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Raif Badawi wins Andrei Sakharov prize for human rights

Raif Badawi has won the European Parliament’s Sakharov prize for human rights.

Raif Badawi
Raif Badawi

Badawi is the Saudi Arabian blogger, writer, activist, and creator of the website Free Saudi Liberals, an online platform for political and religious debate.

He was arrested in 2012 on a charge of insulting Islam through electronic channels and brought to court on several charges, including apostasy.

In 2013, he was convicted of several charges and sentenced to seven years in prison and 600 lashes.

In 2014, he was re-sentenced to 1,000 lashes, ten years in prison, and a fine.

The lashes were scheduled to be administered over 20 weeks. The first 50 were administered on January 9, 2015. The second set has been postponed more than  twelve times due to Badawi’s poor health.

Named after the Soviet Humanist scientist and dissident Andrei Sakharov, the award was created in 1988 to honour people and organisations defending human rights and fundamental freedoms.

The announcement was greeted with a standing ovation at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France.

Guy Verhofstadt, MEP
Guy Verhofstadt, MEP

Guy Verhofstadt MEP, leader of the Liberal bloc, said: “The European parliament has sent today a strong political and humanitarian message to the Saudi Arabian authorities. We urge His Majesty King Salman to release Raif Badawi from prison and, in any case, to end the barbaric punishment of flogging.”

George Broadhead
George Broadhead

George Broadhead, Secretary of the Pink Triangle Trust, welcomed the news and said: “This award must be very welcome to everyone concerned about humans rights. It is also a slap in the face for the Saudi Arabian Islamic theocracy. Together with Iran, Saudi Arabia has the worst record of human rights abuses worldwide. One of the most barbaric punishments, meted out under the country’s Sharia Law, is flogging. As well as severely breaking skin and causing heavy bruising, this punishment can lead to nerve damage, infections, psychological trauma and even death in extreme cases. Other “crimes” punishable by flogging include being in possession of alcohol and, if you’re a women, driving.

“British and other Western governments are rightly outraged by the appalling barbaric actions of ISIS, but are these so different from those of Saudi Arabia which they support? They both engage in public beheadings, floggings, torture, amputations, stoning, crucifixion, executing gays, oppressing women and endorsing child marriage, yet these governments seem blind to this reality, choosing to drop bombs on one and sell them to the other.”

For more information about Pink Triangle Trust, click here:

Trans woman moved to female prison

Tara Hudson a 26-year-old trans woman lost her appeal today after being convicted of assaulting a bar manager by Bath magistrates last Friday (October 23).

Tara Hudson

Tara had been sent to an all male prison in Bristol to serve out a thirteen week sentence.

The Bath Gender Equality Network with the support of Bristol Pride instigated a social media campaign and online petition to get her moved to a female prison which was signed by more than 159,000 people.

Recorder Llewellyn Sellick refused Tara’s appeal against the sentence this morning, (Friday October 30), citing the 26 year old’s “worrying criminal record”, but asked prison officers to reconsider the case and where they had placed Tara.

Tara’s mother Jackie Brooklyn has confirmed this evening that Tara has been moved to HM Prison Eastwood Park, a women’s closed category prison, located in the village of Falfield in Gloucestershire, England.

REVIEW: Crownton Dobby

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Crownton Dobby

Ruth Torjussen  

21st Century Films

This is a fun romp and a well thought out parody of country house costume dramas and a particularly astute spearing of Downton Abbey.  Crownton Dobby is a 10 x 10 mins online spoof par excellence made by a Downton fan for Downton fans and other obsessives.

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The plots are utterly daft but acted and directed poker-faced, with the kind of knowing ironic urgency that understanding the particular type of drama being gently poked fun of makes happen. The characters have all the wonderful twitches, weaknesses, vices, odd interjections, secrets, shames, back stories and suspicious activities that you want and expect from such romping fun and the narrative tension builds with a ridiculously somber serious majesty as the house literally sinks into disrepair. With every delicious tongue in cheek dramatic moment wrung the f**k out of, and the actors allowing the breadth of madness into their characters this throbs with life and fun and it’s an extra delight to watch something made in local places that you know and recognise. Each and every cliché of the genre is explored and tickled for fun and the characters, from the uber snobbish great aunts to the scheming evil servants all interact and mesh well to give the whole a feeling of a bigger drama happening somewhere else.  I loved the chain-smoking wicked evil servants heaving with menace  and their plotting against The Family and their inbred madness and the wonderfully dotty and drugged up Lady of the House, but all the cast give are very good.

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With special interest for Sussex and Brighton folk as it stars some locally based actors Russell Floyd (Eastenders, The Bill), Sonia Elliman & Rosemary Macvie  (Off their Rockers) and uses interiors of the Albion Hotel and Preston Manor which stands in for Crownton Dobby itself  but set in the glorious lush hills.

This is episode one:

For lovers of parody TV, this reminded me of Brass, a great TV series from the 80’s staring Timothy West and Barbara Ewing.  It was quality, ambitious, equally nutty and just as much laugh out loud fun. Brass was also written by someone who loved the genre and it’s that tender fondness for something which allows a good parody to skirt being cruel and end up being fun.

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There’s a lot of green screen technology gone into the production and the limitations of this are poked fun of too, so there’s a meta-level of deconstructive parody going on here, very clever stuff, but if you don’t know what that means don’t worry, Crownton Dobby is sophisticated enough to be able to aim low and it’s silly, joyous fun manages to shine through in every episode.

Director Ruth Torjussen (who’s also producer, designer, and writer of the series) has done extremely well with this production, it’s neat, bumps along with an interesting tempo and makes you care about the house and its community even if none of it really makes sense at all. I enjoyed it a lot.

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For more info from 21st Century Films who produced Crownton Dobby, click here:

It’s on release now and you can watch episodes 1-5 on-line now on their website or on YouTube.  If you are a fan of Downton Abby,or any number of costume dramas based on the lives of the people who live and work in those great English Country houses of the past then give yourself a treat and log on and catch up.

For more info or to buy the DVD or download the minisodes, click here:

Interact and explore more on the Dobby Facebook page here.

 

Kemptown MP supports Poppy Appeal

Simon Kirby MP for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven encourages people to support this years Poppy Appeal and wear a poppy with Pride.

Simon Kirby MP for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven
Simon Kirby MP for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven

The money raised from the annual Poppy Appeal organised by the Royal British Legion provides thousands of modern veterans, service men, women and their families with vital advice and support.

Simon who will be collecting for the Appeal over the weekend, said: “I have supported the Royal British Legion’s Poppy Appeal for many years.  Money raised goes directly to their welfare work providing through-life care to anyone currently serving in the British Armed Forces, those who have previously served and their families.”

“I would encourage local residents to join this year’s Poppy Appeal and wear their Poppy with Pride.”

Make Brighton beautiful with a grant from Pride

Community groups are being invited to bid for a grant to put Pride in our city.

Photo: Chris Jepson
Photo: Chris Jepson

For one weekend every year, the city is taken over by a sea of rainbows. The message is clear: whoever you are, wherever you’re from, whatever you do; it does not matter.

What matters is coming together with friends and family and celebrating that beautiful but rarely achieved concept – equality.

From the parade watched by tens of thousands through to the festival in Preston Park through to the street party in St James’ Street, the whole city comes together to mark the LGBT celebration.

The addition of other events such as Trans Pride, the Pride Arts and Film Festival, the Pride Dog Show and Pride Diversity Games means that now, more than ever, Brighton Pride is more inclusive than ever.

But the celebration of our city’s LGBT community does not end after that one weekend in August; it’s a permanent fixture.

The organisers of Pride know this – and that’s why some of the money raised at the event has been set aside as a social impact fund to do good in our city.

The aim is to support those groups or organisations which need a little helping hand in making a difference in their community.

They do not have to be LGBT related; they don’t even have to be directly-linked to Pride (although applicants directly impacted will be favoured). The impact just has to be positive.

It might be a residents’ group that wants to create some planters for a communal area. It might be a sports club that wants a new bag of balls. It might be a community organisation that wants to put on an event.

However big or small, the only criteria is that it will brighten up people’s lives by the time Pride comes round again next year. We look forward to hearing from you.

How to apply

The Social Impact Fund has been set up to provide small grants for communal good. Grants are awarded annually to organisations or groups within the city with particular emphasis on areas directly affected or in the footprint of Brighton and Hove Pride.

Submissions should be a maximum of 400 words mapping out how the money will be spent and why the cause is deserving. Please note the maximum award will be £1,000. There is no lower limit.

There is no restriction on ‎numbers of entries by individual groups.‎ However, the emphasis is on supporting community and grassroots groups, rather than individuals.

Submit your application by midday on November 30 by email to: Bhsocialimpactfund@gmail.com

Applications will be considered by a panel of local media editors with successful applicants informed by the end of December.

Any money distributed needs to have had a visible outcome by the start of Pride 2016.

Photo: Chris Jepson
Photo: Chris Jepson
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