Labour figures step up AV fight

Former Business Secretary Peter Mandelson and former Foreign Secretary Margaret BeckettSenior Labour figures are stepping up their appeal for crucial swing Labour supporters

Senior Labour figures on both sides of the referendum on voting change are stepping up their appeal for crucial swing voters within the party.

Speaking to the Independent former Business Secretary Peter Mandelson said voters should not pass up the chance to vote Yes and damage the Tories.

While former Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said they should vote No to an “expensive and complicated” system.

UK voters will be asked on 5 May whether they want to adopt AV.

The 5 May referendum was a Liberal Democrat condition for entering coalition with the Tories.

But with all Lib Dems in the Cabinet backing the change and their Tory colleagues speaking against it, the two parties making up the coalition have been increasingly pitted against one another during the campaign.

Speaking about the AV referendum, Lord Mandelson said: “Labour shouldn’t ignore this chance to defeat the Tories on 5 May.

“Labour supporters need to use their noddle and ask themselves why Cameron is fighting so hard for a No vote. He’s fighting for his party’s interests but also to protect his own leadership. Labour has a chance to inflict damage on both.”

Meanwhile, Ms Beckett said it was “more important than ever that we put aside party differences for the good of the country and that everyone comes out to vote against the unfair and expensive AV system”.

“I strongly urge people to look at the two voting systems… our current system is simple, fair and decisive. AV is an expensive and complicated political fudge,” she said.

The comments came after the row over AV intensified over the weekend, with Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg accusing Prime Minister David Cameron of aligning himself with the far-right BNP “in defence of the indefensible” First Past the Post electoral system.

Liberal Democrat minister Chris Huhne, who refused to rule out resigning as energy secretary over the tensions, threatened legal action over “untruths” he said had been told by Conservatives opposed to the Alternative Vote system.

The Electoral Commission says it cannot investigate claims of dishonesty during the AV referendum campaign.

Meanwhile, leading Conservative backbencher Mark Pritchard MP, Secretary of the 1922 Committee, told Mr Clegg and Mr Huhne to “stop their whinging” about the way opponents of the alternative vote are campaigning.

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Deadly storms pummel central US

Eve Andrews, left, and her son Brandon Andrews walk through floodwater to get back to their home in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, on MondayIn Poplar Bluff, Missouri, residents hope a levee holding back a swollen river holds
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At least five people have been killed in the US state of Arkansas as storms and tornadoes careered up a swathe of the central United States.

Three died as flood waters swept their cars off the road in the state’s north-west, while two people died in a small town, possibly hit by a tornado.

Meanwhile in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, 17,000 residents are hoping a levee holds and prevents major flooding.

Storms have pummelled states across the region for weeks and more rain is due.

More than a dozen tornadoes were reported in Texas and Arkansas on Monday night.

In eastern Texas, damage was reported in the largely rural Houston County but the extent was unclear because much of the area was without power, the Associated Press quoted Fire Marshal David Lamb as saying.

In Arkansas, two residents of the town of Vilonia – about 40km (25 miles) north of Little Rock – died when what meteorologists said was probably a tornado swept through the town.

“The town’s gone,” resident Sheldon Brock said from a petrol station outside Vilonia.

Map

Authorities have closed roads around the town and urged residents not to try to return to help with the clear-up.

In the north-west of Arkansas, flood waters swept vehicles off the road, emergency officials said, killing a man and a woman in Madison County. In Washington County, a woman died but her 11-year-old son survived.

The governors of the states of Arkansas and Kentucky have declared states of emergency.

In south-eastern Missouri, residents of Poplar Bluff are hoping a saturated levee withstands more rain, AP reported.

As the Black River swelled, murky water was flowing over the levee at many points and creeping towards homes in the flood plain.

Some homes had already flooded, but many more are at risk if the levee breaks, as forecasters warn it is in imminent danger of doing.

Some 1,000 homes have been evacuated, and the National Guard has dispatched 200 soldiers and rescue equipment to the town.

Business owners in Fayetteville, Arkansas - 25 AprilIn Fayetteville, Arkansas, business owners are scrambling to keep out the flood waters

At least 150 people are seeking shelter at a concert venue.

The storm system that has blown through north-eastern Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas is now predicted to move into Illinois and Wisconsin to the north-east.

But a second system will follow on behind bringing more rain, said Greg Carbin from the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma.

“I think we’ll see substantial flooding,” Mr Carbin told AP, adding later: “Arkansas to Illinois, that corridor, they’ve already had incredible rainfall and this is going to aggravate the situation.”

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Mubarak ally on trial for deaths

Habib el-AdlyThe former interior minister, Habib el-Adly, was a hate figure for anti-government protesters.

Egypt’s former interior minister, Habib el-Adly, has gone on trial accused of ordering the shooting of protesters during the country’s revolution.

Nearly 850 civilians were killed during an 18-day popular uprising that forced President Hosni Mubarak from power. Most were shot in the head and chest.

The trial of Mr el-Adly and six former aides opened amid tight security at a courthouse in a suburb of Cairo.

He could face the death penalty if convicted, but pleaded not guilty.

The court was packed with lawyers and relatives of the defendants. Outside there were small protests that included the families of those killed, who were not granted access.

Mr el-Adly is accused of instructing security forces to open fire on unarmed activists during the protests, which started on 25 January.

He is also charged with withdrawing police officers from the streets on 28 January.

The removal of police led to chaos and widespread looting, with householders forced to guard their own properties.

Mr el-Adly pleaded not guilty and his trial was adjourned until 21 May.

As head of Egypt’s domestic security services, the former interior minister was a hate figure for protesters. They demanded his removal from office and an end to the emergency law which gave wide powers to his forces.

Mr el-Adly has already begun a trial for embezzlement.

He has also been accused of illegally profiteering – along with former Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif and the former Finance Minister Yousef Boutros-Ghali – from a deal to import new vehicle licence plates.

Police outside Sharm el-Sheikh International HospitalThe public prosecutor has announced that Hosni Mubarak will be moved to a military prison.

Hosni Mubarak, the former president, remains in detention at a hospital in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh after suffering from heart problems during interrogation.

The public prosecutor has ordered him to be moved to a military hospital as he is investigated over the violent suppression of the protests and alleged corruption.

Mr Mubarak’s sons, Gamal and Alaa, are also being questioned.

They are being held in Tora prison in Cairo, along with a growing number of former officials from their father’s government, including Mr el-Adly.

Egypt’s new military rulers have promised that those responsible for abuses of power will be brought to justice.

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Nigeria elects powerful governors

Ruins of a market in the town of Zonkwa (file image from 21/4/11)The town of Zonkwa in Kaduna state witnessed some of the worst violence

Nigerians are due to head to the polls for the final round in a lengthy election process that has been marred by violence.

A Nigerian human rights group says more than 500 people died when clashes broke out after earlier presidential polls.

Violence erupted in the north after Goodluck Jonathan, a southern Christian, was declared the winner of the 16 April vote.

Ballots in the two hardest hit northern states have since been postponed.

Churches were set alight and Muslims were then targeted in revenge attacks. Many Christians had to celebrate Easter in the police and military barracks where they had taken shelter from the riots.

Poverty and religion

A total of 29 states out of 36 will hold their gubernatorial elections on Tuesday. Several delayed federal legislative polls will also take place at the same time.

For many Nigerians, governors – who control big budgets in the oil-producing country – represent the closest embodiment of power many ever see in African’s most populous nation of some 150 million people.

Goodluck Jonathan

Can Nigeria unite behind Goodluck Jonathan?

The head of the country’s Independent election commission, Attahiru Jega, said some Nigerians had paid “the ultimate price” for democracy.

“One way of immortalising them is to ensure that we complete the remaining elections successfully and not succumb to the designs of people who want to scuttle our collective aspiration for a strong, united and democratic country,” he said, according to the Associated Press.

Mr Jonathan was appointed to the presidency last year upon the death of incumbent Umaru Yar’Adua, a northern Muslim whom he had served as vice-president.

Many in the north felt the next president should have been from their region Mr Yar’Adua died before he could finish his term.

However, some analysts say the violence has more to do with poverty and economic marginalisation in the north than religion.

The north and south also have cultural, ethnic and linguistic differences.

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Shoe hurled at Delhi Games chief

Suresh Kalmadi (centre) arrives at court in Delhi on 26 AprilThe shoe missed Mr Kalmadi as he was being escorted to court
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An unidentified man has thrown a shoe at Suresh Kalmadi, the disgraced former chief of the 2010 Commonwealth Games, in the Indian capital, Delhi.

Mr Kalmadi was being taken to court in the city when the would-be assailant struck. The shoe missed its target.

Mr Kalmadi was arrested on Monday, accused of conspiracy regarding the awarding of commercial contracts for the Games. He denies any wrongdoing.

The build-up to the Games was marred by allegations of sleaze and incompetence.

Throwing a shoe at someone is considered a grave insult in India.

Television pictures showed a man running towards Mr Kalmadi – who was removed from his post in January – as he walked to the court surrounded by policemen.

Timeline: Games scandalOctober 2010: Games held in Delhi after weeks of problems and construction delays – corruption probe begins soon afterNovember 2010: Games Chairman Suresh Kalmadi resigns his post in the Congress partyNovember 2010: Officials TS Darbari, Sanjay Mohindroo and Games treasurer M Jayachandran arrested over alleged financial irregularitiesJanuary 2011: Suresh Kalmadi and Games secretary general Lalit Bhanot sackedFebruary 2011: Mr Bhanot and top official VK Verma arrestedMarch 2011: Head of India’s anti-corruption watchdog forced to resignApril 2011: Suresh Kalmadi arrestedDelhi Games’ top 10 moments

The man jumped in the air and threw a slipper at the Games chief, but missed. He was then detained by police.

Inside the court, Mr Kalmadi was remanded in custudy for eight days while the authorities investigate the charges against him.

His lawyer told the court his arrest was “illegal”.

Mr Kalmadi’s office in the western city of Pune was ransacked overnight by protesters.

A spokesman for India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) said on Monday that Mr Kalmadi had been arrested “for conspiracy to cause favour to a company in Switzerland while procuring timers and scoring equipment for the Games”, which were held last October.

Other charges relate to contracts at a 2009 event in London which marked the start of a baton race across Commonwealth countries, say reports.

If found guilty Mr Kalmadi could face years in prison. He is the third Commonwealth Games official to be detained in India accused of corruption.

The row over the Games is one of a series of corruption scandals that has rocked India in recent months.

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VIDEO: Third gender recognised in Pakistan

Pakistan takes the landmark decision to allow transsexuals to have their own gender category on some official documents.

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France and Italy meet on migrants

Tunisian migrants at Rome's Termini train station - 21 April 2011Many Tunisian migrants arriving in Italy are heading to France where they have relatives
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French President Nicolas Sarkozy is due to meet Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to discuss tensions over migrants from North Africa.

Italy has angered France by granting visas to thousands of migrants, allowing them to travel across Europe’s border-free Schengen zone.

About 25,000 migrants have arrived in southern Italy so far this year. Rome has called for EU help with their care.

Many of the migrants are Tunisian and want to join relatives in France.

Earlier this month the two countries agreed to joint sea and air patrols to try to stop African migrants reaching Europe.

The unrest in North Africa has triggered a huge movement of migrants to Europe. Many head first to the Italian island of Lampedusa, which lies about 120km (75 miles) off the Tunisian coast.

France promised to honour the temporary visas Italy has granted the migrants but has said it will turn away those who cannot support themselves financially.

Last week, French gendarmes sent back Tunisian migrants trying to cross the border from Italy.

There are reports that officials from both countries have reached agreement on amending the Schengen treaty so that national border checks can be reintroduced.

The 1995 Schengen treaty allows legal residents of most EU countries, Switzerland, Norway and Iceland to travel across the zone without visas.

Mr Sarkozy and Mr Berlusconi are also due to discuss French takeovers of Italian firms and the two countries’ response to the unrest in Libya.

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BBC presenter reveals gagging order

Andrew MarrFormer political editor Andrew Marr said he was “embarrassed” and “uneasy” about the injunction
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BBC presenter Andrew Marr has revealed he took out a super-injunction to protect his family’s privacy – but says he will not pursue it any further.

In an interview with the Daily Mail, Mr Marr said he was “embarrassed” about the gagging order he took out in January 2008 to suppress reports of an affair with a fellow journalist.

“I did not come into journalism to go around gagging journalists,” he said.

The use of injunctions seemed to be “running out of control,” he added.

Mr Marr’s comments follow a number of recent injunctions which have banned the identification of celebrities.

In the Mail newspaper, Mr Marr – who hosts a Sunday politics show on BBC One – confirmed he had taken out an injunction to prevent details about the affair, which happened eight years ago, from being published.

He said: “Am I embarrassed by it? Yes. Am I uneasy about it? Yes.”

But he added: “I also had my own family to think about, and I believed this story was nobody else’s business.”

Mr Marr went on to say he knew injunctions were “controversial, and the situation seems to be running out of control”.

“There is a case for privacy in a limited number of difficult situations, but then you have to move on. They shouldn’t be forever and a proper sense of proportion is required,” he said.

Last week, Prime Minister David Cameron said he felt “uneasy” about judges granting injunctions to protect the privacy of powerful individuals.

He warned that judges were using human rights legislation “to deliver a sort of privacy law” and argued that Parliament, not judges, should decide on the balance between press freedom and privacy.

Last Wednesday, High Court judge Mr Justice Eady agreed to issue a “contra mundum” order – effectively a worldwide ban – in the case of a man who sought to prevent publication of material about his private life.

Such orders were previously used to stop the publication of details about the killers of James Bulger, when a court ruled that there was a “strong possibility” that their lives would be at risk if they were identified.

A contra mundum order is intended to apply forever, and applies to everyone – as opposed to forbidding the publication of details by a specific newspaper or journalist.

In a separate case, a married Premier League footballer who reportedly had an affair with Big Brother’s Imogen Thomas, won the right to continue his anonymity.

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VIDEO: Global media arrives for royal wedding

Described as Britain’s biggest ever media event – hundreds of millions of people around the world will be watching the royal wedding.

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China-US economic talks confirmed

Yuan and dollar notesThe value of yuan has become a hot political issue between China and US
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China and the United States have agreed to hold economic talks as tensions between the world’s two biggest economies continue to rise.

Top officials will meet in the US next month to discuss differences over trade and currency policies, says the US Treasury Department.

The United States has accused China of keeping the value of its yuan currency artificially low to help exporters sell products or services abroad.

China is the world’s largest exporter.

The growth of the Chinese economy over the past few years has been powered by the success of its export sector.

However, China’s major trading partners, notably the European Union and US, have raised concerns that the government in Beijing has been engineering an economic strategy that gives an unfair advantage to the country’s manufacturers, by keeping its currency artificially low.

A lower valued currency makes Chinese goods cheaper in foreign markets compared with other competitors.

China has maintained that a sudden change in its currency policy will be detrimental not only to its export sector but to its overall economy.

Beijing has been allowing the yuan to slowly appreciate against the US dollar, but not as much as the decision-makers in Washington and Brussels would like. The Chinese currency has gained almost 5% against the US dollar in the last year.

However, analysts say that despite that gain, the yuan remains undervalued, compared to currencies like the euro and US dollar.

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Sri Lanka ‘killed civilians’ – UN

Breaking news

The UN has said widespread shelling by the Sri Lankan government killed most of the tens of thousands of civilians who died in the final months of the 25-year-long war, in 2009.

The report also accuses Tamil Tigers separatists of using civilians as human shields.

The UN is calling for an independent investigation into what it says could constitute war crimes.

Sri Lanka had asked the UN not to publish its findings.

It said the report could damage reconciliation efforts.

The government has consistently denied allegations that it targeted civilians, and has rejected the report’s findings as biased and fraudulent.

The panel also criticises the UN itself for failing to take actions that might have protected civilians.

The BBC’s Barbara Plett, in New York, says that a divided Security Council was initially reluctant to address Sri Lanka’s war and much less call for an inquiry.

However, the secretary general appointed the panel after mounting evidence of serious human rights abuses and massive civilian casualties in the five-month offensive which ended the war.

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Hip Hop: The business of getting rich

Sean "Diddy" Combs at Jackie Robinson Foundation Awards Gala.According to Forbes magazine, the estimated net worth of Sean “Diddy” Combs was $475m in 2010
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Get Rich or Die Trying was a mantra coined by rapper 50 Cent – who did get rich, seriously rich, and who almost died in the process.

With fluctuating share and property prices, it is impossible to determine exactly how much any artist is worth at any particular moment.

But although 50 Cent’s estimated wealth might not surpass that of Sir Paul McCartney, he is able to rub shoulders with the mega-rich music elite such as Sir Elton John, Sir Mick Jagger and Madonna.

Meanwhile, Sean “Diddy” Combs sang the hip hop track All About the Benjamins – referring to the portrait of Benjamin Franklin on $100 bills.

Hip hop music is not all about the Benjamins, but it has generated an enormous amount of them.

The fact that hip hop was largely created and owned by African-Americans has led to some extraordinary claims about how that particular music genre has transformed American society.

Some people even argue that the Obama presidency would not have been possible without hip hop.

Hip hop began in the late 1970s as an urban subculture, initially confined to two of America’s most notorious ghettos – Harlem and the South Bronx in New York City.

Since then, however, it has grown into a multi-billion dollar business spanning music, film, television, books, fashion and sports.

“In 1979, there were only two black artists in the top 10 of the Billboard singles chart in America and in 2002, in a similar week, all 10 pop artists in America were black artists”

Dan Charnas The Big Payback

And many hip hop stars – Sean “Diddy” Combs and Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter for example – have become music moguls themselves, owning and running huge businesses.

“In order for hip hop to survive long enough to make it into the mainstream, it actually had to develop a business sense,” says Dan Charnas, author of The Big Payback.

“Hip hop had to foster entrepreneurship, it had to develop these very powerful external institutions – because nobody else would touch it,” he says.

Unlike other musical forms that were adopted and championed by the big record labels, hip hop was virtually ignored until 1979, when Rapper’s Delight became a worldwide hit.

But it was still five more years before a major label made a big investment in this genre of music and that was when Columbia Records – which was then a division of CBS – gave a distribution deal to a small label based in New York.

The label was Def Jam, created by Rick Rubin and run out of a dormitory room. The label had only issued seven vinyl singles – including releases by LL Cool J and the Beastie Boys.

Def Jam quickly became a huge power in the music industry, and the transcendent hip hop brand.

50 Cent50 Cent has announced a partnership with Sleek Audio to produce wireless headphones

Even in the 1980s after Michael Jackson’s great MTV breakthrough with Thriller, black artists could not get played on pop stations unless they complied with certain media-imposed criteria.

There was a brief moment in the 1960s where AM stations played James Brown and Aretha Franklyn next to the Beatles and the Beach Boys but, after corporations started taking over FM stations in the 1970s, there was a huge separation and segmentation of audiences.

That led to what could be called the disco backlash in the late 1970s.

“In 1979, there were only two black artists in the top 10 of the Billboard singles chart in America. And in 2002, in a similar week, all 10 pop artists in America were black artists,” says Mr Charnas.

It was then apparent to everyone that hip hop had created a huge social and cultural change in America.

That change also created some of the richest black people in America, some of whom evolved into great moguls of the hip hop music scene.

HIP HOP’S TOP MULTI-MILLIONAIRESSean “Diddy” Combs: Formerly known as Puff Daddy, he built his fortune through his clothing line Sean John, Bad Boy record label, Ciroc vodka, acting, live concerts and TV shows.Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter: The husband of Beyonce sold his Rocawear clothing label for $204m (£125m), signed a $150m deal with Live Nation, has shares in restaurants and the New Jersey Nets basketball team.Andre “Dr Dre” Young: Helped launch careers of Snoop Dog, Eminem and 50 Cent, expanded with Aftermath record label, Beats headphones and HP laptops.Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson: Received $100m from sale of Vitamin Water, has G-Unit clothes line, video games, film production company and several acting credits.

Source: Forbes magazine

“What Shawn ‘Jay-Z’ Carter, Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs and Curtis ’50 Cent’ Jackson said, was, ‘If Time Warner can own music, why can’t I?'” says Mr Charnas.

That was something hip hop artists learned to do – with the same ruthless determination that had enabled them to survive the rugged urban environment of their youth.

They learned to drive a harder bargain, and hip hop created more entrepreneurs and artists who owned more of their own work than any other genre previously.

Mr Charnas says you cannot compare what R&B and soul did in the 1960s to what hip hop entrepreneurs were able to do in the 1990s and the first decade of this century.

Hip hop went way beyond just music – it expanded into numerous other business areas.

“Run DMC were very brand-conscious – they wrote a song about Adidas because they love Adidas, and the endorsement deal came afterwards,” Mr Charnas says.

It went from hip hop artists seeking endorsement deals to basically creating their own brands, such as Wu Tang Clan creating Woo Wear and 50 Cent manufacturing his G-Unit clothing.

“You now have these power houses like Rocawear and Sean Jean, almost pushing aside folks like Nautica and Ralph Lauren Polo for space in the young man’s and young woman’s department stores across America and indeed, across the world,” he says.

Pharrell Williams at a fashion showPharrell Williams is equally at home at a fashion show as he is behind the desk in a recording studio

One of the genre’s most lucrative financial investments came when 50 Cent negotiated a minority stake in Vitamin Water in return for acting as a celebrity spokesman and lending his name to the Formula 50 drink.

When The Coca Cola Company acquired Vitamin Water from Glaceau for $4.1bn (£2.5bn), bankers familiar with the deal said 50 Cent’s profit ranged from $100m to $150m.

If you combine that windfall with record sales, concerts, clothing, merchandise, endorsements, acting, video games and investments in property, dietary supplements, moisturisers, and even his own brand of condoms to promote safe sex among his younger fans, it is safe to assume 50 Cent’s dream of earning his next $500m is within the realms of reality.

He even published a book entitled The 50th Law, which explains how his personal philosophy and self-confidence reversed the fortunes of his humble beginnings.

Producer and fellow rapper Pharrell Williams certainly seems to have named his clothing line most appropriately – the Billionaire Boys Club.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Inside The Clink:

Al Crisci with inmates at High DownKitchen manager Al Crisci runs a tight ship and is not afraid to sack staff

Wild mushrooms en croute, guinea fowl, red cabbage and fondant potatoes. Not a typical prison dinner menu, but the kitchen turning out this food at HMP High Down in Surrey is a one-off.

At the centre of this prison for 1,100 criminals is a gourmet restaurant, where the prisoners themselves cook and serve food for people who book their visit in advance.

The Clink is the brainchild of professional chef and prison kitchen manager Al Crisci.

Sample lunch menu

Starters

Warm Chicken Liver Salad with smoked bacon & watercress – £3.95

Roast Beef Tartare with onion relish & dandelion salad – £4.50

Main course

Slow Braised Beef Skirt with chasseur sauce & beef cheek with cabbage hearts & stuffed tomatoes, served with Pont Neuf chips & seasonal vegetables – £6.95

Grilled Fillet of Sea Bass with spring onion, soy, lime and sesame, served with carrot & coriander rice cakes – £6.95

Homemade Crab Ravioli with a rich crab bisque sauce, served with chicory, endive, tomato & onion salad – £6.50

Dessert

Homemade Ice Cream ask your waiter for our flavours – £3.75

A Celebration of English Pears a trio of pear desserts – £4.50

Gourmet food cooked by convicts

“It’s a real restaurant. These are paying customers so they expect a service. The Clink is not on the outside of a prison, the Clink is bang smack in the middle of the prison and there’s always a security risk,” he said.

The restaurant is funded by the Clink Charity and a discerning clientele.

“We have MPs we have lords & ladies, we have some celebs, we have all sorts,” said Mr Crisci.

Guests have to go through security checks and alcohol is not on the menu, but otherwise it could pass as a restaurant in London’s West End.

It offers prisoners an opportunity to change, to gain experience of food preparation, food service and cleaning qualifications with the chance of a full-time job within the hospitality industry upon release.

It opened in 2009 and in its first 18 months released 13 fully-trained chefs and waiters from prison with a catering job.

Inmates are paid £14.70 a week to work in the restaurant – 50p a week more than those working in the main kitchen where the prisoners’ food is prepared.

The Clink Charity hopes to build on its success at High Down and roll out more restaurants in other prisons.

Levan, inmate at High Down

Levan and fellow prisoner Robbie were both nervous on their first day

Mr Crisci said he demanded high standards: “It’s a dictatorship so I’m the dictator. They have to do what I say. You know it’s got be like that. I’ve got 18 prisoners in here. I can’t have anarchy.”

For some it is not easy – breaking the rules by taking food or drink without permission, hacking in to a till or having a crafty cigarette is too much of a temptation. If they are caught they are out of the restaurant business.

For others though, it really can mean a new start.

Robbie Lister, 24, grabbed his chance enthusiastically when Mr Crisci offered him a job as chef and soon made his mark with the Italian chef Giorgio Locatelli, owner of the Michelin-starred Locanda Locatelli restaurant.

Mr Locatelli is a supporter of the Clink project and has been happy to do a stint in the kitchen passing on some of his tips to the inmates.

Robbie was offered the chance of some work experience at Locanda Locatelli and was released on temporary licence.

“I’m feeling nervous but it’s a good nervous. It’s a good opportunity. I could turn a page and start a new chapter,” he said, as he arrived at the restaurant with Mr Crisci.

Robbie’s first challenge was to make a fennel and blood orange salad, to satisfy the palate of Mr Locatelli.

“I’m sure I can handle it. If I can pass the test of being in prison I can pass the test of doing this hopefully.”

Mr Locatelli had a few words of advice for him: “When you do something as simple as that, you really need to be spot on with the seasoning and everything, so that’s what we’re going to taste – your ability to season it.”

After two mouthfuls, he told Robbie: “I think you can come back.”

Robbie now has the prospect of earning £19,000 a year.

It was a great moment for Mr Crisci too: “I’ve got faith. I think he’s going to start slow, it’s going take him a while but I think he’s going to be alright. I think he’s got it in him.”

And he said that was the main aim of the project: “In a nutshell, the idea of The Clink is a prisoner comes in and a very well trained chef leaves us with a job. And society is better off.”

The Prison Restaurant can be seen on BBC One at 2235 BST on Tuesday 26 April and after on BBC iPlayer.

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‘Race’ for 2012 Olympics tickets

How London 2012 tickets might lookLondon 2012 tickets went on sale on 15 March
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Applications for tickets for the London 2012 Olympics have “hit the roof”, according to organisers.

The deadline to apply for the 6.6 million tickets on the London 2012 website is 2359 BST on 26 April.

London 2012 chief executive Paul Deighton said the number of applicants had risen steadily until Friday before hitting a “really high level”.

Applications will be processed by June 2011 when those who have been successful will be notified.

Before tickets went on sale on 15 March more than 2.5 million people had signed up to the official website.

Prices range from £20 to £2,012 – the top price for the opening ceremony – and oversubscribed events will be decided by a random ballot.

Mr Deighton said: “Every day is different, but also in the last week we have been getting three or four times the applications above and beyond what was coming in for the previous five weeks – and the sky’s the limit based on the pattern that I am seeing at the moment.”

There are 650 sessions across 26 sports and 17 days to choose from and people will be limited to a maximum of 20 events each.

The most popular events, including the men’s 100m final, have a limit of four tickets per person.

Mr Deighton said orders had been “pretty well-spread” across the sports, adding: “I think that a lot of people are ordering quite a number of tickets. Families seem to be ordering so they can go together.”

London view

Sport, news and more 2012 informationBBC London 2012

And he said he was confident the ticketing system would stand up to the pressure expected in the next few hours.

“The system has actually worked faultlessly and with a process of this scale and complexity that is extraordinary,” he said.

“Even though I am expecting we will have significant demand we are confident with the way the system is working and that it can support anything that the ticket-buying world can throw at us.”

Once the deadline for tickets passes the process of matching demand, and the different-priced tickets, with sessions available will start.

Applications for tickets for the Paralympic Games open on 9 September.

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