It took her 40 long days.But after battling against torrential rain and wind, intrepid Barbara Dowling has completed the first ever Brighton and Hove nanathon.The 77-year-old, of Westfield Avenue North, Saltdean, was so inspired after watching granddaughter Eli Tweed run the 26.2mile Brighton course in April she decided to cover the distance herself.And since April 19 the pensioner has clocked up one mile at a time with the help of the Brighton Marathon course map and a regular bus service.On a few occasions after battling the elements she had to abandon her walk but she was lucky enough not to suffer from sore feet or blisters.She said: “It was such an achievement for my granddaughter to run the marathon and I thought if I could do that I would love to but I could not run. So I thought I would walk a mile a day instead as it would be a much better way to keep myself fit.”
There have been countless people who have contributed to the Eastbourne Borough success story over the past decade.Manager Garry Wilson and head coach Nick Greenwood rightly deserve all the plaudits that come their way for guiding Borough from the County League to the pinnacle of the non-league game.Then there is record goalscorer Scott Ramsay and veteran defender Darren Baker who has played more than 850 games for the club.Not to mention chairman Len Smith and his committee who have presided over what has to be one of the best run clubs in non-league football.The parts played by the likes of goalkeeping coach Dean Lightwood and physio Ray Tuppen often go overlooked, though.Both arrived at Priory Lane 11 years ago at the beginning of Wilson’s reign and have been unsung heroes in the club’s rise up the football pyramid.Fans will get a chance to show their appreciation tonight when Borough take on Lewes in a testimonial game at Priory Lane for the long-serving duo (7.45pm).Lightwood, who played more than 150 games in goal after signing from Saltdean and is now one of the leading goalkeeping coaches in the non-league game, said: “The club was in the County League when I joined so a lot has changed in the last 11 years.“I was playing for Saltdean at the time and only signed because their goalkeeper got injured. It was a tough decision as I lived in Saltdean and they were one of the top teams in the County League.“I went for it, though, as I thought the set up gave me a better chance of playing at a higher level and I have been proved right.“I had to stop playing six years ago when I had a bad hip injury. I hadn’t really thought about coaching but Garry and Nick asked me to come and help out and it’s gone from there.“At first I did it just to get out of the house and stay involved but in the last four years I have spent a lot of time doing my badges. I am one of less than 300 in the country to hold the FA’s goalkeeping badge.“It is a big commitment and you can count on the fingers of one hand the number of games I have missed over the last 11 years. You certainly have to have an understanding wife!”Tuppen admits he also had to think hard before following Wilson to Priory Lane from Hastings United as it meant a drop down the pyramid.The 61-year-old’s ability to patch up players has been invaluable for a club which has prospered despite limited resources with Wilson once describing him as his best ever signing.Tuppen said: “That quote always seems to crop up. It was great for him to say that and I do appreciate it as my job is not really a very glamorous one.“The majority of the job is filling up water bottles and rubbing players’ legs so I only usually get mentioned when something bad happens, like when Danny Knowles broke his leg last season.“Towards the end of every season I do think about giving up because it is a hell of a commitment but I love being in the dressing room with all the banter. It helps keep me young.“My treatment table is also a bit of a psychologist’s couch for the players. I’m just glad there isn’t a camera in my room to catch all the stuff that goes on in there!”A silent auction is being held on the Borough website for a VIP day at Manchester City donated by Gareth Barry and four hospitality tickets for an Albion game. Closing date is August 10.
Great News – in 2010/11 Saltdean United will be represented at all levels within the Club for the first time since formation. We will have teams from Under 7′s all the way through to senior level, including Under 16 and in the Youth League at Under 18. This is a tremendous achievement and rewards the hard work of all those involved in the club from the youth levels all the way through to the Senior Squad. Good luck to all teams in the coming season and let us continue to represent our community in the positive and nurturing way that we have built our fonundations on.
Thousands of people will have to travel miles to get to their nearest bank after a swathe of branch closures. HSBC has provoked anger by announcing the closure of dozens of branches they claim are little-used, including ones in Worthing and Saltdean. And villagers living in Patcham will be left without a bank when the Halifax shuts its doors in November. Most high street chains are reviewing their network as they look to save money in the wake of the credit crunch. Royal Bank of Scotland, which lost billions at the peak of the crash, is selling off 318 branches around the country. The taxpayer-owned Lloyds Banking Group was ordered to sell a fifth of its retail network following its merger with Halifax Bank of Scotland Derek French, from the Campaign for Community Banking, said bank closures have accelerated in recent months. And he warned that the closures could hit trade near the banks.
My appologies for sending you a further email. I felt this important enough to warrant its own distribution.
Worrying news about criminal & suspicious activities in our local area has been reported to me by Chris Kingswood our local Police Community Support Officer These include incidents of bogus callers, cold callers and suspicious males!
Please , please pass this on to anyone you know who might be at risk to these sort of individuals and keep your eyes open for anything out of the norm. You can report these to Chris directly.
A number of things need to be taken from these reports:
NEVER let a person into your property unless they can show you ID, and that you are happy with that, remember that you can call your service provider and set up a pass word with them that any member of the company would need to confirm with you.
NEVER give your bank card details, the service provider would not need them to take a meter reading. If they wished to confirm personnel details with you they would do so by letter or phone and then go through a security screen.
NEVER let any person into your property without first securing the door behind them, and don’t leave them alone in a room on their own
You can contact Chris as per the below contact information
Kind regards
Paul Yates-Smith
01273 447111
CHRIS KINGSWOOD
Police Community Support Officer - Neighbourhood Policing Team Woodingdean (Saltdean/Ovingdean/Rottingdean)
Woodingdean Police Box | The Ridgway Woodingdean | East Sussex | BN1 8AF
Telephone 0845 60 70 999 Ext. 19365 Direct dial 01273 306769 Mobile 07766997863
www.sussex.police.uk
Sussex Police – Serving Sussex
BOGUS CALLER
Last night (20th July) in the area of St Margaret’s, the High St Rottingdean.
Last night (17:45) a male made his way into a property, under the guise of being a British Gas meter reader. He was wearing a British Gas t-shirt with the British Gas Logo, but had NO ID or a meter recording device.
The male is described as being:
White; 5’10”/11”; Medium build; Glasses; Balding hair; Reddish cheeks; close shaven bear with sideburns; Chubby-ish face; Age 35/40, not over 40; Spoke with a Southern accent.
Blue trousers that did not look like workman’s wear, black boots with steel toe caps.
The male was reported as looking stressed at the time; he looked at the gas meter but did not take a reading or write anything down. The male then took a bank card form the informant and recorded their personal details along with details from the card.
Police attended, conducted house to house and scene’s of crime Officers made a forensic examination.
On this occasion the informant had a second person in the property and nothing was taken as the caller was accompanied at all times.
British Gas were contacted and reported that they did not have any staff working in the area.
A number of things need to be taken from this report:
NEVER let a person into your property unless they can show you ID, and that you are happy with that, remember that you can call your service provider and set up a pass word with them that any member of the company would need to confirm with you.
NEVER give your bank card details, the service provider would not need them to take a meter reading. If they wished to confirm personnel details with you they would do so by letter or phone and then go through a security screen.
NEVER let any person into your property without first securing the door behind them, and don’t leave them alone in a room on their own
MALE IN SALTDEAN AREA
Information has been received with regards to a male acting up in Saltdean, the information is:
White male 5’ 10”, medium build, short fairish hair, mid 30’s, smartish dress in jeans.
The male was seen standing at the front of a property taking pictures of the house. When the male was spoken to by a neighbour he stated that he was working for the phone Company Nokia, and was taking photos of open plan gardens. He was asked for some form of ID, to which he said that he had none, and went on to ask if there where any other open plan gardens in the area.
The male made off on foot. Should you see any person acting in a suspicious manner, anything that makes your hackles stand or you just have a gut feeling please report it.
I contacted Nokia public relations; they confirmed that they did not have any person doing any work of any kind in the area.
Further Report
I have a further report of the male taking photo's in the area, one is historic, the male ran off but this information was not called into the Police and this was back in Jan. It is this very sort of information that we need. It is NOT normal to stand and take pic's of property and when challenged as to your actions you run off down the road as fast as you can.
Also reported yesterday, (19th July) from Bevingdean Avenue at around 16:00hrs a male came to a property, saying that he had permission from Sussex Police to etch vehicle index onto the vehicle glass, when the male of the property came into view he made off, getting into a metallic green discovery K132TBX, the male was 5' 4"/5" tall, med build, short dark hair, the vehicle was driven by a second male but no description.
Sussex Police DO NOT endorse this type of activity in any way. Once again it looks as if Saltdean is on the radar of some not very honest people. If you see something and you don’t like it report it, it may well be the final piece in the puzzle.
Cold Callers
Chris has received a report of persons going around the area, talking about; transferring funds, cavity wall insulation and loft insulation and Government funding and the like.
The firm is "MILLER PATTISON" they are genuine, and the money is out there, but it is only open to the over 70 and it is something that you can get form the local Council. I have spoken to Brighton and Hove Council "housing" and they will be looking at passing on information onto trading standards, due to their sales style.
MALE IN SALTDEAN AREA
Information has been received with regards to a male acting up in Saltdean, the information is:
White male 5’ 10”, medium build, short fairish hair, mid 30’s, smartish dress in jeans.
The male was seen standing at the front of a property taking pictures of the house. When the male was spoken to by a neighbour he stated that he was working for the phone Company Nokia, and was taking photos of open plan gardens. He was asked for some form of ID, to which he said that he had none, and went on to ask if there where any other open plan gardens in the area.
The male made off on foot. Should you see any person acting in a suspicious manner, anything that makes your hackles stand or you just have a gut feeling please report it.
I contacted Nokia public relations; they confirmed that they did not have any person doing any work of any kind in the area.
Vote for our lovely local Saltdeaner Elly Griffiths
Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year
Unlike other literary awards, with the Crime Novel of the Year it’s what readers think that really counts. Voting is open from 1st to 21st July to help determine which books from the Shortlist of 8 books – all chosen by you, the readers, in a 1st round vote – will go on to take the prize.
The eventual winner will be decided by combining the result of this public vote with the votes of a panel of expert judges: Jenni Murray, BBC Radio 4 broadcaster and author; John Dugdale, Guardian Associate Media Editor; Natalie Haynes, comedian and journalist; and Simon Theakston, Executive Director of T&R Theakston Ltd.
What are you waiting for? Vote now! It’s not just your right, it’s your duty!
The 2010 Shortlist
In The Dark – Mark Billingham The Surrogate – Tania Carver A Simple Act Of Violence – RJ Ellory The Crossing Places – Elly Griffiths Dead Tomorrow – Peter James Gallows Lane – Brian McGilloway Doors Open – Ian Rankin Child 44 – Tom Rob Smith
Kindly folk of Saltdean - URGENT LOST BIKE - can anyone help????
Hi Nikki,
I was wondering if you might be able to help me? On Saturday 5th June my family and I visited the lido. On our way home we unfortunately left our sons 'isla bike' at the bustop! An hour or so after we realised we went back to see if it was there and alass it was gone.
I've asked the bus companies lost property but it was not handed in to them. Is there anyway we could put a notice on your website to see if itwas found by any locals. I guess normally we might contact the saltean police station but there isn't one- is that correct?
Many thanks in advance
Phil Buckingham
14 Porthall Place
Brighton
p.s I've attached an image of the same model of bicycle that we lost - our one has dark grey paintwork.
can you help? plerase email me here and perhaps we can get the bike back
June 2010 - ChillFilms
Cheers Tim and Janet for the great film - find them here
"Plant & Book Sale" on Saturday, May 22 at 3:00pm.
Event: Plant & Book Sale
What: Fundraiser
Start Time: Saturday, May 22 at 3:00pm
End Time: Saturday, May 22 at 5:00pm
Where: St Martins Church, Longridge Avenue, Saltdean
Creative Writing - Saltdean Scribblers Open Evening
Open invitation for all. Come and hear what we've been up to. Bring your own writing that's been tucked away. Readings and open mic, competitions, discussions and refreshments.
No tickets required, just turn up. Free Event (contribution for refreshment)
All ages welcome, children accompanied by an adult.
Date: Thursday 20 May
Time: 6.30-8.30pm
Venue: Saltdean Library
Saltdean's only bank to close
HSBC BANK CLOSURE
The only bank in Saltdean, the popular HSBC in Longridge Avenue, is scheduled to close in June. The branch provides a vital community service to local residents and businesses. Its closure will mean an increased risk of crime as customers will have to carry cash over prolonged distances.
Local parliamentary candidate Simon Burgess (Labour) has given his support to preventing the closure; other candidates have yet to respond.
The Argus news desk is proposing to run a story on the impact of the closure next week.
Saltdean residents are urged to contact local political candidates to canvass their views on the bank’s position, and to contact HSBC spokesperson Dionne Nicholson on 08456 03 90 93 or email servicequality@hsbc.com . You do not have to have an account there to make your protest. Their letter in response to my initial complaint stated:
”Customers are making use of other banking methods such as telephone and internet banking...and the regular 12 bus service operates to branches in Newhaven or Brighton.”
HSBC clearly fails to recognise the needs of Saltdean residents, not least those of us dependent on the hourly 47 bus which takes 40 minutes each way to Brighton, and the many without access to telephone or internet banking. The staff at the Saltdean branch provide an exceptionally good service, including social support to older residents, help with personal financial questions, and a safe and friendly environment for cash transactions. It needs to stay!
Want to support keeping it open ? If there is please email Kate here.
The only bank in Saltdean, the popular HSBC in Longridge Avenue, is scheduled to close in June. The branch provides a vital community service to local residents and businesses. Its closure will mean an increased risk of crime as customers will have to carry cash over prolonged distances.
On Monday local customer Kate Harmond (07889 988384) urged the Saltdean Residents’ Association to protest against the proposal. Local parliamentary candidate Simon Burgess (Labour) has given his support to preventing the closure; other candidates have yet to respond.
The Argus news desk is proposing to cover the closure and BBC Radio Sussex featured the issue yesterday.
Saltdean residents are urged to contact local political candidates to canvass their views on the bank’s position, and to contact HSBC spokesperson Dionne Nicholson on 08456 039093 or email servicequality@hsbc.com . You do not have to have an account there to make your protest. A spokesman from HSBC said:
”Customers are making use of other banking methods such as telephone and internet banking...and the regular 12 bus service operates to branches in Newhaven or Brighton.”
Like many others, local resident Val Barritt (01273 301314) is devastated. She depends on the branch to pay wages directly to the carers she employs to support her disabled husband; the Post Office cannot offer this service.
Businessman Rodger Meighan, (01273 304834) owner of HR Hardware in Longridge Avenue, said “After 30 years as a loyal HSBC customer, I have transferred my banking to Alliance and Leicester, so I can use the Post Office. It would be impossible to travel to Brighton after a long working day to deposit my takings.”
HSBC clearly fails to recognise the needs of Saltdean residents, not least those of us dependent on the hourly 47 bus which takes 40 minutes each way to Brighton, and the many without access to telephone or internet banking. The staff at the Saltdean branch provide an exceptionally good service, including social support to older residents, help with personal financial questions, and a safe and friendly environment for cash transactions. It needs to stay!
Ongoing CRIMINAL DAMAGE 15/03/10 Undercliff Beach Chalets. Racist graffiti applied to wall in chalk (occurred 9th March). Pictures taken and report filed.
VIOLENT CRIME 12/03/10 Saltdean Park. Fight between a group of children resulting in common assault. Offender arrested and dealt with by way of caution.
OTHER CRIME 04/03/10 Public House, Longridge Ave. Theft of money from games machine. No lines of enquiry.
17/03/10 Saltdean. Possession of an imitation firearm. One arrested.
29/03/10 Saltdean Vale. Theft of items by person known. One arrested and charged.
OTHER CRIME 02/03/10 Lewes Close, Theft of wallet 31/01 or 01/02. Undetected.
13/03/10 Cissbury Crescent. Paypal fraud.
News Our three local priorities are currently: 1. Underage drinking in public places such as Oval Park; Undercliff; Saltdean Football Club.
2. Traffic and parking related issues especially around Saltdean Primary School and the shops in Longrigde Avenue and Lustrells Vale.
3. Racist Graffiti (has been appearing on the beach huts on the undercliff).
Any information or comment on any of these would be gratefully received. If you would like to comment on the priorities we have decided upon, please feel free to contact PCSO Harrison.
If you have any time to help support the local action team and/ or Neighbourhood Watch, he would be pleased to have a chat.
Activity during the month included the following: A very successful Saltdean and Rottingdean Neighbourhood Watch AGM was attended by PCSO Harrison together with Inspector Fleming and Sergeant Davidson (and around 50 co-ordinators and members).
He attended the Deans Business Club for the first time and gave a short insight into activities. Also a request was made at this meeting for volunteers to join our Local Action Team Thanks to Paul Yates-Smith.
He attended the second meeting of the Rottingdean Local Action Team.
Vehicle owners in Tumulus Road were asked to remove vehicles from the pavement where they were causing an obstruction.
Daily checks on the undercliff made to try to resolve graffiti issues and also liaising with other agencies .
Friday Night Project (youth club) attended.
School traffic patrols carried out.
Lights seen up on the fields behind Greenbank Avenue turned out to be Talk-Talk filming (with the agreement of the farmer).
He has accepted an invitation this month to attend SRA meeting and a Bike-it event in Rottingdean.
Traffic in the bus lane on the A259. - penalty tickets were issued; and also vehicles whose drivers were using mobile telephone were awarded a £60 ticket (with 3 penalty points).
Other drivers acting in an anti-social manner were reported using Sussex Police Op Crackdown site (access through the Sussex Police front page).
The date of the next West Saltdean Local Action Team meeting is 21st April 2010. Start time is 1930hrs and is at the Community Centre in the Lido.
Please let PCSO Harrison know if you would be able to join the group.
April 2010 update - new Website for St Nicholas Church here
Creative Writing - Saltdean Scribblers Open Evening
Saltdean Library
Thursday 20 May, 6.30-8.30pm
Free Event (contribution for refreshment)
Open invitation for all. Come and hear what we've been up to. Bring your own writing that's been tucked away. Readings and open mic, competitions, discussions and refreshments.
No tickets required, just turn up.
All ages welcome, children accompanied by an adult.
ARTISTS OPEN HOUSES will be Open again during May 2010.
AOH - The Rottingdean and Downs Artists Open House Trail for May 2010 is 13 venues representing the work of about 100 artists. This runs during the Brighton Festival. The Rottingdean and Downs trail has venues in Rottingdean, Ovingdean, Woodingdean and Saltdean. These included a church, a shop, galleries and artists houses with a wide range of work on show. All Houses are open from Saturday 1st May for four weekends, with some also open for the final weekend in May and holiday Mondays. if you are searching for something special, there are a really fabulous collection of work on show. 13 venues to explore and enjoy.
This trail has the advantage of very easy parking near all the houses, so there is no reason not to explore these venues. Combine your visit with a walk along the Undercliff, Downs or Rottingdean Pond and a meal in Rottingdean and make it a real day out. Also, many of the houses offer refreshments, Cakes, Drinks, etc. to keep you going.
LIFEstival will be held over 2 days Sat 1st and Sun 2nd May 10.30-6pm. Support a local Charity & support Saltdean Lido.
The LIFEstival is a health and well-being event to be held at the Saltdean/Lido Community Centre on 1st - 2nd May 2010. We hope you will come along and visit the health, well-being and holistic experts we have exhibiting. There will be the chance to try out some treatments, listen to some talks and watch demonstrations. Plus you will be helping the Chestnut Tree House Hospice, a children’s hospice in Arundel, East Sussex with 50% of all proceeds to go to the charity.
So if you’re looking for inspiration to start your healthier lifestyle, help with your personal growth and development or just want a weekend of pampering, then come along and join us at the LIFEstival.
We chose the Chestnut Tree House as the charity we wanted to sponsor due to the care and support they give to families when a child develops a life-limiting illness.
50% of all our proceeds are going to the charity and we welcome business sponsors so we can increase our donation to the charity.
For more information on the children’s hospice, please see their website.
We still have some stands available for exhibitors, so if you’re in the well-being industry and would like to exhibit please contact us via the contact page.
So put 1st -2nd May in your diary and we look forward to seeing you there.
The LIFEstival is a health and well-being event to be held at the Saltdean/Lido Community Centre on 1st - 2nd May 2010. We hope you will come along and visit the health, well-being and holistic experts we have exhibiting. There will be the chance to try out some treatments, listen to some talks and watch demonstrations. Plus you will be helping the Chestnut Tree House Hospice, a children’s hospice in Arundel, East Sussex with 50% of all proceeds to go to the charity.
Girls, come along for a fantastic evening of pampering on May 14th. Complimentary glass of wine and entry into the prize draw to win a 3 month membership to the Deans Leisure Centre
xxx".
Event: Longhill PTFA Ladies Night
What: Festival
Start Time: Friday, May 14 at 7:30pm
End Time: Friday, May 14 at 11:00pm
Where: Longhill School Hall
Armed police descended on a quiet street after receiving reports of a man brandishing a gun. Officers sealed off the cul-de-sac for several hours after residents dialled 999.
The siege in Hawthorn Close, Saltdean, lasted several hours in a bid to protect members of the public. Dozens of officers, including Sussex Police’s armed response unit, arrived at the scene at about 3.45pm yesterday.
Police sealed off the street before detaining a man and searching a car. No gun was found and investigations are continuing.
Officers did not leave the scene until after 6pm. A spokeswoman for Sussex Police said last night: “Police attended following reports of a man pointing a gun near Hawthorn Close at about 3.44pm.
“Police attended and closed of the road at about 4.10pm. “The vehicle was searched and the object which the man was using turned out to be a car jack. “The man was detained.”
Lido Meeting - from Sue Tyrell
The public meeting is going to be on Sunday 28th March at 2pm in the community centre - organised by the SRA and the SCA. Until then the 'Taskforce' are doing lots of things, contacting associations and societies and the such-like. Any helpers or ideas please use the saltdeanlidocampaign@googlemail.com address.
One other thing, thanks to a group member who sent me a link, I've set up an e-petition via the council website. I think they need to approve it before people can sign it. I'll post a link when I've got it.
See you at the meeting!
Sue
SAVE SALTDEAN LIDO
YOU WILL PROBABLY BE AWARE THAT THERE IS CURRENTLY A CONSULTATION AT THE MOMENT TO CLOSE SALTDEAN LIDO AND OPEN AN APARTMENT DEVELOPMENT WITH A 'WET SPACE' IN ITS PLACE. THIS IS ENTERING INTO THE PLANNING DEVELOPMENT IN APRIL.
WHILST THIS SITE IS INDEPENDENT AND FREE :-) WE AT WWW.SALTDEAN.INFO LOVE OUR LIDO.
I WOULD DIRECT YOU ALL TO THE FACEBOOK GROUP - JUST CLICK ON SAVE SALTDEAN LIDO - IN THE SEARCH PART OF FACEBOOK.
NOT A MEMBER OF FACEBOOK?? - I WILL MAKE SURE ANY UPDATES ARE POSTED HERE.
IN THE MEANTIME IN 24 HOURS THE GROUP HAS 570 MEMBERS AND COUNTING SO THERE IS A LOT OF INTEREST AND PASSION SURROUINDING THE FUTURE OF THE LIDO.
WATCH THIS SPACE.
Saltdean Residents Association AGM
All members of the local community are invited to the Annual General Meeting of the SRA on Monday 26th April.
The meeting will start at 7.30pm and will be held in the lower hall of the Community Centre on Saltdean Park Road (the Lido building).
Come along and have a cup of tea and bring your views on local matters, and listen to the latest news on local issues.
One of the last lidos in Sussex is set to close for good.
The art deco Saltdean Lido, which has been an iconic seafront attraction for more than 70 years, will undergo a £12 million redevelopment if plans are approved.
Owner Dennis Audley, who is funding the project to create more than 100 apartments on the site, said his proposals would mean the loss-making outside swimming pool would be concreted over.
Yesterday, hundreds of people gathered at the community hall at Saltdean Lido, in Saltdean Park Road, to look at plans which are expected to be submitted to Brighton and Hove City Council in four weeks time.
Many voiced their dismay that there would not be any swimming pool for local residents.
Speaking at the event Mr Audley said the city’s weather did not make an outside pool viable.
He added:“In the early years we would take £60,000 in the open season for three months. Over the past three years it has been £4,000 a time.
“I have made a loss of £250,000 running the building over the past ten years and I just cannot finance it anymore.”
The redevelopment, which has been designed by architect Mark Strawbridge, from CAMplan, will include 102 apartments and community facilities including a library, similar to the Jubilee Library in Brighton.
The lido will become an enclosed space which will be filled in and could contain either a children's splash pool, be used for concerts or turned into an ice skating rink in the winter.
The Grade II Listed facade will remain largely untouched.
Meeting to discuss the future of the Lido
There is a chance to see upcoming plans for the Lido in a consultation exercise at the Lido on
For nearly six years, British resident Omar Deghayes was imprisoned in Guantánamo and subjected to such brutal torture that he lost the sight in one eye. But far from being broken, he fought back to retain his dignity and his sanity
Omar Deghayes: 'I gave them a really hard time.' Photograph: Stefan Wermuth/REUTERS
It is not hot stabbing pain that Omar Deghayes remembers from the day a Guantánamo guard blinded him, but the cool sensation of fingers being stabbed deep into his eyeballs. He had joined other prisoners in protesting against a new humiliation – inmates being forced to take off their trousers and walk round in their pants – and a group of guards had entered his cell to punish him. He was held down and bound with chains.
"I didn't realise what was going on until the guy had pushed his fingers inside my eyes and I could feel the coldness of his fingers. Then I realised he was trying to gouge out my eyes," Deghayes says. He wanted to scream in agony, but was determined not to give his torturers the satisfaction. Then the officer standing over him instructed the eye-stabber to push harder. "When he pulled his hands out, I remember I couldn't see anything – I'd lost sight completely in both eyes." Deghayes was dumped in a cell, fluid streaming from his eyes.
The sight in his left eye returned over the following days, but he is still blind in his right eye. He also has a crooked nose (from being punched by the guards, he says) and a scar across his forefinger (slammed in a prison door), but otherwise this resident of Saltdean, near Brighton, appears relatively unscarred from the more than five years he spent locked in Guantánamo Bay. Two years after his release, he speaks softly and calmly; he has the unlined skin and thick hair of a man younger than his 40 years; he has just remarried and has, for the first time in his life, a firm feeling that his home is on the clifftops of East Sussex.
Deghayes must, however, live with the darkness of Guantánamo for the rest of his days. There are reminders everywhere, from the beautiful picture of Saltdean that was painted for him while he was incarcerated, to the fact that Guantánamo remains open 12 months after Barack Obama vowed to close it within a year.
There are still around 200 prisoners left in the detention camp, many of whom have been there for eight years. Of the 800 freed, only one has been found guilty of any crime and he was convicted by a dubious military commission, a verdict that is likely to be overturned. Deghayes, too, does not want to forget. He says there is so much still to be exposed about the conditions there, and about British collusion in the extraordinary rendition and torture of men such as him in the months following the American-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001.
Deghayes, one of five children of a prominent Libyan lawyer, first came to Saltdean from Tripoli aged five, to learn English with his brothers and sisters on their summer holidays. He would return and stay with British families every summer. Then, in 1980, his father, an opponent of the increasingly totalitarian Gaddafi, was taken away by the authorities. Three days later, Deghayes' uncle was told to collect his body from the morgue. Harassed and increasingly fearful for their safety, Deghayes' mother sought asylum for her family in Britain. They settled in the place they knew best, Saltdean, in a large white house with fine views over the sea. More than two decades on, the family still lives there.
After a secular upbringing in Saltdean, Deghayes became a practising Muslim while at university in Wolverhampton, where he graduated in law. When he finished studying to become a solicitor, he had a "longing" to return to Libya but couldn't because of his family name and opposition to Gaddafi, so he left for a round-the-world trip to experience Arabic cultures and visit university friends. He enjoyed Pakistan's mixture of west and east, and was then tempted into a trip to Afghanistan: he saw business opportunities and the chance to use his languages (Farsi, Arabic and English) and legal training (understanding both western and Sharia law) to help import-export companies.
He fell in love with the country and an Afghani woman; they married and had a son. "I liked the country – such beautiful rivers and different terrains. The people were difficult to get to know at first, but if they knew you and liked you, they'd open their hearts and houses to you," he says. Afghanistan, it seems, triggered many ambitious dreams: he says he helped set up a school in Kabul, assisted NGOs, experimented with an agricultural social enterprise and exported apples to Peshawar. "I was generating income for myself but I had more ambition than that – to establish myself as a lawyer," he says. "Things were really good. Then this war broke out and everything was shattered."
Fearing for his new family's safety, he paid people-smugglers to get them all back to Pakistan in early 2002 after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan. He hoped his mother would take his wife and child back to England, while he planned to return to Afghanistan and continue his NGO and legal work. "I still thought I had nothing to fear. Even if there was an invasion, there was nothing I had been doing that was illegal."
They rented a house in Lahore, "far away from the war atmosphere". But then the Americans began paying large amounts of money to find Arabs who had been in Afghanistan. Suddenly, he was lucrative bounty for the Pakistani authorities. "The atmosphere changed completely. Nice Pakistan turned into a trap," he says. One day, their house was surrounded by armed police. He was seized, but not taken to a normal police station. Instead he was driven, fast and under heavily armed guard, between secure rooms in hotels and villas. A Kafkaesque nightmare had begun.
Deghayes says he was beaten and interrogated first by Pakistani officials. He thinks the Americans and the Libyans competed to "buy" him from the Pakistanis, and it appears the Americans won: when he was moved from Lahore to Islamabad, a man introduced himself as the head of the CIA's Libyan section. Taken between hotels by armed guards, Deghayes believes he saw a man who is now listed as a disappeared prisoner: an Italian Moroccan. "I remember seeing him; he was with me in the same car in Islamabad. He came out crying from the meeting, scared; he was saying, 'No, don't do this to me.'"
Deghayes also describes meeting a British interrogator when he met the CIA section head for the second time. "I was facing the British man, who introduced himself as Andrew. He spoke in an obvious British accent." According to Deghayes, Andrew said he was from the intelligence services and wanted to question him.
"I was really annoyed and said, 'You shouldn't do this, you're helping these people – I'm kidnapped, abducted against my will. Your job is to get me out of here. I'm British and if I go back to England, I will take you to court for what you are doing now.' Andrew was a little bit scared, but he looked at me and said, 'What case would you bring against me?' I had nothing in my mind. He said, 'Listen, if you answer my questions and co-operate with me, I will do my best. I will get you out of there.'"
Deghayes was shown an album of 100 photographs of supposed terrorists. He says he did not recognise anyone. One morning, he was tied, bound and blindfolded and taken to an airport. The "thin black bag" was removed from his head: he was standing in front of a mirror, guarded by two US soldiers. They tied another bag over his head, which "felt worse than the first bag – it suffocated me." It smelt "like socks or cheese," he says. "This was an indication of the new regime – there were even harder times coming up."
Inside the plane, it was mayhem: his feet and hands bound together and covered in bags, Deghayes was bundled on top of others in the hold. "People were crying. People were throwing up. Some people were suffocating, and there was a kick here and a kick there: 'Get your head down, you bastard!' Things like that. Then the plane took off and you could smell [the guards] drinking spirits."
They landed in what he later realised was Bagram military air base. Here, Deghayes' clothes were taken away and he was given two pieces of blue uniform. He was not allowed to speak to fellow inmates, and was bound to barbed wire before, he says, being beaten and made to suffer "all sorts of humiliation". He spent several months there. "There were no rules in Bagram; people just went in and kicked people if they didn't like them."
He says he did not eat for more than 50 days. "I was really sick; I became a skeleton. I couldn't walk any more. I lost my mind – I was really scared for my mental safety. I tried to eat but I threw up. I started to hear voices in my head because of the hunger. People would say something and I could not understand what they were saying. You hear shouts and you're speaking to yourself inside your head. I started to become really scared because I thought I was losing my brains and going crazy."
While he was in Bagram, he was again interrogated several times by officials he believes were from Britain. "They felt I was lying to them. I said to them I studied in Holborn, London. They said, 'Which train did you take to get there?' They didn't believe anything," he says. "They weren't free to do what they liked; the Americans were running the show." When he said he was too sick to speak, they called him "a bandit".
His British interrogators "came up with lots of stupid things" – suggesting the scubadiving lessons he had taken in the shabby lido in Saltdean, within yards of his family home, were terrorist training. "The Americans took that up in Guantánamo. It was a big headache. They showed me books of military scubadiving and ships and mines and they said, 'Which ones did you see?'" The British also accused him of teaching people to fight in terrorist training camps in Chechnya, and claimed they had secret video evidence.
Deghayes had never been to Chechnya, and thought all these allegations laughable. Only later did he discover through Clive Stafford Smith, director of the human rights charity Reprieve, that his apparent appearance in an Islamic terrorist training video in Chechnya was the crucial evidence in a flimsy case against him. The authorities refused to give Stafford Smith, who campaigned for Guantánamo detainees, a copy of this videotape, but he eventually obtained one through the BBC.
It was, says the Reprieve director, an obvious case of mistaken identity: the person depicted lacked Deghayes' small childhood scar on his face. Stafford Smith was able to show that the videotape was of a completely different person, actually a Chechnyan rebel called Abu Walid, who was dead. "This was typical of the whole Guantánamo experience," says Stafford Smith. "They said they had evidence and they wouldn't let you see it. Then when you did, it was incorrect."
After two months in Bagram, Deghayes was flown to Guantánamo in autumn 2002. There, prisoners were treated brutally. According to Deghayes, when guards physically subdued them by tying them down, they would "do actions to pretend as if they are raping you. They put you down on your stomach. It was really horrible, all sexual and psychological stuff." On other occasions, he says, guards would hold a prisoner's head and "bang it on the floor".
Deghayes developed a personal policy of resistance. Guards would typically arrive at a prisoner's cell and spray pepper and other chemicals through the "bean-hole", the hatch in the door. While most prisoners cowered at the back of their cell, Deghayes says he would grab the guards' hands and attack them. He fought back, as viciously as he could, trying to take the fights with guards out of the privacy of his cell and into the corridors.
"It was chaos; they would fall on top of each other and it was embarrassing [for them]. They were wearing all this heavy stuff [body armour] which didn't help either," he says. Some guards became afraid of going into his cell. Most, he says, were Puerto Rican and were not driven by the patriotism of the "war on terror". They did not want to get hurt for their meagre wages.
Deghayes did not realise how badly his eye had been beaten until a year after the incident, when he looked in a mirror for the first time in four years. He accepts his resistance caused him more physical pain, but believes it subsequently helped him. In the camp, he was less fearful.
"I was targeted more, but I was also relaxed compared with others who didn't do that. It was really scary for [the guards] to come into my cell," he says. "Being humiliated by getting beaten up is better than giving your own trousers out. If I'd done those things, I would've been really bitter now. I'm probably less bitter than anyone else because I know I gave them a really hard time. If I had given in, and all this was bottled up, I would have been like I see them [other ex-prisoners] – really bitter, full of hatred."
Deghayes says his suffering made his faith stronger; it helped him survive. "We knew there's a Muslim [God] behind things, there's a hereafter, our patience and hardships will be rewarded and the pain has to end sometime. Our religion teaches these things – the good always prevails and the bad is only temporary; the patience of Job, the patience of Moses. All these teachings make a difference." Praying five times a day delivered transcendence, removing him from the material world of bodily suffering. "My body and physical being can be chained, can be tarnished, can be beaten, can be raped," he says now, "but not the spiritual: that is something that nobody can bind down. The spirit is what makes us who we are."
As a campaign to free him gained momentum back in Brighton, Deghayes languished in Guantánamo for nearly six years. He was never charged or convicted of anything, by any authority. "And never been apologised to either," he adds. Finally, in August 2007, the British government requested the release of Deghayes and four other detainees who were legal British residents. In the month before his release in December 2007, he says, he was deliberately fed well so he would not emerge looking gaunt and half-starved. "For one month we were fattened up with milk shakes, chocolates and really good cakes."
When he returned to his family in Saltdean, he was happy but also disorientated. "You know if you are in a forest or walking on the moon, you can't tell what is what. I was like this when I came out," Deghayes says. He was stunned by some of the changes in Britain. "To my shock, when I came out from prison the whole country had changed – the surveillance, the Islamophobia, the control orders, secret evidence, and people being under curfews not being able to leave the house." His neighbourhood also appeared to have altered: "We never had thugs and mobs in the street before, and kids didn't go binge-drinking or stealing. When I came back, these were some of the changes that I had to adjust to," he says.
While he is very appreciative of the support he had in Brighton, after he was freed his family was targeted by racist teenagers who bullied his nephews and threw stones and bottles at their house for months. This stopped, abruptly, after a community meeting and media coverage led the police, rather belatedly, to install a video camera in the window of their home.
His imprisonment also caused his marriage to break down. His wife wrote to him in prison but her letters were never delivered; nor were his to her. "It's cruel, isn't it? These were just normal letters between husband and wife." Both believed they had abandoned each other, and they divorced. She now lives with her family in Afghanistan. His son, Sulaiman, who is now eight, is staying with Deghayes' mother in the Emirates. They hope eventually to bring him to Britain and give him a western education.
Two years after he was released, Deghayes remarried in December and is now busy buying furniture for a new place in Brighton. "Brighton is such a nice city. You can just walk by the sea, and the fresh air comes across. It reminds me of Tripoli. Before, I used to long for Tripoli; now, only recently, I have started to prefer Brighton. Maybe when you are younger you want to go back to dreams, and when you get to 40 you start to think, this is nicer, this is really what I like."
Deghayes now works with Reprieveand other survivors of Guantánamo on legal challenges, including a civil case being brought against the Home Office with help from Gareth Peirce, the human rights lawyer. Deghayes hopes there will be a public inquiry into Guantánamo to bring those to account who were involved in his interrogation. Financial damages are not, he says, his motivation. "Even if I get damages, I will give them to charity. The court is an opportunity to embarrass and expose those who committed these crimes."
While Reprieve campaigned to get Deghayes released, Stafford Smith explains how Deghayes "was a tremendously helpful ally in Guantánamo because he was fluent in English and he had a bit of legal training". Stafford Smith brought him legal textbooks but they were censored as a "threat" to national security, and he says he worried for Deghayes' safety during his incarceration. "If it had been me, I would have taken the course of quieter resistance. I was always afraid for Omar, that he would get himself beaten up. I was concerned for him because he was constantly being beaten up by the guards, but there's nothing you can do to stop Omar loudly saying what is just and right."
Stafford Smith believes Deghayes has fared better than many veterans of Guantánamo since his release because he had the support of his family, an education – and because he has taken a very positive approach to his experiences. "He's not just sat back and taken it; he's tried to do something positive. Omar works a lot with us to try to help other prisoners who are still in Guantánamo. He's also always been up for a good argument or a good debate."
Deghayes appears remarkably calm; but his brother, Abubaker, says he has noticed signs of trauma. "His memory is not as good as it was. He forgets to switch off lights. If he opens a window, it stays open. He stays up at night a lot, thinking." Abubaker is not surprised his brother struggles to sleep. "Imagine the lights are on for six years." Has Deghayes changed as a person? "A lot of the things Omar had in his character seem to have deepened, like rebellion and resistance and not accepting oppression. I think they became more rooted in him rather than being beaten out of him."
But isn't he ever tempted to retreat to a quiet place, start his own business, and renounce the hassles of political campaigning? "I don't want that life," Deghayes says firmly. "I never intended to live like that before imprisonment, and nor do I intend that after imprisonment. I would not be true to myself if I did.
"Life is worth more. It's good to be a number in society rather than a zero. There are many zeros around but every human is worthy of being a number, and I hope I will be something of a change for the good, rather than for harm and wars. I hope so. I really hope so."