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Commentators

Christina Patterson: Angels in leather and the lure of God Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 29 September 2006

At a time when Islam is attracting new recruits with promises of guns, bombs and passports to paradise, the Anglicans are targeting potential converts with ice cream. Yes, really. Last Sunday, three churches on the outskirts of York took part in the initiative, spearheaded by the Rev David Casswell, to capture local hearts, minds and stomachs. The weapon was simple - a traditional choc ice - and the aim modest. "We don't mind if people just come for the ice cream," said the Rev Casswell, with characteristic Yorkshire bluntness. "Everyone has to start somewhere."

The Third Leader: Northern lights Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 29 September 2006

Here's a thing. Metropolitan observers, commentators, penseurs, and other rhyming nouns I can think of, have been in Manchester for some reason over the past few days and have been pleasantly surprised. Modern buildings, efficient hotels, mobile telephone reception; an absence of peaked headwear, small racing dogs and persistent precipitation.

Tony Juniper: Warm words on climate change are not enough

Published: 28 September 2006

A climate change law would be a clear sign of the kind of the action Clinton called for

Cooper Brown: He's Out There Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 28 September 2006

'I aimed at some bird, not expecting to hit it, and blew it apart. Dad went mental. It was a protected species'

Julia Stephenson: Green Goddess Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 28 September 2006

I'm still waiting for permission to put up my roof extension, solar panels and wind turbines. Although I was granted planning permission seven months ago, I also need party-wall consent, but the solicitor dealing with it seems to have disappeared. The last I heard of him, he was on his way to Heathrow on 21 August for his summer hols, but I fear he may have done a John Stonehouse and swum away forever. Or maybe he's been lost with everyone's luggage. I'm not blaming him, but I would like to crack on.

Catherine Townsend: Sleeping around Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 28 September 2006

When Luke invited me to cook dinner at his place, I was determined to conquer my almost pathological fear of the kitchen. My track record with meal preparation isn't great - I almost burned down my French ex-boyfriend's flat while trying to liberate a lobster, and the last time I had an "aphrodisiac" oyster, my date and I ended up taking turns all night in the loo. The closest I've come to cozy domesticity in the past couple of years is wearing a French maid's outfit and pretending to clean.

The Third Leader: Ring of truth Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 28 September 2006

I must apologise for a certain satisfaction when the present fails to work out how the past did it, as with enthusiastic experts and heavily breathing volunteers in matching T-shirts having a crack at building Stonehenge. Even less admirable is to cheer when theories and beliefs dismissed by modern knowledge prove to have merit after all. Put it down to fear, ignorance and envy.

Claudia Winkleman: Take It From Me Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 27 September 2006

'We've all lied to look cool. I constantly pretend I'm wearing vintage - when the thought of it makes me feel quite sick'

Denis MacShane: Europe: the issue that dare not speak its name

Published: 26 September 2006

Once again we risk being left behind, reacting to the ideas shaped in other EU capitals

Leonard Doyle: 'The small advances women have made are now being wiped out'

Published: 26 September 2006

Late last year the pupils of a rural Afghan girls school made a horrying discovery. The Taliban had hidden a landmine under a bag in their classroom. Their teacher was not completely surprised since a few weeks earlier the Taliban had left a threatening note in the village mosque ordering all girls schools to close.

Dylan Jones: Thoughts on fashionable Puglia Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 26 September 2006

Every now and then, almost as if by some swirling grand design, some particular part of the world is blessed by a creeping fashionability. Take Italy: once it was the Amalfi Coast, then Tuscany, then Umbria, swiftly followed by Sardinia, and now - the news delivered to your home like an estate agent's Exocet direct mail shot - it's Puglia. Or, more correctly, Puglia!

The Third Leader: Critical bashing Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 26 September 2006

Who would be a critic? Victims of a heartwarming concern for one's fellows and a sense of the aesthetic that impose an inescapable obligation to warn and advise, their reward seems to be either tedium or obloquy. And now some of them have been beaten up in a boxing ring in Vancouver by an angry film director. Really. Still unmoved? I should add that all four were volunteers, and that their opponent was Dr Uwe Boll, regarded (and with some justice, I might add, if it were not for my cowardice issues) as the worst film director in the world.

Our Man in New York: Invasion of the pink bunnies is making me see red Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 25 September 2006

A plague of pink rabbits has invaded Manhattan. I first noticed them daubed on pavements a couple of weeks ago. Then, while exploring lower Broadway, I spotted an abandoned shop-front wrapped in pink banners and slogans - surely the bunnies' hutch.

Charles Nevin: Age doesn't weary, so don't condemn Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 25 September 2006

Observations on Sir Ming Campbell's spell in Brighton, although mixed in its success, have agreed on one point: the age thing is a problem. I'm not so sure. Those of us who have been around for a bit are detecting a significant, if careful, swing, a definite, if deliberate, movement from salads to desserts, particularly in the last few days.

Rebecca Tyrrel: Days Like Those Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 25 September 2006

'The purchase of the Tia Maria tells me something catastrophic is going on with our finances'

Ron Manager: Is that a bung in your pocket or just a lazy lob? Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 24 September 2006

Large men in smoky rooms... bundles of cash for goalposts. Mud sticks. But when it gets dry you can brush it off a bit

Darfur: Let's hit these corrupt generals where it hurts Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 24 September 2006

Imagine that you are a citizen of an African country who keeps up with world events by listening to the radio. Two years ago, on the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, you heard the international community vow it would never again stand by as defenceless civilians were slaughtered. Yet, at the same time, genocide was unfolding in a remote and arid corner of western Sudan called Darfur. A year later, you heard about the United Nations' "Responsibility to Protect" policy, committing the same countries to intervene to protect civilians if they were being ethnically cleansed and murdered by their governments. While you listened to leaders congratulating themselves, African villages in Darfur were being destroyed, people killed and women raped on a vast, systematic scale. You knew the perpetrators of these racist crimes were being paid for and supplied by the government of Sudan. Then you found out that although the UN voted to impose targeted sanctions against those responsible for Darfur, only one retired general has been sanctioned. And although the UN voted for a no-fly zone, it was never enforced. Like many Africans, you are in despair about the 400,000 dead in Darfur, and concerned about the three million people in refugee camps. Their suffering has continued for three years, but when you switch on your radio you learn that UN peacekeepers had been despatched to Lebanon within 30 days of the start of bloodshed. You will not be surprised that the Chinese put their oil interests in Sudan before human rights. You understand the Russians value their arms sales to Khartoum and want to avoid setting precedents for international intervention because of Chechnya. But although the British and Americans say they care about Africa and human rights and democratic values and send generous food aid, they have held back on exerting sustained and serious pressure on the Khartoum junta.

Rebecca Tyrrel: Save the planet, or go to Harvey Nicks? Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 24 September 2006

Where's the instant gratification in a new boiler? I feel justified in blowing the £5,000 on a banana-skin coat

Richard Mabey: It begins with the bee orchid down our lane Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 24 September 2006

Alongside biodiversity, let us have some 'bioluxuriance'. Each species is a part of life's unfathomable intricacy

James Cameron: The green revolution has started Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 24 September 2006

The longer that we wait to reduce emissions, the more difficult it becomes

Christopher Silvester: The diary Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 24 September 2006

Disgraced Lib Dem MP Mark Oaten emerges as a Charles Kennedy loyalist In Greg Hurst's biography of the former leader. This was not only through his helping to conceal Kennedy's alcoholism but extended to an important role at Prime Minister's Question Time. Kennedy's performances were hesitant, but his team "became aware that the somnolent posture of Edward Heath beside him made the visual impression still worse. Each week thereafter Mark Oaten made a point of squeezing on to the bench next to Edward Heath and giving the former Prime Minister a vigorous nudge just before Kennedy rose to speak".

Jemima Lewis: Journalism is crass, especially for women Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 23 September 2006

Would media studies be so popular if it included a module on the self-loathing involved?

Rupert Cornwell: My fantasy head of the United Nations Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 23 September 2006

Bill Clinton, it seems to me, is an extraordinary yet underused global asset

Rupert Cornwell: Nothing the Americans do stops the slide into despair

Published: 22 September 2006

They have organised elections, and pushed through a new democratically-ratified constitution that has given birth to a national government with a true mandate. They have sent more of their own troops, and trained the locals. They have sacrificed some 2,700 of their servicemen and over $300bn (£1.6bn) of their taxpayers' money. But nothing the Americans can do has stopped post-Saddam Iraq's long slide into chaos and despair.

Alexei Sayle: The World According To Me Independent Porfolio Content

Published: 22 September 2006

'They're always at some jumbly-up event, like kick-boxing followed by a poetry slam in a swimming pool'
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