Monday, April 28, 2025
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Interview: Stuart Broad

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As a staunch supporter of Indian cricket, the prospect of meeting Stuart Broad, part of the bowling attack that have tormented India so successfully in recent times, was indeed an exciting one. I could ask him, for instance, what it was like to be hit for six sixes by Yuvraj Singh in the inaugural World T20 tournament, or why Kevin Pietersen was not on the plane headed for Sri Lanka last month: a move that would surely have improved England’s stock in the last few matches.

But my attitude changed when I finally did meet him. Stuart has been on tour, but not of the kind we, as cricket fans are used to. Instead of taking wickets he has been writing about them in his new book My World In Cricket out this week.

As I sat down to interview him, I was immediately struck by the humility and professionalism of his demeanour. There was no arrogance or ego that sadly attaches itself to many  international sportsmen these days. Instead, he was very approachable and willingly giving out autographs.

Hi Stuart, so first of all congratulations on the book, I read a few sections this morning. What inspired you to get involved with cricket in the first place?

I was born into a cricketing family. My old man played for England, Gloucestershire and Nottinghamshire, so I was always around on the cricketing grounds when I was younger. That’s where my enthusiasm for the game started. I was lucky to meet some incredible professionals when I was younger, like  Courtney Walsh. It just developed in my back garden. I watched it on TV and it was always just a hobby. I just played it for enjoyment; I never took it too seriously or felt under pressure. My family were brilliant with that. My mum just took me to games and watched: it was never an examination or evaluation: we enjoyed it and that was it. It was a relaxed environment to grow up in.

When you were playing domestic cricket, and got the call up to play for England, did you find that a big step up, especially when considered the pressure put on international players today?

I was still only 19 at the time. I went from playing crowds of 5,000 at Grace Road, Leicestershire to the 50,000 that winter. It was definitely a big step, but I learnt pretty quickly that you simply don’t build it up too much in your mind. At the end of the day whether you’re playing for England in Australia in front of 100,000 or playing for your league side on a Saturday morning, it doesn’t change which ball you bowl, it doesn’t change the skill you have to deliver. So ultimately, it’s about getting yourself in the mental place where you feel comfortable.

So how do you get to that zone where you can feel focused?

I have a lot of routines which I go through every match. They make me feel like I’m at home whether I’m in front of an Australian crowd screaming to kill me or in front of a home crowd; it just makes me feel ready to deliver my skill every time. That’s what’s important to a cricketer.

You talk about this idea in your book, particularly during your time on the India tour of 2009. The crowds over there can often be passionate and intense; what was your experience of this?

It really is a big test as a cricketer to keep your mind clear when you are playing on the sub-continent. The crowds are so passionate about their own players: I’ll never forget when I bowled Sachin Tendulkar out at Bangalore in front of a crowd of 40,000 people. Before that ball, I couldn’t even think straight and when I went back down to fine leg, I saw the crowd were booing and hissing me, because I had bowled their hero out! I was only 21 at the time and that was quite a realisation to me. I thought “Wow, these crowds are so impassioned by their cricket”, and that’s why India is always an exciting place for me to tour. We are hugely fortunate that we have 12 weeks coming up out there with the Test series coming up.

What was it like out in Sri Lanka for the T20 World Cup and how would you evaluate your performance there?

We are obviously disappointed that we weren’t able to retain our crown from the 2010 World Cup as it was something we really wanted to do. But if you don’t learn from your experiences, you get nothing from them. We did have a young side while playing the tournament, mostly 22 to 23 year olds, so the next time we do go to a World Cup they will be 26 and 27 year olds ready to exhibit their skills on the world stage. We had some fantastic individual performances during the Cup, and we made some basic errors which cost us. But it given the format of T20, it was such a tight tournament with about six teams that could have won it on their day. So it was really hard to pick a favourite and I actually think that made it more exciting.

As captain of a T20 team, did you find it particularly difficult to lead the team given the fluidity of the format?

You can’t plan for it. You have to always think on your feet, so if one bowler gets hit around the park you have to switch it around and understand what the batsman is feeling. This is why I love captaining the format and I am sure all captains regardless of level will enjoy the format.

Given your upcoming tour in India, where pitches will play very differently from here in England, how is the team looking to adapt to the conditions?

We are very fortunate to have a month of practice matches in India before the official tour starts, so we have a lot of time to get use the conditions. But I think we as individuals have to take responsibility for our actions. For instance, we will look at how we play the spin bowling, and how we are going to bowl. Obviously if we do all these things, we will be in a strong position going into the series. We know the wickets are going to turn in India but we still have to put runs on the boards and we have the talent to do that.

As I left the book-signing, I couldn’t help but think that Stuart was very much what more sportsmen should be like today: passionate and fiery on the pitch, but thoughtful, dignified and articulate. With the India series fast approaching, England have a serious challenge ahead of them, namely, adapting to the slow turning wickets of the subcontinent: a problem for England in the past which Stuart alluded to. Having said that, with adequate preparation and men like Stuart Broad in the changing room, India will certainly have a challenge on their hands in the months to come.

s a staunch supporter of Indian
cricket, the prospect of meeting
Stuart Broad, part of the bowling
attack that have tormented India
so successfully in recent times,
was indeed an exciting one. I
could ask him, for instance, what
it was like to be hit for six sixes by Yuvraj Singh
in the inaugural World T20 tournament, or why
Kevin Pietersen was not on the plane headed for
Sri Lanka last month: a move that would surely
have improved England’s stock in the last few
matches.
But my attitude changed when I finally did
meet him. Stuart has been on tour, but not of
the kind we, as cricket fans are used to. Instead
of taking wickets he has been writing about
them in his new book My World In Cricket out
this week.
As I sat down to interview him, I was immediately
struck by the humility and professionalism
of his demeanour. There was no arrogance
or ego that sadly attaches itself to many international
sportsmen these days. Instead, he was
very approachable and willingly giving out autographs.
Hi Stuart, so first of all congratulations on
the book, I read a few sections this morning.
What inspired you to get involved with cricket
in the first place?
I was born into a cricketing family. My old
man played for England, Gloucestershire and
Nottinghamshire, so I was always around on the
cricketing grounds when I was younger. That’s
where my enthusiasm for the game started. I
was lucky to meet some incredible professionals
when I was younger, like Sir Courtney Walsh.
It just developed in my back garden. I watched
it on TV and it was always just a hobby. I just
played it for enjoyment; I never took it too seriously
or felt under pressure. My family were
brilliant with that. My mum just took me to
games and watched: it was never an examination
or evaluation: we enjoyed it and that was
it. It was a relaxed environment to grow up in.
When you were playing domestic cricket,
and got the call up to play for England, did
you find that a big step up, especially when
considered the pressure put on international
players today?
I was still only 19 at the time. I went from
playing crowds of 5,000 at Grace Road, Leicestershire
to the 50,000 that winter. It was definitely
a big step, but I learnt pretty quickly that
you simply don’t build it up too much in your
mind. At the end of the day whether you’re playing
for England in Australia in front of 100,000
or playing for your league side on a Saturday
morning, it doesn’t change which ball you
bowl, it doesn’t change the skill you have to deliver.
So ultimately, it’s about getting yourself in
the mental place where you feel comfortable.
So how do you get to that zone where you can
feel focused?
I have a lot of routines which I go through
every match. They make me feel like I’m at
home whether I’m in front of an Australian
crowd screaming to kill me or in front of a home
crowd; it just makes me feel ready to deliver my
skill every time. That’s what’s important
to a cricketer.
You talk about this idea in
your book, particularly
during your time on
the India tour of 2009.
The crowds over there
can often be passionate
and intense; what
was your experience of
this?
It really is a big test as
a cricketer to keep your
mind clear when you are
playing on the sub-continent.
The crowds are so
passionate about their own
players: I’ll never forget when
I bowled Sachin Tendulkar
out at Bangalore in
front of a crowd of
40,000 people.
Before that ball,
I couldn’t
even think straight and when I went back down
to fine leg, I saw the crowd were booing and
hissing me, because I had bowled their hero
out!
I was only 21 at the time and that was quite a
realisation to me. I thought “Wow, these crowds
are so impassioned by their cricket”, and that’s
why India is always an exciting place for me to
tour. We are hugely fortunate that we have 12
weeks coming up out there with the Test series
coming up.
What was it like out in Sri Lanka for the T20
World Cup and how would you evaluate your
performance there?
We are obviously disappointed that we
weren’t able to retain our crown from the
2010 World Cup as it was something we really
wanted to do. But if you don’t learn
from your experiences, you get nothing
from them. We did have a young side
while playing the tournament, mostly
22 to 23 year olds, so the next time we
do go to a World Cup they will be
26 and 27 year olds ready to exhibit
their skills on the world stage.
We had some fantastic individual
performances during the Cup, and
we made some basic errors which
cost us. But it given the format of
T20, it was such a tight tournament
with about six teams
that could have won
it on their day.
So it was
r e –
ally
hard to pick a favourite and I actually think that
made it more exciting.
As captain of a T20 team, did you find it particularly
difficult to lead the team given the
fluidity of the format?
You can’t plan for it. You have to always think
on your feet, so if one bowler gets hit around
the park you have to switch it around and understand
what the batsman is feeling. This is
why I love captaining the format and I am sure
all captains regardless of level will enjoy the
format.
Given your upcoming tour in India, where
pitches will play very differently from here in
England, how is the team looking to adapt to
the conditions?
We are very fortunate to have a month of
practice matches in India before the official
tour starts, so we have a lot of time to get use
the conditions. But I think we as individuals
have to take responsibility for our actions. For
instance, we will look at how we play the spin
bowling, and how we are going to bowl. Obviously
if we do all these things, we will be in a
strong position going into the series. We know
the wickets are going to turn in India but we
still have to put runs on the boards and we have
the talent to do that.
As I left the book-signing, I couldn’t help but
think that Stuart was very much what more
sportsmen should be like today: passionate and
fiery on the pitch, but thoughtful, dignified and
articulate. With the India series fast approaching,
England have a serious challenge ahead
of them, namely, adapting to the slow turning
wickets of the subcontinent: a problem for England
in the past which Stuart alluded to. Having
said that, with adequate preparation and men
like Stuart Broad in the changing room, India
will certainly have a challenge on their hands
in the months to come.

Dispute over Poptarts move

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The owner of Baby Love has strongly denied claims that Poptarts, the popular gay night, is to move to another club.

Sam Brandon, a long-time DJ at Poptarts and event promoter, has announced that he is leaving the club and is setting up a gay night at Plush.

In an email circulated among students of the LGBTQ society, Brandon wrote, “I am writing to you to inform you that Poptarts will no longer be running at Baby Love Bar due to increasing security threats upon the LGBTQ customers. It is clear that Baby Love Bar cannot support our mission of a safe night out and it is time to move to a venue that share our values.”

He claimed that there has been “a longstanding issue of homophobic abuse directed at clubbers” and also alleged that there has been “a decline in the attitudes of the staff with regards to who is let in.”

Brandon specifically highlighted a recent event, in which he claimed that a man was allowed into the club for three hours despite making multiple homophobic comments and acting violently towards others.

However, CCTV footage viewed by Cherwell shows that the man was in the club for less than thirty minutes under the supervision of security. The owner of Baby Love has added that any such abusive behaviour is not tolerated, and that the man is now barred. He also “strongly refutes” claims that the issue of homophobic abuse has been pertinent, with one member of security commenting, “I’ve been working here for four and a half years and no one’s complained to me about homophobic behaviour.”

The owner also denied Brandon’s claim that Poptarts would be moving, telling Cherwell, “I’ve been running this night for eternity. We will continue Poptarts at Baby Love as we have a responsibility towards the LGBTQ community in Oxford.”

Jack Powell, a third year at Wadham, responded to the claim that Poptarts would be moving, saying, “I think this is a tragedy for LGBTQ students in Oxford. I never felt more comfortable in my own sexual identity than when I could dance to Britney is such an easygoing place.”

A summer of extremism: from Lebanon

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This summer may not have been the ideal time to do an internship in a Western embassy in the Middle East. Since ‘The Innocence of Muslims’ appeared on the internet, the whole region has erupted in anger, and the brunt of this has been levelled at symbols of the West – most notably embassies.  

The tragic death of the US Ambassador to Libya, along with 3 other US officials, signalled the beginning of a deadly wave of fury that has spanned the entire Islamic world from Indonesia to Morocco, resulting in the deaths of dozens and hundreds of injuries.

In Lebanon, where I have lived for a year, the elusive leader of the Shia militant group Hezbollah, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, called for protests up and down the country against what he called the ‘greatest insult’ to Islam the world has ever seen. The largest saw tens of thousands of angry Hezbollah sympathisers taking to the streets in the capital, Beirut, calling for ‘Death to America’ (the country where the offending film was produced), ‘Death to Israel’ (of course) and, somewhat more puzzlingly, ‘Death to Germany’.

Sadly, Lebanon was not spared the deadly violence and in the northern city of Tripoli, fatal clashes broke out around government buildings after a branch of KFC was set on fire and vandalised.

Given the circumstances, I should probably have been worrying for my life, and yet paradoxically, the local press heralded a new period of religious tolerance in the country.

Quite unrelated to the protests against the film, this ‘new era’ of improved Muslim-Christian relations was proclaimed after the Pope’s ‘Peace Mission’ to the Middle East. The mood in Beirut was electric as hundreds of thousands of worshippers swarmed to the sea front in the hope of catching a glimpse of the Pope-mobile. Some entered into what can only be described as a religious frenzy, laughing and swaying about and whilst muttering hymns.

But what made this visit so significant for Lebanon was not the effect it had on the Christian minority, but rather the Muslim population.

‘I’m so happy he’s here!’ shouted Ibrahim, a Muslim grocer who had travelled down from his small village above Beirut for the occasion. ‘Look how happy everyone is  – it has proved what Lebanon is about.’

And he was exactly right. Somehow the German octogenarian had brought people together, regardless of their religion or sect, proving the incredible coexistence that Lebanon has been famous for.

Whilst the rest of the region was burning, Hezbollah remained silent. Realising the significance of the Pope’s visit, and the danger of anti-West protests turning into anti-Christian ones, Nasrallah judged the situation perfectly and released a statement welcoming the Pope to Lebanon.

Then, a week later, after the Pope was safely back in the Vatican, he knew that a formal reaction to the film was expected of him, and so he gave a fiery speech calling for protests across the country. As is often the case with Hezbollah protests, they proved to be well-controlled and peaceful. Indeed, the only injuries recorded were the result of celebratory gunfire.

Lebanon has had a tough summer. With war waging across the border in Syria, the country was beset by a spate of kidnappings, dozens were killed in clashes in the North, and angry protesters caused havoc by continuously blocking roads with burning tyres.

But, contrary to what the media may make out, it is not inevitable that Lebanon will succumb to the violence that has shaken the rest of the Muslim world, and that which is devastating Syria. The tiny country has shown an incredible resilience and is still basking in the honey-moon of optimism that followed the Pope’s visit.

I never felt remotely unsafe being in the British Embassy in Beirut, or in the city more generally. Instead, whilst protests may have been staged across the country, I trusted that the authorities had the power to contain the anger, and channel it away from the sectarian lines that marble Lebanese society. Whilst these leaders agree that peace is better than war, Lebanon will hold on and weather the storm.

Hunt should keep his opinions to himself

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Jeremy Hunt, the recently appointed Health Minister, has an infamous mouth. In 2010, it yakked about football hooliganism causing the Hillsborough tragedy and later had to apologise to the victims’ families. In 2011, it congratulated James Murdoch on the progress of News Corp’s takeover bid for BSkyB. Now it’s off on another rant and the consequences for the nation’s health could be dire.

“I don’t want a fat tax. I like my Coca Cola and crisps,” Mr Hunt told the Times last week- end. As for the abortion limit, he deems twelve weeks to be “the right point for it.” These remarks – the first a flippant quip, the second a personal moral conviction – are not only medically uninformed. They reveal a Health Minister dangerously removed from the population for whose healthcare he is responsible.

Let’s begin with Mr Hunt’s desire to see the abortion limit reduced from 24 weeks. Doc- tors are unanimous about the negative impact this reduction would have on women’s health. Only nine per cent of abortions take place after twelve weeks. These tend to be the most vulner- able or complex cases: young girls who either didn’t realize they were pregnant or were previously too afraid too act, as well as those with scans revealing severe foetal abnormalities. A 12-week limit would greatly reduce the ability of tests to pick up on conditions like Down’s syndrome. The spokeswoman for the Royal Col- lege of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, summarizes the government’s contradiction well: “Politicians talk about putting patients at the centre… How is the woman at the centre of her healthcare with something like this?”

Less noise has been made about the health consequences of Mr Hunt’s anti-fat-tax joke, yet they could be equally adverse. The health secretary’s refusal to consider taxation of sugary and fatty foods is a bad omen for the trajectory of obesity in the UK.

Evidence shows that if you want people to stop doing things that are bad for them, taxation is the answer. A ten per cent increase in tobacco prices, for example, cuts cigarette consumption by about five per cent. Britain is now the fattest country in Europe. A fat tax should not be excluded from the discussion of how to tackle our obesity epidemic.

The most worrying part of Mr Hunt’s comments, however, was how out of touch they proved him to be. The proposed abortion limit reduction demonstrates a lack of understanding of women’s health needs and the reality of women’s lives. Similarly Mr Hunt fails to understand that a tax on junk food is not designed to help muesli-munching politicians like himself, but poorer Britons who opt for unhealthy food because it is cheap. This group is the most at risk from obesity.

As well as his partiality for fizzy drinks and salty snacks, Hunt reveals that he had a “moment of shock” when he became Health Minister. Most of the country did too. He would be wise to remember that next time he opens that mouth.

Party Conferences – Pointless?

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Izzy Westbury: No

Conference. Noun. A formal meeting of people with a shared interest. Are important policy decisions made at party conference? No. Is it a meeting of ordinary party members? No. Does it have any effect on public interest? Barely. Lamentable though this may be, the nostalgic image of the grass-roots, policy-changing party conference, ladies and gentlemen, is long dead.

The first thing to acknowledge is that the focus has shifted and the aim of the party conference nowadays is a much simpler one: to survive. Certainly conference represents a reassertion of common goals and a once-a-year chance for like-minded people to converge upon an appropriately mundane location. But on stage, where the ‘real’ stuff supposedly happens, there’s nothing real happening at all.

The crucial point, however, is that although it may just appear a large theatrical production, everything that party leaders and MPs say and do is scrutinised intensely by the media. For them, it is a question of making it through in one piece. Ask any high-profile politician and I would imagine that they don’t use the word ‘enjoy’ to describe party conference. For them it’s a dress rehearsal, a confirmation that they can withstand the scrutiny and that they have the resilience to carry it off when the real thing – the election – comes around.

Anyone remember the David Miliband banana moment? Yes – that awkward photo. Does anyone remember any of the important and constructive ideas he set out in his speech? No, nor me, until I looked them up. The media is much quicker to pick up on any shortcomings or slip-ups than any real positives that transpire. But this is a fact of life, and one which most politicians have learned to deal with. If you can get through conference, you can get through anything. ‘The aim of party conference: to survive’

Party conference is not built for the now. It isn’t a hunting ground for grass-roots activists; in fact, conferences, with their professional lobbyists and free drinks events, have had to embrace and indulge big business. Funding is becoming increasingly scarce, so the stakes have been raised. It is all too apparent that money is the key issue now, and the parties need as much as they can possibly muster.

The impact of a conference on a wider scale also remains – the public may not give a damn at that moment in time, but it sets the standards for the future. A conference is a public stage where the politicians can practice getting it right. The value of a large-scale dress-rehearsal, and the money at stake, mean that party conference plays an important a role as ever.

 

 

Patrick Kennedy: Yes

Now look,” intoned Ed Mili- band, in his recent, courageous, autocue-less oration; “let me tell you a bit of insight into Conference”. He looked mock- sheepish. Coping with the meet- ing, he confessed, “can be a bit of trial.” I’m glad someone’s admitted it.

Parties presumably need token rituals of solidarity, wheeling out the tribal elders and arriviste sha- mans to reassure the faithful that the magic’s still there. Which is great – if you believe that incubat- ing the parochial narcissism of party membership in tiny cliques is genuinely healthy.

Times have changed. Sixty years ago, around four million Britons were signed-up members of a political party. Today, a paltry one per cent of the electorate are zealous enough to send off for their coloured rosettes and cutesy car- stickers.

Party spirit is not – thank God – a central feature of most of our lives. Ours is the age of the discerning, if fashionably apathetic, consumer voter, coolly shopping about for the deal of the day. In blissful post- ideological Britain, party confer- ences look at best redundantly antique, and at worst gawkily out of touch. Miliband’s recent rhetorical triumph at Labour’s Manchester gathering would have been so much more if he’d just cut out the conference and spoken directly to voters.

Even if the bulk of the conference seems vaguely irrelevant, we are interested in juicy sound- bites from the leader’s speech. And that’s a point: conferences apparently exist largely as glossy plat- forms for a speech directed at the people who didn’t turn up. The real audience is no longer the fawning party loyalists packing the aisles, but the great world beyond. (In fact, the fawning party loyalists are falling away as we speak. Bizarrely, three-quarters of last year’s conference populace were reporters and other commercial hangers-on.)

Conferences are hardly about honestly consulting the party grassroots; boil them down and they’re merely inefficient exhibition spaces for cheesy demagogues to air broad-brush generalisations. We the apathetic want to hear big rhetoric, highfalutin, soaring visions, but you don’t need to hold a massive ego-festival to justify it. You could sweep away the tendentious panellists and impassioned leaflet stalls and nobody would notice. Get rid of the conference detritus and speak to the nation. It goes without saying that party power is invested in the few at the top: if they were still loosely democratic, then conferences might be useful for crunching out policy. But if, alternatively, these partisan clapping-sessions are put on merely to nurse fragile tribal identities, then Heaven help us. We’re supposed to be “one nation”, aren’t we?

Interview: Natalie Bennett

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Natalie Bennett’s chosen venue for this interview is a community café near where she lives in London, which is very nice and supportive of the local area, but it does mean that the regulars popping in for their lunch are treated to hearing this interview first hand and shoot bemused looks at the fast-talking woman with the piercing Australian accent and big laugh. I wonder if they come to the same conclusion as I do: with her friendliness and willingness to engage in discussion, Bennett comes across as a genuinely nice person who just wants to change the world.

Bennett was elected as the leader of the Green Party of England and Wales in September. Though she has never before held elected office, she’s been involved in Green campaigning since 2005, and seems like a good bet for the party: experience in journalism should make her media-savvy, while a degree in agricultural science gives her credibility on environmental issues.

On her election, she declared her intention to make the Greens the ‘third party’ (the status that Nick Clegg rejects for the Lib Dems, the Greens would gladly take). Bearing in mind that the Greens achieved less than 1% of the vote at the last general election and only have one MP, this does seems overly optimistic, but you have to admire her ambition. Her confidence stems from her certainty that the Greens have “a very distinct political vision that’s unlike anyone else’s political vision,” as well as the electorate’s disillusionment with the main parties:  “people are increasingly looking around for new answers and for new people to give those answers.” In her eyes, the “neo-liberal project of the 20th century”  with “a grossly unequal economy with unequal wages” has failed, but all is not lost: “somewhere in there we took a wrong turn. But we can turn in a different direction now.”

Disaffected Lib Dem voters seem ripe for the picking, as the Greens oppose tuition fees, nuclear weapons and the war in Afghanistan – “All of the things Lib Dem activists thought they were working for! But the reality is there’s not that many Lib Dem voters even in their heyday, and there’s a lot of Labour voters who we’re after.” Bennett talks of showing them “that we’re a viable alternative,” and claims to be unfazed by our electoral system’s bias against smaller parties, which I find surprising until I remember that she’s hardly going to admit that any vote for the Greens could be ‘wasted’.

What shines through is Bennett’s strong sense of fairness: it’s just not fair that the rich should hog all the resources, or that we should screw over future generations by messing up the planet they will inhabit, or that women should still find themselves disadvantaged (in fact, she says, “my first politics was feminism,” and it’s something she is particularly keen to talk about). It’s all related: “The social and the environmental in my mind have always been very closely tied together because you can’t just go around saying, ‘let the rich continue to prosper, and somehow let’s bring us up to that level.’ Because that’s not physically possible. And so while you allow the wealthy to flourish with huge levels of consumption, then what you have is the poor continue to suffer, and will continue to suffer as the environment gets worse.”

As far as I can see, one of the core ‘green’ issues is how we get our energy. This battle will likely become bigger in the coming years because the infrastructure needs to be renewed; the UK’s old nuclear power stations are about to reach the end of their lives, at which point we will have to plug a yawning ‘energy gap’. The Government and Opposition would like to see that gap filled with a mixture of renewables and nuclear new build. The Greens, unsurprisingly, are not keen on the latter.

Bennett thinks that a lot of the energy gap could be filled if we just conserved more energy, even if this is considered dull: “Insulating houses and putting in double glazing and stuff like that doesn’t produce nice sexy photos that politicians like.” Alas, although this would be a convenient solution, it is blatantly not enough, and so Bennett would like to see a comprehensive network of renewables to fill the gap: “The thing is we know precisely what the fuel is going to cost, forever into the future: zero.”

She can easily reel off the reasons why she doesn’t like nuclear power (commercial lobbying, long development times, expense, finite resources of uranium, and so on). However, there’s an Energy Bill about to go through Parliament which may dramatically restructure the electricity market and supposedly incentivise nuclear new build, and she’s pretty shaky on the details of it. Perhaps this reflects how shockingly complicated it is with feed-in tariffs and Electricity Market Reform and carbon price floors (even industry insiders admit that they don’t fully understand it), but she isn’t overly sure about what the changes might mean, or for that matter what the international situation is; she claims that “pretty much every other country in the world – certainly every other developed country – is going less nuclear or dropping nuclear altogether.” Actually this isn’t entirely true, as various countries including France and Finland are currently building more nuclear power plants.

This all said, she knows there are gaps in her knowledge and she’s very honest about that. I can’t imagine the leader of any other political party confessing to a journalist, “I don’t actually know enough about that to actually know,” or “I shall have to get better on the energy bill I’m afraid.” She’s not a slick seasoned politician and it’s actually quite refreshing.

Some of the Greens would like to label their party ‘socialist’, but their new leader insists they have a “holistic philosophy” of their own: “I have many ideas that people would call socialist, but I wouldn’t say ‘I am a socialist’ because I am a Green.” In fact what she talks about does sound a lot like socialism with environmental policies thrown in, but I can see why she doesn’t want to pin the party down to a word like ‘socialism’ with so much baggage. The Greens need an identity and an ideology to call their own.

Sometimes the Greens are accused of being a one-issue party, but Bennett insists they have the full range of policies: “They’ve always been there, we’ve always talked about them, we haven’t always been heard about them.” Looking at a cross-section of issues – the EU, transport, economic policy, drugs, prostitution and healthcare – it is clear that Bennett is well-versed on them all, with strong opinions and a defined ‘party position’. She’s not a fan of austerity (“when you’re in a hole you don’t keep digging, and we’re very clearly in a hole,”) or of big business (“I think the problem is big business is innately un-green”). She stresses that the Greens aren’t anti-Europe “in a UKIP kind of way,” but is critical of the undemocratic and deregulatory aspects of the EU. Close as she is to socialism, her stance on these issues is not very surprising at all.

The Greens are essentially calling for a complete overhaul of the whole infrastructure of society, and their version of utopia certainly seems attractive; happy citizens cycle and walk to school and work, free of the burden of childcare or low wages, while old people live cosily in their warm insulated houses. Local communities rejoice in their wind turbines, using the profits from selling their spare energy to fund new roofs for village halls. China and other rising nations realise the errors of the Western path to development and find a greener way to expand.

While the cynic in me says that we’re too set in our ways to contemplate such a radical restructuring of society, it’s quite nice to meet a politician who really genuinely believes that the general public can be a force for good. She takes things right back to the beginning: “When there was a small group of homo sapiens on the plains of Africa, facing a whole lot of predators, it’s only by sticking together and protecting each other that we survived. I believe the human race is basically altruistic and community orientated because in the days of sabre toothed tigers and all the rest of it we’d never have survived if we weren’t.” Is she prescient or naive? It seems that time will tell if she’s right.

Zoom in on…photo blogging

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A lot of what you do is out and about on the street, has that always how you work?

The street photography on my blog has only really been going about a year, year and a half. Previously to that most of my photography was architecture, oxford colleges, some landscapes, bit of still life. But it was anything but people!

Were there any photographers that inspired the change? 

It was a lot of little things that came together, but mainly the work of two photographers; the Sartorialist blog, and Vivian Maier. Hers is the most incredible story! She shot thousands and thousands of pictures on her breaks in Downtown Chicago, thousands of rolls of film. But she never showed anyone the pictures. It only came to light after someone bought boxes of negatives at an auction after she died in an old people’s home, and discovered something wonderful.

 Two very different inspirations then?

Yeah, but I just thought, wouldn’t it be amazing if when I’m 50 or 60  if something remains for my daughter (she’s 4) to look back on. Thing that I love about looking at old pictures is seeing what life was like, even 20 years ago the way people were dressed. The things you walk past every day and never even think about –

 Do you find people willing to be photographed generally?

It’s now probably about 90 odd % say yes, a few who say no will have a genuine reason, a few will say no, but if I have the image in my head, and I know I can get that image I will try and convince them

 How do you feel if people do say no once you’ve got this image?

If I see someone on the street, the first thing I see is the image that I would make of them if I have the chance; I can see the picture before I even lift the camera to my eyes. So I just think it’s such a shame that they don’t get to see the image that I’m seeing. They’re so used to being photographed with camera phones, just snapshots, With film all I get is one shot, in one frame.. so if someone says no, I don’t feel rejection, I feel it’s a missed opportunity for me to make that image. You have to apply a little psychology to it as well- I never approach someone if they’re busy on their phone caus I know quite quickly that they don’t want to be bothered. They’re so focused on what they’re doing.

  How quickly does it take to pick up on your next subject as you walk along?

It doesn’t usually take long! But I need to be still. If I’m going A to B, and they’re going A to B and you pass them and it’s gone. I don’t like to run after somebody, I have on a few occasions! If I’m applying some psychology to them I imagine they’re doing the same to me. If they’re looking around and see some random guy walking towards them – you can see from someone’s expression in their eyes, that they’re sizing you up. So there’s lots going on.

 Sounds like you’ve got this whole process down to a fine art!

It’s usually really quick, once I’ve decided what it is that makes me want to photograph them, it might be their hat, it might be an old guy with a big beard, could be whatever. I think I’ve probably got about 10, 20 seconds to get my point across before they’re going to decide…

I’m usually out every day, in my lunch hour, if it’s not raining I’m out – In the beginning, my rejection rate was a lot higher, so I had to think, how am I going to get better at this. I want to get a yes every time because I’m not going to approach someone unless I really want that image

 Did you ever use this interest professionally?

I did used to many many years ago, that’s what I’d always wanted to do. But that job taught me you can have photography as a job or you can do it because you love it. I prefer it this way, if you’re doing commercial photography you’re accepting payment to do whatever it takes to please someone else

 What kinds of camera do you use on your blog?

[Nasir shows his first medium format camera, Mamiya RB67 with Polaroid attachment back, 10 shots on a roll, and a Rolleiflex SL66, taking the square pictures on the blog, with 12 on a roll] I started with 35mm film, but this [The Mamiya] was from an advert in the back of a magazine – it was over a month’s salary and I bought it second hand! It’s completely mechanical, no electricity, no battery, it works just flawlessly and has done so ever since.

 Have you always worked with film?

I got a digital camera and thought this is it, it’s digital forever now …but I got more and more frustrated with it, caus I was expecting pictures to look like they would have done if I’d got film, and they never look like that

I don’t have the confidence in digital, that the files will still be readable 20, 30 years from now – I can’t have that confidence. Whereas I’ve got film from over 20 years ago, and I can scan it, I can develop it, it doesn’t matter what computers are doing.

 You shoot a lot with Black and White, is that an aesthetic choice?

It’s a lot easier to develop, the chemicals are a lot easier to mix. And once I take a picture I want to see it. And not only is it a lot quicker to develop, but also it’s timeless. So I go back and forth, but I would choose b&w over colour

 Would you recommend developing your own film, if people want to get into that side of photography?

Yeah, start with B&w, and it is so easy to learn..the way I started to read up on a lot of stuff, was watching videos on youtube! You make a few mistakes, you can figure out what went wrong. You don’t get that with digital, everything’s very temporary. With film it’s a bit more real to me, because once you press that button that image is committed to film, like it or not.

 So the whole technical process is important to you?

If people have never experienced that, they’re really missing out – try it! If it’s not for you, at least you tried it. Film photography, that’s the root of photography, that’s the start of the process, using a material, put that in the camera, shine light onto an image, you develop with the chemicals, you do all that with your bare hands, that truly is photography

 What do you think it is about this city that inspires you?

I’m Oxford born and bred so I feel rooted here really. It’s not too small, it’s not too big and I always remember you could always notice the new batch of students coming in – there’s something about them, the way they’re dressed, they’re wide eyed. I didn’t always want to photograph them but I remember noticing them zooming around on their bikes. The university always fascinated me. One of the little triggers for turning to people was looking through a series of postcards I did in the mid 90s. And they look like I could’ve shot them last summer, the buildings haven’t changed and I didn’t include any cars or any people – just empty streets – and now I’m annoyed at myself. I wish I’d had the vision to include some people.

 Are you specifically interested in the fashions you see around? What’s specific to 2012 do you think?

The way that people dress now (and a lot of people do!) I think it’s called ‘the hipster look?’ I don’t know, but you see it a lot and, that’s going to change, that’s going to go out. So you in the middle of it, you students, should be taking a lot more pictures! Doing things that will date, so you can look back and think ‘yeah, you know what, I’m glad I shot that’

 Seeing the same sorts of people on the street every day, do you like to find them again and see how they’ve changed?

I love to find them again, and I find once people have seen the picture that I’ve made of them, then I’ve almost got them hooked. If I meet them again they can be so friendly, with so much warmth. And to me that’s confirmation that what I’m doing is worth something. But there’s some people that I’ve photographed and I wish I’d see them again and I never have!

 Any advice for those wanting to get into film photography?

Go to Poundland. It’s great stuff, great for experimenting with –it’s the best deal ever, what can I say?

 If you could shoot anyone, anywhere, what would you do?

I couldn’t narrow it down to one thing – for me, anyone on the street who catches my eye, that’s the next person I want to photograph! Vivian Maier’s story should be a lesson to us all about legacy and what we will end up leaving behind. Surely it should be more than just a bunch of pictures on Instagram. 

Julay!

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 Monks survey the view from the stupa in Leh.

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Little girl from Testa.

Ladakh is contested territory. Lying in the furthermost northern tip of India, dozens of military bases defend the Himalayan region from the interests of Pakistan and China. Life at chest-tightening altitude, with severe winters and blinding UV levels, is a challenge for Ladakhis. But despite these struggles, the region flourishes with a fascinating Buddhist culture. Bustling monasteries sit like birds nests on hill-tops, bright prayer flags are shredded by the wind, and there are stupas and chortans at every turn (make sure you pass to the left).

 And blocked with snow for almost eight months of the year, the remote Zanskar Valley runs through this perilous mountain shadow. With no real road, it’s inhabitants, young and very, very old, must travel by donkey or foot to the nearest town, generally several days walk. You might even see an entire kitchen sideboard being carried from the town of Padum to a village two days away. And although people have to be tough to survive, their welcome is warm. The Budhishat greeting, ‘Julay!’ echoes through this jaw-dropping landscape, a place that is austere, but entirely alive. 

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A resident of Testa village, Zanskar.

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Himalayan mountains seen from Lamayuru monastery.

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 Prayer flags flying at the Phirtse Lah pass, 5,500 metres above sea level.

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Tunduk and his grandpa, near Purney.

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Dance festival at Hemis Monastery. 

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Trainee monk at Phuktar monastery.  

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A junior monk plays at Lamayuru Monastery, Zanskar.

Ski Chic – Varsity Stash!

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Models: Fred Ellis, Maura Lysaght

Photographer: Melanie Gurney

Styling: Melanie Gurney

Video made about life of a deaf student at Oxford

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A documentary about coping with life as a deaf student at Oxford, made by a group of Oxford undergraduates, has gone viral on YouTube.

The film, entitled “Hearing… but not as you know it” was made by SJCtv, the student TV channel of St John’s College, and received over 9,200 views after being listed on the site for just two days.

It follows the life of Helen Willis, a third year Physiology and Psychology undergraduate at the college, who was left totally deaf after contracting meningitis at the age of two.

Willis said, “My parents were told I would never be able to speak and I would need special support for the rest of my life.”

Willis was given a unilateral cochlear implant following her illness, which gives her limited hearing, and the film explores how she experiences life in “two worlds of silence and sound”.

In June, Willis was awarded the £6000 UK Graeme Clarke Scholarship to help her in her studies at Oxford. The scholarship was set up to honour the memory of Professor Graeme Clarke, the pioneer of the modern cochlear implant, and is presented to deaf students on both the basis of academic achievement and commitment to the foundation’s ideals of humanity and leadership.

Miss Willis described her time in Oxford as her “first experience of the hearing world”, and explained that she has been “stunned” by the unexpected success of the film.

She told Cherwell, “Previous television documentaries on deafness and cochlear implants have generally been third-person accounts, and I feel that the best way to understand how the cochlear implant works and the challenges the recipients face is to directly experience it for yourself.”

Pascoe Foxell, an undergraduate involved in editing the film, noted that “pretty much everything […] was produced by St John’s students with the equipment SJCtv has bought in the past.”

There had been concerns about how the film would be vx cb rtreceived by the Deaf community, as use of the Cochlear Implant is still a “sensitive issue”, being seen by some as an attempt to escape the Deaf identity.

However, feedback appears to have been wholly positive. The video was passed on to the Cochlear Implant Children’s Support which has distributed it to parents of children relying on Cochlear Implant Technology today, and the President of SJCtv, Sally Le Page, said that “it’s especially lovely to see how it has helped so many families.”

The film has been viewed in around 50 countries, and has proved most popular in the United States. Indeed, it was featured in the American web-show, “Right This Minute”, in which it was lauded as “compelling” and “an inspiration”.

It is hoped that the video will increase awareness of the challenges facing those with hearing problems, and also encourage others considering study at Oxford.

Helen Young, a University Disability Officer, noted that although there are several deaf students at Oxford, university applications from those with sensory impairment are low, “particularly amongst students who are profoundly deaf” but was keen to stress the “wide range of support” which the University provides. Miss Willis also noted how both St John’s and the University have been “wonderful” in arranging any necessary support.