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PREVIEW: Lustrous Brighton@New Steine Hotel

Brighton born photographer Nick Ford celebrates the sights, textures and tones of his dazzling city in his new exhibition Lustrous Brighton.WEB.600

A selection of framed metallic images showing key Brighton landmarks will be on display at The New Steine Hotel Thursday, August 4 till Friday August 30.

Nick has a studio & exhibition space on Oxford Street Brighton and will be hosting ’10×8′; a series of exhibitions throughout October for Brighton Photofringe.


Event: Lustrous Brighton

Where: New Steine Hotel, 10-11 New Steine, Brighton

When: August 4 – 30

For more information, click here:

Sussex Police and safety at Brighton Pride

Sussex Police will once again join in this weekend’s Pride celebrations that sees thousands of people take to the streets of Brighton and Hove (August 5, 6 & 7).

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As with previous years, the force’s priority is the safety of all visitors taking part in the weekend’s festivities as well as members of the local community.

Chief Superintendent Nev Kemp
Chief Superintendent Nev Kemp

Brighton and Hove divisional commander, , said: “We have been working hard for months with the Pride organisers in order to make sure as many people as possible get to have an enjoyable and safe weekend.

In terms of security, where public safety has been significantly compromised as it has been in recent events overseas, we have considered any lessons that we can learn and reviewed our plans to keep Pride in Brighton and Hove as safe as possible.

Whilst the nationally assessed terrorist threat to Pride is unchanged from 2015, we have this year strengthened our contingency plans and have some additional security measures in place. For example this year we will be using some concrete barriers. Most people are unlikely to notice any difference from previous years and none of the changes that we have made should affect the enjoyment of people involved in the Pride celebrations in anyway.

A large proportion of the stewards and event security staff have received additional training prior to this year’s celebrations meaning they are better equipped to recognise and respond to any incidents that may arise. As always, we ask that the public demonstrates a certain level of personal responsibility including things like: taking care of belongings, following personal safety advice and flagging any issues or suspicious behaviour to event staff or police.”

Saturday is the main day of celebrations with the carnival parade starting from the Peace Statue on Hove Lawns at around 11am followed by a ticketed event in Preston Park.

In the evening the Pride Village Party is in Kemptown. Anyone wishing to enter the St James’s Street area between Old Steine and Upper Rock Gardens and Edward Street and the lower Marine Parade will need a wristband.

The Pride flag will be flying at John Street police station and for the third year police vehicles will be showing the rainbow colours.

Chief Supt Nev Kemp added: “I’m looking forward to once again joining colleagues in the parade and having the opportunity to talk to other people who celebrate Pride and help make it a great weekend for Brighton and Hove. I thoroughly enjoy marching with colleagues and I am proud to do so and be part of the biggest event in Brighton and Hove’s calendar, showcasing our uniquely special City and celebrating our LGBT communities. I know that I can speak for my colleagues too when I say how uplifted and appreciative we are with the warm encouragement and appreciation we receive from the crowds of people as we pass by.

Whilst we will be working with Brighton and Hove City Council to keep the city moving and safe throughout the day, there will inevitably be some disruption to traffic with such a large event, so if you were planning to come to the city, don’t be put off but please do allow extra time and think about your travel plans.”

Paul Kemp
Paul Kemp

Pride director Paul Kemp said: “Pride have worked  throughout the year on planning with our colleagues at Sussex Police, Brighton and Hove City Council and East Sussex  Fire and Rescue to ensure we deliver a safe and successful Pride weekend for the thousands of locals and visitors to our city.

We would like to thank Sussex Police for liaising closely with Pride and the extra measures being put in place this year to enhance safety for everybody.”

Sussex Police will have a stand in Preston Park, where you can speak to their LGBT officers and volunteers as well as representatives from Surrey Police. The Sussex Police and Crime Commissioner, Katy Bourne, will also have a stand and will be on hand to say hello.

For up to date information throughout the day you can follow the police on Twitter @BtonHovePolice or check out the Brighton and Hove Police Facebook Page.

The police will also be trialling the use of Snapchat with videos and pictures of the parade and celebrations being posted across the weekend. The aim is to help improve public engagement with a younger demographic and demonstrates the force’s open and honest approach to building relationships with communities using popular and emerging social media platforms.

You can add Sussex Police in Snapchat by searching for Sussex_Police in the app or visiting https://t.co/xOmGpxGEY2

For everything you need to know about Brighton and Hove Pride, including information on travel and wristbands, click here:

Support the Lunch Positive community café at Pride this weekend

Lunch Positive, the Brighton based lunch club for people with HIV will once again operate a Community Café in the Community Village at Pride, Preston Park this Saturday, August 6.

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The Café is open to everyone attending the park, and will be run entirely by Lunch Positive volunteers and supporters. Every penny raised will go directly to help running the Lunch Positive charity.

This year over forty volunteers have been working hard organising the Community Café. They will be offering an enjoyable and affordable menu, including rice dishes, pasta salads, and home-made cakes. There’ll be hot and cold drinks, quick service and a seating area.

Gary Pargeter
Gary Pargeter

Gary Pargeter, Service Manager at Lunch Positive: “It’s fantastic that we’re staging our Café at Pride again this year. It’s a real privilege to be part of Pride and the Community Village at Preston Park. Pride means so much to us, it’s equalities mission and opportunity for our community to stand together, and its important role in raising funds for the Rainbow Fund. Our Community Cafe is a major annual fundraiser for us, and involves all of our volunteers, many friends and supporters. Please come along and get your food and drink from us. Please help us raise as much as possible, and tell your friends and everyone you know who’ll be at Preston Park!”

For information about Lunch Positive www.lunchpositive.org

Lunch Positive 26 Nov copy

OPINION: Careless talk costs lives

Gscene columnist Craig Hanlon-Smith urges NHS England to prescribe PreEP now to save lives, then engage in debate about behaviour tomorrow.

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Tuesday’s High Court hearing at which it was determined that the NHS, can fund HIV preventative treatment PrEP has lit alight social media. The problem with a concise limit of 140 characters is that one’s opinion has to be kept to the basics and Twitter may not necessarily be the most appropriate medium with which to join in the debate.

We’ve all been guilty of it. I recently leapt into the lions’ den of football management to the tune of a sixteen word limit with interesting results. I have not changed my opinion on the subject at hand but concede that given the opportunity to publish 1000 word articles whereupon I can justify my ultimate conclusion with six different pieces of evidence, Twitter is possibly best left to posting links to longer articles, such as this one. And so, in response to those incensed at the suggestion PrEP should be available on the NHS and wishing all manner of death and destruction upon an apparent sexually promiscuous homosexual community, I have this to say.

The prescription of PrEP is a strategy aimed at saving lives. It is an HIV infection preventative measure that has up to a 90% success rate across various trials, and although not inexpensive, is a fraction of the cost of treating an HIV infection itself.

Craig Hanlon-Smith
Craig Hanlon-Smith

Are there some, who given the opportunity may pop a pill, throw caution to the wind and share themselves amongst the sexually active multitudes with wild and gay abandon? It’s possible. Am I wholly comfortable at the idea that preventative treatments come in chemical form rather than education, discussion and behaviour changing support? No. But let’s list that as second on the priority menu.

First and foremost is the opportunity to prevent further infections and save lives and we will not change behaviours by merely ranting or condemning swathes of the population in a tweet. The behaviour will continue but without the protection. Give people PrEP what’s the problem?

Of course I have the advantage of being old enough to remember when AIDS came trucking into view the first time around and the destruction left in its wake. Through my work with GScene and Mad ‘Ed Theatre I have met countless older LGBT people who talk about the AIDS holocaust, of sections of the community numbering first hundreds, then thousands, disappearing into death as if overnight. Of families burying their sons, brothers, nephews, cousins. In the years before legal partnerships and same-sex marriage, of long-term partners evicted from their homes following the death of their twenty-seven year old lover who had died without leaving a will. Of boyfriends and partners denied hospital visiting rights because they were not listed anywhere as ‘next of kin’. Disease does not only ravage the body of the sick, it infects our social stability, tears apart communities and unlike mankind, it knows no prejudice. PrEP, had it been around thirty years ago, could have prevented such suffering, well it is around now and we would be fools to argue against it.

During the early 1980s as AIDS was developing, Governments were slow to act. Health minister Norman Fowler was warned by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher that if he proceeded with his proposed course of action he would be known as the ‘Minister for AIDS’ and his career would end. He ignored her and the ‘Don’t Die of Ignorance’ campaign was born. Although sometimes criticised for its iron fist of fear approach, the UK has half the number of HIV/AIDS cases of France, where no such campaign existed. Action helps, inaction and more ‘wait and see talk’ will kill people.

When US President Ronald Reagan finally mustered up the interest to utter the word AIDS in 1987, his focus centred entirely around infections from blood transfusions and drug addicted mother to baby transmissions. He was unable to bring himself to say the word ‘gay’ once in his key AIDS address preferring to skirt around the issue. I know that as a community we are often quick to point that AIDS is not only a gay disease, and it isn’t, but we remain uncomfortable that the possibility of it looms large over our heads like a storm cloud. He was not alone in his dithering. Scientists argued with one-another over the origins of the virus more concerned with their own race to the Nobel prize than improving public health.

Sections of the gay community fought between themselves over their rights to sexual liberation versus community education and prevention and ultimately too much talk killed people. In the US in 1987 there were 15,000 HIV/AIDS cases, by the end of the millennium there were half a million. Not taking enough or the right kind of action will infect and ultimately kill people. PrEP can stop this and the time for talk, legal appeals and injunctions is running out.

Of course we should examine our behaviour, of course it is irresponsible to have countless sexual partners, sometimes hundreds and to not use condoms to protect ourselves, but it is also irresponsible to overeat high fat, high sugared convenience foods, not to undertake any exercise, to drink excess alcohol, to use drugs and to smoke. Our health services treat all of these social issues, to refuse PrEP to people who need it would be both discriminatory and stupid. Save lives today, and then let’s talk behaviour tomorrow.

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