chepstow Rob Wright 4.33 Handicap Hurdle 6.00 Memorial Handicap(£5,129: 1m) (9) 6.30 Novice Stakes (2-Y-O: £3,564: 5f) (9) 7.00 Novice Stakes (2-Y-O: £3,564: 5f) (9) 7.30 Handicap (2-Y-O: £3,873: 6f) (12) 8.00 Handicap (£3,140: 6f) (12) 8.30 Handicap (£3,140: 5f) (8) (£10,562: 2m) (12) 1.35 2.05 Novice Stakes Unibet Veterans’ Handicap ITV4 Chase (£15,609: 3m) (10) (2-Y-O: £10,800: 6f) (17) 4.25 Handicap (2-Y-O: £10,800: 5f) (12) 5.08 2.10 Unibet Persian War ITV4 Novices’ Hurdle (Grade 2) Conditional Jockeys’ Handicap Chase (£6,601: 3m) (10) (£28,475: 2m 3f 100yd) (9) 2.40 William Hill Finale ITV4 Handicap (Heritage Handicap) (3-Y-O: £51,540: 1m 6f) (14) 5.00 Handicap (£10,800: 5f) (14) 2.48 Novices’ Hurdle (£4,901: 2m) (14) Newcastle Rob Wright 4.20 5.35 Handicap (£3,140: 2m) (9) Apprentice Handicap (£10,468: 7f) (20) 3.15 British EBF £100,000 ITV4 Final (Colts And Geldings) 3.23 (2-Y-O: £50,960: 7f) (18) 3.58 Novices’ Limited Handicap Chase (£11,882: 3m) (9) 4.52 Maiden Stakes (£4,104: 1m 2f) (8) 5.27 Handicap (£3,140: 1m 4f) (12) Mares’ ‘NH’ Novices’ Hurdle (£4,901: 2m 3f 100yd) (13)
61 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Sport Dettori refuses to rule out Ascot return, admitting: I just cannot stop Retirement ditched as celebrated jockey says he will continue in the US and maybe beyond, writes Matt Dickinson T he legendary career of Frankie Dettori will have at least one more chapter after the sport’s most celebrated jockey revealed that he will continue riding in the United States. “I just can’t stop,” Dettori told The Times after amending his plans to race for the last time in December. “It could be three months, it could be three years,” he said of moving to California to compete in the warm weather of the US, as well as the Middle East. Even at 52, Dettori says that he has unfinished business, such as trying to win a first Kentucky Derby. “I just can’t stop because I am winning, simple as that,” he said. “I am winning, performing and feeling good.” The racing industry will celebrate the extension of Dettori’s long farewell. Dettori insists that he will stick to his pledge to finish riding in Britain and Europe. Champions Day at Ascot a week tomorrow will be his tearful goodbye to the country he arrived in as a 14-year-old from Italy, barely speaking a word of English, and where he made his home and his name as the best of his generation, arguably the best of all time. Having announced in December that this would be his final year in the saddle, a statue will be unveiled as part of his farewell to Ascot, the track where he pulled off many of his most famous wins, including the Magnificent Seven victories in 1996. “I did say my last goodbyes to Deauville, to Royal Ascot, to Longchamp, where I had to sign my peg,” Dettori said. “I went to the Curragh thinking I won’t walk in here again. I will do my last in Milan next week, where it all started, another sad day with all my family and school mates. Ascot on the 21st will be my last there and I will stick to my word, but I still have something to get out of my system. There is a little bit more in me that I can give.” Although, pressed on whether he might do a volte face on his UK farewell by returning to Royal Ascot next year, Dettori did not rule it out. He said it would depend on commitments in America and whether he was still riding winners. “I’m not looking that far ahead,” he said. “Let’s see how it goes in America.” Lester Piggott came out of retirement at 54, famously winning at the Breeders’ Cup 12 days later, and continued for five years. Dettori says that he might have stuck to his retirement plans if he had stopped winning but his triumphs this year have included the 2,000 Guineas, Oaks and Gold Cup. “Turn back ten months ago, I spoke to my parents, spoke to my wife: ‘Listen, I am going to be 53 next year, we have to start considering retiring and doing something else. One more year, say goodbye to everyone.’ We all agree on that. Then I went to California for the winter and I smashed it; Everything that he’s won 23 Classic victories Derby Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe Oaks Irish Derby 1,000 Guineas Dubai World Cup 2,000 Guineas Breeder’s Cup Classic St Leger Breeders Cup Turf Ascot Gold Cup Japan Cup And two he still needs... Kentucky Derby and Melbourne Cup Dettori is 53 soon but it seems that the famous dismount, below, will not be lost second leading rider, loving it. I loved the lifestyle, the riding, the weather. I thought, ‘This is nice.’ “I came back to Europe and I won the Guineas, the Oaks, the Gold Cup. What didn’t I win? It’s probably one of the best years I’ve had and everyone is saying, ‘Why are you retiring?’ And I am thinking, ‘Maybe they’ve got a point.’ So I spoke to my parents and wife and said, ‘I didn’t expect this, not a fairytale year like this.’ There are many attractions in setting up home in California. Dettori will move with his wife, Catherine, to Pasadena, near the Santa Anita track. “We race there four days a week, Thursday to Sunday. All year round mostly, but no travel, great weather and a new challenge. This way I slow down on my own terms. I don’t think I could have done another year here [in the UK]. The travelling is too much.” While Dettori rides a couple of kilograms lighter in America, he says that the climate makes it easier to stay at 53kg. It also helps that the youngest of Dettori’s five children has turned 18, enabling him to sell the family home in Newmarket. “The kids have left the house so there is no school run any more, I’m not kicking them out,” he said. “It feels like the natural next step for me. “Ten years ago if you said, ‘Would you like to live in California?’ I would have laughed because everything shuts at 9pm at night. Once I wanted to be out all the time but for an old fart like me that’s perfect.” While Dettori has always embraced the fame that came with his success, he says that he has found it “suffocating” at times and is looking forward to a little more anonymity across the Atlantic. “[David] Beckham went there, didn’t he? I am not saying I am Beckham but it suits me and my wife as well.” Still spending an hour in the gym each day, Dettori has no doubts that he will thrive among the best in America. “I am representing myself but also all of Europe,” he said. “And the biggest ambition is a horse for the Kentucky Derby.” Dettori, who turns 53 in December, had originally planned to finish with a global tour including the Breeders’ Cup meeting at Santa Anita in November, the Melbourne Cup in Australia three days later and then on to Hong Kong. Only last week Dettori had dismissed the idea that he might continue, but he is relieved to have made his plans and set up a new life. “It’s been playing on my mind for a long time,” he said. “My mind is fried. I’ve had four times the workload since I said I would retire. I’ll be glad when it is over on the 21st, I close the book here, have a breather and then go to the US. It has been full on emotionally, some tears, anxiety, the knot in the stomach and the pressure of riding in big races.” Dettori will make the move shortly before Christmas, with a Boxing Day meeting the start of his new adventure. The headline writers may be a little disappointed — “it would be nicer to live in West Hollywood but the traffic is terrible”, he says — but racing and his many fans will be delighted that Frankie rides on.
62 V2 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Sport Cricket World Cup De Kock and fielding horror show leave Cummins’ captaincy in crisis Scoreboard Mike Atherton Chief Cricket Correspondent South Africa v Australia Lucknow (Australia won toss): South Africa (2pts) beat Australia (0) by 134 runs Some players make the game look absurdly easy. Quinton de Kock, the brilliant left-handed opener from South Africa, is one of those. In an age where many batsmen stand stiff, rigid and muscle-bound, De Kock’s rhythm, flow and touch mark him out. He is a lovely player to watch and on a steamy afternoon in Lucknow he took Australia’s bowlers to task and put Pat Cummins’s team firmly into crisis mode. There was nothing better on the night than the languid six that De Kock hit off Cummins, a short ball flicked effortlessly over square leg, to bring up his second hundred of the tournament in as many matches. No one else came to terms with the two-paced pitch as well as him and when Australia lost four wickets in the first dozen overs of their reply, a second defeat of the tournament was assured. The final margin was a whopping 134 runs, their heaviest World Cup loss. Australia have looked well off the pace, beaten soundly by India first of all and now South Africa. They put in a horrible fielding performance here, dropping five catches, and their bowlers and captain were too slow to size up the conditions, taking too long to mix up their pace. The top order have struggled in both matches against pace and spin, and unless improvement comes quickly, they will struggle to make the knockout stage. South Africa, on the other hand, have impressed so far. They were the dark horses of the tournament for many — including this observer — but their supporters have been burnt so often in ICC events as to make them scarred. Could this be their time at last? Early days, but their batting line-up looks as De Kock celebrates his century on a forgettable day for Australia whose drops included a bad one by Stoinis powerful and as dangerous as any, their spin options are sound and so far the loss of Anrich Nortje has not hurt them. If De Kock continues in this rich vein of form, then all things are possible. This will be his swansong in ODI cricket as he has already announced his retirement will follow this World Cup and he won’t be the only one who will turn his attention exclusively to the franchise circuit thereafter. The 30-yearold looks determined to go out on a high, although being one of the less demonstrative players, his way is one of quiet determination. De Kock has not always looked totally at ease in international cricket, nor ODIs which, this week, he admitted to finding “tiring.” Almost two years is a long time to wait for a hundred in this format for a player of De Kock’s class, but that’s how long it had been before he became one of three South Africans to hit a hundred in a record World Cup score in the opening match against Sri Lanka. So he and the rest of the batting lineup came into this game, unlike Australia, in good form. That much was clear South Africa Runs (b) Q de Kock b Maxwell 109(106) *T Bavuma c Warner b Maxwell 35 (55) H E van der Dussen c sub b Zampa 26 (30) A K Markram c Hazlewood b Cummins 56 (44) H Klaasen c Inglis b Hazlewood 29 (27) D A Miller b Starc 17 (13) M Jansen c Warner b Starc 26 (22) K S Rabada not out 0 (1) K A Maharaj not out 0 (2) Extras (b 4, lb 2, w 7) 13 Total (7 wkts, 50 overs) 311 L T Ngidi and T Shamsi did not bat. Fall 1-108, 2-158, 3-197, 4-263, 5-267, 6-310, 7-311. Bowling Starc 9-1-53-2; Hazlewood 9-0-60-1; Maxwell 10-1-34-2; Cummins 9-0-71-1; Zampa 10-0-70-1; Marsh 1-0-6-0; Stoinis 2-0-11-0. Australia Runs (b) M R Marsh c Bavuma b Jansen 7 (15) D A Warner c van der Dussen b Ngidi 13 (27) S P D Smith lbw b Rabada 19 (16) M Labuschagne c Bavuma b Maharaj 46 (74) J P Inglis b Rabada 5 (4) G J Maxwell c and b Maharaj 3 (17) M P Stoinis c de Kock b Rabada 5 (4) M A Starc c de Kock b Jansen 27 (51) *P J Cummins c Miller b Shamsi 22 (21) A Zampa not out 11 (16) J R Hazlewood c Rabada b Shamsi 2 (2) Extras (lb 4, w 11, nb 2) 17 Total (40.5 overs) 177 Fall 1-27, 2-27, 3-50, 4-56, 5-65, 6-70, 7-139, 8-143, 9-175. Bowling Ngidi 8-2-18-1; Jansen 7-0-54-2; Rabada 8-1-33-3; Maharaj 10-0-30-2; Shamsi 7.5-0-38-2. Umpires J Wilson (WI) and R Illingworth (Eng) P W L Pts NRR South Africa 2 2 0 4 +2.36 New Zealand 2 2 0 4 +1.96 Inida 2 2 0 4 +1.50 Pakistan 2 2 0 4 +0.93 England 2 1 1 2 +0.55 Bangladesh 2 1 1 2 -0.65 Sri Lanka 2 0 2 0 -1.16 Holland 2 0 2 0 -1.80 Australia 2 0 2 0 -1.85 Afghanistan 2 0 2 0 -1.91 in the fifth over of the morning when he flicked Mitchell Starc for his first six and then cut him to the boundary for four. The opening partnership with Temba Bavuma was worth 108 and South Africa never looked back. Mind you, what help they got. Two of the five dropped chances were gifted to Bavuma; another was given to Aiden Markram, dropped on one by Cummins off a straightforward return catch. In his present mood — Markram made the quickest World Cup hundred against Sri Lanka — he is not someone to be generous to, and he made a bruising 56 in 44 balls. Cummins’ performances are under the microscope. He was criticised for his captaincy after the opening game against India, when he took his threatening quicker bowlers off too soon, and here his own bowling looked below par, conceding 71 from his nine overs. Adam Zampa, the main spinner, was the other concern as his figures of none for 70 were put into context by Glenn Maxwell, who took two for 34 with his off spin and did not concede a boundary. At one stage, South Africa looked like getting well above 300. Eventually, though, De Kock tired and was bowled reverse-sweeping; the loss of Markram and Heinrich Klaasen within six balls of each other held them back and David Miller was starved of the strike for too long. It could have been worse for Australia, although their fielding did not improve, with Marcus Stoinis and Starc dropping catches in the 49th over. Stoinis’s was an especially bad drop. When Australia batted, wickets tumbled immediately. The arrival of dew might have brought some extra movement for South Africa’s new-ball bowlers, but they were smarter, too, with Lungi Ngidi immediately varying his pace cleverly. When he gave way, there was no respite, with Kagiso Rabada putting in a top-class spell. The ball that bowled Josh Inglis, which angled in and darted away off the seam, was special. There were some comic moments, too, not least when Steve Smith was given out on review to Rabada. Smith was convinced that the ball was missing leg, as was his partner, Marnus Labuschagne. Both had retreated to their positions, ready for the next ball, when the DRS decision came. Stoinis was dismissed caught down the leg side off Rabada, and given his bottom hand looked to be off the bat handle as the ball flicked his glove, there was some doubt over it. Still, there was no questioning the excellence of the catch. De Kock it was, of course, making a difficult catch look easy. The art of making the difficult look easy — post-retirement, maybe de Kock can tell us the secret.
63 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Football Sport No excuses for Wayne this time – he must deliver success Matt Dickinson Senior Sports Writer J ohn Eustace had a good job offer this summer — another Sky Bet Championship club, more money — but backed himself to win over the new owners of Birmingham City. With the club sitting sixth after comfortably beating their rivals West Bromwich Albion live on television on Friday night, his mission was going admirably well. Except it was mission impossible. Eustace could have had Birmingham soaring at the top of the table and it would not have been enough because of one big problem. He is not Wayne Rooney. Eustace does not have 120 England caps, multiple honours with Manchester United and global renown. He does not have a name that builds a brand in America. He will not look recognisable on Instagram alongside the new Birmingham shareholder, and NFL legend, Tom Brady. He might know how to coach a football team, motivate players and win matches, but he is not prime content. Nor does he have an agent who happens to be close to Garry Cook, the Birmingham chief executive. So Eustace is unceremoniously dumped and Rooney comes in, and you might think a little less of football as the departed manager licks his wounds and scours the job market. It would also seem a fortuitous break for Rooney, who departed DC United in Washington less than a week ago having missed out on the MLS playoffs, except, perhaps, for one thing: the manner of his arrival has increased the stakes. Rooney, 37, is hardly unaccustomed to pressure — he has lived with its intensity since he muscled onto the scene as a prodigy at 16 — but the way this move has been handled undoubtedly attracts added scrutiny as he seeks to build a coaching CV, and to bring the success that Birmingham expect. That he will earn more than three times Eustace’s salary, which was less than £500,000, is only one reason he will need to thrive. The Birmingham owners have had to justify the sacking of Eustace to dismayed fans, so they talked about “philosophy” and “ambition”, as if Rooney guarantees heaps of the stuff compared to the previous guy. He will need to take Eustace’s team — which could hardly be blamed for a survival strategy last season, given 17th was as high as the club had finished in any of the past seven years amid all sorts of off-field chaos — and play not only winning football but attractively too. Rooney has inherited an expectation to take Birmingham at least into the play-offs, and hopefully the promised land of the Premier League, and there is not only his salary to think about but the money being thrown at players. City signed 13 in the summer and the wage bill is going up in every department. This is not a cheap operation. Among the new arrivals could be Mike Rigg, who was technical director at Manchester City when Cook was there during the early days of the Abu Dhabi regime, and may be given a role in recruitment on top of the public backing for Craig Gardner, technical director. The new regime under Tom Wagner, formerly of Goldman Sachs and now a hedge fund manager, is ambitious enough that Rafael Benítez was another name considered by the new owners when they were taking over in the summer. Wagner might be doing this in part for the joys of sport — and, heck, Rooney looks in relaxed mood as he is presented as Birmingham’s new manager yesterday, but expectations will be higher than in his previous jobs which wealthy American does not covet an English football club these days? — but there will be a need for success to match investment. It will be intriguing to see how Rooney — along with Ashley Cole as one of his assistants — fares as he seeks to show that he has much more to offer than a famous name as one of England’s greatest goalscorers and the outstanding English footballer of his generation. To have the profile can be a mixed blessing. Frank Lampard was twice promoted beyond his experience by Chelsea, to the detriment of his longterm career. Steven Gerrard’s CV is very much a work in progress, especially in the light of all that Unai Emery has achieved at Aston Villa, so it was surprising that he chose to take the golden cul-de-sac of Saudi Arabia. Rooney’s record at Derby County and DC United is not substantial enough to be rushing to make judgment, especially given the mess he worked under at Pride Park — including points deductions and an inexperienced squad — and a relatively low budget in America. He is insistent that he is committed to a serious career in coaching. He finished his Pro Licence with the FA while abroad, and was willing to live away from his family to learn from a different league and transfer market. He claims to have learnt from his own experiences — including the binge drinking and anger of some of his playing days — to not only be able to handle players but teach them modern, progressive football. Rooney insists that his forte is bringing through a technical team; indeed, he says that he learnt the most from Louis van Gaal and his positional attention to detail among his United managers rather than the more basic tactical strategies of Sir Alex Ferguson. It sounds promising, but this is the point where Rooney will have to bridge the gap between potential and delivery given that Cook talks of Birmingham becoming “a football Rooney: I rejected Saudi move to prove myself at home Tom Kershaw Wayne Rooney has revealed that he rejected a move to Saudi Arabia because he was determined to prove himself as a manager in English football. The former Derby County and DC United head coach was presented as the new Birmingham City manager yesterday alongside the club’s chief executive, Garry Cook, who admitted he had attempted to lure Rooney to the Gulf in his previous position with the Saudi Pro League. “We discussed Saudi Arabia. It wasn’t going to happen,” Cook, who also attempted to sign Rooney when at Nike and Manchester City, said. “And that’s no disrespect to any of the managers who have gone out there by the way,” Rooney interjected. “For me, I felt my development, my pathway, was a different way.” Rooney, 37, wore a glazed look that told of the jet lag, having only left his role in Washington on Sunday, but there was little questioning the former Manchester United forward’s managerial ambitions, as he stated his goal to “get this club back to the Premier League” after signing a 3½-year deal. “To get back into English football is great. It’s what I’ve wanted to do,” Rooney said. “I’ve had opportunities over the last four to six weeks at other clubs as well, but since speaking to Birmingham, it was a really easy decision. I want to be successful, it’s clear this club wants to be successful.” After a litany of broken promises under beleaguered ownership models, it is a new era for Birmingham under the American investment firm Knighthead Capital, with Rooney the coveted star name in the dug-out to mirror the fame of their minority investor, the NFL legend Tom Brady. Having replaced John Eustace, who was sacked despite leading Birmingham to sixth in the Sky Bet Championship this season, Rooney’s ability as a coach will come under a different kind of scrutiny to his experience at Derby, where a depleted squad and points deductions amounted to an unsparing baptism of fire. Rooney emerged with credit, but his tenure at DC United ended a little mutedly after they missed out on the MLS play-offs this season. “It will be nice to focus on the training sessions and game and have a team above me who I can trust in to make sure everything is right,” Rooney said. “Maybe that wasn’t the case at my two previous clubs. “This is where I feel I’m meant to be. I believe my ambitions are going to elevate the club.” Having recruited former team-mates Ashley Cole and John O’Shea as assistant coaches, Rooney said he wouldn’t hesitate to call on Brady too. “He’s one of — if not the — greatest athlete of all time, so I am sure he has a lot of advice,” Rooney said. “I have had Kevin Sinfield and Tony Bellew, different athletes from different sports, come into my team in the past. One of the things I want to do when Tom Brady is over next is get him talking to the players and get him sharing his story.” powerhouse”, and Wagner has shown his ruthlessness in backing the decision to be rid of Eustace. With coach production remaining a failing of English football, we should wish Rooney well — but we should also say the same for Eustace, a former Birmingham trainee who battled up via Kidderminster Harriers and spells as an assistant to earn his opportunity. He thrived at Birmingham despite one day arriving at the training ground to find it on fire, a telling metaphor for a club which has endured more than its share of mismanagement. Eustace was running a team in front of two closed stands at St Andrew’s, ownership sagas and the threat of sanctions from the Football League. Last season he gave the most number of minutes to players aged 18 and under of any club in Europe. He did well despite all this. Now it is over to Rooney to do better and, in the circumstances, there will not be much room for excuses. Kenwright discharged six weeks after cancer surgery Everton have confirmed that their chairman, Bill Kenwright, has been discharged from intensive care and is recuperating at home after surgery to remove a cancerous tumour in his liver. The 78-year-old theatre impresario, who has been the chairman of the Merseyside club for the past 19 years, is expected to make a full recovery. Kenwright had the tumour diagnosed at the start of August and underwent an operation six weeks ago, but suffered complications after the procedure. Craig Shakespeare, the former Leicester City manager, has had cancer diagnosed. The 59-year-old was Claudio Ranieri’s assistant for the club’s Premier League title win in 2015-16, before taking over from the Italian the following season.
64 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times Sport Football Grealish: I’m over Arsenal now I’m back with pal Rice Henry Winter Chief Football Writer Jack Grealish does not just play for England — he can talk for England too. Life, never mind football, needs more characters like him. For someone who trends on social media every time he goes out on the pitch — or just goes out — the 28-yearold remains remarkably unaffected. Now a Treble winner with Manchester City and an England regular, Grealish’s level of fame has skyrocketed, but he has stayed as grounded and as much fun and talkative as ever. He talked up England’s hopes for next year’s Euros — “it’s our time” — then talked down claims about City in crisis — “no chance” — and also talked dismissively about claims of a lack of dedication — “football’s my life”. Only the fact that the team bus was about to leave St George’s Park, heading south for Friday’s friendly with Australia at Wembley, stopped him in full flow. So much talent was about to board that bus that it was easy to understand why England are among the favourites, behind the effervescent French, for Euro 2024. “We feel now is the perfect time to succeed together,” Grealish said. “You look at the talent we have — Harry Kane, Jude Bellingham, [Bukayo] Saka, [Phil] Foden, [Marcus] Rashford, Declan Rice, all these players, it’s just unbelievable. The defenders as well. Kyle Walker, he’s what now; 33? I said to him to the other day, ‘Mate, I think this is the best I’ve ever seen you.’ “This is one we’re really looking at to try and win the tournament. Imagine how amazing it would be for the country? We do feel this is our time. Definitely that swagger and that belief within ourselves, we have that now.” And then there is the togetherness. Club cliques hampered the so-called Golden Generation. England are more united now, helped by Gareth Southgate’s man-management, fewer egos and greater familiarity through in- Euro 2020 final shoot-out. “It was horcreased contact in the age-group rible,” Grealish said. “We feel like there’s teams. unfinished business.” Grealish took an example from City’s There is a serious streak in Grealish loss at the Emirates on Sunday, when amid the smiles. He bridled at suggesthe winger was seen arguing with Ar- tions of lacking dedication. It annoyed senal players as he headed to the tun- him. “Yeah, a little bit,” he said. “You’d nel. “We got beaten by Arsenal and as only have to ask my coaches at England much as I’m the worst sore loser ever, and clubs I’ve played for how much I the next day I come here and I’m with love football. I’m not one of these Declan Rice and he’s one of my best people who loves sport — golf, cricket friends,” he said. “That’s the beauty of it. and F1, I can’t really get into. I just love Going back in the day, I heard a few of football. Even if it’s League Two or them [like Rio Ferdinand] say they League One games on TV, I’d be watchhad such a talented squad but I don’t ing.” know if they really got on with each But how do you follow the Treble? other. When we come here, we proper “I’m not saying it’s hard to get motivatget on. ed. You can’t say that. But when you’ve “Back in the day, I don’t know if done it, it’s like, ‘What now?’ It would people would ‘fake injuries’ but have been nice to do something people here, they get injured we’ve never done — maybe and want to come here to win all four but we’re out of see the guys instead of the Carabao Cup already. England v staying at their club. Last Then it was trying to do Australia month I was injured and an ‘Invincibles’ season, I came and met up with but we got beaten by Friendly international the guys, stayed for a Wolves.” Tonight, 7.45pm kick-off night. Saka came and did Grealish laughed at Wembley Stadium it. Luke Shaw did. It’s brilheadlines that City losliant. ing two on the spin constiTV: Channel 4 “Everyone needs talent in tuted a crisis. “Come on. No their team but you also need chance. It’s nowhere near a crithat togetherness. It sounds cringesis. Rodri’s been a big miss for us.” worthy but when you’re a group of Grealish himself has played only 175 brothers playing together, a group of minutes since suffering a dead leg in the friends, that really, really helps. And win away to Sheffield United in August. we’ve got that here. A lot of it is down to “It was the worst pain,” he said. “You the manager and the way he’s instilled might laugh at me — it was only a dead that in us.” leg — but it was the worst dead leg I’ve Southgate has such depth to draw on. had in my life. “The quality we have in the attacking “I get so many of them over the years areas, especially on the wing, is maybe and I’m usually good at taking them, the best in world football,” Grealish taking the hits. And it wasn’t even bad, said. “It’ll be a tough decision for the the tackle. It was Oli McBurnie. If I manager because there’s so much tal- showed you the tackle now, you’d ent in those spaces. There’s Saka, Fo- be like: ‘Get up,’ But when I went to den, Rashford, myself. Jarrod [Bowen] walk off the coach back into the has been on fire and now he’s here. training ground at City, I genuinely There’s people who aren’t here like could not walk, honestly. I was on Raheem [Sterling, ignored] and [Ebere- crutches for a few days. I could not bend chi] Eze got injured.” my leg. The Australia “friendly” will be com“You have the haematoma, the blood, petitive because of the sporting rivalry and if you have a bad one, it’s like 6cm. between the nations while the visit of Mine was 20cm. Our doc at City [Max Italy on Tuesday in a Euro 2024 qualifi- Sala], who has worked at AC Milan, er carries an edge beyond qualifying said, ‘That’s the worst dead leg I’ve ever points. They return to Wembley for the seen by a mile.’ ”But Grealish’s back and first time since defeating England in the firing, and smiling as usual. ‘I’m disappointed FA won’t back Israel’ continued from back to stop the matches being used for demonstrations. Security staff will be briefed to refuse entry to anyone carrying or wearing a flag or replica shirt not relating to the teams in action. The FA took the decision after consulting a number of groups and believes it has support for the move across the board. The FA’s statement read: “On Friday evening, we will remember the innocent victims of the devastating events in Israel and Palestine. Our thoughts are with them and their families and friends in England and Australia, and with all the communities who are affected by this conflict. We stand for humanity and an end to the death, violence, fear and suffering. “England and Australia players will wear black armbands during their match at Wembley Stadium and there will also be a period of silence held before kick-off.” The FA will also promote the British Red Cross emergency appeal to support the people affected by the humanitarian crisis in the region. The EFL will follow a similar approach at its matches this weekend. The Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, and the FA’s former chairman, David Bernstein, had called for the arch to be lit up in a show of support for Israel. It has previously been illuminated in the colours of Ukraine, after the Russian invasion began last year, and France, after the Paris terror attacks in 2015. The England cricketer Moeen Ali, who in 2014 was banned by the International Cricket Council from wearing wristbands saying “Save Gaza” and “Free Palestine” during a Test match — despite having been given permission by England — posted a message on social media quoting the black rights activist Malcolm X, saying: “If you’re not careful the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed & loving the people who are doing the oppressing.” Aleksander Ceferin, the Uefa president, became the first football leader to comment publicly, writing a letter to the Israel FA expressing his sorrow. Colwill makes his debut as fringe stars told to deliver Paul Joyce Gareth Southgate has warned his fringe players that they must deliver for England against Australia or risk jeopardising their hopes of making the cut for Euro 2024. The manager plans to experiment in the friendly and give some squad members the chance to represent their country at Wembley for the first time. Levi Colwill is set to make his debut and Jarrod Bowen is also likely to feature from the start, with Southgate raising the stakes by saying they must seize the opportunity. “We want to see as many of the squad as we can this week,” he said. “There is a reality with England that you have to take your chances when they come. “As a former player, you knew the moments when you felt, ‘OK, I have got to deliver tonight. I am not going to get six or ten chances’. That is not how it works. Our job is to try to alleviate pres- sure from the team, but you cannot hide that you have to deliver with England and we have to win matches, so we have got to be good at handling and coping with pressure. “For a number of the guys it will be their first chance to play for England at Wembley and that’s an unbelievably special moment.” That also raises the prospect of Eddie Nketiah featuring for his England debut at some point. The 24-year-old Arsenal striker was called up for the previous squad last month but was subsequently overlooked for the draw with Ukraine and the success over Scotland. A big concern for Southgate is Kalvin Phillips’s lack of playing time for Manchester City. The 27-year-old midfielder, a mainstay for Southgate over the past three years, has played only 167 minutes of club football this season. Even the suspension of Rodri has not resulted in an overdue run in Pep Guardiola’s side. “We’ve got a few situa-
65 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Sport Grealish and Rice are close friends, despite their clubs’ rivalry ‘Maybe I could have won more caps, but it’s hard to get one’ Former Everton striker Francis Jeffers tells Paul Joyce about his lone England game in 2003, against Australia T he memories of an evening at the Boleyn Ground two decades ago will resonate for Francis Jeffers this week, although he will not be tempted to search for footage of the goal he scored on his one — and only — England appearance. Instead, the only football on his laptop will be the recent games of AlKholood as he begins the forensic analysis that he hopes will help to bring another victory for the ambitious Al-Qadsiah, who play in Saudi Arabia’s second tier. Jeffers, who scored England’s consolation goal in the 3-1 friendly defeat by Australia in 2003, moved to the kingdom in the summer, although his defection did not command the same attention as others. The former “fox in the box” is now 42, but a career that began at Everton before a £12 million transfer to Arsenal is still throwing up opportunities. The latest has come as part of the former Liverpool and England striker Robbie Fowler’s coaching team in the Middle East, with Al-Qadsiah unbeaten in Division One and looking to gain promotion to the Saudi Pro League. Each morning Fowler, Jeffers and Tony Grant, the former Everton midfielder who has also been part of the backroom staff since the start of the month, meet to plan the training session that will take place at night because of the heat. Aramco, one of the most valuable companies in the world, recently bought Al-Qadsiah and has big plans for the club based in Khobar. The ambition of the state-owned energy firm matches that of the Liverpoolborn trio. “Three teams go up and promotion is everyone’s ambition,” Jeffers, who was a coach at the National League England v Australia Wembley Stadium, kick-off 7.45pm England (possible; 4-2-3-1) S Johnstone (C Palace) L Dunk H Maguire (Brighton) (Man Utd) T Alexander -Arnold (Liverpool) L Colwill (Chelsea) J Henderson (Al-Ettifaq) J Bowen (West Ham) C Gallagher (Chelsea) J Maddison (Tottenham) J Grealish (Man City) O Watkins (A Villa) Referee: S Frappart (France) tions like that,” Southgate said. “We’ve obviously got Aaron Ramsdale as well [at Arsenal]. In the way we want to play he [Phillips] can be hugely important for us. It’s not a good situation for us that he’s not playing regularly.” The commitment to look at different players comes in the lead-up to Tuesday’s Euro 2024 qualifier against Italy at Wembley, which could seal qualification for next summer’s finals. Southgate said his squad retained a “responsibility to keep winning” and he is also mindful of the sporting rivalry that exists with Australia. He attended the third Ashes Test at Headingley this summer, and recalled how the Socceroos celebrated their last victory over England in 2003. “We’ve talked about the rivalry and we know what that means,” Southgate said. “I played with a lot of Aussies and when they beat us at Upton Park [in 2003] they were pretty quick to come back to Middlesbrough and [Mark] Schwarzer had a blow-up kangaroo under his arm.” 6England Under-21 maintained their winning form in their European Championship qualifying group with a 9-1 victory over Serbia at Nottingham’s City Ground although they wouldn’t have banked on finding themselves behind after 27 minutes. In the end Chelsea’s Noni Madueke, Jaden Philogene, of Aston Villa, and Liverpool’s Harvey Elliott alll helped themselves to a brace of goals for Lee Carsley’s European champions. side Oldham Athletic last season, said. “The new owners have spoken about that in meetings and that brings a little bit of pressure, but if everyone is all pulling in the same direction, it will happen. “I did my League Managers’ Association diploma with Robbie for a year. I knew him before then, obviously, but until you go on these courses with people you don’t really know someone. When he got the opportunity to come here, he needed to put a team together and I must have come into his thoughts from whatever he had seen on that course. I did my Uefa B, A and Pro Licences and I only know football. It is something I am passionate about. I have aspirations to be a manager myself one day.” When Fowler and Jeffers arrived in Saudi Arabia they inherited a bloated 40-man squad, but have whittled down the numbers and introduced some familiar names, such as Joel Robles, the former Everton and Leeds United goalkeeper, and Max Power, the former Sunderland and Wigan Athletic midfielder. Five wins and two draws from their first seven league matches has been an encouraging start, while in the King’s Cup, AlQadsiah pushed AlTaawoun, who are second in the Saudi Pro League, in a 2-0 defeat. “Robbie is very meticulous,” Jeffers said. “He plans everything a month, six weeks ahead. We play with three at the back and we want the ball, but it has to be possession with a purpose. We were both strikers and there is nothing worse than a team having a lot of the ball but the team not supplying the striker.” Given that, who oversees the finishing drills? “It would have to be him,” a chuckling Jeffers said. “I am not going to get in the way of one of Jeffers scored against Australia the greatest strikers of all time in terms of finishing, but we all do it. Robbie’s not one of those people who says, ‘I do this, I do that.’ He trusts his staff and that is a big thing for me.” Australia’s game at Wembley this evening offers a reminder of when they were previously in the capital for a friendly. Sven-Goran Eriksson made 11 changes at half-time, with Jeffers and Wayne Rooney among those to win their first caps. Jeffers met Jermaine Jenas’s cross to direct a header beyond Mark Schwarzer and, on an otherwise forgettable night, continued his own rise. He returned to Arsenal the next day intent on forcing his way into becoming part of Arsène Wenger’s regular plans. Instead, he would go on to have a nomadic career, with spells at Charlton Athletic, Blackburn Rovers, Sheffield Wednesday, Motherwell and Accrington Stanley, as well as time in Australia and Malta. Still, Jeffers, who had been a prolific scorer for England Under-21, looks back fondly on that one appearance under Eriksson. “It is the pinnacle, isn’t it?” he said. “Even though it was one cap I managed to get on the scoresheet. I got in the next squad but didn’t play. When I was a young lad I always said I wanted to play for Everton and England so I managed to tick them both off. “People will say, ‘He had unfulfilled talent, he should have got more caps.’ But it is quite hard to get an England cap. To be involved with Wayne — two lads who went to the same school in Croxteth [the De La Salle Academy] — you very rarely get that at any level. “I watch all the England games and for me, England are the best team in the world now. People will say, ‘How can you say that? They haven’t won a tournament.’ But they are getting closer and with a little bit of luck that will happen. “They have an unbelievable squad. Look at what [Jude] Bellingham is doing at Real Madrid, look at the bench, they have a mix of youth and experience. The next step is to win a big tournament. I think they will.” Kane brother not on agent list Italy pair sent back to clubs Matt Lawton Chief Sports Correspondent Harry Kane’s brother, Charlie, is among several family members of England players missing from a new global list of football agents that has been published by Fifa. Agents were required to pass a multiple-choice examination before October 1 to secure a licence under new Fifa rules designed to reduce the number of intermediaries working in the game. There were about 15,000 agents before the test was brought in but there are only 4,766 on the new Fifa list. It is unclear whether Charlie Kane and the family members of a number of Gareth Southgate’s squad have passed. It is understood that some agents who sat the exam last month are yet to be added. Kane, who negotiated his brother’s £100 million move from Tottenham Hotspur to Bayern Munich in August, has not responded to a request to clarify his position. Mark Bellingham, the father of the Real Madrid and England midfielder, Jude, did pass the exam and is on the Fifa list. The new Fifa regulations, which include a limit on the fees agents can charge, are the subject of legal challenges in England and Germany by some of the leading sports management companies. The FA publishes its own list of registered agents, which will remain unchanged until this is resolved, with a decision due by November 30. Kane and other family members of England players remain on the FA list. The number of agents in England has grown from 500 in 2015 to more than 2,000, and Premier League clubs paid a record £318 million in fees to intermediaries between February 2022 and January this year. Fifa received 6,586 applications from 138 member associations to take the first exam on April 19. Entrants have to study a 528-page book to prepare for the 20-question, 60-minute test, which costs £200 to sit. Only longer-serving “legacy” agents do not have to take the exam. More than half of entrants failed the first exam with only 1,962 of the 3,800 candidates achieving the 75 per cent pass mark. continued from back statement on Thursday evening to confirm that both players had left the Italy training camp for the forthcoming Euro 2024 qualifying group C games with Malta on Saturday and against England at Wembley on Tuesday. The pair are returning to their clubs. “The federation announces that, in the afternoon of [Thursday], the Turin Public Prosecutor’s Office notified investigation documents to the players Sandro Tonali and Nicolò Zaniolo, currently in training with the national team at the Federal Technical Center in Coverciano,” the statement read. “Regardless of the nature of the acts, believing that in this situation the two players are not in the necessary condition to face the commitments scheduled in the next few days, the federation has decided, also to protect them, to allow them to return to their respective clubs.”
66 2GM Friday October 13 2023 | the times Sport Euro 2024 qualifying Scotland stars up in arms as referee denies McTominay Spain Morata 73, Sancet 86 Scotland 2 0 Michael Grant Scottish Football Correspondent, Seville Ryan Christie and John McGinn claimed that the referee gave two different explanations for disallowing a Scott McTominay goal against Spain that could have secured Scotland’s place at Euro 2024. A point in Seville would have been enough for Steve Clarke’s side and they thought they had taken a shock lead after an hour when McTominay’s free kick whipped past the goalkeeper Unai Simón from a tight angle when Spain were expecting him to cross. Qualification was in their grasp but as McTominay led Scotland’s celebrations, the VAR, Pol van Boekel, alerted Serdar Gozubuyuk to an apparent infringement. There was confusion in the stadium, and on the pitch, about the reason for VAR’s intervention, but after checking his monitor, Gozubuyuk signalled that the goal would not stand. The stadium screen showed that a foul was being checked — by Jack Hendry on the goalkeeper — but then it emerged the goal had been ruled out for Hendry being fractionally offside, for which the referee would not have been called to his monitor. Álvaro Morata and Oihan Sancet then scored late goals to give Spain a 2-0 win which they deserved for a dominant performance against dogged and organised Scottish defending. Scotland, who also lost Andy Robertson to a dislocated shoulder, with the length of his expected absence unclear so far, will still qualify for the Euros on Sunday unless Spain lose to Norway in Oslo. Failing that, they have two further chances against Georgia and Norway next month. “It’s so frustrating,” Ryan Christie said. “I’m off celebrating, Scott’s off Morata celebrates Spain’s first goal after McTominay, below, thought he had put Scotland ahead with a superb free kick only for it to be controversially ruled out celebrating, everybody’s off celebrating. Then the ref’s telling everyone on the pitch that it’s for a push, then when we see him afterwards he’s saying it’s offside. But if it’s offside he doesn’t have to go to the monitor, does he? “There’s no clarity. If no one in the stadium knows what the decision’s been given for, then it can’t be clear and obvious. “I’ve seen it back from a few angles. From the match angle, which I’m guessing they have on VAR, it looks like Jack pushes him a little bit. Then you see an angle from behind the goal and he hardly touches him. This is what really gets to us players, it just leads to more questions and doubt when what we need is certainty and clarity. All we know is that at 1-0, we’d have been in a great position to go on and get the result.” John McGinn, the Aston Villa midfielder, was equally baffled by the officials’ intervention. “The referee decides it’s a foul,” he said. “During the game he changes his mind to say it’s an offside. That’s the thing that stings really. “Is he [Simón ] going to save it? Absolutely no chance, no goalkeeper in the world is going to save that. It’s frustrating because that goal qualifies us because they need two goals. It is a bit of a hammer blow. I feel for big Scott. Sometimes they go for you but tonight it was never going to go for us. We can’t be too disappointed. We wanted to qualify tonight and we were capable of qualifying tonight.” Spain had fired crosses behind Scotland’s back line all night, never quite finding takers or accurate finishes, but the captain delivered. Morata’s 34th international goal was a deft, downward glancing header to finally put his country ahead with 17 minutes left. After the fine game he had it was cruel that Aaron Hickey was punished for a slip in the 86th minute, being dispossessed as Joselu found Oihan Sancet in the middle to bundle a finish beyond Angus Gunn. They could never keep it, their inferior passing highlighted by the science of Spain’s movement and distribution. Scotland reached half-time goalless but having still suffered a serious loss. Robertson chased a ball into the Spanish penalty area and was caught by Simón, landing heavily. The captain could not continue and Nathan Patterson came on at right back with Hickey going to the left. Spain (4-3-3): U Simon 6 — D Carvajal 6 (J Navas 67min, 5), R Le Normand 6, A Laporte 6, A Balde 6 (F Garcia 46, 6) — Gavi 7, Rodri 7, M Merino 7 (O Sancet 67, 5)— F Torres 7, A Morata 8 (Joselu 84), M Oyarzabal 5 (B Zaragoza 46, 5). Booked Merino, Carvajal, Simon, Laporte. Scotland (5-2-2-1): A Gunn 7 — A Hickey 7, R Porteous 7 (B Gilmour 87) J Hendry 7, S McKenna 6, A Robertson 6 (N Patterson 44, 6) — S McTominay 7, C McGregor 6 (K McLean 87) — J McGinn 6, R Christie 6 (S Armstrong 79) — L Dykes 6 (C Adams 79). Booked Dykes, Patterson, Hendry. Referee Serdar Gozubuyuk (Neth) Att 45,623
67 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Sport Rugby World Cup Sport ‘Be careful what you ask him’ – Schmidt’s detail lifting All Blacks Coach has improved New Zealand and will have former players and Farrell second-guessing, writes John Westerby Schmidt’s growing influence Ireland v New Zealand Quarter-final Tomorrow, 8pm (UK time) Stade de France, Paris TV: ITV T here is always an element of second-guessing in the way that modern coaches prepare for a big match. All teams want to play their own game, of course, but they are also striving to predict what strategies the opposition coaches expect them to employ, and to avoid becoming too predictable. So well do the coaching set-ups of Ireland and New Zealand know each other at this World Cup, before their teams meet at Stade de France tomorrow, we can expect third-guessing and fourth-guessing to be involved in the planning process. Joe Schmidt is only an assistant to Ian Foster, the All Blacks’ head coach, primarily working with the attack, but his presence looms large over this quarter-final. He has spent countless hours working alongside Andy Farrell and Simon Easterby, close colleagues from his six-year stint as Ireland head coach, while Greg Feek is now the New Zealand scrum coach, having previously filled a similar role with Ireland. Much as Ireland’s players will be straining to focus on their own game this weekend, they are acutely aware that, given Schmidt’s intimate knowledge of their individual abilities, and the attention to detail that he brings to his planning, their weaker points will have been laid bare for the All Blacks this week. The detail. Whenever Schmidt’s influence on a team is being assessed, the degree of detail he brings to a coaching set-up is always part of the conversation. Here is Rieko Ioane, the All Blacks centre, when asked this week about the impact Schmidt had made since he joined Foster’s coaching group last year. “Joe just sees the game in a very detailed view,” Ioane said. “Especially with us backs, his work in noticing trends in other teams’ attack and defence is what separates him, the detail he goes into. Trying to find those one-percenters can be quite hard, but with Joe, he makes the view of the game a lot easier by the way he understands it.” Aaron Smith, the scrum half, smiled when sharing how he had learnt to tailor his requests to Schmidt for information. “I’ve really enjoyed connecting with him,” Smith said. “He always has clips to show you, if you ask. So you’ve got to be careful what you ask him, because it could cost you 20 minutes.” That is the level of detail Schmidt brings. And Smith has been playing for the All Blacks for more than a decade, winning his 123rd cap this weekend. From his time with Ireland, the comment that most colourfully described Schmidt’s coaching style came from Johnny Sexton. “You play the game with two voices in your head — your own and Joe’s commentary,” Sexton said. “Make a mistake and you know you’re going to hear about it on Monday morning.” New Zealand are scoring far more tries from set pieces since Joe Schmidt took over as attack coach Percentage of tries from set pieces (2021 to July 2022) Percentage of tries from set pieces (July 2022 to present) Australia Wales 76 South Africa Ireland Italy Argentina Scotland France England 73 70 70 69 68 61 58 New Zealand 54 Wales 53 70 New Zealand 67 Australia 64 South Africa 63 Argentina 62 Italy 60 Scotland 59 Ireland 57 France 54 England 50 Source: Opta Schmidt’s All Black backline to face his former side has Leicester Fainga’anuku, left, on the wing. Mark Telea has been dropped for breaching the team curfew How they line up Ireland H Keenan M Hansen G Ringrose B Aki J Lowe J Sexton (capt) J Gibson-Park A Porter D Sheenan T Furlong T Beirne I Henderson P O’Mahony J van der Flier C Doris Replacements R Kelleher D Kilcoyne F Bealham J McCarthy J Conan C Murray J Crowley J O’Brien 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 New Zealand B Barrett W Jordan R Ioane J Barrett L Fainga’anuku R Mo’unga A Smith E de Groot C Taylor T Lomax B Retallick S Barrett S Frizell S Cane (Capt) A Savea Replacements D Coles T Williams F Newell S Whitelock D Papali’i F Christie D McKenzie A Lienert-Brown Kick-off 8pm (UK time). Referee W Barnes (Eng). Assistant M Carley (Eng) and C Ridley (both Eng). TMO T Foley (Eng). It was the detail and prescriptive drive for higher standards from their head coach that helped Ireland to enjoy the most successful period in their history. In the six years that Schmidt was head coach, after his three trophy-laden seasons with Leinster, they won the Six Nations title three times, the grand slam once and recorded Ireland’s first two victories over the All Blacks. When it all went wrong at the 2019 World Cup, the All Blacks exacting revenge at the quarter-final stage, it was the weighty volume of detail and the exacting demands of the head coach that were to blame. The Irish Rugby Union, in its post-tournament debrief, identified “performance anxiety” among both players and management as a key failing. Schmidt, 58, had always intended to leave after that tournament, and his next posting was as director of rugby and high performance with World Rugby, a wide-ranging brief that involved working to strengthen relationships between international coaches and referees, leading developments on player welfare and law amendments around minimising head injuries. He had moved back to New Zealand with his family, to Taupo on the north island, but the travelling involved in his new job, particularly with Covid restrictions, meant that he left after a year in the role to spend more time at home. He had always been loath to spend too long away from his family, not least because his son, Luke, had suffered from severe epilepsy since the age of four, having had a large brain tumour removed, at times suffering 15 seizures a day. With his wife, Kellie, he has four children, and Luke is now 20. When he was asked, upon his return to New Zealand, whether he aspired to coach the All Blacks one day, he replied: “I aspire to be a good dad, if I can be. When I stepped away from coaching, that was my aspiration.” He was enticed back into coaching last year as an assistant with the Blues, based in Auckland, helping them to reach the Super Rugby final, and he then agreed to become an All Blacks selector. But New Zealand were about to experience a severe wobble, suffering a home series defeat by Ireland, of all teams, and Foster came close to being sacked. Instead, there was a reshuffle of his backroom staff and Schmidt was brought on board as attack coach in August last year. It did not take long for him to make a difference, as New Zealand went on to win the Rugby Championship. By the time they came to face England at Twickenham in November, opposing coaches were noting the effect that Schmidt was having on the All Blacks’ game plan. “It looks as though the team is a lot more structured with Joe Schmidt’s influence on their attack,” Anthony Seibold, the England defence coach at the time, said. “He did a super job with Ireland and you can see some improvement there since Joe has been involved.” Since his early coaching days, with Bay of Plenty and the Blues, and then Clermont Auvergne in France, he has always loved dreaming up set-piece moves from scrums and lineouts. Over the past 14 months, since the end of that series defeat by Ireland, the All Blacks’ percentage of firstphase scores from set pieces has increased markedly. Compared with the 18-month period before the Ireland series, 67 per cent of their tries now originate from scrums and lineouts, up from 54 per cent, and first-phase scores from those set pieces are now up to 31 per cent from 27 per cent. After this World Cup, Schmidt’s future is unclear. He did not throw his hat in the ring to become Foster’s successor, and Scott Robertson, who was given the job, has assembled his own team of assistants. But the chances are his services will soon be in demand, all the more so if he can scupper Ireland’s hopes tomorrow.
68 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Sport Sport Rugby World Cup Smith pick is pivotal test for Owen Slot Chief Sports Writer, Paris In the dying days of England’s Eddie Jones era, the RFU took confidence from what it thought were its next options. These came in the form of a presentation made by Nigel Redman, the former Bath and England lock, who is now the RFU’s team performance director. Redman’s work was the culmination of a huge project — a detailed analysis of all the English coaches working at a high level in or outside the country. It covered their experience, their expertise, their character profile. Those who saw it were impressed. Unfortunately, it also became somewhat redundant, because the postJones era started earlier than intended and when Steve Borthwick was appointed in the Australian’s stead last The men in charge Steve Borthwick Head coach The former England captain, 43, is at his first World Cup as a head coach, having been a part of Japan’s coaching staff in 2015 and England’s in 2019. He coached Leicester Tigers to the Gallagher Premiership in 2022. Kevin Sinfield Defence coach He had a decorated rugby league career with Leeds Rhinos, where he was also director of rugby. The 43-year-old has only been a rugby union coach since June 2021, when he joined Leicester. Richard Wigglesworth Attack coach He won Premiership titles with Sale Sharks (one), Saracens (five) and Leicester Tigers (one). The 40-yearold was the interim head coach at Leicester after Borthwick departed for England, and was a part of the Canada set-up at the 2019 World Cup. Tom Harrison Scrum coach The 32-year-old worked with Borthwick as a scrum coach for Leicester after playing for Auch in France’s second division. December, he didn’t look to the breadth of expertise and the varied options in the coaching world that Redman had laid out. Instead he insisted on going to what he knew best and that was where he came from: Leicester Tigers. First, Borthwick recruited Kevin Sinfield, who was his assistant at Leicester. Richard Wigglesworth, Aled Walters and Tom Harrison then followed. With England now preparing for a quarter-final and still lacking clarity in basic defining elements — selection, team culture, game plan — it is not unreasonable to ask how smart that was. The quarter-final against Fiji will provide something of an answer, and the likely selection of Marcus Smith at full back is thus a test not only of the player but of the coaches too. Will it be a stroke of inspiration? Or will it prove that chucking in a player out of position is not an experiment to be tried in a high-stakes game? The idea came from Sinfield, the defence coach. Its implementation will have been one of the key responsibilities this week of Wigglesworth, the attack coach. It is for the whole coaching team to make it work. If they do, it will be a big win for a coaching unit that hasn’t exactly been notable for its achievements in its brief time in the international game. This shortcoming does not mean that those men are not good coaches. Nor is it to suggest that they won’t become outstanding coaches. But they are so green. There is a neat comparison to be made, here, between this coaching team and the one that Stuart Lancaster took to the 2015 World Cup. Andy Farrell and Mike Catt were comparatively inexperienced and at their first World Cup as coaches, and they lost their jobs after it. But look at what the pair of them are doing now with Ireland — they haven’t turned out too badly. The fortunes of that 2015 coaching group demonstrate a point that shouldn’t really be a surprise: that it takes time to develop expertise. Meanwhile, Sinfield came into rugby union as a coach only two years ago and he started as an international coach as recently as January. Wigglesworth has spent four years fast-tracking his coaching credentials and he went to the previous World Cup with Canada but has been with England only since the start of the summer. Harrison, likewise, joined for this World Cup campaign and he is 32. How much expertise can they possibly have developed in such a short space of time? Actually, Lancaster’s 2015 coaching team were more experienced because they came together in 2012, at the start of their World Cup cycle, rather than at the end of it, like this class of 2023. However, it is the origins of this present England coaching team that limits them, as much as their inexperience. They all learnt their coaching at Leicester; the Leicester way is what they know. This means that the group lack diversity. If everyone has learnt the same lessons from the same teacher then the range of ideas can only be limited. Thus, if they are heading in the wrong direction, who is to say: “Stop, we need to check the map?” Or, for instance, if England are playing a heavy kicking game, as Leicester did, who is to say: “Should we rethink the approach?” That is why the Smith selection is so intriguing. Someone did say: “Stop, we need to rethink.” And the irony is that the full back they will drop, Freddie Steward, is the one that they invariably picked as the first choice for Leicester. The experience and diversity of a coaching team is a significant factor in successful teams. Look at the All Blacks and their policy of replenishing from within. Is this why they have failed to stay ahead of the rest of the world — because of group-think? And is that why they have improved since they were joined by Joe Schmidt, the attack coach who arrived with a decade’s worth of knowledge learnt in Ireland and France? When England were most recently a decent side, it was at the 2019 World Cup. Jones’s diverse coaching team for that tournament included John Mitchell, the Kiwi who was on his third World Cup having been the All Blacks head coach at one of them, and Scott Wisemantel, an Aussie on his third tournament with three different nations. Thereafter, England’s coaching staff splintered and as successive, underqualified coaches came and went, the team’s good form departed with them. England v Fiji Quarter-final Sunday, 4pm UK time Marseille TV: ITV Starting Smith, centre, out of position at full back in the quarter-final could prove a stroke of inspiration by England’s Likewise, it cannot be a surprise that the team who have flopped at this World Cup are Australia, because Jones’s reputation as a man-manager is so tarnished that he can no longer recruit a world-class coaching line-up. The result was that the Wallabies came to France with a defence coach (Brett Hodgson) who came with a great reputation from league, and an attack coach (Jason Ryles) who was also from league and was parachuted in having barely coached attack in union before. The coaches’ role is to give the players the best chance to hit the ceiling of their talents. You wonder: were that humiliated Wallabies team ever given a chance? The challenge for England’s coaching group is to prove that they can elevate their players towards their ceilings, and to do so with their lack of experience and diversity ensuring the odds are against them. It would be hard to argue that they have achieved this. It is too late, now, for the Redman analysis. It would help, therefore, to get the Smith experiment to work. Gatland opts for two No 7s in back row Elgan Alderman Toulon Warren Gatland has opted for the short-term solution of twin open-side flankers for Wales’s World Cup quarterfinal against Argentina tomorrow, with Tommy Reffell and Jac Morgan joining Aaron Wainwright in the back row. Dan Biggar and Liam Williams are fit to start at fly half and full back, and Ryan Elias is at hooker in preference to Dewi Lake, who is on the bench. After Michael Cheika, the Argentina head coach, had said that Wales were favourites, Gatland claimed that such labels did not concern him, though he pointed to his team’s standing this year to suggest they should not be regarded
69 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Sport Sport Borthwick’s limited coaches Fiji must rediscover sevens magic to win beauty and beast contest Stuart Barnes ‘T coaching team, below, or should it fail, could highlight the group’s inexperience as outright favourites. Wales were No 10 in the world when the tournament began, then topped their pool with 19 points from a possible 20. “I don’t know where Michael got that from,” Gatland, the Wales head coach, said. “He’s probably trying to take some pressure off himself. If you read or listened to anyone a couple of months ago, there were people predicting we wouldn’t get out of the group.” Taulupe Faletau’s broken arm in the win over Georgia means Wainwright moves from No 6 to No 8 and Morgan from No 7 to No 6, with Reffell completing the trio. Gatland has elected not to pick a big blind-side flanker — usually his favoured selection — instead rewarding two men who have put in manof-the-match displays on the open side. “Long-term, it’s not something we want to replicate on too many occasions,” he said. “We felt that the way that Tommy had played, the turnovers and the breakdown, that was going to be really competitive on the weekend. “I spoke to Jac and he was very comfortable moving to six. I did say I think it was tough on him. He’s been the best seven at this tournament so far. “Jac will take on more of a role that Taulupe would have had at lineouts. There’ll be crossover from a defensive point of view and from scrums. Hopefully not a lot of changes.” In Pablo Matera’s absence, Cheika has moved Juan Martín González from No 8 to No 6 and brought in Facundo Isa at the back of the pack. Guido Petti and Tomás Lavanini are the locks and Marcos Kremer the No 7 in an Argentina pack notable for its size. Wales L Williams; L Rees-Zammit, G North, N Tompkins, J Adams; D Biggar, G Davies; G Thomas, R Elias, T Francis, W Rowlands, A Beard, J Morgan (capt), T Reffell, A Wainwright. Replacements D Lake, C Domachowski, D Lewis, D Jenkins, C Tshiunza, T Williams, S Costelow, R Dyer. Argentina J C Mallia; E Boffelli, L Cinti, S Chocobares, M Carreras; S Carreras, T Cubelli; T Gallo, J Montoya (capt), F Gómez Kodela, G P Pagadizabal, T Lavanini, J M Gonzalez, M Kremer, F Isa. Replacements A Creevy, J Sclavi, E Bello, M Alemanno, R Bruni, L Bazan Velez, N Sanchez, M Moroni. TV ITV, Tomorrow, 4pm kick-off (UK time) hey contest the ball on the floor at virtually every breakdown so we need to understand just exactly how that is going to be officiated.” The words belong to Steve Borthwick, “they” are Fiji. The point of the comment is to pressurise gently Sunday’s referee, the delightfully independent French official Mathieu Raynal, at the breakdown. Here’s my translation of Borthwick’s comments. “Keep an eye out for those Fijians flying into breakdowns and not supporting their own body weight to secure turnovers. Do we understand each other, Mathieu?” Or something like that. Rassie Erasmus has been at it as well. South Africa’s director of rugby has helpfully noticed that in the immediate wake of a “big hit” against the host nation, France “do simulate sometimes a little bit which is clever and obviously works”. Ben O’Keeffe, the Kiwi referee, don’t be fooled. What have we got? Fiji off their feet and not supporting their body weight beyond the tackle zone and competition for the ball; France cynically milking penalties. We must be getting to the sharp end of the tournament. Where are you, Eddie Jones? Borthwick, Jones’s former No 2 with Japan and England, knows the importance of the breakdown. It’s the launchpad of England’s kicking game. Alas, there is little need for them to be concerned with the speed of ruck ball. For much of the match against Samoa it was measured at six seconds, a crisis for a team such as Ireland, but ideal for England. Ideal because if England were to achieve the elusive three-second ruck speed, their utter absence of coherence in attack would be exposed. Nobody would be able to find their way to the position the pre-programmed England side demand of them. Now, six seconds . . . that gives players time to form the caterpillar, to protect the kicker at the base, and for all the chasers and their support runners to ready themselves to rush in pursuit of the kick. Really, what would be the point of this excessively structured game plan if the team couldn’t slot into position? Maybe the back line looked so lost as an attacking force against Samoa because 60 per cent of breakdown ball was quicker than the six seconds, which is perceived as painfully slow by rugby thinkers and statisticians alike. The slower the better for England on Sunday, though, against a Fiji team who are themselves playing their way into problems. That’s the theory. Forget about unleashing the back line. Borthwick is after breakdown penalties. Kicks to the corner and tries like Portugal’s second against Fiji. It makes the expected selection of Marcus Smith as the starting XV look like the last throw of a gambler. Perception and reality. Everyone loves the Pacific Islanders and their freewheeling style. Remember the final 20 minutes against Wales? Well behind on the scoreboard, they threw caution to the wind and came within a Semi Radradra score (and subsequent conversion) of beating them. The last 20 minutes were breathless and brilliant in a way rugby fans recognise and expect from Fiji. After Wales beat Australia later in pool C, Warren Gatland said that people forgot how much his team had been in control against Fiji until the memorable mayhem in those final few minutes. Fiji’s win against Australia is their one outstanding performance and, let’s admit it, the Wallabies were woeful for the majority of this competition. Fiji’s head coach, Simon Raiwalui, bemoaned the first-half penalty count in their third game, against Georgia. Here was a game Fiji could easily have lost. Portugal went one better than their fellow Europeans and won. Before kick-off Raiwalui told the watching world his side must “minimise the mistakes in contact”. The magic is in danger of disappearing beneath the structure of coach-think. The allure of seeking 80 minutes of collision and confrontation will play into the hands of a limited but brave and physical England. Crash-ball runners will not petrify England half as much as an offloading game, which prevents the European side from settling into a game played in third gear. Yet Fiji are moving away from Maqala could break England open their dazzling pyrotechnics. And this from a team with one of the worst lineouts in the tournament. There is a template for Fiji, but it has nothing to do with a game based predominantly on minimal risks. Samoa dismissed England’s defensive boasts in a stunning spell of attacking rugby midway through the first half. Theo McFarland, the Saracens forward, wasn’t testing the physical strength of the tacklers, he was offloading into space, using his skills to stretch England. The first try began with Samoa running backwards and included a ball bouncing to no one, but England couldn’t live with the almost seven-a-side sense of space Samoa brought to the game. England should beware the staggering counterattacking game of Sireli Maqala, the Fiji full back, every bit as much as the hefty ball-carrying forwards. After all, someone has to put forwards into positions to turn power into points. During a telling six minutes in which three tries were scored in the second half of the Fiji game with Portugal, Maqala made a mazy 60-metre run that created a try for the forwards from close range. The full back can break England open if his team embrace their instincts. On the flip side he runs better than he jumps. Portugal’s first try came from a high kick, regained by the fly half Jerónimo Portela in a great attacking position, unopposed by the full back. One diagonal kick behind the defence and Portugal had scored. To round off the three-try, six-minute spell, Portugal drove over from a catch-and-drive lineout. He is a threat but the opportunities are obvious for all to see. England neither want nor need quick ball against Fiji. They need firm foundations to kick and regain and kick again into winning positions. To reiterate: Smith is a bold selection. Smart? We’ll have to wait and see. Fiji need to replay the Samoa match and rekindle their fading fluidity — courtesy of a few turnovers — if they are to reach a first World Cup semi-final. If it ends up Beauty v the Beast, we could have a thrilling quarter-final on our hands. Beating England ‘would be greatest feat’ continued from back it but things happen on the day. When we play the Tier One nations, if we get it right we put them to sleep. “We’ll go in with humility and respect our opponents and understand they’ll come harder as we beat them last time around. I think Fiji on its day is capable of shocking the world. We’ve done it in the past, and if we stick to our game plan, then we’ll do it again. “We believe now that we can match Tier One nations on our day, not just England and Australia but we also pushed Wales close. For us now, it is do or die. We go hard at the weekend or we are going home early.” The Pacific Islanders previously made the last eight in 1987 and 2007, and have a fine shot at the semi-finals having beaten Steve Borthwick’s side in August at Twickenham. Fiji want to emulate their historymaking sevens team in France. That team won their country’s first gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics — beating Great Britain 43-7 — and backed it up by winning the 2020 tournament in Tokyo, beating New Zealand 27-12. Dewes said it would be one of the country’s greatest sporting achievements if they were to beat England. “We want to have the same feeling that our players did at the Olympics,” he said. “We have only got to the quarters before. Being the only Tier Two team left, it’s an achievement in itself.”
Friday October 13 2023 | the times 2GM Sport Why I’m not quitting Racing legend Frankie Dettori talks to Matt Dickinson Fiji: We’ll put you to sleep Are Australia dropping out of World Cup? Will Kelleher Deputy Rugby Correspondent, Marseille Mitchell Starc shells a simple chance, one of five catches put down by the Australians as they fell to a 134-run defeat by South Africa in Lucknow. Report, page 62 Fiji think they can put England’s World Cup hopes “to sleep” and are ready to “shock the world” in their quarter-final in Marseille on Sunday. The Fijians qualified for the last eight by the skin of their teeth, taking a losing bonus point in the 24-23 defeat by Portugal on Sunday in Toulouse. That eliminated Eddie Jones’s Australia and sent the Fijians into the quarter-finals to face England. Fiji’s forwards coach, Graham Dewes, who scored the winning try against Wales in 2007 to take Fiji to their last World Cup quarter-final, said his team believe they can knock England out. “On our day we can match anyone,” Dewes said. “Sometimes when we play Tier Two nations, we drop our standards. We don’t plan to do Tonali dropped after bet claims Martin Hardy FA slammed for Israel stance Stadium arch following last weekend’s horrific terrorist attacks in Israel, and have made my views clear to the FA. “It is especially disappointing in light of the FA’s bold stance on other terrorist attacks in the recent past. Words and actions matter. The government is clear: we stand with Israel.” The FA has been wary of taking action that could be seen as divisive. Instead it wants to honour “innocent victims”of the violence. The sensitivities around tonight’s match have been heightened by Australia being scheduled to play Palestine in a World Cup qualifier on November 21. As well as the ban on flags, fans will not be allowed to wear any national team replica shirts at Wembley tonight other than England or Australia ones. The same rules will apply to the Euro 2024 qualifier against Italy at Wembley on Tuesday — with only England or Italy shirts permitted — in an attempt Sandro Tonali and Nicolò Zaniolo have been sent back to their Premier League clubs from Italy’s training camp after they were interviewed by prosecutors over illegal betting. The Newcastle United midfielder Tonali and Zaniolo, who is on loan at Aston Villa from Galatasaray, are both formally under investigation by prosecutors in Turin. The Juventus midfielder Nicolò Fagioli is being investigated for betting online via unauthorised websites. The 22-year-old Fagioli is facing a three-year ban from football and a heavy fine if he is found guilty. Tonali, 22, and Zaniolo, 24, were accompanied by Gianluigi Buffon, the Italian Football Federation’s (FIGF) head of delegation, while they were interviewed. The FIGF released a across down Yesterday’s solution 28,732 1 One’s depressed so one will stay in bed a little longer! (6,6) 8 Not for good, but as regularly, arriving at island (7) 9 Say nothing about a Book Club day (7) 11 Single keen on encounter (3,4) 12 Vessel, one making gradual progress on way back (7) 13 Judgement, substantial, was cut short (5) 14 Cow’s advance, just losing way by entrance to field? (9) 16 Attack on PC maybe not originally viewed without interest (9) 19 Retiring perhaps as exam failed first time is a shocker! (5) 21 Where documents kept neat after what’s done initially badly (4,3) 23 School run avoiding centre was better (7) 24 Some lean back to front, getting in danger (7) 25 Top goalkeeping feat — recalled ducking (7) 26 Son experiencing criticism that’s got dad foaming at the mouth? (7-5) 1 Protested “alien” material man made (7) 2 With small body, old WWI soldier needs trimmed dress fabric (7) 3 Awfully lazy soul injecting energy with passion (9) 4 Established old penny not made of precious metal? (5) 5 Players frozen here: cricketer turning blue, we hear? (7) 6 Scrapping a goal — it’s a pain (7) 7 Remedy we find in our best friend’s coat? (4,2,3,3) 10 Tough negotiations where punches exchanged? (5,7) 15 Be greedy, after ordering seconds, but not all at once (2,7) 17 Marcher is hoping demos are entertaining (7) 18 Arrest and fine upset very old writer (7) 19 Daughter fleeing as mouse circles vessel in part of kitchen (7) 20 Small deer to annoy castaway (7) 22 Gas: current, presumably, rising (5) 6 Minister attacks decision not to light up arch 6 Wembley security ordered to ban flags Martyn Ziegler Chief Sports Reporter The FA has been criticised by a government minister for its decision not to light up the Wembley arch in the colours of the Israel flag for tonight’s England match against Australia. Lucy Frazer, the secretary of state for culture, media and sport, said she was “extremely disappointed” at the football governing body’s failure to offer a show of support for Israel. The FA announced that Israel and Palestine flags would be not be allowed to be taken into Wembley for the friendly international. England’s players will wear black armbands and there will be a period of silence before kick-off to pay tribute to all the innocent victims of the violence in Israel and Gaza. However, in a post on X, formerly Twitter, Frazer spoke out against the FA’s refusal to illuminate the Wembley arch. The minister wrote: “I am extremely disappointed by the FA’s decision not to light up the Wembley Times Crossword 28,733 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 10 12 13 14 16 17 21 18 19 22 24 15 23 25 26 20 H A I R C U T A S S I S T I P A S S T A P A HR T D I C H I P A L E H I P HOOR N A X U E WOO D R K N E T OWN S E I L L E R P L D M D A S MA S N C ND Y CH A U L I A DD A Y S N S M HOR S DOE A L B A T R O S S P I L A U Y C L O V R E R L I N AG L L E T A T E V R S C K I AM P C Y E D I T S M H I S E S Check today’s answers by ringing 0905 757 0141 by midnight. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke 0333 202 3390. 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ARTS How Taylor made the album of the century Plus Will Hodgkinson on the other contenders for the title October 13 | 2023
2 Friday October 13 2023 | the times arts Caitlin Moran’s Barney Celebrity Watch 6 Celebrity Watch’s Headline of the Week award goes to “Daniel Kaluuya’s ‘Barney’ film will ‘not be odd’, says Mattel boss.” This headline works as a series of information bombs seemingly designed to scramble the mind of anyone who was not previously aware that Daniel Get Out Kaluuya — one of Britain’s most garlanded actors — was working on a film about Barney, as in Barney the purple dinosaur, the peerlessly goofy/ sinister children’s TV, well, dinosaur. Sure enough, when I googled it, it seems that Kaluuya’s Barney film has been in development since 2019 — pre-Covid! — but has not as yet gone into production. One can only presume this hiatus comes from whatever lies behind the Mattel boss’s quote, “will not be odd ”. I know we live in an age of miracle and wonder and Barbie explaining patriarchy to loads of Blue Harbour dads, but how can a film about a purple dinosaur not be odd? It’s an unworkable note. Also, if I’m going to see a film about a purple dinosaur, I want it to be odd — to lean away from the oddness would be like trying to make a sequel to Jaws that isn’t too sharky or doing a Star Wars spin-off that’s set in Reading. And where does Kaluuya fit into all this? Is he playing Barney? It would be weird to see this generation’s Robert De Niro peering out from a gigantic purple head. Still, humans are inventive creatures, so if we can get a man on the moon, we can surely de-odd a purple dinosaur. Good luck, everyone! 5 Spotify Liam Gallagher Good morning, dear Times reader, and welcome to what is technically autumn — but an autumn where until recently people were still wearing shorts and having to take their jackets off as they were “a bit sweaty”. As anyone raised on Old Moore’s Almanac will know, men’s knees being visible weeks after the autumn equinox is a fundamental disruption to The Way of Things. From October everything below the thigh of a man should be safely packed away in trousers. And yet it is too hot for slacks. It’s a true dilemma. And not the only one! For this week it was announced that Spotify is introducing a new tier for subscribers — by which it means, obviously, a new revenue stream for the musicstreaming platform. The new service — which at $19.99 a month for American subscribers will be roughly twice the standard price — will offer “lossless audio” (whatever that is), AI-generated playlists and at least 20 hours of free audiobook access. Which, to put it in context, is about one third of the Wolf Hall trilogy. The big news isn’t the service that’s being offered but the name it has been given. For Spotify has dubbed this service “Supremium”, a truly elevated piece of wordplay. Let us observe how a portmanteau of “supreme” and “premium” transforms the situation, magically upselling the idea of paying twice the standard price for a bunch of things you don’t care about so it seems to become an act of supremacy: you are the winner, perhaps even the god, of Spotify simply because no one else is paying more than you. Not only do you have Supremium, you are Supremium. And with this invention, Spotify has thrown down the gauntlet to other tiered service providers to give their most expensive option a similarly swaggering name too. As part of Celebrity Watch’s part-time activities on our Naming Things Bureau, I can obviously offer “UberUber” for Uber’s most uber service, and “PrimeMinister” for Amazon’s prime-best Prime service. However, when it comes to Twitter/X’s “X Premium” accounts, having coughed up myself and found no difference whatsoever — indeed, a notable decline in functionality, reach and service — all I can truthfully offer is “X Premiumly disappointing”. Last week the north was devastated by Rishi Sunak’s cancellation of phase two of HS2. Latitudes higher than Watford don’t get transport funding, it seems — the message to the barm cake-eating classes was a firm “put your clogs on and get your steps in”. This week the north has tried to heal this wound with the only medicine left available to it: Liam Gallagher. The Greater Manchester mayor, Andy Burnham, announced that the former Oasis frontman will be taking over the passenger announcements on Manchester’s tram network during the Beyond the Music festival. As someone who has decades-long knowledge of Gallagher’s “lively” interview/onstage technique, I feel Manchester should brace itself — in a good way — for some real out-of-the-box stuff: “Keep clear of compilations by the Doors”, “The next stop is NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS”, “MIND THE GAK!” 4 Kelvin Fletcher As someone who prides themselves on being up to date with celebrity news and gossip, I was genuinely shamed this week to learn A Celebrity Fact that has been in the public domain for more than two years. Namely, the actor Kelvin Fletcher, who played the farmer Andy Sugden in Emmerdale for more than 20 years, has left Emmerdale — and become a farmer! He runs a 120acre livestock farm in the Peak District, which this Christmas will convert into a winter wonderland complete with “giant piano” — nothing more Christmassy than a giant piano! — and Santa meeting “every child in his cosy front room”. There’s no reason why that last sentence should sound slightly menacing, yet it does. 3 I guess this news has delighted me because I’ve long wondered whether years of playing a character with a specific job leads to actors becoming semiqualified in the career they depict. I’m pretty sure, after all that time playing a doctor in ER, George Clooney could still reflexively shout, “Cross two units to the head CT, pulse is strong, put in a cervical restraint, let’s intubate!” if he came across someone who’d fallen off a chair. What else is careerspecific dialogue in a script if not rote-learning? While wearing a hat? Now that Fletcher has gone from being a pretend farmer to a real farmer, I hope that in coming years we’ll have Danny Dyer opening a pub, Cillian Murphy making an atomic bomb and Meryl Streep becoming the prime minister. 2 Roger Waters This week social media was full of reports from disgruntled Pink Floyd fans who’d gone to see the former member Roger Waters play The Dark Side of the Moon Redux at the London Palladium — only for him to spend the first half of the show reading aloud from his autobiography, at present unpublished, instead. “Rambling nonsense”, “selfindulgent crap”, “a load of old waffle” and “shit” were just some of the harshbut-fair reviews posted on Twitter/X from fans who’d paid up to £500. Still, you can’t argue with Waters’s stagecraft: apparently, when heckled by audience members, he swore — then tried to lighten the mood by doing impressions of Bruce Forsyth and Max Bygraves. Max Bygraves! What a pity Waters isn’t still in Pink Floyd — if he were still able to collaborate with David Gilmour, they could have dropped the music entirely and workshopped a whole episode of ChuckleVision together.
3 the times | Friday October 13 2023 arts 1 Keir Starmer Last week I was quietly, almost contentedly sure that the Labour Party conference would be incredibly dull. In the lead-up to Keir Starmer’s speech, I certainly wasn’t shouting, “KIDS! It’s starting in five minutes!” up the stairs in the way I was before Rishi Sunak’s speech at the Tory party conference. In fact I’d resolved to watch Starmer later on catch-up so I could fast-forward through all the samey bits about “normal, hardworking people”. Well, more fool me. In the event, Starmer arrived on stage to the carefully chosen Lionheart (Fearless) by Joel Corry and Tom Grennan (uplifting house piano respectfully nodding to the Tony Blair anthem, D:Ream’s Things Can Only Get Better, but more classy. A big hit across Europe — the seventh most played song in Latvia in 2022! — so a forward-looking choice for reestablishing cross-Channel ties. And if you’re thinking Starmer himself is a “lionheart” and/or “fearless”, well, those are your words, not the words of the playlist compiler). There was clapping. Starmer did some gracious, maybe lionhearted nodding. He even did that thing where you single out someone in the audience and give them a Special, Happy-Surprised Look, just like Barry Gibb did on the 1998 TV special An Audience with the Bee Gees when he saw Lulu. And then, of course, Starmer got covered in glitter by a protester. “True democracy is citizen-led! Politics needs an update!” shouted the 28year-old Yaz Ashmawi from the People Demand Democracy group before being wrestled to the ground by a female security guard and led off stage — which was great feminism optics. Full Mary Earps vibes. Of course, by that point, wrestling Ashmawi to the ground didn’t really matter — a room full of photographers had already got the shot of Starmer receiving a head full of glitter. Photo after photo showed him in the centre of a Force-like nimbus of spangled glow, while looking 20 per cent perturbed and 80 per cent stoic, like a dad enduring a toddler putting Olaf from Frozen stickers on his nose. Starmer’s jacket came off, his shirt sleeves were rolled up. “If he thinks that bothers me, he doesn’t know me!” he said. The place went bananas. And so, in a blizzard of triumphant vibes and sparkles, the speech finally began. Of course, the world — and, in particular, Twitter/X — being what it is right now, this incident was immediately fed into a series of conspiracy theory algorithms, and madness starting falling out of the Hot Take Chute. The majority view was that it had all been staged: Labour’s PR department had planned the episode to get that rarest of things, an exciting picture of Keir Starmer — and in a situation that showed him taking his jacket off and popping his cuffs. A bit of alpha wardrobe work. And, you know, I can entertain that for 30 seconds. People Demand Democracy is a “coalition member” of Just Stop Oil, and that group’s “throwing substance” of choice is usually orange-coloured paint dust. Had Ashmawi top-coated Starmer tangerine, the vibes would have been completely different. Saying, “If he thinks that bothers me, he doesn’t know me!” while the colour of Joey Essex just doesn’t land the same way as making a speech while spattered in glitter like Marc Bolan, which plays hard into the 6 Music Dads vote. Since when have protesters coalesced around a glam rock aesthetic? Ultimately, of course, we know these conspiracy theories are balls: there isn’t some genius, Malcolm McLaren-like figure at Labour HQ going, “What single, throwable substance plays well with Sweet fans, and gay disco fans, and Taylor Swift fans, and small children, and anyone who’s been to Glastonbury? FIND IT AND THROW IT AT KEIR!” Primarily because, as anyone who has had glitter thrown at them knows, it poses a huge choking hazard — you get a fleck on your epiglottis and you’ll be coughing all the way through your greyfield building announcements. However awesome the photo opportunity, it’s not worth the risk of a crucial hour-long speech being punctuated by repeated dry hacking and throatclearing: humans are fundamentally unreasonable creatures, programmed to deeply hate anyone who coughs more than three times in a minute. In a parallel world where Starmer had gargled the glitter, coughing 270 times in the following 90 minutes, Sunak would win by a landslide in 2024. That’s just who we are. The trouble with Hirst’s flowers? They have never seen the sun Do judge an artist by his florals, says Laura Freeman ‘S ay it with flowers.” One of the all-time great slogans was invented, so the story goes, by a Boston adman for the Society of American Florists. In art, as in floristry, a rose is never just a rose. Flowers speak and a flower painting has much to say about its painter, the art market, and the age and society in which it was made. Dismiss an iris at your peril. In the 1930s Stanley Spencer, intent on painting his mystic visions of resurrection and ministry, was reprimanded by his London agent Dudley Tooth. Couldn’t he paint a few more of “those little flower pictures that people have always liked so much”? (And not, by implication, so many of those commercially tricky religious scenes.) Spencer sulked but complied. As it turned out, Spencer’s magnolias, fuchsias and wisterias were heavenly. But why do a little flower picture when you can do a great big flower picture? At this week’s Frieze art fair, Damien Hirst has thrown open the patio doors on a new series of huge flower paintings exhibited by the Gagosian gallery. He’s a seasonal sower, Hirst. It feels like only yesterday (July) that I was reviewing another huge show of huge Hirst paintings. Seascapes in the summer, flowers today. We’ll get to Hirst, but first: what makes a great flower painting? There used to be a hierarchy of genre. At the top, noblest and most respected, was history painting (scenes from the Bible, myths and the deeds of great men). Then came portraiture, then landscape, then still life (fruit’n’flowers), then “genre” painting itself — scenes from the taverns, the lower orders behaving badly but picturesquely. Flowers were definitely lowly — but lovely. Asked to choose between a history painting recounting an episode from the life of the Roman commander Belisarius and a nice picture of some daffs, I’m for the daffs. A flower still life should still live centuries after it was painted. Dutch tulips, captured just as their outer petals are beginning to droop and peel, by the Golden Age painter Rachel Ruysch. Van Gogh’s irises, bowing with the weight of their wonderfully overblown heads. Renoir’s peonies, hot pink and parched at the end of a warm afternoon, their vase in desperate need of a top-up. Winifred Nicholson’s small, brave, chilly snowdrops, looking, as snowdrops do, defiantly set against the winter odds. Duncan Grant’s quickly picked, Vincent van Gogh’s Irises, from 1890. Top: one of Damien Hirst’s flower paintings at Frieze They are too bright, too busy. Asters with ADHD any-old-how arrangements, jammed into jugs, profuse and easy and very far from the tortured hothouse bouquets of the Victorian generation just gone. Grant’s anything-goes bunches tell of a new freedom — in both flowerbeds and bedrooms. The trouble with Hirst’s flowers — and I say this having warmed to his seascapes — is that you don’t believe they’ve ever seen the sun or felt the rain or met a bee. They aren’t particular, in the way that a Nicholson primula is particular. Hirst gives you generic geraniums, daisies by the dozen, poppies on repeat. Photorealistic, but not photosynthesising. They are of a piece with those ghastly Insta-bait cafés with fake cascades of wisteria across the shop frontage and plastic posies round the door. Do you remember, in the pandemic spring of 2020, David Hockney’s iPad portrait of golden Normandy daffodils with the tagline “They can’t cancel the spring”? Hockney’s means might have been digital, but the observation was wonderfully alive: the daffodils shot up and gangling like teenagers on stems too thin for their heads. Hirst does the trick the other way around: he makes his paintings look like screens. They are too bright, too busy. Asters with ADHD. Pointillism is one of his cited inspirations, but it was pixelation that came to mind. Onto the compost heap they go.
4 Friday October 13 2023 | the times the arts column Why Taylor’s Richard Morrison Who should decide which statues remain? Not the government I t’s kind of symbolic of this government’s attitude to the arts, in what will probably be its last year in power. It has issued strict guidelines to local authorities and other bodies with responsibility for public places, instructing them to preserve old statues in situ for ever, no matter how unpopular they are. England’s public monuments (here, Westminster’s writ doesn’t run to the rest of the UK) have, in effect, been deemed untouchable. History has been frozen. The guidelines — issued last week, but prompted primarily by the incident in June 2020 when a mob dumped a statue of the slave trader Edward Colston, right, into Bristol harbour — put into effect a policy called “retain and explain”. As you read them, however, it becomes glaringly obvious that the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) considers the first of those injunctions far more important than the second. How local authorities “explain” controversial statues is left pretty vague, whereas it’s made very clear that “retain” is an order, not a suggestion. Relocating a contested “heritage asset” is “only justifiable in very few circumstances”, the DCMS states. What’s more, it would require going through the planning system, which (as the DCMS also points out in a scarcely subtle warning shot) “could be a costly process”. In The soft power of British art Two women, supporting each other, watch the flames of a funeral pyre. Another woman breastfeeds her baby. Around them lurk the faces of evil spirits that must be appeased. This is the newly commissioned artwork that will shortly be displayed in British embassies around the world. Interpret it how you will! To me it doesn’t exactly radiate joy and hope. But the artist, Michael Armitage, says the lithograph, right, other words, don’t waste taxpayers’ money — especially since the final say in the planning process lies with government ministers anyway. And we know what they think. This being the Tories, there is an exception to the rule. Statues can be relocated as part of a “major development or infrastructure project”. So it’s fine for the effigy of a slave trader to be moved if it stands in the way of a new office block or shopping mall, but not if (as was the case with Colston in Bristol) many members of the public have campaigned for years against it. I don’t agree with vandalism or with local authorities renaming streets or removing monuments because of pressure by extremist factions. But it seems to me that the DCMS has gone too far in the other direction. Each generation should have the freedom to decide whom it wants commemorated. And as the historian David Olusoga pointed (which he calls Ngaben after a Hindu cremation ceremony) is a homage to an artist friend in Bali who died, and that it symbolises the kinship that should exist between artists. As such it seems an apt addition to what our diplomats call “soft power”: persuading people around the world that the UK is still a civilised, caring and creative nation. Armitage, 39, is certainly an excellent choice to convey that As Swift’s tour film and a new version of her 2014 masterpiece come out, Ed Potton salutes her glorious invention out last week, it’s not clear that statues of slave traders were approved by most people even at the time they were erected. Yes, let’s have a good debate about each individual statue. But in some cases the overwhelming conclusion will be that we don’t want to look at the effigies of certain horrible historical figures any more, and in that case their removal should not be banned by central government. The British government isn’t alone in demanding that old statues be retained for ever. The smashing of a statue to “Iron Felix” Dzerzhinsky, Stalin’s secret police chief, outside the KGB’s notorious Moscow headquarters on Lubyanka Square was one of the great symbolic acts during the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991. Last month, however, a replacement Dzerzhinsky statue, virtually identical to the original, was unveiled outside the headquarters of Russia’s present-day secret service. Like Lucy Frazer, our culture secretary, the people who run today’s Russia clearly believe that those who want to remove statues of evil historical figures are merely exhibiting (what was the word she used?) “hysteria”. Whether she finds it comforting to be on the same side as Vladimir Putin on this issue is up to her. message (he has also designed the new £1 coin, incidentally). Half British, half Kenyan, he derives not just his hallucinatory images from life in Africa and Indonesia but also the very fabric of his craft. He does his oil paintings on lubugo cloth, made by the Baganda people of Uganda from the inner bark of the mutuba tree. He is the sixth artist to take part in the TenTen scheme. A collaboration between two philanthropists (Sybil Robson Orr and Matthew Orr) and the Government Art Collection, it commissions a work from a different artist each year then produces 30 prints of it — 15 for distribution to diplomatic and other government buildings (MI6 apparently displays last year’s artwork, a suitably enigmatic image by Rachel Whiteread), and the rest sold to finance GAC commissions to young artists. A virtuous circle indeed. All this was announced on Tuesday morning in none other than 10 Downing Street. It was the first time I had been inside the place for an arts-related event since (perhaps significantly) early 2010. Naturally I looked around for the famous karaoke machine and the wine fridge, but mysteriously they weren’t on display. W hen Beyoncé comes to the premiere of your concert movie it’s safe to say you’ve made it. She was among the guests watching Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour in Los Angeles on Wednesday night alongside legions of fans doing all the dance moves. The film, which opens in UK cinemas today, had advance sales of more than $100 million and the tour it captures is projected to take more than $1 billion, making it the most lucrative in history. Swift, in a dreamy blue Oscar de la Renta gown, looked understandably stoked on the red carpet. It hasn’t always been like this for her — and if you wanted to pinpoint the event that transformed her from star to superstar, it was the release of her album 1989 in 2014. “If you chase two rabbits, you lose them both,” she said at the time, referring to her decision to abandon the country music she had sung since her early teens and make her “very first documented, official pop album”. Listening to 1989 it soon became clear why she had her sights fixed on the rabbit marked “pop” — 1989 is the best pop album of the century so far. And it will soon be back in the charts because Swift has re-recorded it as her latest Taylor’s Version, part of a project to reclaim her back catalogue after her master tapes were sold. Out this month, the new version will feature five previously unreleased tracks. The original, however, takes some beating. Some numbers first: 1989 has sold ten million copies worldwide, is nine-times platinum in America and spawned five US Top Ten singles, putting it level with Madonna’s True Blue and two hits behind Michael Jackson’s Thriller. Never mind the figures, though: feel the quality of a record that won album of the year at the Grammys and featured on Rolling Stone’s best albums of all time in 2020. Where else can you find so many perfect hooks allied to so many killer lyrics? How many other albums can match the sheer volume of bangers? There’s Shake It Off, of course, the definitive response to online brickbats, but that’s not even among the five best songs on the album. Better still are Wildest Dreams, a lush, fatalistic swooner foreshadowing the end of an affair even as it begins; Out of the Woods, a hurtling ode to reckless love; How You Get the Girl, which pours a rom-com’s worth of giddiness and heartbreak into four hyper-melodic minutes; and Blank Space, that playfully ingenious retort to the media’s portrayal of Swift as obsessed with writing songs about her exes, featuring the genius couplet: “Oh my God, look at that face/ You look like my next mistake.” And, best of the lot and one of the greatest pop songs in history, Style, which nailed the thrill of mutual attraction through the fantasy of fashion and Hollywood. “You got that James Dean daydream look in your eye/ And I got that red lip classic thing that you like,” Swift sang. “And when we go crashing down, we come back every time/ ’Cause we never go out of style, we never go out of style.” Just writing about the song makes me want to put it on. And yes, as the name suggests, it was probably inspired by her fling with Harry Styles. Nine years on, Swift, 33, is more successful than ever but moving on from country was a massive deal for a singer-songwriter who had been so synonymous with the genre that the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville named its teaching wing after her. Perhaps the biggest lesson the Taylor Swift Education Center could teach is that it pays to reinvent yourself as a synth-pop artist. It’s called pop for a reason. Key players in that synth reinvention were Max Martin, the Swedish pop mastermind, and Jack Antonoff, the American songwriterproducer. And yet as Michael Cragg, the author of Reach for the Stars, a book about pop in the Noughties, says, “she managed to still keep the Taylor
5 the times | Friday October 13 2023 cover story 1989 is a perfect pop album Elsewhere he used the Roland Juno-6, a synthesizer favoured by Erasure and Duran Duran that evokes, as Antonoff put it, “a sadness and a glory, all at once”. Which rather sums up the album. That bittersweet nostalgia is one reason why middle-aged men including me love 1989. Def Leppard and the actor-musician Jared Leto are fans, and the singer-songwriter Ryan Adams paid Swift the ultimate tribute by covering the album in full. With her new musical palette came a more playful lyrical response to those — and it’s a long list — who have wronged her. Compare the strident We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together from Swift’s previous album, Red, with the far more equable Shake It Off and Wildest Dreams. Only 5 more great albums of the 21st century 1 Back to Black by Amy Winehouse 2006 Against a retro soul and Sixties girl group backing Amy Winehouse bared her troubled essence so fully on her second album that it was painful to hear yet impossible to turn away from. And the songwriting is off the scale: the slow removal of every musical element to mirror a descent into despair on Back to Black, the party-in-an-ambulance defiance of Rehab. Songs about hedonism make it sound like no fun at all, love is presented as a recipe for destruction, and Winehouse became a Billie Holiday of the 21st century: brilliant, tragic, massively influential. 1989 is the year she was born — and denotes a musical rebirth Swift line all the way through it, which is difficult. It showed people like the Weeknd and Adele, who both ended up working with Max Martin, that you can step up to another level without — inverted commas — losing who you are.” Martin is clearly a genius, having helped to create hits as huge as Britney Spears’s . . . Baby One More Time and Katy Perry’s Teenage Dream, but his influence can be overplayed. If you listen to the demo of Blank Space that Swift recorded on her own it already sounds fully formed. “There was this idea that female pop stars aren’t hugely involved in the creative side, which is crazy, especially in her case,” Cragg says. Swift named 1989 after the year in which she was born to denote a musical rebirth, and also because it doffed its cap to the electronic pop of the Eighties. Swift named Annie Lennox and Peter Gabriel as important influences, Lennox for her ability to convey intense emotion, Taylor Swift and Beyoncé in Los Angeles this week. Above left: playing LA in 2015. Left: the cover of 1989 Gabriel for creating “an atmosphere behind what he was singing, rather than a produced track”. The album’s Eighties flourishes continue. On I Wish You Would Antonoff sampled a snare drum from Fine Young Cannibals’ She Drives Me Crazy off their album The Raw & the Cooked, released, neatly, in 1989. the Perry-bashing Bad Blood, the sole duff moment on 1989, deviates from that tone. Swift said at the time that she wanted to have “more of a sense of humour about people who kind of get under my skin”. Even witty responses can have repercussions, though. “Got a long list of ex-lovers/ They’ll tell you I’m insane,” Swift sang on Blank Space, the wittiest of the lot. That can be seen as “coming for the tabloids a little bit”, Cragg says, “and gets them involved as in, ‘She’s coming for us so we can keep going with this narrative.’ That’s what 1989 did for her, good or bad.” When one journalist said they were interested in the incident that inspired the memorable line “Remember when you hit the brakes too soon?/ Twenty stitches in the hospital room” in Out of the Woods, Swift’s response was hilarious: “I’ll bet you are.” Leaving a blank space, so to speak, only encourages speculation, of course. Rolling Stone wrote that Swift said Out of the Woods was inspired by “a snowmobile ride with an ex who lost control and wrecked it so badly that she saw her life flash before her eyes”. That led some sleuths to the time that she and Styles went snowmobiling together in 2012 while on a trip to Utah with Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez. You can see why this stuff is catnip to the press. The relationship depicted in Out of the Woods “ended sooner than it should’ve because there was a lot of fear involved”, Swift said. “We really felt the heat of every single person in the media thinking they could draw up the narrative of what we were going through.” The heat turned up on her next album, the darker Reputation, whose big theme was media scrutiny. But 1989 was the sweet spot where vivid emotion, giant-sized choruses and a sanguine take on fame converged. They’ll still be playing it in 2089. 1989 (Taylor’s Version) is out on October 27 on Republic. Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour is in cinemas 2 Is This It by the Strokes 2001 Here is one of those rare moments in which everything was right: the sound, the look, the time and the place (New York City, before and after 9/11). Last Nite, The Modern Age and other threeminute gems stick to a Lou Reed-style dirty rock template, but the insouciance the Strokes injected into it made everyone want to join their gang. 3 To Pimp a Butterfly by Kendrick Lamar 2015 Hip-hop had been using jazz samples for years, but the Los Angeles rapper changed the game by collaborating with jazz musicians and making the ebb and flow of improvisation inherent to the end result. Black identity in America is the theme, but there are no easy answers or trite statements in Lamar’s metaphorladen lyricism. 4 The Fame by Lady Gaga 2008 With her debut album Lady Gaga took Madonna’s ambition and work ethic, and injected them with goofiness and camp superficiality, resulting in a pure pop delight. Every song sounds like a hit single, and many were, Poker Face turning bad taste Eurodisco into high art. The Fame Monster, a 2009 release initially intended as a deluxe version, took the album’s themes and milked them further, adding the future standards Telephone and Bad Romance. 5 Queen of Denmark by John Grant 2010 A soft rock classic by a depressed 42-year-old waiter at the Gramercy Tavern in New York as one of the greatest pop albums of the century? Listen to the childhood reminiscence Marz, the lovelorn ballad TC and Honeybear and the fantasy Sigourney Weaver, variously hilarious, beautiful and heartbreaking, and you’ll agree. Will Hodgkinson
6 Friday October 13 2023 | the times THE CRITICS Jaysus! It’s a cod-Irish calamity A The most notable feature of this gangland parody from Adam Deacon is its line-up of superfluous cameo performers, including Jennifer Saunders as a Met police boss, Jeremy Corbyn as a berk in a bank (no acting required) and Ed Sheeran as, ho ho, a vagrant. Elsewhere, Deacon is back (this is a semi-sequel to his 2011 film Friday the 13th (1980) 15, 95min {{{{( Maggie Smith and Kathy Bates play caricatures in this clichéd drama, says Kevin Maher h, jakers and begorrah and begob, sure isn’t it that time again! It has only been two years since the critically reviled Wild Mountain Thyme set a new low bar for screen Paddywhackery, courtesy of Emily Blunt and a ginger dye job. Now, break out the Guinness and the strangulated accents, as Maggie Smith and Kathy Bates lead a cast of spectacularly small-minded, God-fearing, boozeswilling eejits. We’ve had blackface, Jewface and gayface controversies. It seems only reasonable to suggest, based on these cringeworthy caricatures, that Smith and Bates are indulging in Paddyface. It doesn’t help that the screenplay, credited to three actual writers, feels as though it has been spewed out by a malfunctioning AI that was programmed with the catch-all terms “Oireland”, “church”, “priests”, “unwanted pregnancy”, “emigration” and “the craic”. The result is a painfully hackneyed tale, initially set the classic film Maggie Smith, Agnes O’Casey and Kathy Bates The Miracle Club 12A, 90min {{((( Sumotherhood 15, 97min {{((( in small-town Dublin in 1967, about friends who reunite for a funeral and open old wounds concerning a teenage romance that went awry. Bates plays Eileen Dunne, a gruff woman with an adoring brood and an inability to approximate the speech patterns of any recognisable human being, let alone a 20th-century Dubliner. When “joking” about her attempts to induce miscarriages by flinging herself down the stairs, she says: “Oi trew meself dan de stay-ars more toimes den Oi’ve had hat dinnas!” Smith isn’t any better as Anuvahood), starring as the petty criminal and wannabe roadman Kane, who with his sidekick Riko (Jazzie Zonsolo, on right, with Deacon) becomes embroiled in a struggle between London mobsters, Polish drug dealers and an unhinged copper (Vas Blackwood). It’s slickly shot, and Deacon has Lily Fox, who does Dublin by way of Saskatchewan and Alpha Centauri — “Look at da bazeelca! Isn’t it bootifool?” she says of the basilica in Lourdes. Yes, they go to Lourdes for a miracle (see title), but they discover there that true miracles live inside. Ugh, I can’t go on. Accompanying them, for no reason, is their estranged buddy Chrissie, who emigrated to the US as a teenager and thus allows the American actress Laura Linney to dodge the accent trap. Small mercies. In cinemas The best bits of Halloween, Carrie and Hitchcock’s Psycho were cheekily repurposed here by the director Sean S Cunningham for a slasher movie that remains the genre standard-bearer. Cunningham commits fully to POV shooting, letting the audience “experience” the perspective of the throat-slashing killer who murders the doomed and randy teens of Camp Crystal Lake. And yes, some of the performances are admittedly creaky — especially Betsy Palmer, below, as the former cook turned psychopath Pamela Voorhees, but a young Kevin Bacon is charismatic in his first significant movie role. He plays wisecracking and oversexed Jack, who, when his girlfriend Marcie (Jeannine Taylor) leaves their latenight love cabin, utters the immortal lines: “Hurry back, OK? It’s getting cold in here!” Bye-bye, Bacon. In cinemas learnt lessons from Guy Ritchie, Quentin Tarantino and Top Boy. But the writing is horrible, the entire screenplay is shouted by the cast, and beneath the larky postmodern tone is a nasty posturing machismo that never quite gels. In cinemas
7 the times | Friday October 13 2023 film reviews Ben Kingsley as Salvador Dalí H ow do you make a movie about Salvador Dalí when you can’t reproduce his famous paintings (protected by copyright), when you can’t afford to film in Spain and when one of the leads is played by an inexpressive, dead-eyed novice. The answer? Badly. These are indeed just some of the insuperable barriers that bar the way to a meaningful, even competent, Dalíland. It stars a buoyant Ben Kingsley as Dalí, with the curly moustache and third-person pronouncements. “Dalí is almost God,” he says grandly. “If Dalí was God there’d be no Dalí and that would be a tragedy!” He holds brushes a lot and occasionally dabs at canvases. But since the film was made without the approval of the Dalí Foundation we never see a finished masterpiece. We watch him stare at some melting brie, which is supposed to represent The Persistence of Memory, his famous dreamscape from 1931, and we’re even given a flashback sequence in which an observer drools at Dalí’s first finished canvas and coos: “No one who sees this painting will ever forget it!” But do we lay eyes on it? Nope. This might not have been a problem without the overwhelming sense that there’s little else in the discount goodie bag of the director Mary Harron (she of American Psycho) that seems authentically “Dalíesque”. Most of the film is set in New York in 1974 but was shot in a poorly disguised Liverpool in 2021. When Dalí, in the second half, finally returns to his beloved Figueres in Catalonia he waxes lyrical about the impact of the exotic sun-drenched Spanish landscape and the allure of the Mediterranean vistas before him. He does so from a grey pebble beach, on location in Anglesey. In moments such as this the film acquires a surreality of its own, as if Kingsley has been caught playing dress-up during a loo break on the way to Holyhead. The Flash’s Ezra Miller was originally recruited to play the movie’s second most important role, James Linton, a fictional creation of the screenwriter John C Walsh (Harron’s husband). Linton is an art school dropout and New York gallery gofer who, because of his supposedly beguiling beauty, becomes Dalí’s personal assistant and a de facto audience guide through the dizzying and decadent party life of Seventies art hipsters. These festivities, possibly due to budgetary constraints, never seem especially decadent and rarely evolve beyond a handful of revellers dancing lethargically in small underlit rooms. The attempted elevation of the Paw Patrol posse from TV twerps to big-screen icons continues with this second prestige adaptation, a direct follow-up to 2021’s Paw Patrol: The Movie. And why is this one “mighty”? Because now, thanks to a magical meteorite, our gang have superpowers! They actually did this plot before, in the 2019 home entertainment feature Paw Patrol: Mighty Pups, but here the apparent draw is “proper” voice actors, such as Taraji P Henson Silver Dollar Road PG, 101min {{{{( Dalí goes to Wales in a surreally bad biopic the big film Even Ben Kingsley’s performance can’t redeem a budget take on the artist’s life, says Kevin Maher Daliland 15, 97min {{((( Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie U, 92min {{((( Linton is effectively the Eddie Redmayne role in My Week with Marilyn, and it requires finesse, and the suggestion of a complex inner life, to make it work. Miller might have aced it, but instead went to shoot Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore. The non-binary actor, who was charged with burglary and disorderly conduct among other misdemeanours last year, did return, however, for a handful of flashbacks, playing the young Dalí in sequences that are as pointless and amateurish (Anglesey again) as they are distracting. Linton, meanwhile, is played by the newcomer Christopher Briney in a mode that can only be described as terrifyingly vacant. His line readings are monotonous and impassive, and are matched by a as the main villain, Victoria Vance, and a slew of starry one-line cameos, including Serena Williams as a yoga instructor and Kim Kardashian as a poodle. The charm of the original series came from terrible graphics, camp line delivery and cute catchphrases such as glazed facial expression. When he discovers that some of Dalí’s staff are racketeers he announces in a strange stoned groan: “Dalí. There are bad things going on around you!” It’s unfortunate too that, out of an epic life that encompassed the Spanish Civil War, encounters with Freud and Coco Chanel, and a scandalous admiration of Franco, Walsh could manufacture only a threadbare plot about getting some pictures ready for a New York show in 1974. The narrative drive is non-existent and features Linton admiring Dalí, going to parties and clashing with Dalí’s fearsome wife, Gala, who’s played by Barbara Sukowa with all dials set to 11. On the positive side, there’s Kingsley. He consistently highlights the movie’s inadequacies with his incomparable abilities. There’s a scene, midway through, where Dalí sits before the mirror, preparing for a party. He slowly applies make-up and moustache dye and assembles himself, the man and the myth. It’s symbolic and unexpectedly powerful. More of this would have helped. In cinemas “Chase is on the case!”. That’s all gone and we’re left with sub-Marvel tedium about super-fast, super-strong and super-annoying canines who never feel A-list. They’re not, alas, ready for their close-ups. In cinemas The film-maker and former Haitian minister of culture Raoul Peck follows his award-winning 2016 documentary I Am Not Your Negro with another incendiary account of racial injustice in US society. Specifically he concentrates on an extended and resilient black family in North Carolina who are battling ruthless property developers for the right to remain in their beloved and unfussy beachfront homes. The developers, representing a largely white community, have plans to build luxury McMansions and a golf course. The film widens its polemic to a cultural analysis of land ownership in the US yet never once becomes dry or academic. It carefully keeps the family’s dilemma in focus at all times, especially when two brothers, Melvin and Licurtis, are sent to prison for eight years simply for refusing to vacate their legally owned premises. It’s provocative material. And watch out for the closing track, Wounded Heart by the Nairobi-born singer Ondara — it’s a guaranteed best original song Oscar contender. In cinemas; on Prime Video from October 21 Smoke Sauna Sisterhood 15, 89min {{{{( Marlon Brando’s bald head, popping in and out of the shadows at the climax of Apocalypse Now, is oddly invoked by the visual style of this mesmerising Estonian documentary. The subjects couldn’t be more different, however, as the debut feature from Anna Hints explores her country’s traditional practice of smoke saunas and the lives and stories of several close-knit woman practitioners. The trick in this smartly edited, engrossing work is that the women are not clearly delineated, instead filmed in the darkened sauna as body parts that, like Brando’s skull, drift in and out of shadows. It’s their voices that matter most, and what they express, in rolling monologues of revelation and reflection, ranges from comedic anecdotes to poignant childhood recollections and one profoundly upsetting memory of rape that’s seemingly allowed to surface only because of the safe and supportive setting. In cinemas
8 Friday October 13 2023 | the times music reviews You can always get what you want Warner Music {{{{( The band’s new album is a joy from start to finish, says Will Hodgkinson For the past ten years, Mike Skinner of the Streets has been writing, directing, starring in and, naturally, doing the music for a murder mystery about a DJ who enters a casino underworld after hooking up with a rich girlfriend. This 15-track soundtrack album features Skinner’s trademark blend of deadpan vocal delivery and unusual samples: Dixieland jazz on the title track, flamenco guitar on Walk of Shame, which captures post-party comedown guilt with “I stay silent so Sunday doesn’t try to get to know me.” At 45, Skinner can’t have his finger on the pulse of club culture as he once did. But he can still draw on two decades of memories such as on Good Old Daze, with its evocative detail on getting the night bus home: “Painted nails tap the rhythms on protective screens.” Skinner remains the poet laureate of everyday, unglamorous, British nightlife. B ack in 2021, Paul McCartney claimed the Beatles were better than the Rolling Stones because the Stones were essentially a “blues cover band”. He paid the Stones a massive compliment without realising it. They did indeed start by covering the blues, and got massive because they did it better than all the other callow white kids from provincial Britain. Then Mick Jagger and Keith Richards took the blues and applied it to their own songwriting, leading to the swagger, looseness and depth of feeling that makes Jumpin’ Jack Flash, Gimme Shelter and countless others such high points of late 20th-century music. The Stones have retained the essence of a bluesy bar band ever since, and therein lies their charm. They have never taken themselves too seriously. They have never tried to save the world. They’re simply here to show us a good time. McCartney pops up on Hackney Diamonds, and the album is something of a miracle in offering vibrant, anarchic, poignant, reflective rock’n’roll from a band who still sound like their lives depend on it, after 60 years in the game. “If I was a dog, you would kick me down,” Jagger claims on the punky, frenetic Bite My Head Off, before McCartney blasts off with some extremely distorted bass guitar. The Beatles and the Stones, coming together in a moment of punk unity? It is a surprise to say the least. Hackney Diamonds is a joy from beginning to end because it reminds us of the things we love about the Stones while still sounding like it belongs to the modern age. Driving Me Too Hard opens with Keith Richards playing the same riff as Tumbling Dice but the production, courtesy of 32-year-old The Streets The Darker the Shadow Ronnie Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards pop The Rolling Stones Hackney Diamonds Polydor {{{{{ In The Times Magazine tomorrow Mick Jagger reveals all Andrew Watt, is crisp and contemporary. Dreamy Skies is a country soul strum, with a worldweary quality reminiscent of quieter moments from the late 1960s/early 1970s golden age like Let It Bleed and Exile on Main St. Yet the words, about Jagger dreaming of cutting himself off from the ubiquitous spectre of digital communication, belong to the 21st century. While Mess It Up harks back to disco, the problem it deals with is a current one: doxxing. “You nicked my phone!” Jagger complains, before revealing that the miscreant has gone on to share his photos with the world. He didn’t have to deal with this back when Street Fighting Man was causing panic among the British establishment. There are plenty of moments of pure Stonesyness too. Angry is a fun remodelling of Start Me Up while Whole Wide World is a garage rockstyle memory of living with Richards and Brian Jones in a flat of legendary squalor in early 1960s Fulham, with its smell of “sex and gas”. Sweet Sounds of Heaven is simply beautiful, a gospel soul epic with a positive message to the world (“let no woman or child go hungry tonight”) featuring Lady Gaga on backing vocals and Stevie Wonder on Fender Rhodes. Like You Can’t Always Get What You Want and Shine a Light, it finds the Stones getting spiritual without going anywhere near a church. Although Jagger is steering the ship, Keith Richards leaves his mark throughout, not least on the guitarweaving with Ronnie Wood in which rhythm and lead intermingle. Tell Me Straight is one of Richards’s saddest songs, a lament on which he asks, “Is the future all in the past?” Finally comes Rolling Stone Blues, with Jagger and Richards going back to where it all began with a rough, raw version of Muddy Waters’s Rollin’ Stone featuring nothing more than Jagger blasting away on harmonica and Richards knocking the hell out of an acoustic guitar. So it turns out Paul McCartney was right. The Rolling Stones were a blues cover band all along. The fact that they have never forgotten that, even after writing some of the greatest songs of the rock era, is what makes them — and this album — still so exciting, even after all these years. Agnetha Faltskog A+ BMG {{((( It is wonderful to have Faltskog, she of Abba, back. As it turns out, though, this album is a reworking of one she made in 2013 and it isn’t a massive improvement. The original A was a nice, if lightweight, collection of sentimental pop. Now A+ features a production makeover from Jorgen Elofsson and a new song called Where Do We Go from Here? It’s the best thing about the album, which also has Gary Barlow duetting on the disco-tinged easy listening of I Should’ve Followed You Home and the pretty ballad Past Forever reworked into a nasty synthetic setting. Faltskog’s warm delivery is as affecting as ever, but this is sorely lacking in the high pop drama with which she made her name. Rattle and his Bavarian band electrify Wagner I t’s hard to argue with Simon Rattle when he says that you wouldn’t want to go on holiday with any of the characters in Siegfried with the exception of the Waldvogel, the bird that chirrups advice to the hero in Act II. Indeed, a short bus ride with the line-up of the penultimate opera in Wagner’s Ring cycle would be testing enough. And here we have almost four hours of them! The transfiguring grace is the grandly imaginative music that surrounds the composer’s mythical band of gods, humans, dragons and whatnots, even while the slow-moving narrative threatens to entomb them. That, plus the power of the electrifying performance itself. It stems from live concert recordings made in Munich earlier this year, following previous Ring instalments with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in a cycle begun in 2015. Rattle, below right, made his debut as the orchestra’s chief conductor this September, but their happy union is already clear in the confident ensemble pacing, phrasing and dynamic control, and the dark lustre of solo winds and brass as they wrap themselves around the singers in a way impossible if the orchestra is sectioned off in a theatre pit. And the singers themselves? Mostly magnificent. Simon O’Neill’s Siegfried might not suggest the hero’s headstrong youth, and his German vowels may be rather broadbrush. But he still has the force and stamina needed to conquer the challenges of a very testing role, and only slips under the orchestra’s shadow when his timbre thins at the top of his range. classical Simon Rattle Siegfried BR Klassik {{{{( Jazz album The East Asian vibes of Chien Chien Lu reviewed at thetimes.co.uk/arts Meanwhile, you need a microscope to detect vocal faults in the ebullient characterisations of Peter Hoare’s Mime and Georg Nigl’s Alberich; and if Michael Volle’s Wanderer goes on a bit at times, that has everything to do with the tortuous stanzas this god in disguise has to sing, not the penetrating eloquence of the voice itself. In the smaller but indispensable female camp, Anja Kampe’s sterling Brünnhilde is well worth the wait, while Gerhild Romberger’s Erda is properly earthy. As for Danae Kontora’s Waldvogel and her silvery trills, the holiday is already booked. The bird and I are going to Bora Bora. Geoff Brown Goat Medicine Rocket Recordings {{{{( This elusive Swedish group have become a huge live draw over the past decade for their psychedelic wig-outs and because, hidden behind ornate masks, nobody knows who they are. Now they explore the outer reaches of pagan mysticism against squealing guitar solos, pastoral flute moments, pounding rhythms and a general air of folk horror malevolence. It doesn’t all belong to some ancient agrarian vision — I Became the Unemployment Office explores a more modern fear, ie not having a job — but if you have a fondness for The Wicker Man and Midsommar, this will provide endless doomy delights.
9 the times | Friday October 13 2023 first night affection for the miniature, the cute (kawaii) and the creaturely that extends well beyond childhood. The Hello Kitty keyring or the Pokémon backpack charm is a direct descendent of such intricately carved netsuke. This absorbing exhibition, hung at child’s height and with lovely captions, introduces children to the myths and legends of Japan and the characters, spirits, monsters and animals they have inspired. There is plenty to do as well as see. There are drums to bang (to summon the sun goddess Amaterasu out of her cave of darkness), origami animals to fold, manga comics to draw and fairytales to be read on a forest carpet. It is divided into themes: sky, sun, classical Aurora/Delago Queen Elizabeth Hall {{{{( A t the Edinburgh Fringe 15 years ago, when I first came across Manu Delago, he was “merely” the world’s most virtuosic exponent of the hang — steel pans struck with the bare hands. These days the Austrian is a composer, film-maker, creative accomplice to the hippest musicians on the planet and still the world’s most virtuosic hang player. All that was evident in this delightful entertainment, concocted with Aurora orchestra. The challenge for the players here, at least in the second half, must have been keeping their eyes on the score and their playing perfectly co-ordinated with what was happening on the big screen, as lighting changes flashed around them and Delago’s new orchestration of his 2021 album Environ Me unfolded in nine epic segments. Epic, that is, in their technological ambition rather than their length or harmonic complexity. On the screen Delago (or, often, several Delagos, all wearing black woolly hats) jogged around London parks in all seasons, lit a campfire in the Alps, and led a band of 20 double-bass players perched on tree stumps in a forest. I think we were meant to sense some deep ecological subtext. Frankly, though, the main message conveyed by Environ Us (as this new version is called) was Delago’s sheer exuberance at precisely co-ordinating the “found” sounds — from the plop of pebbles thrown into water to the screech of a car-crushing yard and the rip of Velcro — with live orchestral music, sometimes lullaby-like, elsewhere pounding like a rave in a metal factory. Delago’s music in the concert’s first half was calmer, at least until the earpopping upward pitch glissando, like a spaceship taking off, that ended his Newton’s Rainbow. The pleasure here, however, was in hearing disparate pieces merged seamlessly. They included Anna Thorvaldsdottir’s drone-based and folk-inflected stringorchestra work Illumine, the contrapuntal intricacy of the In Nomine in seven parts by Henry Purcell, and a raga (embellished by the string players) from a fine sarod player, Debasmita Bhattacharya. Richard Morrison theatre I’m Sorry, Prime Minister, I Can’t Quite Remember Barn, Cirencester {{{(( I Bang a drum to summon the sun goddess out of her cave The sun goddess Amaterasu by Utagawa Kunisada, c 1800s Gods, heroes and Hello Kitty Children will relish taking a journey into Japanese culture, says Laura Freeman visual art Japan: Myths to Manga Young V&A, E2 {{{{( t’s a measure of how febrile British politics has been in the past few years that Jim Hacker almost begins to look statesmanlike. Who would have thought that the old bumbler from Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister would end up as the master of an Oxford college bearing his name? Actually, it soon becomes apparent in Jonathan Lynn’s gentle “final chapter” that the former premier’s life is far from blissful. He may enjoy making the occasional speech in the House of Lords, but he is a lonely widower in imminent danger of being ejected from his seat of learning (which turns out to have been founded with a Russian oligarch’s dosh) because he has been caught up in the culture wars. His old adversary, the Whitehall mandarin Sir Humphrey Appleby, is enjoying a less than serene retirement too. Lynn’s valedictory offering is a solo effort — his co-writer on the sitcoms, A n ivory octopus cowers in a trap, drawing each of its eight legs defensively close to its body. The trap, also ivory, has been stained to look like rusty metal. Tiny barnacles encrust its surface. It is slightly less than 3cm high. This 19th-century netsuke — a toggle for the cord that suspends a pouch from a belt-sash — is just one of many wonders in Japan: Myths to Manga, the first temporary exhibition at the recently reopened Young V&A in east London. It sheds light on something in the Japanese psyche: an Antony Jay, died in 2016. If it lacks the sparkle of yesteryear, there’s still an elegiac warmth to the enterprise. The play had its problems in the run-up to press night. Martin Jarvis was originally due to play Hacker, but withdrew, apparently for personal reasons. Lynn, a fine actor in his own right, stepped in but then had to return to New York, where he now lives, due to a family emergency. He’s still credited as director. So now Christopher Bianchi, who was originally cast in the lesser role of the High Court judge Sir David Knell, has taken over, with his part going to Andy Hawthorne. Of course you can’t watch Hacker or Sir Humphrey without thinking of the irreplaceable ghosts of Paul Eddington and Nigel Hawthorne. The Hacker we see here, doddery and dishevelled, is stars, sea, moon, forest and city. If your child is obsessed with the heroes and hydras of Greek myths, this show will introduce a new and extraordinary cast of characters. The objects and artwork are a mix of the exquisite and the plastic — plushie toy recreations of celestial figures, Transformer toys, a cuddly Pokémon catfish. It’s tricky to get away from screens entirely in a show such as this — how could you not include scenes from Studio Ghibli films? — but the clips are short and then it’s on to Utagawa Hiroshige’s The Treasure Ship with its piratical sailors and their plunder or a Sylvanian Families campsite or an eruption of yokai — shape-shifting supernatural demons. Hiroshige rather steals the show with print after print teeming with incident, mischief and elegance. His Night Festival at Miyajima gives Canaletto’s regatta a run for its money. Boisterous gondoliers (or their Edo equivalent), in short tunics, straw hats and blue-and-white-striped knee socks, jostle and jest. I might have wished for a bit more for the mums (and indeed the dads) about making, materials, history and artists, but this spirited show is just right for a troupe of half-term yokai. From tomorrow to Aug 11, 2024 Christopher Bianchi and Clive Francis a more peevish figure, wandering around the designer Lee Newby’s careworn living room filled with cardboard boxes of old files. The ever-dependable Clive Francis makes a suitably suave Sir Humphrey. The plotting is a little perfunctory, in all honesty. You never quite believe in pop Gilberto Gil Royal Albert Hall {{{{{ T here is no audience like a Brazilian audience, which became obvious when a packed Royal Albert Hall rose as one to give the silver-haired 81-year-old Brazilian Tropicalia legend (and former minister of culture) Gilberto Gil a standing ovation — before he started playing. “It is a pleasure to be back in London,” Gil responded, adding, “a city I learnt to love.” Seated with an acoustic guitar, his four backing musicians playing various forms of percussion, Gil opened with Expresso 2222, a signature tune he wrote in 1971 while exiled in London alongside his fellow Tropicalia founder Caetano Veloso. The exile followed three months in jail and four months under curfew in Salvador, his home town, for reasons never made clear by the military dictatorship in power at the time. Gil wrote a handful of songs in jail and you would imagine they were mournful laments on his unjust loss of freedom. The one he played here, Cerebro Eletronico, was a frantic psychedelic rock romp. He is clearly not one for self-pity. This was billed as Gil’s final London concert, but it didn’t sound like any sort of goodbye. His guitar playing, acoustic for the first half and electric for the second, was magical, with that Brazilian touch that makes the ultra complex seem like the easiest thing in the world. Upa, Neguinho, a popular classic from 1966 made famous by the great Brazilian singer Elis Regina, flew by in a melodic breeze, while a reggae touch brought new life to the bossa nova standard The Girl from Ipanema. Watching the Albert Hall’s ushers trying to control an audience of Brazilians dancing to Back in Bahia, which Gil wrote to celebrate his return to Brazil in 1972, before giving up and joining the party was almost as good as watching the stage. Gil’s set consisted of old favourites, seemingly known by most of the audience. And when he finished with Aquele Abraço, a joyful celebration of Rio he wrote the day after he was released from one of the city’s jails in 1969, the entire hall was singing along. It was life-affirming. Will Hodgkinson Sophie (Michaela Bennison), the forthright young black woman and college alumna who has taken on the job of Hacker’s care worker because she needs the money. He, meanwhile, is in trouble because some private comments about the British empire and the Cecil Rhodes statue controversy have seeped into the public domain. There are some tired bien-pensant reflections on Brexit too. But the moment when Francis serves up one of Sir Humphrey’s trademark exercises in circumlocution prompted a wellearned wave of applause. A gentle exercise in nostalgia has its charms. Clive Davis To Nov 4, barntheatre.org.uk; Theatre Royal, Bath, Nov 14-18; Cambridge Arts Theatre, Nov 21-25
10 Friday October 13 2023 | the times first night Sex and the sacred in one haunting hour Pam Tanowitz and David Lang’s new work enthrals Debra Craine dance Song of Songs Barbican {{{{( classical Isserlis/Shih Wigmore Hall, W1 {{{{( O but instead Tanowitz’s almost courtly choreography explores the consummation of love within a tightknit community. What are they all yearning for? Is it the joy of physical intimacy or is it something more spiritual perhaps? The sensuality in the dance feels like an intellectual concept rather than a corporeal reality, while the need for belonging is overarching. There are eight barefoot dancers on a stage that looks a bit like an airport departures lounge, with two low-lying benches and a round table set against walls suggested by hanging strips of fabric. Tanowitz’s choreography, which has a feminine sensibility despite the presence of men in her company, is restrained emotionally but alert with detail. The jittery footwork, semaphoring arms and springy, popup jumps are interspersed with moments of sculptural stillness and graceful, statuesque poses. Her language uses the sophistication of classical ballet but gives it an entirely new context, while her group setting occasionally recalls the simplicity of folk dances (Tanowitz researched forms of Jewish dance for the making of this piece). While aware of each other on stage, Tanowitz’s fine dancers internalise their experience instead of selling it to the audience. Even when they touch, it’s a formality, not a plunge into desire. Yes, it might be considered too dry for some, but the choreographer’s decision to avoid the obvious works on its own terms. Lang’s repetitive minimalist music is scored for three female voices (the wonderfully clear Sarah Brailey, Martha Cluver and Katie Geissinger) and cello, viola and percussion. The score offers pristine harmonies and a haunting meditation on the poem’s words of love and longing. The show’s ending, with the lights down low and the atmosphere even more elusive than before, feels like a secret, communal rendezvous, a consummation of sorts. Ends tomorrow, barbican.org.uk ne word kept springing to mind as I listened to Steven Isserlis and Connie Shih: delight. It was visible in the cellist’s smile as he played Bach, in his open-armed gestures of joy at the end of a phrase. It could be heard too in the way this dynamic duo revelled in the music’s myriad moods, drawing out a delicious melody or excitedly building to a flamboyant finish. Throughout this superb recital they shared their sheer pleasure in the invention of the music. The programme was inspired by Pablo Casals, the Catalan cellist who died 50 years ago in Puerto Rico. He was the musician who brought Bach’s solo Cello Suites back into the light, but here Isserlis and Shih chose the composer’s Viola da Gamba Sonata No 1 to open the concert, playing it with sprightly energy and elegance. Theirs is a wonderful partnership. If the Bach showed off their dancing nimbleness, two cello sonatas from the romantic era called for brooding lyricism. Lalo’s Cello Sonata of 1856 made a strong impression in this impassioned performance. In spirit it’s not a million miles from Chopin’s Cello Sonata, full of tempestuous drama. True, it was still outshone by Brahms’s Cello Sonata in F, which gleamed like polished mahogany. In between came a selection of little-known short pieces, which built up a picture of Casals, one of Isserlis’s heroes. He spun the sombre line of Emanuel Moor’s Largo Op 105 like a wordless song, a real contrast to the airiness he brought to Casals’s wistfully lilting Pastoral. Gaspar Cassado was one of Casals’s many pupils and saw the teacher as his “spiritual father”. Cassado’s arrangement of the Intermezzo from Granados’s Goyescas — played with larger-than-life glee — and his Requiebros added a Spanish flavour to the mix. And for a recital in honour of Casals, there could only really be one possible encore, The Song of the Birds, his haunting signature piece. Rebecca Franks On wigmore-hall.org.uk and YouTube theatre a florist and a West Indian takeaway. With the fourth episode we find ourselves in the aftermath of failure. The venture has closed down and Delroy’s mother, Denise, and his other half, Carly, Michael’s sister, are sifting through the wreckage. In an ideal world Dyer and Williams would have an opportunity to weave the four narratives into a slimmer single piece. If you haven’t seen the previous instalments you may find yourself groping at some of the references in the final showdown. There’s no mistaking, though, the intensity of the relationship between Jo Martin’s cynical Denise and the younger Carly, spikily played by Hayley Squires. With James Graham’s portrait of Gareth Southgate, Dear England, having just opened in the West End after its run in the Olivier, this twohander is a grittier exercise in state-ofthe-nation drama. In the latest encounter — again directed by Dyer — we return to the hugely evocative, catwalk setting created by the designers Sadeysa Greenaway-Bailey and Ultz for the original drama. Once again the Dorfman feels like a football stadium’s theatre of dreams. The writing, though, isn’t quite as taut; over the course of more than two and a half hours the evening drifts. Yet the moments when the two women alternate between suspicion and hard-won friendship make it worthwhile. Sometimes casually sitting among audience members, Carly and Denise circle each other like tigresses. As in the first monologue, the script sounds a false note when it tries to inject a political agenda. But the scene in which Carly’s drunken utterances at a girls’ night out sow the seeds of a rift is brilliantly conveyed, thanks in part to Benjamin Grant and Pete Malkin’s fevered sound design. Clive Davis Jo Martin has been indisposed since Clive Davis reviewed this production. The role of Denise is now performed by Sharon Duncan-Brewster To Nov 11, nationaltheatre.org.uk T he inspiration for this American collaboration between the choreographer Pam Tanowitz and the composer David Lang is a Hebrew biblical poem — more than 2,000 years old — that celebrates sexual love. What’s fascinating about their hour-long Song of Songs, however, is that dance and music take a more cerebral and less visceral approach to something so obviously born out of physical desire. Given the erotic source material, the temptation would be to focus on the passion between a single couple, or even a number of couples, Zachary Gonder and Maile Okamura were among the eight barefoot dancers Death of England: Closing Time Dorfman, National Theatre {{{(( T hey’re not quite the bluecollar equivalent of The Forsyte Saga, but Clint Dyer and Roy Williams’s sketches of plain-talking Londoners, white and black, are a kind of chronicle for our times. The story began, in the long-ago days before lockdown, with Rafe Spall’s volcanic performance in a monologue about a flower seller, Michael, mourning his father, an old-school racist. That study — the best of the series — was followed by another solo piece, starring Michael Balogun as Michael’s old friend Delroy. Next up was a filmed two-hander, shot during lockdown, in which the two men (this time played by Neil Maskell and Giles Terera) hatched plans to open
11 the times | Friday October 13 2023 television & radio This revamp has plenty to sink your teeth into Carol Midgley TV review Interview with the Vampire BBC2 {{{(( I t’s a brave TV series that parks its tanks on the lawn of Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, Christian Slater and Kirsten Dunst. Interview with the Vampire, based on Anne Rice’s novel, was a hit as a film in 1994, so a TV series had better have something new to say or it’s all a bit embarrassing. Well. It certainly does. And it is not shy about violence and sex either. Lordy, no. The homoerotic undertones of the film have become full, in-yourface sex, including an early threesome, as Louis de Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson) and Lestat de Lioncourt (a charismatic Sam Reid) become an openly gay couple who climb into each Radio choice Ben Dowell Add to Playlist Radio 4, 7.15pm A fresh eight-part series has Cerys Matthews and Jeffrey Boakye back compiling a new playlist with the help of various music specialists. As always, they choose and discuss five tracks, each picked for its musical connections with the previous one, to highlight a web of connections across the breadth of all musical styles. In this opening episode, the pianist Isata Kanneh-Mason, above, and the writer and musician Neil Brand take in a journey that includes a live performance from a 12-year-old Stevie Wonder and Gustav Mahler’s sole surviving piece of instrumental chamber music. our tv newsletter other’s coffins for a bit of how’s your father. “It’s OK, you can be on top,” Lestat says on their first night when they share one casket. Vampires are always a bit camp and sensual, penetrating fangs an obvious metaphor, but sex runs through this series like the blood through a swooning maiden’s veins. And not always poetically. In a brothel an outraged prostitute walloped a punter after he did something unsavoury. Subtlety may not be its forte. Indeed, the violence in this fang-dango is gleefully unrestrained. At one point Louis pulls a victim’s jaw off and holds it aloft; at another Lestat punches his fist through a priest’s skull, gore and brain matter spurting forth. But is it good entertainment? Well, it’s melodramatic and sometimes cheesy, but in the main it is rollickingly well done. And it is droll. Such as when they take their adopted vampire child, Claudia (Bailey Bass), to buy a coffin, spinning the shop’s owner the line that she has a heart condition and is terminally ill. The “dying” teen happily lies down in one saying, “It’s so soft!” while the salesman stares. Quite funny. The big strength of the series is in refashioning the story and making it its own. The setting and timeline of the main action has moved to New Orleans in 1910, and this Louis is a black man who suffers racism but Times Radio Digital, web, smart speaker, app 5.00am Rosie Wright with Early Breakfast 6.00 Chloe Tilley and Calum Macdonald with Times Radio Breakfast 10.00 Matt Chorley. An insider’s take on politics 1.00pm Ruth Davidson. Covering the big political stories of the week, and looking ahead to the weekend in sport and entertainment, plus headlines and discussions 4.00 Cathy Newman with Times Radio Drive. Friday’s headlines and discussions 7.00 Ed Vaizey. The Conservative peer and former MP sits in bringing his take on the day’s news 10.00 Henry Bonsu 1.00am Stories of Our Times 1.30 Red Box 2.00 Highlights from Times Radio Radio 2 FM: 88-90.2 MHz 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show 9.30 Vernon Kay. Michelle Visage chooses her final Tracks of My Years 12.00 Jeremy Vine 2.00pm Scott Mills 3.30 Scott Mills’ Wonder Years 4.00 Sara Cox. The host takes listeners’ calls for All Request Friday 7.00 Michelle Visage. A selection of hits from across the pop music genre 8.30 Michelle Visage’s Handbag Hits. Feelgood party classics handpicked by Michelle. Her mood this week is “Do It Again!” 9.00 The Good Groove with DJ Spoony. A mix of soulful house and lyrical garage tunes 11.00 The Rock Show with Johnnie Walker. The host introduces a selection of rock tracks 12.00 Romesh Ranganathan: For the Love of Hip-Hop (r) 1.00am Moby: 20 Years of Play (r) 2.00 Moby: 20 Years of Play (r) 3.00 Radio 2 Unwinds with Angela Griffin (r) 4.00 Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Kitchen Disco Radio 3 FM: 90.2-92.4 MHz 6.30am Breakfast Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3’s classical breakfast show, including the Friday poem 9.00 Essential Classics Georgia Mann plays the best in classical music, featuring new discoveries, some musical surprises and familiar favourites 12.00 Composer of the Week: Fauré (1845-1924) Fauré brings reform and consternation to France’s leading music school. Presented by Donald Macleod. Fauré (Cantique de Jean Racine, Op 11; Le Chanson d’Ève, Op 96 No’s 1-5; Pénélope — Prelude; Violin Sonata No 2 in E minor, Op 108 — Andante and Masques et bergamasques, Op 112) (r) Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid as vampires Louis and Lestat 1.00pm Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert Georgia Mann presents a performance by the harpsichordist Justin Taylor and the Consone Quartet, recorded at LSO St Luke’s, London, on 24 January. Bach (Harpsichord Concerto in D minor, BWV1052; Toccata in D for solo harpsichord, BWV912 and Harpsichord Concerto in G minor, BWV1058) (r) 2.00 Afternoon Concert Simone Menezes conducts the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra in a performance. Ian Skelly presents. Wagner (Siegfried Idyll); Coleridge-Taylor (Piano Trio); Brahms (Tragic Overture); Mendelssohn (Symphony no.3 — Scottish); George Walker (Stars, Praise ye the Lord); Glazunov (Chopiniana) and Chopin (Cello Sonata — Finale) (r) 4.30 The Listening Service Tom Service explores the ability of music to evoke a sense of the ethereal, examining how composers create the affect (r) 5.00 In Tune The pianist Beatrice Berrut plus members of the Academy of Ancient Music and their music director Laurence Cummings perform live in the studio and chat to Sean Rafferty 7.00 Classical Mixtape A selection of classical favourites mixed with jazz, folk and music from around the world 7.30 Radio 3 in Concert Kazuki Yamada conducts the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra in the opening night of a season celebrating the 50th anniversary of the CBSO Chorus. Presented by Miriam Skinner. Verdi (Requiem). Evalina Dobraceva (soprano), Karen Cargill (mezzo), Jose Simerilla Romero (tenor), Ashley Riches (bass). CBSO Chorus City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, 10.00 The Verb Ian McMillan presents an extended interview with Zadie Smith, author of White Teeth. In her latest novel The Fraud, set in her native North West London, Smith moves into historical fiction with a story inspired by an extraordinary real life court case 10.45 The Essay: The Lost Hours The glamour of the early evening cocktail hour and the later evening supper party come under Martin’s forensic gaze in the last of his talks about rituals that punctuate our day (r) 11.00 Late Junction Verity Sharp shares a mixtape from Reverend Kristin Michael Hayter, the artist formerly known as Lingua Ignota, featuring Bach, bluegrass, gospel and Gesualdo 1.00am Ultimate Calm (r) 2.00 Happy Harmonies with Laufey (r) 3.00 Through the Night (r) Radio 4 FM: 92.4-94.6 MHz LW: 198kHz MW: 720 kHz 5.30am News Briefing 5.43 Prayer for the Day 5.45 Farming Today 5.58 Tweet of the Day (r) 6.00 Today With Mishal Husain and Justin Webb 9.00 Desert Island Discs With entrepreneur Greg Jackson (4/15) (r) 9.45 (LW) Daily Service 9.45 Book of the Week: Going Infinite By Michael Lewis (5/5) 10.00 Woman’s Hour Presented by Anita Rani 11.00 The Briefing Room With David Aaronovitch (r) 11.30 Tom Allen Is Actually Not Very Nice The comedian works out how best to navigate tricky social situations (1/4) (r) 12.01pm (LW) Shipping Forecast 12.04 Archive on 4: The Cult of Lebowski Helen O’Hara celebrates 25 years of the Coen brothers’ comedy The Big Lebowski 1.00 The World at One 1.45 An Almanac of Anxiety: In Search of a Calmer Mind The benefits of gardening for people with mental illness. Last in the series (r) 2.00 The Archers (r) 2.15 Drama: The System Thriller, by Ben Lewis (5/5) 2.45 Close Encounters A portait of the suffragette Christabel Pankhurst (5/10) (r) 3.00 Gardeners’ Question Time The experts are in the Isle of Wight 3.45 Short Works Something Borrowed, by Karen Campbell 4.00 Last Word The lives of famous and less well-known people who have recently died 4.30 Feedback With Andrea Catherwood (1/11) 5.00 PM 5.54 (LW) Shipping Forecast 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 The News Quiz Topical comedy panel game (6/8) 7.00 The Archers Alan makes a shocking discovery 7.15 Add to Playlist The pianist Isata Kanneh-Mason and musician and silent movie score composer Neil Brand launch a new playlist. Presented by Cerys Matthews and Jeffrey Boakye. See Radio Choice (1/9) makes a good living from running bars and brothels (the Louis played by Brad Pitt was a plantation owner). In the present, Daniel Molloy (Succession’s Eric Bogosian), the journalist tape-recording Louis’s story, is in the vampire’s Dubai penthouse for the titular interview. Dubai seems a strange location for an undead creature terrified of sunlight, but hey ho. Maybe he likes tacky hotels. Louis declares that he hasn’t snacked on a human since 2000 and instead feasts on unfortunate animals served to him live on plates. There’s much talk of Covid, which feels a bit overdone, but signifies “an unravelling of geopolitical foundations”, which is the “opening the vampires have been waiting for’’. OK, if you say so. Then there’s Claudia, played by Dunst in the film but here allowed to reach age 18 so the series can explore her desire for a lover. Bass brings brattish energy to the role, springing off New Orleans balconies to eat some passing pedestrian and accidentally killing a chap she fancies, causing her to sulk. “I’m not sure how I feel about that pleated skirt,” Lestat says, observing their protégée. “It’s chiffon, it has movement,” Louis replies. As you can see, it’s not afraid of camp. Neck-biting has its limits, plot-wise, and seven episodes may be too many, but be assured there’s plenty here to sink your teeth into. 8.00 Any Questions? Topical discussion, chaired by Alex Forsyth 8.50 A Point of View A reflection on a topical issue 9.00 Archive on 4: Kissinger’s Century US statesman Henry Kissinger reflects on his life and experiences (r) 10.00 The World Tonight 10.45 Book at Bedtime: Open Throat By Henry Hoke (5/5) 11.00 Americast Cultural and social stories breaking in the US 11.30 Lusus Ale of Goibhniu, by Samantha Newton (8/8) 12.00 News and Weather 12.30am Book of the Week: Going Infinite (r) 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Chiles on Friday 1.00pm Defoe & Deeney Football Firsts 1.30 Fantasy 606 2.00 Elis James and John Robins 4.00 5 Live Drive 7.00 5 Live Sport 7.45 5 Live Sport: England v Australia (Kick-off 7.45). Match commentary 10.00 Stephen Nolan 1.00am Greg Mckenzie Radio 4 Extra TalkRadio Digital only 8.00am Marriage Lines 8.30 Kathmandu or Bust 9.00 Whispers 9.30 Barbara Nice 10.00 A Man Alone 11.00 Ordeal by Innocence 11.30 High Table, Lower Orders 12.00 The Camomile Lawn 12.15pm Ground Control 12.30 Ed Reardon’s Week 1.00 Marriage Lines 1.30 Kathmandu or Bust 2.00 Whispers 2.30 Barbara Nice 3.00 A Man Alone 4.00 Ordeal by Innocence 4.30 High Table, Lower Orders 5.00 The Camomile Lawn 5.15 Ground Control 5.30 Ed Reardon’s Week 6.00 Marriage Lines 6.30 Kathmandu or Bust 7.00 Whispers. Panel game, chaired by Gyles Brandreth. First aired in 2003. Last in the series 7.30 Barbara Nice. Barbara protests against the closure of a local public toilet 8.00 Three-Sided Football. The story of a baffling game with three sides and only three rules 8.30 Soul Music. The emotional power of the Edith Piaf song Non, je ne regrette rien 9.00 Monsters of Music with Tom Allen. The dark and twisted story of Anton Bruckner 9.30 Journey into Space: The Red Planet. The Red Planet. Sci-fi adventure, by Charles Chilton 10.00 Comedy Club: Desolation Jests. Sketch show starring David Jason 10.30 4 Stands Up. With Sarah Millican, James Sherwood and Jeff Green. Originally broadcast in 2009 11.00 Nick Mohammed in Quarters. Sketches and monologues 11.15 Bunk Bed 11.30 The Mark Steel Lecture Radio 5 Live MW: 693, 909 5.00am Wake Up to Money 6.00 5 Live Breakfast. Unique stories from across the UK talkSPORT MW: 1053, 1089 kHz 5.00am Early Breakfast 6.00 talkSPORT Breakfast with Alan Brazil 10.00 Jim White and Simon Jordan 1.00pm Hawksbee and Jacobs 4.00 talkSPORT Drive with Andy Goldstein and Darren Bent 7.00 Live Kick Off: England v Australia (Kick-off 7.45). Match commentary 10.00 Sports Bar 1.00am Extra Time with Martin Kelner Digital only 5.00am Cristo Foufas 6.00 Talk Today with David Bull & Sarah Hewson 9.30 Mike and Kev 10.00 The Independent Republic of Mike Graham 1.00pm Julia Hartley Brewer 3.00 Kevin O’Sullivan 5.00 Vanessa Feltz 7.00 Plank of the Week 8.00 Friday Night with Nadine 9.00 The Talk 10.00 What Just Happened? with Kevin O’Sullivan 10.30 The World According to Mike Graham 11.00 Andre Walker 1.00am Martin Kelner 6 Music Digital only 5.00am The Remix 5.30 Emily Pilbeam 7.30 Lauren Laverne 10.30 Huw Stephens 1.00pm Chris Hawkins 4.00 Steve Lamacq 7.00 The People’s Party with Afrodeutsche 9.00 Indie Forever 11.00 The Ravers Hour 12.00 Rave Forever 1.00am Emo Forever 2.00 Focus Beats 4.00 Ambient Focus Virgin Radio Digital only 6.30am Chris Evans 10.00 Eddy Temple-Morris 1.00pm Jayne Middlemiss 4.00 Ricky Wilson 7.00 Ben Jones 10.00 Rich Williams 1.00am Olivia Jones Classic FM FM: 100-102 MHz 6.00am More Music Breakfast 9.00 Alexander Armstrong 12.00 Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00pm Margherita Taylor 7.00 Smooth Classics at Seven. Presented by Zeb Soanes 10.00 Calm Classics 1.00am Katie Breathwick 4.00 Lloyd Griffith
12 Friday October 13 2023 | the times television & radio Viewing Guide James Jackson Frasier Paramount+ And so Dr Frasier Crane gets a third act. After nine years in Boston for the beloved Cheers, then 11 years in Seattle for the impeccably witty Frasier, the who likes an afterwork drink or three. Suffice to say, Frasier is a hit with the students, and now that he’s in town he is also keen to reconnect with his son, Freddy (Jack CutmoreScott), a firefighter. Also in the mix is Frasier’s nephew David (Anders Keith) — that’s Niles and Daphne’s son, who was born in the last episode of the old Frasier in 2004. Suffice to say, complications ensue. There are farcical situations in apartments and no shortage of heart. Two episodes are released today, then they’re weekly — and how good it is to have that cool-jazz thrum of “tossed salads and scrambled eggs” back again for Friday nights. Lessons in Chemistry Apple TV+ In the sexist 1950s the world of science was a swamp of misogyny, or so it’s portrayed in this eight-part drama. Elizabeth Zott (Brie Larson) dreams of being a chemist but is told by her boss: “This institution has a reputation based on the world-class scientists not the theories of a pretty lab tech.” The stone-faced Zott is unafraid of ruffling feathers, however, not least when she becomes the host of a TV cooking show. Now she’s teaching a nation of housewives — and the men listening — more than just recipes. This isn’t subtle, but done with polish. BBC2 ITV1 Channel 4 Channel 5 6.00am Breakfast 9.15 Rip Off Britain. The spat between big names in the holiday industry that has left customers out of pocket 10.00 Crimewatch Live. A dog offering support for those suffering from PTSD 10.45 Caught Red Handed. An armed robber regrets picking a bicycle as a getaway vehicle 11.15 Homes Under the Hammer. The progress of lots in Co Durham, Derby and East Sussex (r) (AD) 12.15pm Bargain Hunt. A special show all about tea and the history of tea-drinking (AD) 1.00 BBC News at One; Weather 1.30 BBC Regional News; Weather 1.45 Five Bedrooms. Liz bears the brunt of Harry’s anger and grief 2.30 Money for Nothing. Items include a sideboard with matching chairs 3.00 Escape to the Country. Alistair Appleton helps a couple look for a property on Anglesey (r) (AD) 3.45 The Repair Shop. A kitchen curiosity intrigues wood conservator Will Kirk, and a treasured wedding ring is restored (AD) 4.30 The Vintage French Farmhouse. Items including a wooden figure and pair of smaller puppets are bought by antiques experts in L’Isle-sur-la-Sorgue 5.15 Pointless. Quiz hosted by Alexander Armstrong (r) 6.00 BBC News at Six; Weather 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather 6.30am Escape to the Country (r) 7.15 The Vintage French Farmhouse (r) 8.00 Sign Zone: Gardeners’ World (r) (AD, SL) 9.00 Nicky Campbell 10.00 BBC News 12.15pm Politics UK. The week’s political proceedings around the UK 1.00 Impossible. Quiz hosted by Rick Edwards (r) 1.45 Make Me a Dealer. Paul Martin is in Clevedon, where two locals face off in the antiquesbuying challenge (r) 2.30 Wanted Down Under. A family sees what Auckland has to offer (r) 3.00 Murder, Mystery and My Family. A case from 1882 in which a farmer and landowner was shot dead. Last in the series (r) (AD) 3.45 This Wild Life. Saba Douglas-Hamilton runs into problems when the safari camp reopens (r) 4.15 Cornwall: This Fishing Life. Competition is fierce as the ring-netters of Newlyn go on the hunt for sardines. Also known as pilchards, they were once a staple of the Cornish fishing industry (r) (AD) 5.15 Flog It! The team values antiques at Blackpool Tower Circus (r) 6.00 Richard Osman’s House of Games. James Buckley, Amy Gledhill, Romilly Weeks and Gary Wilmot take part 6.30 Strictly: It Takes Two. Fleur East and the showbiz panel discuss tomorrow’s show. Plus, more couples pop in for a chat 6.00am Good Morning Britain 9.00 Lorraine. Entertainment, current affairs and fashion news, as well as showbiz stories and interviews. Presented by Lorraine Kelly 10.00 This Morning. Daily magazine, featuring a mix of interviews, showbusiness news, lifestyle features, topical discussion, health and beauty advice and more. Including Local Weather 12.30pm Loose Women. Interviews and topical debate from a female perspective 1.30 ITV News; Weather 1.55 Regional News; Weather 2.00 James Martin’s Great British Adventure. James is in London, where he visits Clare Smyth’s restaurant Core and spends time at a knife forge. He also meets up with old friends Michel Roux Sr and his son Alain (r) (AD) 3.00 Tenable. Five family members from Ipswich take part in the quiz hosted by Warwick Davis 4.00 Tipping Point. Ben Shephard hosts the arcade-themed quiz in which contestants drop tokens down a choice of four chutes in the hope of winning a £10,000 jackpot 5.00 The Chase. Bradley Walsh presents as four more contestants work as a team to take on one of the ruthless Chasers and secure a cash prize 6.00 Regional News; Weather 6.30 ITV News; Weather 6.05am Countdown. Colin Murray and Rachel Riley host the long-running words-and-numbers game with Susie Dent in Dictionary Corner (r) 6.45 Cheers (r) 7.35 Everybody Loves Raymond (r) (AD) 8.25 Frasier (r) (AD) 9.55 Château DIY. New château owners start work on a guest suite (r) (AD) 10.55 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. The architect meets a couple crafting a magical den for their toddler (r) (AD) 11.55 Channel 4 News Summary 12.00 Steph’s Packed Lunch. Weekday magazine show hosted by Steph McGovern 2.10pm Countdown. Levi Roots guests in Dictionary Corner 3.00 A Place in the Sun. Lee Juggurnauth helps a womant to find a holiday home in the popular resort of Villamartin on Spain’s Costa Blanca (r) 4.00 The Great House Giveaway. In Royton, Lancashire, two women transform a property with bags of potential. Untouched since the 1960s, they hope to turn this tired terrace into some desirable digs 5.00 A New Life in the Sun. The season nears its end and in France a family’s gîte springs several leaks. Meanwhile in Spain, back-to-back B&B bookings and a busy bar leave an Essex couple run off their feet (r) 6.00 Channel 4 News. Including sport and weather 6.00am Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine. The broadcaster and guests discuss the issues of the day with co-host Storm Huntley 11.15 Storm Huntley. Debate on the day’s talking points continues with Storm Huntley, who takes viewers calls on the biggest stories 12.40pm Alexis Conran. The actor, writer and broadcaster examines the important stories of the day 1.40 5 News at Lunchtime 1.45 Home and Away. Mackenzie is suspicious when she finds Xander at work when he is not rostered, doubt is cast on Alf’s great mood, and Felicity and Cash disagree about the video evidence (r) (AD) 2.15 FILM: Finding Emma (PG, TVM, 2021) A woman who was kidnapped for seven years must face her captor yet again when he offers to help her find her own abducted daughter. Thriller starring Jessica Morris 4.00 Bargain-Loving Brits in the Sun. A married couple gear up for the opening of their new bar on the Costa del Sol, while a musician sets up for a gig for a good cause 5.00 5 News at 5 6.00 Dogs Behaving (Very) Badly. Graeme Hall meets a couple who are struggling to walk their dogs on and off the lead, and are worried their pets may end up in danger after chasing livestock in farmers’ fields (r) 6.55 5 News Update 7.00 The One Show Live magazine show hosted by Alex Jones and Roman Kemp 7.00 Your Garden Made Perfect Angela Scanlon hosts the garden makeover show, beginning with a resident of St Anne’s near Blackpool, who wants to transform her dilapidated space into a garden where she can practice her yoga (1/6) (r) 7.00 Emmerdale Cain and Caleb struggle to gain control, while Suni’s worst fears are confirmed (AD) 8.00 Would I Lie to You? Raj Bisram, Deborah Frances-White, Stephen Mulhern and Jenny Ryan guest on the comedy panel show (8/12) (r) 8.30 Ghosts Alison and Mike’s plan to raise some much-needed funds by selling some land leaves Lady Button appalled. See Viewing Guide (2/6) (AD) 8.00 Gardeners’ World Frances Tophill assesses the tomatoes in her upcycled greenhouse, before heading to a nursery to buy plants for her revamped pond. Elsewhere, Rekha Mistry shares her successes and failures in her new vegetable garden in the Peak District 8.00 Coronation Street As the residents realise that they have a murderer in their midst, the hunt is on to find Stephen before he can add to his death toll — but they may be too late (AD) 9.00 Have I Got News for You Alexander Armstrong hosts with Jon Richardson and Olivia Utley joining Ian Hislop and Paul Merton (2/10) 9.30 Mrs Brown’s Boys Agnes worries her family is too secretive (2/6) (r) (AD) 9.00 Uncanny New series. Adaptation of the Radio 4 series, featuring real-life accounts of supernatural encounters, expert analysis, and investigations. See Viewing Guide (1/3) 9.00 Barbara Knox at 90 Coronation Street star Barbara Knox celebrates her 90th birthday with Bradley Walsh, who has a host of surprises for her, including a reunion with long-time on-screen partner Thelma Barlow (AD) 7PM Early BBC1 8PM Frasier — played with all the immaculate timing we expect of Kelsey Grammer in his signature role — has returned to Boston. He is there to deliver a class at Harvard, arranged by his old mucker from his Oxford days, Alan Cornwall (Nicholas Lyndhurst), who is now a rather dusty professor, albeit one 9PM Top pick psychiatrist is back in Boston and back on our screens. Rumours of the revival began in 2016, and by now the question on everyone’s lips is: can it possibly live up to its forebears? The early signs are that it’s better than anyone might have anticipated even if there is no Niles (alas), Daphne or Martin (John Mahoney died in 2018). Instead, 11PM 10PM 7.30 Make It at Market A stone carver tries overcome a confidence problem, and a woman has given up a career in advertising to try to become a potter 10.00 BBC News at Ten 10.30 BBC Regional News and Weather 10.40 The Graham Norton Show Graham chats to Ozark star Laura Linney, comedy star and writer Dawn French and stand-up London Hughes. Plus, Sugababes perform their new single, When the Rain Comes Late 11.30 RuPaul’s Drag Race UK The queens take on a ’90s rave banger for the girl group challenge. With guest judge while Sophie Ellis-Bextor (3/10) (r) 12.40am-6.00 BBC News 10.00 Red Dwarf The crew members answer a distress call from a trio of attractive women and their robot servant on a marooned craft the Nova 5 (1/6) (r) 10.30 Newsnight With Victoria Derbyshire 11.05 Woman in Gold (12, 2015) A woman takes the Austrian government to court to reclaim art treasures stolen from her family by the Nazis. Fact-based drama with Helen Mirren, Ryan Reynolds and Daniel Bruhl 12.45am DNA Family Secrets A woman left wrapped in a plastic bag as a newborn wants to find her birth parents (r) (AD) 1.45 Sign Zone: The Big Mortgage Squeeze — Panorama. Colletta Smith meets homeowners adjusting to higher mortgage bills 2.15-3.15 Saving Lives at Sea. The RNLI crew help young man (r) (AD, SL) 10.00 ITV News at Ten 10.30 Regional News 10.45 Pride of Britain Awards 2023 Carol Vorderman and Ashley Banjo host the annual award ceremony which honours and celebrates the nation’s unsung heroes, featuring awe-inspiring stories of bravery, selflessness, phenomenal fundraising feats and plenty of emotional moments (r) (AD) 12.30am The NFL Show Host Craig Doyle is joined by Osi Umenyiora and Jason Bell to look ahead to the final London game of 2023, Baltimore Ravens v Tennessee Titans 1.25 All Elite Wrestling: Collision. Grappling action (r) 3.05 In the Shadow of Mary Seacole (r) (AD, SL) 3.50 Unwind with ITV 5.05-6.00 Tenable (r) (SL) 7.00 Live England International Football: England v Australia (Kick-off 7.45). Jules Breach presents all the action from the friendly at Wembley Stadium. Gareth Southgate is likely to use this match to assess members of his squad ahead of Tuesday UEFA Euro 2024 qualifier here at home to Italy, but his side impressed in their previous friendly last month, defeating Scotland 3-1 at Hampden Park. The sides last met at the Stadium of Light in 2016, when goals by Marcus Rashford and Wayne Rooney helped England claim a 2-1 victory. With analysis from Joe Cole, Jill Scott and Harry Kewell 7.00 Shop Smart, Save Money Angellica Bell and Ortis Deley help a football coach who is looking for a new pair of boots, while Jon Bentley hunts for new binoculars and Georgie Barrat uncovers what we should be doing with our electronic waste 7.55 5 News Update 8.00 Susan Calman’s Grand Day Out Susan is in Hampshire, where she explores HMS Victory in Portsmouth, visits the former home of Jane Austen and learns about a curious eating competition in New Alresford 9.00 The Good Ship Murder New series. A former detective working as a cabaret singer on a Mediterranean cruise ship is asked to help when a passenger is found dead. Crime drama starring Shayne Ward and Catherine Tyldesley. See Viewing Guide (1/8) 10.00 Gogglebox The armchair critics share their opinions on what they have been watching during the week, with cameras capturing their reactions (AD) 10.00 World’s Most Expensive Cruise The company’s food tsar checks standards are being maintained, a new entertainment team takes to the stage, and there are tears as the captain hands over control (3/4) 11.05 Big Fat Quiz of the Decade Super-sized edition of the quiz from 2020, with Claudia Winkleman, Nish Kumar, Joe Lycett, Alan Carr, Stacey Solomon and Jonathan Ross answering questions on the past 10 years. Hosted by Jimmy Carr (r) 11.05 Inside HMP Frankland: Evil Behind Bars Documentary exploring life inside HMP Frankland, the men’s maximum security prison in County Durham, which has housed some of the country’s most notorious criminals (r) 12.55am England International Football Highlights of England v Australia 1.50 FILM: Rocks (12, 2019) A 15-year-old hides the truth from social services and her best friend when her mother disappears. Drama, starring Bukky Bakray, Kosar Ali and D’angelou Osei Kissied 3.25 Come Dine with Me (r) (AD) 5.40-5.55 Beat the Chef (r) 12.35am ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 Highlights of New Zealand v Bangladesh in Chennai, India 1.25 Entertainment News on 5 1.35 PlayOJO Live Casino Show 3.40 Friends (r) 4.30 The Railways That Built Britain with Chris Tarrant (r) (SL) 5.15 House Busters (r) (SL) 5.40 Entertainment News on 5 5.45-6.00 Paw Patrol (r)
13 the times | Friday October 13 2023 television & radio Ghosts BBC1, 8.30pm A conversation on the theme of home prompts a dispute between two of the ghosts over north v south. To the undead scoutmaster Pat (Jim Howick), Yorkshire is “rolling dales, puddings and pies . . . and the people! Best folk on Earth!” The trouserless Tory MP scoffs: “Yeah, it’s fine . . . if you don’t mind walking to the local post office.” Pat: “You would say that with your London shoes, and your London hair . . .” “Beats your Carlisle combover.” And so on. Also in this episode the poet Thomas nearly unravels with writer’s block and Kitty thinks she’s pregnant. Can ghosts get pregnant? Uncanny BBC2, 9pm In his hit podcast The Battersea Poltergeist, the presenter Danny Robins explored the story of a notorious “haunting”. In Radio 4’s Uncanny he investigated other paranormal claims, and this has now become a TV series in which he interviews people who discuss their eerie experiences. “Are you team believer or team sceptic,” Robins asks as we hear from a woman about a ghost called Miss Howard in her childhood home. How creepy you find all this might depend on how you find Robins, a lively presence throughout, but really this is a rationalist inquiry into the supernatural. The Good Ship Murder Channel 5, 9pm Based on an idea from Ben Frow, Channel 5’s director of programming, this new crime drama does at least come from the captain’s table. Clearly the man who keeps a firm eye on the ratings knows the appeal of a detective turned cruise singer (Shayne Ward’s Jack Grayling) teaming up with a sexy woman officer (Catherine Tyldesley’s Grace Woods) to investigate murders. It’s filmed on an actual cruise ship, occasionally lending it the feel of a corporate video, and some of the acting is steerage class. But it’s visually pretty and has a certain escapist charm. Film The Fabelmans Sky Cinema Premiere, 8pm In Steven Spielberg’s latest effort, autobiography is everywhere. Yet the director’s life story, with him fictionalised as the child of a pianist (Michelle Williams) and an electrical engineer (Paul Dano), is oddly humdrum. (12, 2022) Sky Max Sky Atlantic Sky Documentaries Sky Arts Sky Main Event Variations 6.00am Supergirl (r) 7.00 DC’s Legends of Tomorrow (r) (AD) 8.00 Air Ambulance ER (r) (AD) 9.00 Stargate SG-1 (r) 11.00 Supergirl (r) 12.00 Road Wars (r) 1.00pm NCIS: Los Angeles (r) 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (r) 4.00 S.W.A.T (r) (AD) 5.00 DC’s Legends of Tomorrow (r) (AD) 6.00 Stargate SG-1. A black hole threatens the team and also puts the Earth at risk (r) 7.00 Stargate SG-1. O’Neill has the contents of an alien library downloaded into his brain (r) 8.00 Strike Back: Silent War. A Russian nuclear bomber vanishes in the South China Sea (r) (AD) 9.00 The Lazarus Project. George puts his plan into motion, unaware that a Lazarus agent is hot on his heels intent to stop him (r) (AD) 10.00 Warrior. Ah Sahm grapples with revelations from Yan Mi and Mai Ling 11.00 FILM: Game of Death II (18, 1980) Thriller starring Bruce Lee and Tae-jeong Kim 1.00am The Blacklist. Drama series (r) 2.00 Stop, Search, Seize (r) 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (r) 4.00 S.W.A.T (r) (AD) 5.00 Highway Patrol (r) 6.10am Urban Secrets (r) 7.55 Six Feet Under (r) 10.05 Ray Donovan (r) (AD) 12.15pm Game of Thrones (r) (AD) 1.20 The Knick (r) (AD) 3.30 Six Feet Under (r) 5.40 Ray Donovan. Double bill of the drama series (r) (AD) 7.50 Game of Thrones. As Jaime weighs up all of his options, Cersei answers a request, and Tyrion’s plans begin to bear fruit (r) (AD) 9.00 Billions. Prince makes changes in the wake of betrayal, while Chuck forges unlikely alliances in his bid to take him down and Wendy finds herself in an impossible position (10/12) (r) 10.10 Das Boot. Buchner is confronted with a mole aboard U-949, while Wilhelm and Klaus try to find a way to alter the course of the war (r) 11.10 Das Boot. Klaus procures information for Admiral Kenton, while Schulz reports to Koch to be sure of Klaus’s implication in the coup (r) 12.10am Chernobyl. Legasov draws up a plan, but it comes with risks (r) (AD) 1.20 Angels in America (r) 2.50 Game of Thrones (r) (AD) 4.00 Richard E Grant’s Hotel Secrets (r) (AD) 6.00am The Last Movie Stars (r) (AD) 7.10 Discovering: Brad Pitt (r) 8.05 The Directors (r) (AD) 9.00 Veleno: The Town of Lost Children (r) 10.00 Once Upon a Time in Londongrad (r) (AD) 11.00 McMillion$ (r) (AD) 12.00 Queen of Speed (r) (AD) 1.50pm My Icon: Pam Cookey (r) (AD) 2.00 Superswede (r) 3.50 My Icon: Shaun Gayle (r) (AD) 4.00 The Directors (r) (AD) 5.00 Discovering: Brad Pitt (r) 6.00 Veleno: The Town of Lost Children (r) 7.00 Once Upon a Time in Londongrad (r) (AD) 8.00 McMillion$. The FBI are able to intercept a call with “Uncle Jerry” (5/6) (r) (AD) 9.00 House of Kardashian. Exploring one of the world’s most powerful families (1/3) (r) 10.00 Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds. The mother and daughter relationship of the Hollywood stars (r) (AD) 11.50 Pantani: The Accidental Death of a Cyclist. The rise and fall of cyclist Marco Pantani (r) 1.50am Right to Fight (r) 3.40 Stirling (r) (AD) 5.00 Discovering: Brad Pitt (r) 6.00am Sky Sports News 7.00 Good Morning Sports Fans 8.00 Good Morning Sports Fans 9.00 Live ICC Cricket World Cup: New Zealand v Bangladesh. Coverage of the group match from MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai, India. The Black Caps will be considered favourites for this match given they have not lost to Bangladesh in this format of the game since 2017, and they secured a 2-0 victory in a three-match series last month with one of those matches being abandoned due to bad weather 5.30pm Sky Sports News at 5. Headlines and updates 6.00 Live PGA Tour Golf: The Shriners Children’s Open. Coverage of day two of the tournament at TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas, as the featured groups make their way across the course 10.00 Live PGA Tour Golf: The Shriners Children’s Open. Coverage of day two of the tournament at TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas, which was won by Tom Kim last year 1.00am Sky Sports News. The latest headlines and analysis over the course of the night BBC1 N Ireland As BBC1 except: 7.30pm The Fast and the Farmer-ish. The teams need to be tactical in some extreme challenges 8.00-8.30 Scarlett’s Driving School. A self-confessed perfectionist wants to pass her test before her wedding 6.00am HMS Pinafore with ENO 8.00 The Joy of Painting 9.00 Tales of the Unexpected (AD) 10.00 Alfred Hitchcock Presents 11.00 Discovering: Harvey Keitel 12.00 The Joy of Painting 1.00pm Tales of the Unexpected (AD) 1.35 FILM: Pursuit to Algiers (PG, 1945) Sherlock Holmes mystery starring Basil Rathbone (b/w) 3.00 Robert Burns: No Holds Bard 4.00 Discovering: Sally Field 5.00 Tales of the Unexpected. Double bill (AD) 6.00 Alfred Hitchcock Presents 7.00 The Joy of Painting. Double bill 8.00 Discovering: Roy Scheider. A look at the life and career of the acclaimed actor 9.00 Queen: Hungarian Rhapsody — Live in Budapest. A 1986 performance by the rock band that was recorded during their Magic Tour 11.00 Bee Gees: In Our Own Time 12.15am Pink Floyd: The Story of Wish You Were Here 1.30 The Who: Live at Kilburn 1977 2.55 Greatest Albums Live 3.55 Live from the Artists Den 5.05 The South Bank Show BBC1 Scotland As BBC1 except: 6.55pm-7.00 Party Political Broadcast (r) 7.30-8.00 Landward. The role dogs play in Scotland’s countryside (r) 12.30am A View from the Terrace. A sideways look at Scottish football (r) 1.30 Weather for the Week Ahead 1.35-6.00 BBC News BBC1 Wales As BBC1 except: 7.30pm-8.00 Kiri’s TV Flashback. Kiri Pritchard-McLean finds funny clips revealing stereotypes around Welsh women (r) 11.30 Blankety Blank. With Ricky Wilson, Sam Quek, Kerry Godliman, Shane Richie, Remi Burgz and Owen Warner (r) 12.05am RuPaul’s Drag Race UK. The queens take on a ’90s rave banger for the girl group challenge (r) 1.15-6.00 BBC News STV As ITV1 except: 6.25pm-6.30 Party Political Broadcast. By the Scottish Green Party 10.30-10.45 STV News 3.50am-5.05 Night Vision. News, sport and weather UTV As ITV1 except: 10.45pm UTV in France. Sara O’Kane and guests assess Ireland’s chances in the 2023 Rugby World Cup 11.15 A Dog Called Laura. Martin Clunes explores the lives of Britain’s guide dogs (r) 12.00-12.30am Rare Breed — A Farming Year. Series following the working lives of farming families (r) TalkTV BBC4 Talking Pictures Film4 More4 6.00am Talk Today with David Bull & Sarah Hewson 9.30 Mike and Kev. Mike Graham and Kevin O’Sullivan give their unique take on the front pages and the latest news 10.00 The Independent Republic of Mike Graham 1.00pm Julia Hartley-Brewer. Stories from the world of politics, current affairs and showbiz 3.00 Kevin O’Sullivan. The host tackles the big stories of the day 5.00 Vanessa Feltz. Interviews, and viewers’ thoughts on the latest events 7.00 Plank of the Week. With Mike Graham 8.00 Friday Night with Nadine. Nadine Dorries presents her take on the week guests from the world of politics, culture and sport 9.00 The Talk. A panel debates the day’s stories 10.00 Plank of the Week 11.00 What Just Happened? With Kevin O’Sullivan. The week in the world of news 11.30 The World According to Mike Graham 12.00 Friday Night with Nadine 1.00am Piers Morgan Uncensored Best Of 2.00 Plank of the Week 3.00 What Just Happened? With Kevin O’Sullivan 3.30 The World According to Mike Graham 4.00 Friday Night with Nadine 5.00 Vanessa Feltz. Fiery political debates 7.00pm Top of the Pops. Sean Maguire, Duran Duran, Wet Wet Wet, East 17 and Simple Minds perform on an edition from March 1995 7.30 Top of the Pops. Ant and Dec present music by Bruce Springsteen, Hole and the Outhere Brothers. First broadcast on March 30, 1995 8.00 Top of the Pops. An edition first broadcast in October 1987, featuring UB40, Five Star, Billy Idol, the Alarm and Terence Trent D’Arby 8.30 Top of the Pops. An edition from October 11 1984, featuring Kim Wilde, Sade, Wham!, Stephanie Mills, Paul Young and Alison Moyet 9.00 Jazz Divas Gold. Archive performances by acclaimed female jazz artists, including Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, Nina Simone, Cleo Laine, Sarah Vaughan and Amy Winehouse 10.00 Joan Armatrading: Me Myself I. The singer tells her life story, both as a songwriter and performer. Featuring key performances by Joan and the musicians she has influenced 11.00 Joan Armatrading in Concert. A performance by the singer-songwriter, recorded at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1977 12.00 Joan Armatrading at Asylum Chapel 1.55am-3.55 Top of the Pops. Music show 6.00am Ensign O’Toole (b/w) 6.35 FILM: Radio Cab Murder (PG, 1954) (b/w) 8.05 FILM: Final Appointment (PG, 1954) (b/w) 9.25 FILM: The Treasure of San Teresa (PG, 1959) (b/w) 11.10 FILM: Holiday Camp (U, 1947) (b/w) 1.10pm FILM: Out of the Fog (PG, 1962) (b/w) 2.30 Crown Court 3.00 In Suspicious Circumstances 4.05 FILM: Dangerous Voyage (U, 1954) (b/w) 5.35 FILM: Night Mail (U, 1936) Following the mail train to Scotland from London (b/w) 6.00 Time to Remember. Archive newsreels 6.30 FILM: Battle of the Rails (1946) Wartime drama starring Marcel Barnault 8.10 Norman Wisdom: A Life 9.00 Cellar Club with Caroline Munro 9.05 FILM: Christine (18, 1983) Horror starring Keith Gordon and John Stockwell 11.20 Cellar Club with Caroline Munro 11.25 FILM: Pin (1989) Horror starring David Hewlett, Cynthia Preston and Terry O’Quinn 1.30am Cellar Club with Caroline Munro 1.35 FILM: Eyewitness (15, 1981) Thriller starring William Hurt 3.35 FILM: Kiss of Death (PG, 1947) (b/w) 5.30 Turn of Fate 11.00am The Black Shield of Falworth (U, 1954) Swashbuckling adventure starring Tony Curtis (AD) 1.05pm Santa Fe Passage (U, 1955) Western adventure starring John Payne (AD) 2.55 The Cockleshell Heroes (U, 1955) Fact-based Second World War drama with Jose Ferrer (AD) 5.00 Oppenheimer Interview Special 5.05 The Land That Time Forgot (PG, 1975) Fantasy adventure (AD) 6.55 The Nanny Diaries (12, 2007) A childminder struggles to cope with her spoiled charge as she falls for a handsome neighbour. Comedy starring Scarlett Johansson, Laura Linney, Paul Giamatti and Alicia Keys (AD) 9.00 Anna (15, 2019) Action thriller following a KGB assassin who becomes one of the world’s most feared killers. Starring Sasha Luss, Helen Mirren, Luke Evans and Cillian Murphy 11.20 The Girl in the Spider’s Web (15, 2018) Hacker Lisbeth Salander embarks on a frantic hunt for a stolen computer programme that could spark a global disaster. Thriller starring Claire Foy and Sylvia Hoeks (AD) 1.35am-3.45 Heatwave (15, 2022) Thriller starring Kat Graham and Merritt Patterson 8.55am Kirstie’s Vintage Gems 9.15 A Place in the Sun 10.05 A New Life in the Sun 11.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It 1.10pm Heir Hunters 3.10 Four in a Bed 5.50 The Secret Life of the Zoo (AD) 6.55 The Dog House Australia. A couple want a pet to join them on their caravan adventures, and a mum and daughter meet a Border collie 7.55 Grand Designs. A couple transforming a half-acre site in Gloucestershire, with 27 protected trees on the plot, their solution is to build a modern treehouse (1/8) (AD) 9.00 For Life. Victoria and her team are under pressure and need answers to the question of who is doing the killing, and why. In Norwegian 10.00 24 Hours in A&E. A 43-year-old cyclist is brought to A&E after crashing into a car, while a 68-year-old woman awaits the results of an X-ray after injuring her leg on holiday (AD) 11.05 24 Hours in A&E. A 68-year-old is rushed in after falling down stairs and breaking her ankle, while a man arrives after an accident at work involving an electric saw (7/11) (AD) 12.10am Emergency Helicopter Medics. Documentary series (AD) 1.15 24 Hours in A&E (AD) 3.20-3.50 Food Unwrapped (AD) ITV2 ITV3 ITV4 Drama Yesterday 6.00am CITV 9.00 One Tree Hill 10.00 Dawson’s Creek 11.00 Dress to Impress 12.00 Dinner Date (AD) 1.00pm Alan Carr’s Epic Gameshow (AD) 2.00 Chuck 3.05 One Tree Hill 4.00 Dawson’s Creek 5.00 Dinner Date (AD) 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase (AD) 7.00 Alan Carr’s Epic Gameshow (AD) 8.00 Bob’s Burgers. Bob and Linda cannot agree on their final resting place (AD) 8.30 Bob’s Burgers. Bob and Linda spend Valentine’s Day at a fancy restaurant (AD) 9.00 Big Brother: Live Eviction. The first housemate is booted out and talks about their all-too-short experience in the house 10.00 Big Brother: Late & Live. A companion show to this year’s series of the reality show 11.05 Family Guy. Stewie’s view of Meg changes when she saves him from choking (AD) 11.35 Family Guy. Brian falls in love with and marries a woman who has cancer (AD) 12.05am American Dad! Stan and Steve become sushi chefs (AD) 1.00 Bob’s Burgers (AD) 2.00 Iain Stirling’s CelebAbility 2.40 Unwind with ITV 3.00 Teleshopping 5.00 CITV 6.00am Classic Emmerdale 7.05 Classic Coronation Street (AD) 8.10 Bless This House 9.15 Where the Heart Is (AD) 11.35 Heartbeat (AD) 1.40pm Classic Emmerdale 3.15 Classic Coronation Street (AD) 3.50 Agatha Christie’s Marple (AD) 5.55 Heartbeat (AD) 6.55 Heartbeat. Carol is shocked to meet a woman who claims to be her mother (AD) 8.00 Doc Martin. Penhale, Louisa and James are all interested in Janice’s new pedicure fish, and Martin’s former girlfriend invites him to speak as keynote speaker at Imperial College (4/9) 9.00 Doc Martin. Louisa is shocked by the unannounced return of her father, while an unexpected caravan squatter thwarts Bert’s dreams of making a quick buck (5/9) (AD) 10.00 Cracker. Part three of three. David Harvey maintains his innocence leading Fitz to think that his wife Maggie is the killer (3/7) (AD) 11.10 Cracker. Part one of two. A lonely bachelor befriends a wayward teenager, and they embark on a deadly relationship (4/7) (AD) 12.20am Where the Heart Is. Double bill of the drama series (AD, SL) 2.30 Teleshopping 6.00am Minder (AD, SL) 7.00 The Professionals (AD, SL) 8.05 The Saint 9.05 The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes (AD) 10.15 Magnum, PI (AD) 11.15 BattleBots 12.15pm The Saint 1.25 Live ITV Racing. The opening day of the Future Champions Festival at Newmarket, including the Fillies’ Mile, plus races from York and Chepstow 4.30 World of Sport 4.55 Minder (AD) 6.00 BattleBots. US robot combat series 7.00 River Monsters. Jeremy Wade searches for the Iliamna Lake monster in Alaska (AD) 7.30 River Monsters. Extreme anglers Jeremy Wade tracks down a snakehead fish (AD) 8.00 The Chase Celebrity Special. Jeff Banks, Michelle Ackerley, Andy Crane and Brian Conley attempt to secure a charity cash prize 9.00 The 1% Club. Quiz hosted by Lee Mack (AD) 10.00 FILM: Death Wish (15, 2018) A surgeon embarks on a mission for justice following an attack on his wife and daughter. Thriller remake starring Bruce Willis (AD) 12.10am River Monsters (AD) 1.10 Extreme Salvage Squad 2.15 The Protectors (SL) 2.45 Unwind with ITV 3.00 Teleshopping 6.00am Teleshopping 7.10 All Creatures Great and Small 8.05 Doctors 9.20 Classic Holby City 10.40 Casualty 11.50 The Bill 12.50pm Classic EastEnders 2.10 Pie in the Sky 3.10 Bergerac 4.20 All Creatures Great and Small 5.35 The Upper Hand. Caroline expects a proposal 6.05 ’Allo ’Allo! Rene gets rid of the money and attempts to dispose of the microfilm 6.40 Last of the Summer Wine. Howard asks his pals to deliver an unusual gift to Marina 7.20 Last of the Summer Wine. Foggy, Clegg and Compo hatch a plot to save Smiler 8.00 Father Brown. The priest investigates when a body is found inside a bank vault (AD) 9.00 Father Brown. The priest is told about an assassination plot during a confession (AD) 10.00 New Tricks. Sandra and her seasoned colleagues reopen the 16-year-old case of a political aide’s murder (7/10) (AD) 11.20 Dalziel & Pascoe. The mismatched detectives go on the trail of a serial killer known as the Wetherton Choker (2/4) (AD) 1.25am Dancing on the Edge (AD) 2.40 Classic Holby City (SL) 4.00 Teleshopping 6.10am Secrets of the Transport Museum (AD) 8.00 Abandoned Engineering (AD) 10.00 Narrow Escapes of World War II (AD) 11.00 World War Weird 12.00 Great American Railroad Journeys 1.00pm Antiques Roadshow 2.00 Bangers & Cash 4.00 World War Weird 5.00 Narrow Escapes of World War II (AD) 6.00 Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland. Double bill of the documentary series 7.00 Antiques Roadshow. Fiona Bruce presents from Newcastle’s Civic Centre 8.00 Secrets of the London Underground. Tim Dunn and Siddy Holloway explore stations on the District Line, Whitechapel (5/6) (AD) 9.00 Bangers & Cash: Restoring Classics. A rare Reliant Scimitar GTC and a Honda CBR superbike from the 1980s are restored (AD) 10.00 Bangers & Cash. Dave goes to Wales to bag a sought-after Sierra Cosworth (5/8) 11.00 Abandoned Engineering. A fuel plant built to make Nazi Germany self-sufficient (1/8) (AD) 12.00 Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland 1.00am Secrets of the Transport Museum (AD) 3.00 Teleshopping BBC Scotland 7.00pm The Seven 8.00 Highland Cops (r) (AD) 9.00 Scotland’s Big Night Out (r) 10.00 Still Game (r) (AD) 10.30 A View from the Terrace. A sideways look at events in Scottish football 11.30-12.00 Limmy’s Show (r) BBC Alba 6.00am Alba Today 5.00pm Treubh an Tuathanais (Big Barn Farm) (r) 5.10 Na Clangers (r) 5.25 Sionnach agus Maigheach (Fox & Hare) (r) 5.35 AH-AH/No-No (r) 5.45 Peicein/Petit 5.50 Stòiridh (r) 6.00 Aithne air Ainmhidhean (All About Animals) (r) 6.25 @12 (r) 6.30 Stri (r) 6.35 Ronia, Nighean a’ Mheirlich/Ronja, the Robber’s Daughter (r) 7.00 An Là (News) 7.25 Dàn (r) 7.30 Live Rugby Union 9.25 Fraochy Bay (r) 9.30 An Clò Mòr (r) 10.00 Peat & Diesel: From the Barrow to the Barrowlands (r) 11.00 Florence Nightingale A’ Chiad Nurs (r) 11.45 Binneas — Na Trads (r) 12.00-6.00am Alba Today S4C 6.00am Cyw: Blociau Rhif (r) 6.05 Jen a Jim Pob Dim (r) 6.20 Octonots (r) 6.35 Shwshaswyn (r) 6.45 Y Diwrnod Mawr (r) 7.00 Timpo (r) 7.10 Tomos a’i Ffrindiau (r) 7.20 Oli Wyn (r) 7.30 Crawc a’i Ffrindiau 7.45 Cacamwnci (r) 8.00 Bing (r) 8.10 Digbi Draig (r) 8.20 Dathlu ’Da Dona (r) 8.35 Twt (r) 8.45 Asra (r) 9.00 Anifeiliaid Bach y Byd (r) 9.10 Cymylaubychain (r) 9.20 Ein Byd Bach Ni (r) 9.30 Patrol Pawennau (r) 9.45 Deian a Loli (r) 10.00 Blociau Rhif (r) 10.05 Jen a Jim Pob Dim (r) 10.20 Octonots (r) 10.35 Shwshaswyn (r) 10.45 Y Diwrnod Mawr (r) 11.00 Timpo (r) 11.10 Tomos a’i Ffrindiau (r) 11.20 Oli Wyn (r) 11.30 Crawc a’i Ffrindiau (r) 11.45 Cacamwnci (r) 12.00 News; Weather 12.05pm Richard Holt: Yr Academi Felys (r) 12.30 Heno (r) 1.00 Dan Do (r) 1.30 Trysorau Cymru: Tir, Tai a Chyfrinachau (r) (AD) 2.00 News; Weather 2.05 Prynhawn Da 3.00 News; Weather 3.05 Noson Lawen (r) 4.00 Awr Fawr: Timpo (r) 4.10 Tomos a’i Ffrindiau (r) 4.20 Oli Wyn (r) 4.30 Patrol Pawennau (r) 4.45 Deian a Loli (r) 5.00 Stwnsh: Byd Rwtsh Dai Potsh (r) 5.15 Potsh (r) 5.35 Rygbi Pawb Stwnsh 5.50 News Ni 6.00 Lowri Morgan: Her 333 (r) 6.25 Darllediad Gwleidyddol gan Llafur Cymru 6.30 Ffasiwn Drefn (r) (AD) 6.57 News 7.00 Heno 7.30 News; Weather 8.00 Cwpan Rygbi’r Byd 2023. A live preview from Stade de Marseille 8.55 News; Weather 9.00 Cyfres Triathlon Cymru 2023: Llandudno 10.00 Y Gêm 10.30-11.35 Jonathan: Cwpan y Byd 2023 (r)
14 Friday October 13 2023 | the times MindGames Backgammon Codeword Chris Bray UK v USA reprise Fifty years ago this month a landmark event took place at London’s Clermont Club. It was a match between the UK and USA. Phillip Martyn and Joe Dwek represented the UK, and the father and son team of Barclay and Walter Cooke played for the USA. It was the first time (and probably the last) that duplicate backgammon was tried, with one person rolling the dice and calling out the rolls to both tables. There were 32 games played, with the players changing opponents at the halfway mark. It was also one of the first times that closed-circuit TV was used to broadcast the match to a small audience. Finally, and most importantly, all the moves were recorded and thus match recording was born. All this was long before the advent of computers, and the quality of play was reflected in the Performance Ratings of all four players. The best of the four was Barclay Cooke with a PR of 7.7. Looked at in 2023 with the benefit of computer analysis, the thing that Train Tracks No 5031 stands out is that basic strategies and tactics were poorly understood back in the 1970s, and yet these were some of the best players of that era. This week’s position demonstrates this very clearly. Early in the very first game of the match, Joe Dwek (Black) had a 32 to play against Barclay Cooke. A modern player would know not to split his rear checkers into White’s blitzing structure and would calmly play 13/10, 11/9, seeking to build a prime. Dwek did not have the benefit of a modern backgammon education and so moved 24/21, 11/9, a move that is a very bad error but not quite a blunder. This weekend, in a reprise of the original match, the UK will once again take on the USA. The match will be played online between teams of 12, using a variety of formats: singles, doubles and speedgammon. If you go to YouTube and search for “UK v USA Backgammon”, you will be able to watch the live stream. Play starts at 5pm (UK) on both days. The USA won the original match 73-64. Let us hope for a UK win this time. No 2064 Lay tracks to enable the train to travel from village A to village B. The numbers indicate how many sections of track go in each row and column. There are only straight sections and curved sections. The track cannot cross itself. Quintagram® Solve all five cryptic clues using each Solveunderneath all five cryptic letter onceclues only using each letter underneath once only 1 Second whiskey: the writer is getting to crawl? (4) Every letter in this crossword-style grid is represented by a number from 1 to 26. Each letter of the alphabet appears in the grid at least once. Use the letters already provided to work out the identity of further letters. Enter letters in the main grid and the smaller reference grid until all 26 letters of the alphabet have been accounted for. Proper nouns are excluded. Yesterday’s solution, right -2 Beat- music - -ultimately identifies Cluelines Stuck on Codeword? To receive 4 random clues call 0901 293 6262 or text TIMECODE to 64343. Calls cost £1 plus your telephone company’s network access charge. Texts cost £1 plus your standard network charge. For the full solution call 0905 757 0142. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri, 9am-5.30pm). -3 After - church - - Basil’s - drunk wine (7) -4 Sensation - - -making - -one-unfit for Challenge your mind with puzzle books from The Times Stones (5) high office? (7) Lexica I Winning Move White to play. This position is from So-Aronian, Speed Chess, chess.com 2023. There are three main time controls for chess. Classical games take about 3-4 hours, rapidplay about an hour and blitz a few minutes. Most players are better at one form but Wesley So seems consistent across all formats, with a world ranking of 10th, 8th and 12th respectively. How did he finish off in this blitz encounter? KenKen Difficult No 6023 No 7089 I D A L C A C U H O I S L C E K E C G N -5 Son-has-sleep - -disturbed: - - it’s No 7090 I T O D G E E irregular (9) L A A B C C E E E G H H I I I K L V L M O O P R R S A E S S S S S T V W F I T P E V T R I T U V Slide the letters either horizontally or vertically back into the grid to produce a completed crossword. Letters are allowed to slide over other letters Futoshiki --------- No 4585 Kakuro thetimes.co.uk/ bookshop What are your favourite puzzles in MindGames? Email: puzzles@thetimes.co.uk No 3544 Fill the grid using the numbers 1 to 9 only. The numbers in each horizontal or vertical run of white squares add up to the total in the triangle to its left or above it. The same number may occur more than once in a row or column, but not within the same run of white squares. All the digits 1 to 6 must appear in every row and column. In each thick-line “block”, the target number in the top left-hand corner is calculated from the digits in all the cells in the block, using the operation indicated by the symbol. Fill the blank squares so that every row and column contains each of the numbers 1 to 5 once only. The symbols between the squares indicate whether a number is larger (>) or smaller (<) than the number next to it.
15 the times | Friday October 13 2023 MindGames times2 Crossword Brain Trainer No 9347 Cell Blocks No 4914 Just follow the instructions from left to right, starting with the number given to reach an answer at the end. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 EASY 8 x7 DOUBLE IT MEDIUM 45 + 56 TRIPLE IT ÷ 4 + 66 – 117 ÷ 6 TRIPLE HALF OF IT IT – 37 + 1/4 HALFIT OF OF IT 10 11 DOUBLE DOUBLE + 1/4 IT IT OF IT ÷ 5 + 93 12 13 14 16 15 17 18 19 HARDER 789 – 427 DOUBLE IT ÷ 4 + 63 HALFIT OF x 6 23 25 Across 1 Affluent (4) 3 Like it would be if (2,6) 9 Small wood (5) 10 Jotter (7) 11 Arctic marine mammal (7) 12 Part of the foot; rogue (4) 14 Deadlock, blockage (6) 16 Clothing (6) Solution to Crossword 9346 G L EG T EAR W GAS Y W AUD R R MYO E S RES F L I P F LOP T E R A O E VESSE L I H L Y L S G I RONS H RONOME O M V M I DGER I DOO L E L N F B E OW U L F I P I A T E R T AR I F F EMB L E Y A P T I T U D E Set Square 18 Mix with a circular motion (4) 19 Provoked (a riot, eg) (7) 22 Reprimand, censure (7) 23 Staid, solemn (5) 24 Render impossible (8) 25 Unit of computer data (4) Down 1 Of late (8) 2 Eligible for legal protection as an original work (13) 4 Individual, sole (6) 5 Small axe (7) 6 In an erratic manner (13) 7 Conceal (4) 8 Netting (4) 13 French police officer (8) 15 Post conveyed by plane (7) 17 Was concerned or bothered (about) (6) 20 Astrological division (4) 21 Witty observation (4) Enter each of the numbers from 1 to 9 in the grid, so that the six sums work. We’ve placed two numbers to get you started. Each sum should be calculated left to right or top to bottom. Yesterday’s answers account, atop, auto, canto, capo, capon, capot, coat, coca, count, coup, occupant, panto, pont, pout, taco, toucan, unco, unto, upon Please note, BODMAS does not apply Killer Moderate No 9114 Solutions Quick Cryptic 2503 Tetonor 404 63 28 42 96 368 ♥9 8 7 3 ♦AQ 7 6 2 ♣Q 2 Step One is to count up your losing tricks. Assume the ace takes the first round of each suit, the king the second and the queen the third; ask how many of those you not have (up to the cards held). Here, you have two losing tricks in spades (♠ AK), three in hearts (♥ AKQ), one in diamonds (♦K) and two in clubs (♣AK). That’s eight. Step Two is to presume partner for a number of losing tricks according to her role. Put an opener with seven, a Two-over-One responder with eight and a One-over-One responder with nine. Here, partner is an opener — seven losing tricks. Step Three is to add your losing tricks to partner’s presumed losing tricks, and subtract the total from 18 — hence the Rule of 18. Here, you are adding eight and seven and subtracting from 18: three. The answer is probably what you should bid — here 3♥ . I say “probably’ with good reason. LTC is not a silver bullet and often not as clever as you. The LTC overvalues queens and undervalues aces. It doesn’t know ♠ A 10 8 ♥J 9 2 ♦Q J 10 8 ♣KJ6 S 24 Sudoku 14,387 24 440 290 x 92 19 + 5 5 23 Dealer N 16 x 40 3 + 13 22 + 20 92 + 4 23 + 1 20 x 22 4 that the king in partner’s suit is worth more, while the king in lefthand opponent’s suit is worth less. Use the LTC to assist your judgement — but don’t be a slave to it. 320 5 + 58 7 + 21 8 Andrew Robson The Rules of One to Twenty Rule of 18 The Losing Trick Count (LTC) is a seemingly magical way of assessing the worth of a hand when you have support for partner. It is best restricting its use to four or more cards and unbalanced hands. You can use the LTC instead of adding points for shortage. Say partner opens 1♥ and you hold: ♠ 72 Kakuro 3543 Codeword 5030 Train Tracks 2063 Sudoku 14,386 Need help with today’s puzzle? Call 0905 757 0143 to check the answers. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri 9am-5.30pm). Bridge No 3547 From these letters, make words of four or more letters, always including the central letter. Answers must be in the Concise Oxford Dictionary, excluding capitalised words, plurals, conjugated verbs (past tense etc), adverbs ending in LY, comparatives and superlatives. How you rate 15 words, average; 21, good; 25, very good; 30, excellent 21 24 ÷ 4 – 123 Polygon 20 22 DOUBLE IT Divide the grid into square or rectangular blocks, each containing one digit only. Every block must contain the number of cells indicated by the digit inside it. ANSWER ANSWER ANSWER 1 23 x 147 1 7 x 58 3 48 39 x 13 95 x 21 8 + 40 5 x 19 Set22Square 3546 1 3 Cell 4 5Blocks 5 7 4913 8 13 19 20 21 23 40 58 92 Lexica 7087 I Killer Deadly No 9115 T C E L ♠ KJ76 ♥A K 7 5 4 ♦K 5 4 ♣4 A H A W Y C H ♠9 ♥ Q 10 8 3 W E ♦9 7 6 S ♠ Q 5 4 3 2 ♣AQ 9 5 2 ♥6 ♦A 3 2 ♣10 8 7 3 U T N R C H H N W E A Sudoku 14,388 Futoshiki 4584 KenKen 6022 Lexica 7088 S T I H K M O O F P O S Pass 1♥ Pass 3♠ (1) Pass 1♠ 4♠ (2) End (1) Time to use the LTC (four-card support, unbalanced). North has six losing tricks (♠ AQ, ♥ Q, ♦AQ, ♣A); she presumes South for nine (One-over-One responder). Nine + six = 15, subtracted from 18 = 3♠ . (2) South can also use the LTC. She has an eight-loser hand, which is one better than partner is presuming; ergo, she goes up one level. This is especially clear given her fifth trump — remember the Rule of Nine and the invaluable ninth trump? Declarer won ♦Q lead with ♦A and crossed to ♥ AK, shedding ♦2. She ruffed ♥ 4 and led ♠ 3 to ♠ J (winning). She now ruffed ♥ 5 with ♠ Q, West discarding (overruffing no better). At trick seven, declarer crossed to ♦K and ruffed ♦5. She then led up ♠ 5. West won ♠ A and the defence cashed a club but dummy could ruff the second club, cash ♠ K drawing West’s ♠ 10 and enjoy ♥ 7. Eleven tricks made — the LTC had underestimated by a trick. andrew.robson@thetimes.co.uk C T G E U S T N E E D Today’s solutions Killer 9112 As with standard Sudoku, fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. Each set of cells joined by dotted lines must add up to the target number in its top-left corner. Within each set of cells joined by dotted lines, a digit cannot be repeated. Cluelines Stuck on Sudoku, Killer or KenKen? Call 0901 293 6263 before midnight to receive four clues for any of today’s puzzles. Calls cost £1 plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri 9am-5.30pm). Killer 9113 Concise Quintagram 1 Tacos 2 Cousin 3 Parsec 4 Capstan 5 Untangle Cryptic Quintagram 1 Swim 2 Rocks 3 Chablis 4 Vertigo 5 Shapeless Suko 3932 Brain Trainer Easy 65 Medium 124 Harder 243 Word watch Quiz Badderlocks (b) A type of seaweed (Collins) Epedaphic (a) Of atmospheric conditions (Chambers) Pot-wrestler (a) A person employed to wash dishes (OED) 1 Gin 2 Eyes 3 Shilling 4 McDonald’s 5 Wednesday 6 Jordan 7 Peter Cushing 8 Damien Hirst 9 Lake Erie 10 John Hannah, who was replaced by Ken Stott 11 To Have and Have Not 12 Belize 13 Mica 14 Wellington 15 Norman Foster or Baron Foster of Thames Bank Chess — Winning Move 1 Qxg6+! wins as 1 ... Kxg6 2 Bc2+ leads to mate
13.10.23 Word watch Sudoku Mild No 14,389 Difficult No 14,390 Fiendish No 14,391 David Parfitt Badderlocks a A tightly plaited hairstyle b A type of seaweed c Brackets in which oars are rested Epedaphic a Of atmospheric conditions b Pertaining to an oracle c Widespread Pot-wrestler a A person employed to wash dishes b A maker of earthenware vessels c One who drinks beer at a rapid pace Answers on page 15 Fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. The Times Daily Quiz Suko Olav Bjortomt the ITV series Rebus (2000-2007)? 1 “Mother’s ruin” is a rhyming nickname for which alcoholic spirit? 11 Set in Key West, which 1937 Ernest Hemingway novel is about the fishing boat captain Harry Morgan? 2 An ophthalmoscope is used to examine which sense organs? 3 Which old coin was known as a “bob”? 12 Ambergris Caye is which Central American country’s largest island? 4 In 1986, which US fast food chain’s first UK “drive-thru” opened on Wilmslow Road in Manchester? 13 Muscovite is the most common type of which silicate mineral? 15 5 In the nursery rhyme Monday’s Child, which day’s child is “full of woe”? 7 Who played Dr Van Helsing in the 1958 Hammer film Dracula? 6 In 1967, Israel captured the West Bank from the Hashemite Kingdom of where? 8 Which British artist’s Visual Candy paintings include Happiness (1993-94) and MerryGo-Round (1995)? The Times Quick Cryptic 1 2 3 9 The Niagara River is a connecting channel between Lake Ontario and which other Great Lake? 10 Who was the first actor to play the titular Scottish detective in 4 9 5 6 7 10 11 12 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 20 22 23 14 Which Florida village is known as the “Winter Equestrian Capital of the World”? 15 Which British architect is this? Place the numbers 1 to 9 in the spaces so that the number in each circle is equal to the sum of the four surrounding spaces, and each colour total is correct Answers on page 15 For interactive puzzles visit thetimes.co.uk No 2504 by Teazel 8 13 No 3932 Across 1 Superficial need to sort inside refuse container (4-4) 5 Keen to put name forward for bender (4) 9 Judge information technology leads to renovation (5) 10 Times covering Antrim town in flattering speech (7) 11 Extra tea that’s earned by sinking a red? (3,3,3,3) 13 Rugby dropped, not having enough time (6) 15 A chap with daughter, a girl (6) 17 A piece of paper worth keeping (5,7) 20 Old conspiracy includes one daring feat (7) 21 This Highlander may give a toss (5) 22 This garden ridiculously short? (4) 23 Jokiness of orderly convulsed with laughter at first (8) Down 1 The sea on the shore slave listened to (4) 2 3 4 6 7 8 12 14 16 18 19 Four regularly visiting pub for a laugh (2,3) Retail outlet where staff have nothing to do? (4-4,4) Bring me up part of tree to make board (6) Square leg, that bowler may aim at? (7) Pharaoh for one training tiny page (8) Very precise mail that came to be translated (12) Support His Excellency? Extremely silly to predict (8) Spy ring (7) A fat book put into words (6) Generous founder of prize putting English last (5) I’d to abandon Crusoe’s man in brawl (4) Yesterday’s solution on page 15
FRIDAY OCTOBER 13 2023 Model ABBEY CLANCY VISITS THE HOUSES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS pages 6-7 homes
2 Bricks & Mortar 2 Bricks & Mortar Friday October 13 2023 | the times Friday October 13 2023 the times £1.35 million Live beside the seaside in a grand villa once owned by Benjamin Disraeli ‘M rs Disraeli is After being run as the Mount Braddon very anxious Hotel through a chunk of the 20th to have the century, reputedly hosting Morecambe pleasure and Wise, the building fell into disrepair of being before being rescued from probable presented to demolition by the awarding of grade II you, and we listed status at the end of the decade. propose to Today’s owners are Keith Damen, 67, take your mountain fortress by assault a retired aerospace executive, and his — and early,” Benjamin Disraeli joked wife, Sharon, who bought it in 2021 for before he was prime minister, in a letter £1.1 million. They have renovated it to Sarah Brydges Willyams, an elderly extensively, and the seven-bedroom woman from Torquay. house looks once again like a classic The letter in question, written in seaside home for the well-to-do, having August 1853, was one of about 250 that been restored to a condition close to its Disraeli and his wife, Mary Anne, were Victorian prime. Stretching over 5,400 to exchange with Brydges Willyams sq ft, it is filled with light thanks during the unlikely decade-long to a collection of rare and valuable friendship that followed. The “mountain 3m Venetian sash windows scattered fortress” he referred to was Mount throughout. Its entrance hall is Braddon, an 1827 particularly elegant, and it whitewashed hilltop leads to two majestic southSign up to our Georgian villa owned by facing reception rooms. property newsletter These rooms overlook the Brydges Willyams, which for the latest analysis, the Disraelis visited every garden, which contains gossip, tips and tricks classic 19th-century uppersummer for the next ten every Monday at years until she died. class oddities such as two thetimes.co.uk/ Initially Disraeli, who was large imported Australian newsletters then one of Britain’s most palm trees. When they move out of Mount Braddon, the Damens, who are history enthusiasts and have an encyclopaedic knowledge of the heritage of the house, promise to leave behind some artefacts they have accumulated. These include an original portrait of Disraeli, which was believed to have hung in the reception room during Brydges Willyams’s time, a copy of the will in which she bequeathed the house to him, and a book of extraordinary letters between her and the Disraelis; all lasting reminders for any buyer that Mount Braddon is no regular seaside home. David Byers £1.35 million; savills.com TQ1 The postcode in numbers In this part of Devon, 35% of properties for sale are under offer, falling to 27% for those at more than £1m In Melton, less than two miles from Woodbridge town centre, this three-bedroom semi-detached house was built in a period style (props for the new sash windows) but dates from 2000. It has a bright double-aspect kitchen/dining room with french doors leading to a well-maintained landscaped garden. The living room is double-aspect too. Upstairs there are three bedrooms, including one en suite, as well as a family bathroom. The property has a separate garage and an off-road parking space in front of it. If you can’t stretch to a listed property in Woodbridge centre this could be a good alternative. EPC C (potential B) Upside Easier to maintain than a genuine period property. Downside The second and third bedrooms are small. Contact fineandcountry.co.uk £495,000 32% The hotter the market, the quicker and easier it should be to sell a home Cornwall A new-build that looks much older, this four-bedroom detached house has a cobblestone façade and stone walls in the front garden, as well as a gravel drive. Three miles from Redruth, it’s in Carharrack, midway between the Cornish coasts. The ground floor comprises a large kitchen/dining room, a lounge and a small bedroom. Upstairs there are three bedrooms, one en suite, and a family bathroom. In all it has 1,550 sq ft of space. There is off-road parking for four cars and planning permission for a detached garage, plus a courtyard garden to the rear. EPC B (potential A) Upside No onward chain — and you’re a 20-minute drive from the north and the south Cornish coasts. Downside The fourth bedroom is on the ground floor. Contact lillicrapchilcott.com £495,000 BUYE RS’ MA R TAKING THE TEMPERATURE SELLERS’ MARKET T KE SE LL 35° Source: Propcast and Rightmove £286,834 is the average house price What £500,000 buys you in . . . Suffolk Decrease in buyer demand in the past year RKET MA S’ ER senior political figures and soon to become chancellor of the exchequer, feared that Brydges Willyams — the wealthy childless widow of a colonel — was an extortionist and reportedly sought legal advice. However, eventually the Disraelis and Brydges Willyams became firm friends and met up annually. When Brydges Willyams died in 1863 she was buried at Hughenden Manor near High Wycombe, the Disraelis’ home, and in her will she left him about £30,000 (about £4.7 million in today’s money) and Mount Braddon — which he sold two years later for £1,850 (about £290,000 in 2023 terms), having never lived there.
Bricks & Mortar 3 the times | Friday October 13 2023 3 Brief encounter Ask the expert We are thinking of remortgaging our flat and taking out a sharia mortgage. It seems complicated. What exactly is it? Islamic finance is based on the belief that money should not have any value in and of itself. This means avoiding financial products like conventional mortgages, which involve paying interest to a bank or building society on the money lent to buy property. But as it is usually permissible to pay rent for a property, most so-called sharia mortgages involve devices where borrowers, in effect, pay rent to lenders instead. Although there are other kinds of sharia mortgage, the most common ones in the UK are known as “diminishing musharakah” schemes. Under such an arrangement, often branded as a home purchase plan or a co-ownership scheme, the bank effectively buys the property from the customer. (In the case of leasehold flats, this means the bank takes an assignment of the lease for no payment.) Ownership of the lease gives the bank security for its investment. At the same time the bank grants the customer their own sub, which provides for payment of a substantial ground rent to the bank. Since the customer pays rent to the bank instead of interest, the arrangement does not offend the moral principles of Islam. The customer’s share steadily increases as they pay rent to the bank, and rental payments adjust accordingly throughout the term of the scheme. Diminishing musharakah home finance plan leases are excluded from the ban on ground rents per section 2(8) of the Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022. Sharia mortgages sometimes create problems with flat leases. For example, banks will often need permission from a freeholder to sublet. It can also be difficult to extend a lease under diminishing musharakah arrangements because the customer has already transferred their lease to the bank. A sharia mortgage of your flat will therefore effectively involve a transfer and leaseback arrangement, with you paying rent to the bank instead of interest. Mark Loveday is a barrister with Tanfield Chambers. Email questions to brief.encounter@thetimes.co.uk View the UK’s most luxurious residential properties mansionglobal.com/london London SE15 Rub shoulders with the cool Camberwell set: this one-bedroom ground-floor apartment, set on a residential street, is a two-minute stroll from Burgess Park. Almost 600 sq ft of living space includes a hallway, a compact kitchen with smart green cabinetry, a shower room and a reception room. You will need to pay approximately £650 in annual service charges for the leasehold flat, although on the plus side it is within easy reach of many hip cafés, eateries and delis, such as the Daily Goods coffee shop, Theo’s pizzeria, the uber-popular Toad Bakery and the highly rated Camberwell Arms pub. EPC TBC Upside A good-sized south-facing garden, plus storage space. Downside It’s a 25-minute walk to the nearest railway station, Denmark Hill. Contact themodernhouse.com £485,000 Portugal A Portuguese seaside getaway on a quiet street in the village of Santa Luzia, 40km from Faro. Santa Luzia is the Algarve’s octopus culinary capital, possessing some of the best and most advanced cooking and preparation techniques in Europe. This 99 sq m two-bedroom house, built in 1975, has a rooftop terrace with a built-in barbecue and a front patio, and is filled with trendy open-plan living spaces that were refurbished this year. There is a small office if you need to work from home. The property has solar panels that supply hot water. EPC E Upside Newly renovated (including plumbing and electrics) — perfect for a holiday let. Downside Somewhat lacking in greenery. Contact fineandcountry.co.uk €560,000
4 Bricks & Mortar 4 Bricks & Mortar Friday October 13 2023 | the times Friday October 13 2023 the times Moving stories Your tales from up and down the property ladder ‘I lived on a houseboat for over 25 years’ I was renting a place in Notting Hill, and an acquaintance of mine had a houseboat in Richmond, southwest London. She let me stay there for a couple of weeks, as a kind of holiday, and I just fell in love with it. It was so beautiful being on the river, and I was just entranced seeing all the ducks and the geese swimming by [says Jennifer Menten, 74]. It was also less expensive than buying a house and so in the spring of 1992 I bought a houseboat on Tagg’s Island, which is in Hampton, also in southwest London. I think I paid £85,000 for it, which is a lot less than buying a house in the area would have been. It measured about 30ft by 15ft, it had two bedrooms and it was on the side of the island that faced a cricket club and Hurst Meadows, which was lovely because there was no traffic around. A couple of years later my now-husband, Les, moved in, and we got married in 2003. When I first moved onto the boat I didn’t have much money and I had to roll a Calor Gas heater from room to room — it was really cold. Then we had gas central heating and a wood-burning stove installed and it was much better. The great thing about Tagg’s Island is that it has a water supply and a sewage system, so that is all taken care of. Most of the other residents were older than me. I was working as a freelance advertising copywriter and was very busy so I didn’t spend a lot of time with them. Over the years, though, a lot more families and young professionals moved in, which was nice — they would swim together, there was an island party, a fireworks party and more of a sense of community. You also get people coming by on their boats, waving at you, and that gives a very nice feeling. There were also the eccentrics. There was one guy who would come past in a rowing boat wearing a fur coat, with a plastic telephone in front of him. We never figured that out. It was around 2017 when we started thinking that we should sell. The boat needed quite a lot of repairs — finding someone who can do that work isn’t easy, and also we didn’t want to use up all of our savings. Plus the lease was Jennifer Menten, 74, lived on the water in southwest London Have your say Would you like to share your moving story? Email carol.lewis@ thetimes.co.uk running down. At some point it was going to start to affect the boat’s value. Our neighbours ended up buying the boat, while we bought a threebedroom semi-detached house in Ely, Cambridgeshire, in 2021. I have always liked cathedral cities and we felt that the thing to do was to make a complete change, not try to replace like for like, because that would have been impossible. The house was built in the late 1970s or early 1980s and had been lived in by the same family. It cost a lot less than the boat had sold for, and that allowed us to do all the decorating we wanted to do and to landscape the very small garden. There are things that I still miss about Tagg’s Island. I miss going over the bridge because it was like entering a different world. I miss all the wonderful wildlife paddling past, and the sound of geese landing on our flat roof in the spring. I miss sitting up in bed and looking out at the river. But now we do have much more space, a new part of the country to enjoy, and we are freed from worry. I would worry about the hull, and when there was a big storm I lived in fear of a 100-year-old poplar tree, which was on the bank by our boat, falling over. It is nice to feel stable and secure. Interview by Ruth Bloomfield

6 Bricks & Mortar 6 Friday October 13 2023 | the times Bricks & Mortar Friday October 13 2023 the times ‘Our doors at home have to be over 8ft high’ Abbey Clancy on presenting a new property series and why she doesn’t let her husband, Peter Crouch, near antiques dealers C O V E R S T O RY A bbey Clancy is in her interiors era. “I don’t know if it means I’m getting old,” the 37year-old model and TV personality says, “but nothing excites me more than looking through Rightmove, Knight Frank or Savills. Pete [her husband, the former footballer Peter Crouch] and I love that — we’re sending each other houses on a daily basis.” Now, in a new six-part TV series, the home-obsessed Clancy will be snooping around celebrity properties, dropping in on the fashion designer Alice Temperley, the models Jo Wood and Jodie Kidd, the socialite Emma Thynn, Marchioness of Bath, and the fashion blogger Lorna Andrews, aka @lornaluxe. “Pete says to me, ‘You doing this house show is going to cost me money!’” she says. “I’ve been to so many incredible houses and got so many ideas — dressing rooms and pantries and dog spas. Which is actually a very practical thing. Basically you come in from a walk and there’s a dog bath with a shower.” Nine years ago Clancy and her improbably lanky spouse, Crouch, 42, designed and built their dream home, tailored to Peter’s 6ft 7in frame. Having rented properties where he was constantly banging his head, Clancy remembers: “We said if we build our own place we want a huge front door, so there’s no more ducking around.” So the doors in their Surrey house are 8½ft high, and chairs have been chosen to accommodate Crouch’s 38 inside legs. “Our children are tall and leggy as well. [The artist] David Yarrow gave us a photo called Keeping up with the Crouches — of six giraffes,” she says. The couple presents The Therapy Crouch, their chart-topping podcast, from the house. Fans of the pod will be familiar with Clancy’s passion for interior design — and her exasperation with her home’s structural issues. “We’ve had scaffolding up for about five months now because we had a problem with the roof. We had floods where the whole ceiling came through three floors above and the ground floor was like a swimming pool. The house is covered in dust, there’s banging and drilling and a million people here every day fixing it.” Despite the infuriating roof, she describes her home as her sanctuary. “It has to be laid-back, because I have four young kids [Sophia, 12, Liberty, 8, Johnny, 5, and Jack, 4] and I want them to be happy. I don’t want it to be too precious. When people walk in I want them to feel instantly welcome and at ease.” Her decorating style is accordingly low-key. “I think a lot of people think it’s going to be a blingy WAG palace, but it’s very homely,” she says. “There’s Swedish painted furniture, and my cashmere throws [from a collection she did for Andrew Martin], vintage rugs and antique rocking horses. Classic, eclectic, elegant but most of all a family home. I describe my house as full of love.” Clancy’s long-term plan is to amass more animals, to add to the family’s two dogs, two cats and pony. “The pony’s not in the house,” she explains. “I went to Alice Temperley’s house and she had donkeys roaming round the dining room and a shire horse in the kitchen. It was the dream.” Clancy probably isn’t cut out for indoor donkeys, being something of a neatnik. “If I walk into my house and it doesn’t smell like bleach I’m not happy. I love things to be perfect and beautiful,” she admits. “The kids spill Ribena on my cream rug and the cats scratch the sofa that’s just been reupholstered, and every time it’s like a little knife to the heart.” She is the only family member allowed to take food upstairs, finishing each day with a cup of tea and biscuit in bed. “Nothing makes me happier than a clean home, ironed clothes and an organised wardrobe. My husband drives me insane saying, ‘Abbey, I can’t find any hoodies’. They are clean, folded, and colourcoordinated, in the drawer with a sticker saying ‘Hoodies’ on!”
Bricks & Mortar 7 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Friday October 13 2023 the times Bricks & Mortar 7 Testing times The best budget air fryers Daewoo 2L single pot air fryer £29.99, robertdyas.co.uk {{{(( Quality Plastic with a stainless-steel basket, it’sThree lightweight but feels Heat up? minutes. substantial. How big? Recipes for two at most. Comfort of thetimer, handles and FeaturesThe 0 tocurve 30-minute 80-200C the size and shape temperature dial. fit my hand exactly. Style Attractive matt finish. Easy to use? The temperature dial and Performance Dishwasher-safe, but easy timer could not be clearer. to hand-wash. The two arms swing Results The chicken was moist andopen had a for cleaning and the grater hinges out. nice bubbly skin. Potatoes were browned Nitpick Nit free. at the edges, the chorizo was a little dry. Verdict all-rounder, amazing value. Verdict Best An attractive, cupboard-worthy runner-up. The price is delicious. Compiled by @Kat_Burroughs Clockwise from left: Abbey Clancy; Jodie Kidd; Heidi Range’s Ferrari; Clancy with Peter Crouch and family Her approach to Celebrity Homes was to pass no judgment on the homeowners’ style choices but to delve into the stories behind each of the houses. “When it comes to interior design there’s no right or wrong,” she says. “It’s all personal. It’s how people want to express themselves.” She won’t name a favourite, but my money is on Kidd (the subject of the first episode) or Temperley. “In Alice Temperley’s house it was like no f***s given. Every single thing in the house was because they loved it and it represented them and their lives. Jodie’s was just so cosy and gorgeous, I just wanted to get in my pyjamas and get in front of the fire. She described her home as a hug in a house. “Longleat was incredible too — Emma Thynn made a house that had been in the family for generations into her own home. She put her stamp on it. Living in Longleat, you’d expect everything to cost millions, but she said she goes to Homesense and Zara Home and finds bargains.” That was music to Clancy’s ears. A vintage Ferrari in the living room of the Sugababes singer Heidi Range’s home leaves her unimpressed (“I was looking at her wedding photos and completely missed it”), but a high street steal . . . that gets Clancy’s full attention. “I love a bargain. It’s in my DNA, being Scouse. We like to barter and we like a rummage. I love my antiques fairs. I bring Pete with me to carry things. We’ll get there at six in the morning.” And her advice for readers who fancy a trip to Ardingly or Kempton market? “You just have to be cheeky. If they smell weakness they are not going to come down on the price. You have to go in confident. Peter Crouch is not a good bargaining tool. If they see him they think let’s add a zero on rather than take a zero off. I send him away to get a coffee so I can get a better price.” Interview by Katrina Burroughs Abbey Clancy: Celebrity Homes airs on Thursdays at 9pm on ITVBe and ITVX The air fryer is the favourite cooking appliance for 35 to 44-year-olds T here could only be one gadget for the season finale of Testing Times. The nation has gone barmy for air fryers. At least, a certain demographic has. According to research by Lakeland, air fryers are the favourite cooking appliance for 35 to 44-year-olds, having overtaken ovens and microwaves. The gadget is a success story for manufacturers and retailers — an iPad moment for kitchen kit. The ascendancy of the air fryer, however, tells a rather different tale about consumers: these days people have limited space at home, they are leading increasingly nomadic lives and they need an energy-saving hack to mitigate the cost of living crisis. Kathleen Mitchell, John Lewis’s commercial director, named a Ninja air fryer (£149.99 but sold out online) as one of its products of the decade. It may be John Lewis’s bestseller, but the Ninja sounds pretty pricey. What if you want one without shelling out a three-figure sum? I found five savvy substitutes, from £29.99 to £64.99. Choosing what to cook was difficult. The air fryer recipes online, despite its branding as a healthy eating aide, are riffs on fast food. You’ll find #FoodTok aficionados (foodies on TikTok) claiming they can bake cakes and muffins too. I didn’t fancy any of those, so I cooked roast potatoes, chicken and chorizo. I bought five free-range chicken thighs, five chunky Maris Piper potatoes and a packet of 12 mini chorizo picante, tossed the poultry and potatoes in olive oil, salt and pepper and preheated all the fryers to 180 degrees. I added parboiled potato to the baskets first, the thighs 10 minutes later and chorizo 10 minutes after that. The cooking time was half an hour, which is 10-15 minutes less than it takes to cook the same recipe in the conventional oven. It’s not all good news, though. The ticking of the timers is loud and the noise of the fryer not unlike a fan oven. It isn’t restful to share a small kitchen with one. And to feed a family, you will need an extra-large model that will take up a substantial chunk of kitchen counter. But an air fryer saves 59 per cent of energy versus a standard 1.8kW oven. Throw in the fact that the non-stick inner trays wipe clean with water and a dab of detergent, and air fryers do feel like a modern way to cook. Read on to find the budget option to suit your taste. Tower T17023 compact air fryer £50, argos.co.uk {{{{{ Heat up? Zero minutes — no preheating needed. How big? A couple of portions, just about. Features Mechanical timer goes up to 30 minutes. Easy to use? The dials are not simple to read. I needed my specs. Results The best for moist chicken. Verdict Best-tasting food. Best buy George Home matte white Scandi 4L manual air fryer £49, direct.asda.com {{{{( Heat up? Ten minutes. How big? Cooks for four. Features 60-minute timer. Easy to use? The black-on-white markings around the temperature and timer dials are easy to read. Results The chicken was moist, the chorizo juicy and the potatoes fairly crisp. Verdict Best for family cooking. Lakeland digital compact air fryer 2L £64.99, lakeland.co.uk {{{{{ Heat up? Three minutes. How big? Cooks for two at a push. Features The timer goes up to 60 minutes in one-minute increments. Easy to use? The LED touchscreen control panel is super simple and intuitive. Results The crispiest potatoes. The chicken was moist but the skin wasn’t the crispiest. Verdict Conveniently small. Salter compact air fryer £37.99, amazon.co.uk {{{{( Heat up? Five minutes. How big? Recipes for two at most. Features Temperature dial goes up to 200C, timer to 30 minutes. Easy to use? Simple. On the aluminium top is a handy cooking guide. Results Moist chicken. The potatoes were nicely browned, the chorizo wasn’t dry. Verdict Pretty foolproof.
8 Bricks & Mortar 8 Bricks & Mortar Friday October 13 2023 | the times Friday October 13 2023 the times S hane Gibson is biding his time. The project manager, 55, sold his four-bedroom semi-detached home in Southgate, north London, in June 2022 for £1.5 million and moved into a rental house with his wife and two children. He’s looking for another fixerupper in the area, but doesn’t want to pay more than £1 million. His chances look good. House prices in the UK fell for the sixth month in a row in September, according to Halifax, down to an average £292,000 — 4.7 per cent lower than this time last year. So Gibson is in no hurry to buy. “Last June it was kind of clear the only way with interest rates was up and that now was the moment to sell and clear some debt,” he says. “I mentioned to my estate agent, Matt Turner at Rash & Rash, that I was thinking about selling. He had a keen buyer who made me a good offer, so I sold off-market. There was nothing to buy that made sense — everything was overpriced, so I decided to rent and wait and see what happens.” Gibson has a two-year lease and his rent is £4,500 a month, which is cushioned by income from a buy-to-let property. “I know that trying to pick the bottom and top of markets is a fool’s errand. If you find something at a decent price in an area you like and you feel the market has gone down enough, it doesn’t matter if it goes down another 10 per cent, because you’ll enjoy your house for the next 20 years.” Nevertheless, if the right house came up tomorrow, he would think twice about buying. “It would have to be perfect for me to sort out the finance. The cost of owning and renting is pretty much the same for me right now, and that’s given me the luxury of taking my time. The asking prices are a bit lower, but they haven’t come down massively. The wild card is landlords. [If they start losing money] and a glut of rental property comes onto the market, that could be when it gets interesting.” He is not the only one playing a waiting game. Michael Zolotas, 44, is in the process of selling his three-bedroom mews house in Kensington, west London, because it’s too small for his family (four children have 1,250 sq ft to play with). He’s signed a 12-month lease with Draker Lettings to rent a fourbedroom house in the same area. “The market has already softened considerably, and I believe there’s a lot of pain to come,” Zolotas, who works in finance, says. “I can’t see how interest rates are going to come down. We’ve been spoilt for so long.” A lot of people are watching and waiting. Transactions are 14 per cent below the pre-pandemic norm, according to Savills, using TwentyCi data. Lucian Cook, director of residential research at Savills, has called the bottom of the market for the middle of 2024, with a drop of 10 per cent from peak (August 2022) to trough. Jonathan Bramwell, head of the Buying Solution, a buying agent in the Cotswolds, is advising clients to be patient and proceed with caution. “You can’t afford to buy a turkey in this market because the reality is that if you buy something today, it’s highly likely that in 12 months’ time it will be worth less than what you paid for it. “It is a confusing market. A lot of housing has been overpriced by 30 per cent and has been reduced by 15 per cent. The problem is the market — it thinks it’s still 5-10 per cent overpriced. When the price comes down to the right level, it’s suddenly competitive again. There are buyers out there.” Selling and moving into a rental property could pay off for market Stick or twist? With house prices still falling, timing the market is everything. By Hugh Graham Houses prices vs transactions Annual transactions Annual house price movements million 3 40% Introduction of mortgage interest relief at source 30 2.5 Brexit referendum 2 20 10 1.5 0 1 Financial crisis 0.5 Intro of Help to Buy Black Wednesday/ Exit from ERM 0 1980 1990 Covid lockdown 2000 2010 -10 -20 2020 Source: Savills using Twenty Ci data watchers, but it’s tricky right now: Bramwell warns that rental properties are extremely hard to come by in the Cotswolds, Wiltshire and West Sussex; he is advising clients who are selling in London to find a rental in the capital while they are looking for a place to buy in the countryside. Henry Sherwood, founder of the Buying Agents, which operates in London and the home counties, says many of his clients are sitting on the sidelines. This could be a mistake, he warns: “In my experience, the people that make money by timing the market have bought in a downward market, when the outlook is pessimistic, and they’ve been able to negotiate a margin that would cover them if there are further price falls. “Because as soon as the bottom of the market hits, it will be in the news, people suddenly come back, demand increases and the prices rise quickly. The only unknown is whether the trough will be longer than normal, but there’s still a lot of pent-up demand.” He warns first-time buyers against waiting for that magical day when interest rates below 3 per cent will return. “A lot of [young] people are holding out for that, so they can borrow what they need to buy at the level they looked at prior to [Liz Truss’s] Top: a seven-bedroom home in Cuckfield, West Sussex, is on sale for £2.5 million with Jackson-Stops. Above: a seven-bedroom house in St Margarets, southwest London, is on sale for £4.65 million with Knight Frank mini-budget. That’s never going to return. So they’re either going to have to buy further out, or buy something smaller.” Jade Vanriel, 30, sold her two-bedroom flat in Harlow, Essex, in June because she is intent on buying her first house, a three-bedroom semi, with her partner. The lifestyle and property content creator bought the ex-local authority flat in 2016 for £175,000, sold it for £215,000 and now rents a one-bedroom flat in Get Living’s Portlands Place, a rental scheme in Stratford, east London. She pays £2,400 a month in rent and is renewing her lease every three months. “I think we’re going to stay put until the new year and then see how the
Bricks & Mortar 9 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Friday October 13 2023 the times Bricks & Mortar 9 Why we should be building on the green belt It’s the only way to create more homes that will satisfy voters of all colours, says Toby Lloyd E Rock bottom Predictions of when the housing market will hit its lowest point, and how far it will fall Company Bottom of the market Peak to trough Hamptons -6.9% Savills Mid-2024 -10% EY Item Club July-September 2024 -10% Capital Economics September 2024 Oxford Economics January-June 2025 Left: Jade Vanriel in her rented flat in Stratford, east London — she is waiting for the right time to buy. Above: a four-bedroom house in Feock, near Truro in Cornwall, is on sale for £1.5 million with Lillicrap Chilcott market is looking,” Vanriel says. “The longest we’d wait would be July. It would be nice if prices are still falling and we could get more for our money. If prices continue to fall after we buy, hopefully it won’t affect us too much, because we will be staying more than ten years.” Henry Pryor, a buying agent, thinks it’s smart for first-time buyers to take their time. “Why buy something today you think might be cheaper tomorrow? But those who are downsizing should get on with it. They may get more for their property today than next year. You’re swapping bricks and mortar for pound sterling.” -2.5% October-December 2023 Centre for Economics January-March 2024 and Business Research (CEBR) It would be nice if prices are still falling next year — we could get more for our money -10.5% -10% Darren Hall, 55, is downsizing. Despite the market uncertainty, he is ploughing ahead with the sale of his five-bedroom, 6,000 sq ft converted barn outside Saffron Walden, Essex, which is on the market with Cheffins for £2.25 million. He and his wife, Kari, will soon be empty-nesters and they want to live closer to their elderly parents in the northeast of England. Hall is not convinced by the argument that if you sell in a falling market, it doesn’t matter because the house you buy will be cheaper. “Mathematically, if all houses go down in value by 20 per cent, then ours will have lost more cash than the house we buy, because that one will be cheaper,” he says. Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at Hamptons estate agents, thinks the bottom of the market could arrive by the end of this year. “It’s going to be dictated by mortgage rates, and it looks increasingly likely that they peaked in July and are gradually coming down. That’s good news for affordability. Inflation is coming down a bit. People’s incomes are rising faster than inflation for the first time in quite a while. So households may be feeling a bit more positive going forward.” The problem with waiting for the bottom of the market is that most people miss it, Cook says. “Catching the bottom is often achieved more by luck than by judgment. What we know is that while people look to buy within 5 per cent of bottom, they tend to buy once the markets are on their way back up, because they’re not brave enough to do it when you’ve still got price adjustments in the market.” veryone talks about the need for more housing, but no one does anything about it. The one thing nearly everyone can agree on is that we need to build more homes. But even this simple goal has proved impossible: there is not a hope in hell that the government will meet its target of 300,000 new homes each year in England, as housebuilders down tools in the face of falling prices. For the Conservatives the politics of housebuilding is an impossible conundrum. If they don’t build enough homes for future generations to join the homeowning middle class that is the bedrock of their vote, they face long-term electoral annihilation. They certainly don’t want to return to an era of state-led development, but if they rely on the market and let the housebuilders build lowdensity sprawl on green fields they face a backlash from their current voters in affluent parts of the country. The only real market-led alternative, building more high-rise development in inner cities, is slow, difficult and just creates more of the metropolitan liberal voters Conservative ministers are actively vilifying. What’s more, neither of these dominant models of housebuilding will satisfy demands for more beautiful, more walkable, more sustainable neighbourhoods coming from the likes of Create Streets, an organisation which advocates low-desnity neighbourhoods. Having painted themselves into this corner, it’s little wonder that Rishi Sunak avoided mentioning housing in his conference speech. For Labour, the dilemma is different but no less acute. They face the same nimby pressures in key suburban battleground seats as the Tories, and building more in their urban heartlands, especially more of the social housing their core voters want, will require a lot of the spending that the shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has explicitly ruled out. Keir Starmer’s solution, it seems, is to combine two old-fashioned ideas: the traditionalist approach to design, and the interventionist delivery mechanisms of the postwar New Towns project. On the face of it this looks smart. The New Towns successfully built homes for two million people in short order, and even returned a profit to the state. But to do so they had to override the complaints of people living in quiet rural areas. Lewis Silkin, the minister in charge, famously told an angry crowd in what was to become the new town of Stevenage, “It’s no good you jeering, it’s going to be done.” It’s hard to imagine a minister of either party doing this now. Which is where the other half of Starmer’s prescription comes in. Building attractive homes in walkable neighbourhoods of up to five or six storeys is wildly more popular than the suburban sprawl or high-rise towers favoured by the development industry, for good and obvious reasons. It also costs far less in land than the former and far less in money than the latter. The problem is that the development system is not currently capable of building these neighbourhoods, except in the rarest of circumstances where a philanthropic landowner is prepared to forgo the allure of easy money and spend 20 years painstakingly building out to a master plan. A new generation of new towns is going to need public-spirited landowners, bringing sufficiently large bits of land in the right places under unified control. Doing this at scale will require the state to assemble land and invest in it for the long term. This is no small task. But we do know it is possible, as it’s exactly what the New Towns development corporations did in the Fifties and Sixties. Politically the hardest part will be deciding where these developments should go. The original new towns were built beyond the green belt, often in deep countryside. But the economics of agglomeration and the demands of sustainability rule this option out today. England has lots of towns and cities that need to grow outwards as well as upwards. And that means tackling the most hallowed part of the planning system: the green belt. This is where Starmer was boldest. In puncturing the sanctity of the green belt he risks a ferocious backlash, but he is quite right that much of the green belt is not particularly green or attractive or accessible to people. It includes lots of brownfield sites, car parks and the like — what Starmer labelled the “grey belt”. And with the green belt covering 13 per cent of England’s land area, releasing even a tiny percentage of it could be a game-changer. A new generation of medium-density sustainable neighbourhoods, built largely on “grey belt” sites near transport links, sounds pretty appealing — if they can pull it off. As John Prescott is rumoured to have said: “The green belt is a Labour achievement — and we intend to build on it!” Toby Lloyd is a policy fellow at Onward, a centre-right think tank
10 Bricks & Mortar 10 Bricks & Mortar Friday October 13 2023 | the times Friday October 13 2023 the times All hands on: how to make your deck stand out Sustainable, easy to care for and longlasting: why decking has got your garden needs covered. By Jayne Dowle D ecking is the garden trend that refuses to die. Decades after garden makeover TV programmes laid acres over lawns, decking is now hailed as a sustainable, easy-care extension of our living space. Whether leading out from indoors or as a stand-alone feature, decking can be the solution to garden challenges, covering spots where grass refuses to grow, for example. “It’s the adaptability of decking that makes it still so popular,” says the garden designer Marlene Lento. “Decking will cover uneven terrain without having to build up ground, quickly and without moving soil or hardcore. Also, with unpredictable weather, drainage is not a problem — unlike with paving.” Here’s everything you need to know. Timber decking There are three main types of timber decking. Softwood is the most economical, but it needs annual treatment with protective non-slip decking stain to avoid splintering and rot. Untreated, the average lifespan of softwood deck boards is about five years. Hardwood, typically tropical varieties — buy from verified sustainable FSC-certified sources — is denser and more resilient than softwood, lasting a couple of decades if looked after. Untreated, hardwood will weather with a silvery patina, or maintain its colour with regular application of decking oil. Thermally modified timber — softwood or hardwood that has undergone a chemical-free process, creating very durable and stable decking board — has a maintenance-free lifespan of up to 60 years, says Lento. Tom Murphy, the director of Compass Garden and Landscape Design, favours timber because it’s a “neutral element” in a garden. “While we try to keep the quantity of other materials such as paving and walling to a minimum, timber transcends this rule as it is a natural product and by definition feels natural in any environment.” Jamie Jones, a landscaper and the founder of the outdoor living specialist company Open Space Concepts, likes timber because it’s versatile: “You can stain it any colour or colour combination you like.” Composite decking Longer-lasting, durable and lowmaintenance, composite decking is often made of recycled plastics. Above: Joe Perkins’s gold medal-winning garden at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2022
Bricks & Mortar 11 the times | Friday October 13 2023 Friday October 13 2023 the times Consider the size of the furniture and how many people you want to accommodate. Do you want to eat outside? How big is your table? Do you want to sit on a comfy sofa and watch the sun go down?” Off the straight and narrow Deck boards are usually laid at right angles to the subframe (the structure of supporting joists) but there are attractive alternatives. Possible configurations include diagonal, chevron (zigzag like parquet flooring) or picture frame (edging boards laid in a different orientation to frame the decking). In a smaller space, cleverly laid deck tiles (rather than boards) are a good way to bring in pattern. The garden designer Joanna Archer says she prefers to use composite decking: “Real timber is prone to warping when exposed to the elements, whereas a composite deck board will retain its solid structure and not rot or warp.” The downside? In high summer temperatures, composite decking can become very hot underfoot. “Composite does generally come with a higher price tag, and although it requires less maintenance than timber, you will still need to clean it to avoid mould in shadier, low-traffic spots,” says the garden designer Eliza Gray. Size it right Look indoors to decide the size of your deck, says the garden designer Helen Elks-Smith. “Assessing your living and dining room sizes is a good start. Above: Joe Perkins’s 2019 RHS Chelsea Flower Show gold winner, made from reclaimed marine timber Planning points Did you know decking can’t be built higher than 30cm, or cover (together with other extensions, outbuildings etc), more than 50 per cent of a garden without planning permission? If your project falls within these rules, it should be possible under permitted development rights. However, other regulations may apply, for instance if your home is listed, or you live in a national park or area of outstanding natural beauty. You will also need to meet safety-first building regulations. See the Planning Portal for further information. Keep it curvy Incorporating curves into a deck can give the appearance of a completely relandscaped garden without the cost and upheaval of a total revamp. Bricks & Mortar 11 “I like curved decking because it introduces movement into a design,” says the garden designer and RHS Chelsea Flower Show gold medal-winner Joe Perkins. “There’s something about a well-shaped curve that feels really organic in a garden.” You will end up with some wastage from offcuts, but these can be repurposed or used as trim. Accessible decking Decking makes a garden more accessible for people with mobility issues, says Mark Lane, a gardening expert at the mobility company Stannah and BBC Gardener’s World presenter. As well as an anti-slip finish and sturdy handrails, there are several considerations: “You need wide, level pathways providing easy navigation for wheelchairs, walkers or other mobility aids. “In gardens with changes in elevation, build in gently sloping ramps. For wheelchair users, remember to plan in a turning circle within the deck.” Can you do a deck yourself? Anyone experienced in DIY with a decent set of power tools should be able to lay their own deck according to the home improvement chain B&Q, but Lento disagrees: “Unless you are a seasoned builder, it is recommended deck installation be left to the professionals, who understand about the structure and waterproofing of the subframe, how to fix decking posts, and what fixings to use to ensure you get the maximum lifespan out of your deck.”