Kylie and Jason Hit Factory reunion gig cancelled - BBC News Kylie and Jason Hit Factory reunion gig cancelled - BBC News
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Kylie and Jason Hit Factory reunion gig cancelled - BBC News

Kylie and Jason Hit Factory reunion gig cancelled - BBC News

A special concert that would have seen Jason Donovan and Kylie Minogue reunite on stage for the first time in more than 20 years has been cancelled.

Pete Waterman said the gig at London's Hyde Park on Wednesday had been called off due to recent bad weather.

He told the BBC the grounds had now become "unsafe" following rain at the Wireless festival over the weekend.

Organisers said ticket purchases made through Ticketmaster and See Tickets will be automatically refunded.

Fans who bought tickets elsewhere were advised to contact the vendor.

'Devastated'

The outdoor concert was to reunite artists who found fame on the PWL record label, which is marking its 25th anniversary.

Waterman said he was "devastated for everyone" involved.

"People have come from all over the world to make this happen," he said. "We're trying to work out what we can do."

"Police, parks and safety people have said it's completely unsafe at the moment.

"We saw the damage caused by the Wireless festival at the weekend, but we can't get lorries on to the site to dump bark and mulch on the ground."

He added: "What can I say? We've had exceptional weather. If it's not safe, it's not safe and you can't control that."

'Extremely disappointed'

Kylie Minogue, who yesterday posted a picture of her rehearsals with Jason Donovan, expressed her disappointment in a statement on her website:

"I am so sorry to hear that the concert tomorrow had to be cancelled," she said.

"I feel for all the fans who had bought tickets to this special event. Jason and I were rehearsed and excited to share this moment with everyone."

Acts including Steps, Sinitta, Sonia, Rick Astley, Bananarama, Pepsi and Shirlie and Brother Beyond had also been due to perform at the concert.

On his Twitter account Donovan said they were all "extremely disappointed" and that they had not taken the decision lightly.

He added: "Can't believe it... Was really looking forward to celebrating the wonderful work of Mike, Matt and Pete and all who made those songs so special to a generation!"

Waterman said he hoped the concert could be restaged at some point in the future, but added "it's not that easy" as Steps are due to go on tour and other acts have prior commitments.

In a statement, organisers said: "Following the severe and unprecedented weather conditions across the country the site was declared unfit this morning to host the concert.

"The decision was made following full consultation with all of the relevant authorities and the safety advisory group. The safety of our customers, performers and production crew is of utmost importance and the decision was made unanimously.

They added: "The potential risk to staff and music fans was too great for the event to go ahead. Live Nation and The Royal Parks sincerely regret the disappointment caused by this cancellation."



Captain of wrecked Italian cruise liner says sorry - Reuters UK

ROME, July 10 | Wed Jul 11, 2012 12:03am BST

ROME, July 10 (Reuters) - The captain of the wrecked cruise liner Costa Concordia apologised on Tuesday for the accident in which as many as 32 people died and said he had been distracted when the vast ship struck the rock which holed it.

In his first full television interview since the accident on January 13, Francesco Schettino acknowledged his responsibility as captain and said he thought constantly about the victims of the disaster.

"When there's an accident, it's not just the ship that's identified or the company," he told Italy's Canale 5 television, speaking calmly but with a pronounced tic in one eye. "The captain is identified and so it's normal that I should apologise as a representative of this system," he said.

Schettino, who is charged with multiple manslaughter, causing the accident and abandoning his ship, was speaking after being freed from house arrest last week.

The Naples-born captain admitted to failing to act decisively enough once it became clear the 144,500 tonne vessel had come too close to the island of Giglio off the Tuscan coast where it ran aground.

"This was a banal accident in which there was a breakdown in the interaction between human beings and it created misunderstandings and it's for this that there's so much rage," he said. "It was as though there was a blackout in everyone's heads and in the instruments."

"I blame myself for being distracted," he said but added the actual sailing of the ship was under the command of another officer at the time.

"At that moment, I went up to the deck and ordered the ship to be put on manual navigation and I didn't have command, that's to say being in charge of sailing the ship, that was the officer," he said.

Investigators have severely criticised Schettino's handling of the disaster, accusing him of bringing the 290 metre-long vessel too close to shore, delaying evacuation and losing control of the operation during which he abandoned ship before all the 4,200 passengers and crew had left the ship.

Schettino, who has been held up to abuse and ridicule following the accident, has always acknowledged making mistakes but has said he as not the only one who should be blamed for the tragedy.

A pre-trial hearing was held in March and investigations also target several other officers and officials of the ships owner, Costa Cruises a unit of the world's largest cruise operator Carnival Corp . (Reporting By James Mackenzie; Editing by Andrew Heavens)



Stone Roses fan delays "atmosphere" sale on eBay - BBC News

A Stone Roses fan who was selling a container of "atmosphere" from the band's recent reunion concert in Manchester has taken it off eBay.

Bids had reached more than £500 for the item, housed in what appeared to be a urine sample container.

However Gary Finch said he felt it was "not appropriate" to be selling the memorabilia after the death of fellow fan Christopher Brahney after the gig.

Brahney went missing after the Heaton Park show on 29 June.

Greater Manchester Police confirmed that the 22-year-old's body was found on Monday in the Manchester Ship Canal, near Media City, Salford Quays.

More than 120,000 people had joined a Facebook group appealing for help in finding him.

Ebay seller Finch told the BBC: "It wouldn't be right for me to make money out of it now."

He added: "I didn't do it to make money in the first place. I did catch the atmosphere, I did it for a laugh, I didn't really expect anything to happen, it just took off."

Finch's auction listing said the jar of "atmosphere" had been collected "at around 10pm on the opening night" of 29 June, between the songs This Is The One and She Bangs The Drums.

He wrote: "Here is your chance to own your very own piece of Mancunian history... approx 10cc of awesome atmosphere."

He said he was unable to accept bids from people outside the UK because of the "totally electrified and awesome atmosphere in the container".

"It might cause security/health and safety issues being carried in a pressurised aircraft environment."

Originally Finch had said he wanted to give some of the proceeds to a local music project for young people.

Now he is hoping to collect together more pieces of memorabilia from the reunion shows, and is hoping to speak to the band about putting together something bigger in Brahney's memory.

The group have already posted a message on their Facebook page expressing their "sincerest condolences to Christopher's family and friends".

However, Finch added that another eBay seller had already relisted his auction, after copying his original photo and wording. He called the duplication "disgraceful".

The Heaton Park shows were the first major UK gigs by the Stone Roses' original line-up in 22 years.

220,000 tickets for the three concerts sold out in 68 minutes.

The group, formed in Manchester in 1983, recorded just two albums before they dissolved in 1996.



Barclays' Diamond accused of misleading inquiry - Reuters UK

LONDON | Wed Jul 11, 2012 2:53am BST

LONDON (Reuters) - MPs on Tuesday accused Barclays former chief executive Bob Diamond of misleading a parliamentary inquiry into an interest rate-fixing scandal that has forced him to resign and give up bonuses worth up to 20 million pounds.

Diamond hit back, calling the comments made by a parliamentary committee "unfair and unfounded".

The affair became a major political issue in Britain this month, after authorities fined Barclays more than $450 million (289.9 million pounds) for its part in manipulating a crucial interbank interest rate. Diamond resigned on July 3.

Marcus Agius, the chairman of Barclays when its traders fiddled the rate, appeared before a hostile parliamentary panel as part of its investigation into the row which as caused widespread public anger in Britain.

In 2-1/2 hours of gripping testimony, he acknowledged the central bank chief had played a key role in pushing Diamond out of his job, and described the personal drama behind the scandal.

"I'm not happy to be where I am, as you can imagine," Agius told the panel in a quiet, clipped voice. "It's very difficult as you go back to say what you would have done differently."

Agius was the first Barclays executive to quit when the scandal erupted but that was not enough to protect the hard-charging Diamond, who was forced out of the 300-year-old bank a day later.

Agius, a Cambridge and Harvard educated pillar of the banking establishment, has agreed to stay on as executive chairman to find a successor to Diamond, who testified in parliament last week.

The panel pressed Agius repeatedly on what it saw as inconsistencies between Diamond's evidence last week and the contents of a letter from the financial watchdog to the bank, which was released at the start of Tuesday's hearing.

"LACK OF CANDOUR"

"It will look to us, and frankly it will look to everybody listening, like another example of a complete lack of candour to parliament by the chief executive of Barclays," said committee chairman Andrew Tyrie.

In a tense exchange, John Mann, a lawmaker from the opposition Labour party, said: "He has calculatedly and deliberately misled this parliamentary committee ... Mr Diamond has been misleading this committee, hasn't he?"

Agius replied: "I can't speak for his testimony."

Diamond, in a letter to Tyrie, later said the accusations were unjustified: "Having watched the committee's session today, I was dismayed that you and some of your fellow committee members appear to have suggested that I was less than candid with the committee last week," he wrote in the letter, which was published by the BBC.

"The comments made at today's hearing have had a terribly unfair impact on my reputation, which is of paramount concern to me."

Neither Diamond nor Agius stand accused of individual wrongdoing in the manipulation of rates.

As MPs piled criticism on him, Agius looked tense at times, blowing out his cheeks and shaking his head in disbelief. He interrupted one committee member sharply at one point to correct the pronunciation of his surname.

Shedding light on what went on behind the scenes, Agius said Diamond resigned after the central bank chief summoned Barclays executives and made it clear that their colleague had to go.

"We explained what had happened," said Agius, who visited Diamond at his house in London. "He was utterly depressed as you can imagine. The conversation was not long.

"He asked for time to talk to his family, and we left confident that if he hadn't already made the decision, that he would make the right decision."

BONUSES LOST

Diamond's pay-off has been the subject of intense speculation in a country where anger with the culture of bankers strikes a popular chord. One of the world's richest bankers, Diamond took home 17 million pounds last year alone and has earned at least 120 million pounds since he joined the board in 2005, according to Manifest, a corporate governance group.

In a separate statement, Barclays quoted Diamond as saying he hoped his decision would help the bank move on.

"The wrongful actions of a relative few should not detract from the outstanding work that Barclays employees carry out each day on behalf of clients and customers around the world," the American banker said.

Diamond will still get a year's pay and a cash payment instead of a pension, all worth 2 million pounds, Agius said.

Letters released on Tuesday showed the Financial Services Authority - Britain's financial watchdog - had long shared its concerns with Agius about his bank's behaviour and culture.

"The cumulative effect ... has been to leave us with an impression that Barclays has a tendency continually to seek advantage from complex structures or favourable regulatory interpretations," said an April 10 letter sent by FSA Chairman Adair Turner to Agius.

Turner said the concerns had also been raised by Andrew Bailey, the head of banking supervision at the FSA, while attending a Barclays' board meeting in February.

In his testimony last week Diamond said: "I don't remember anything ... I didn't brief before this on the February meeting."

FIRM TONE

When asked about the letter, Agius said: "I don't regard this as damning. I regard this as a firm letter from our regulator." He added however he had never received a letter that harsh from a regulator and described his relationship with the Financial Services Authority as "strained".

More than a dozen other banks are now expected to be drawn into the scandal. The London Interbank Offered Rate underpins transactions worth hundreds of trillions of dollars worldwide.

Mervyn King, the Bank of England governor, has declined to comment on his involvement in Diamond's resignation but he told the BBC in an interview recorded before Agius' testimony that it was time to change the way Britain's banking system worked.

"We don't have enough banks, and those banks that we have, have become too big and they dominate the sector in a way that's rather undesirable," he said.

Libor, or the London interbank offered rate, is compiled from estimates by large international banks of how much they believe they have to pay to borrow from each other. It is used for $550 trillion of interest rate derivatives contracts and influences rates on mortgages, student loans and credit cards.

The rates submitted by banks are compiled by Thomson Reuters, parent company of Reuters, on behalf of the British Bankers' Association.

(Reporting by Matt Scuffham, Douwe Miedema; Steve Slater, David Milliken, Sven Egenter, Venetia Rainey, Paul Sandle, Sophie Kirby, Helen Massy-Beresford; Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Giles Elgood and Alastair Macdonald)



Duminy finds form ahead of England series - ESPN.co.uk
Somerset 312 for 8 dec (Trego 104, Tsotsobe 3-46) and 50 for 1 drew with South Africans 282 for 9 dec (Amla 64, Duminy 53, C Overton 3-59)
Live scorecard

Mark Boucher's enforced retirement was the main talking point of South Africa's first outing in England but their two-day tour match against Somerset provided some valuable practice as well. Half-centuries from Hashim Amla and JP Duminy on the second day and another workout for the bowlers ensured all 13 players named for the match had time in the middle.

AB de Villiers replaced Kallis at the start of the day, which was delayed by an hour due to rain, and looked threatening. He took advantage of any wayward deliveries and hit five boundaries before getting an inside edge against Peter Trego.

Compared to the rate at which Trego and James Hildreth scored on Monday, Amla and Duminy batted at a fairly sedate pace, especially in the early stages of Duminy's innings. He was presented with many deliveries wide of off stump and duly left them. His first shot in anger was a cut off the back foot that was parried over the cover boundary by the fielder. His second, a flick over midwicket off left-arm spinner Jack Leach, went for six and seemed to settle him.

Amla showed his usual patience against good lines and lengths from an improved Gemaal Hussain and a disciplined Craig Meschede. He was also accomplished against spin and played an important guiding role with Duminy, who has had problems against slow bowling in the past. Together, they added 53 before Amla was bowled by Leach the ball before lunch.

Duminy blossomed after the interval. He took on Leach, in particular, but lost partners at the other end. Craig Overton gave the South African lower order problems when he bowled Vernon Philander and had Dale Steyn caught behind off the next ball. His hat-trick ball was to Robin Peterson, who survived and went on to score a flawless 33.

Morne Morkel chipped in with a well-played 38 before being caught in the deep, by Craig Overton off his brother Jamie's bowling, but Imran Tahir lasted only three balls before being out lbw to George Dockrell. With Kallis not returning South Africa declared and their bowlers had a chance of another run.

Philander and Steyn opened with the same discipline they had in the first innings and Philander had an early success when he removed Arul Suppiah, who completed a pair, on the stroke of tea. South Africa did not use Morkel again with the ball, after he conceded more than six runs an over in the first innings, and opted for spin instead. Tahir and Peterson took them to close and Tahir grew in confidence, offering more flight and guile than he has done in the recent past. The teams shook hands ten minutes before the scheduled close with Alex Barrow and Nick Compton at the crease.

© ESPN EMEA Ltd

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