Princess Ariane’s first day of school

Els in the Netherlands has sent another update about Princess Ariane’s first day of school:

“According to this article, Ariane arrived at school with her older sisters, Princess Amalia and Princess Alexia, and their parents, Prince Willem-Alexander and Princess Maxima. Ariane had a new Hello Kitty backpack. In the classroom she met her teachers. She was shy at first, but soon this was over. The school director said he expects Ariane to do well. ‘You noticed how eagerly she wanted to go to school; she always wanted to stay here.’”

Thank you to Els for the update!

Yuri Gagarin’s brush with royalty


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Yuri Gagarin’s brush with royalty revealed in new biography” was written by Tom Parfitt in Moscow, for The Guardian on Tuesday 12th April 2011 15.30 UTC

Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, risked an extraordinary breach in protocol when he deliberately touched the Queen’s leg under a table on his visit to London in 1961, according to a new biography of the cosmonaut.

Russia is celebrating the 50th anniversary of Gagarin’s historic first manned orbital flight with a raft of events including concerts, a gun salute and flower-laying at his monument in Moscow.

Gagarin, then 27, travelled to Britain as a part of a world tour and was given a hero’s welcome in London and Manchester. A statue of him is to be erected on the Mall in London in July to commemorate the visit. The book is written by author and literary critic Lev Danilkin.

It claims Gagarin told colleagues on his return to the Soviet Union that during breakfast at Buckingham Palace he was so in awe of his 35-year-old royal host that he brushed her with his hand to ensure she was not a fiction.

“As a village lad, he only knew about kings and queens from fairy tales,” Vladimir Lebedev, a psychologist who worked in the Soviet space programme, recalls in the book: “Yura [Gagarin's nickname] told me he wanted so much to be sure it was a real queen that he touched her under the table, slightly above the knee.” In response to being touched, “the Queen just smiled and carried on drinking her coffee,” Gagarin told Lebedev.

The book, published as part of the famous Soviet and Russian series of biographies called The Life of Remarkable People, also details Gagarin’s struggle to grasp the rules of etiquette in the royal household.

When he expressed doubt over how to use the cutlery in front of him, the Queen apparently replied: “My dear Mr Gagarin, I was born and brought up in this palace, but believe me, I still don’t know in which order I should use all these forks and knives.” She then added in a whisper: “Each time, you take the knife and fork that lie at the outer edge.”

Authors Lev Danilkin, Francis Spufford and Orlando Figes will give a talk titled The Soviet Dream at the Southbank Centre on Wednesday 13 April at 7.45pm.

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Memo ahead of Queen’s visit to Ireland

Note: This article is from The Guardian.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Memo ahead of Queen’s visit to Ireland: mug up on peace process and the Turf” was written by Nicholas Watt, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 11th April 2011 18.34 UTC

The Queen will no doubt be beaming with great pride, assuming all goes well, when she becomes the first British monarch to visit the Irish Republic next month 18 days after the royal wedding.

Her smiles will not just be down to her happiness at the marriage. The Queen is said to regard the Northern Ireland peace process, which has led to the normalisation of Anglo-Irish relations, as one of the finest domestic political achievements of her reign.

It goes without saying that the Queen is delighted that violence has been massively reduced, though sadly not eliminated entirely, as Henry McDonald pointed out in a blog this morning. Henry reported that the itinerary for the visit, which I blogged about last week, will present a headache for Irish police as the Queen visits sights that are acutely sensitive for nationalists.

Charles Lysaght, the chronicler of Anglo-Irish relations, suggested in the Daily Telegraph that the Queen should have made a private visit because many Irish people feel uneasy about the monarchy:

Distaste in Ireland for the monarchy as an institution is not limited to hardline republicans. Many Catholics are offended by its sectarian character, especially the Act of Settlement 1701, which precludes the marriage to a papist of the monarch or of others in the line of succession. Singling out Roman Catholics invidiously from those of other religions, it has been invoked to exclude the Earl of St Andrews and Prince Michael of Kent from the line of succession.

Buckingham Palace, which has made clear that it will not stand in the way of any attempt to change the laws of succession, will no doubt be well aware of all these arguments. But it is pressing ahead with detailed preparations to allow the Queen to follow in the footsteps of her grandfather (George V) and her great great grandmother (Queen Victoria) who visited Dublin in 1911 and 1900 respectively.

Officials are unlikely to be given an easy ride by the Queen before and during the trip. Officials on both sides of the Irish Sea, who have discussed the Northern Ireland peace process with the Queen, say she has shown a keen interest over the years by following every twist and turn. Some figures who thought they were paying a courtesy call on the Queen have found themselves subject to an intense grilling.

The Queen is said to know the names of all the key players at every stage of the lengthy peace process. This started in 1993 with the Downing Street declaration and only reached a full political settlement last year with the devolution of policing and justice powers to the Northern Ireland assembly.

One figure who has come to the attention of the Queen over the years is Ian Paisley, the Unionist firebrand who was a highly divisive figure at the start of the Troubles in the 1960s. The Queen, who is just 15 days younger than Paisley, is said to have watched with interest the evolution of Dr No into Dr Yes when he agreed to share power with Sinn Féin in 2007.

Officials who chat with the Queen during the trip will need to mug up one other area. The Queen assumes that anyone who is anyone in Ireland shares her passion for horse racing. There are stories of officials struggling to keep up with the Queen when it comes to discussing the Turf. One of the highlights of her three day trip will be a visit to the Irish National Stud in Kildare.

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Fears over Queen’s visit to Irish republican landmarks

Note: This article is from The Guardian.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Fears over Queen’s visit to Irish republican landmarks” was written by Henry McDonald, for The Observer on Sunday 10th April 2011 01.27 UTC

Among the throng of bargain hunters at a flea market just off Dublin’s Parnell Street, the day after the itinerary for the Queen’s historic visit to Ireland was unveiled, republican sentiment was stirring.

Standing beside the tower of car tyres he was selling just outside the North Cumberland Street dole office, Christy Armstrong said that he was opposed to the three-day royal visit, which begins on 17 May. “Some people don’t forget. It would not be appropriate. I remember what happened to the hunger strikers and other things the British did. But just because I don’t want her to come here doesn’t mean I want people to kill her. I would rather that any protests that are held are peaceful.

“As for the people living around this part of Dublin, I don’t think most of them care. They are more concerned about the recession. I think they would rather choke a banker before they would choke her,” he said.

The flea market is just a few hundred yards from the Garden of Remembrance, dedicated to the memory of “those who gave their lives in the cause of Irish freedom”. This is one of the venues the Queen will – to widespread surprise – visit next month and where she will lay a wreath. She will also controversially visit Croke Park, home of the Gaelic Athletic Association and scene of the infamous massacre of 1920, when British troops opened fire on a crowd, killing 14 Irish civilians.

The itinerary is privately worrying members of the Garda Síochána, who fear republican dissidents will use the emotion attached to such sites to fuel a violent reception for the entourage.

A massive security operation costing more than €7m (£6.2m) is being put in place to protect the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh. On Friday, six days after the murder in Northern Ireland of a Catholic police officer, Ronan Kerr, in Omagh, a second bomb attached to a vehicle was found hidden under a motorway bridge, possibly destined for a town centre, police believe. Chief Superintendent Alasdair Robinson said that the device was “sophisticated and substantial” and could have caused huge loss of life.

Clearly republican dissident activity is the major concern. But police also believe that demonstrations against the Queen’s visit have the potential to turn violent, particularly in north inner-city Dublin.

The parents of Glasgow Celtic footballer Anthony Stokes were still in custody yesterday after gardaí raided their pub in Dublin’s Fairview area. Their arrests were part of continuing operations directed against republican dissidents in the city.

John Stokes was last month ordered to remove a 40ft banner barring the Queen from his Players Lounge pub. A handful of bullets were found in an outside shed during the arrests, along with cocaine worth €500 (£440) and three stun guns. Stokes’s wife, Joan, was also arrested, as was Paul Byrne, an uncle of the footballer.

Down on O’Connell Street outside the GPO, where the Easter Rising began in 1916 and where the Queen will pass on her way to Croke Park, demonstrators from the hardline group Republican Sinn Féin were collecting signatures in opposition to the royal visit as uniformed gardaí looked on.

Colum Moyes, an RSF activist from Dublin, said he was there to “demonstrate my opposition to a Queen who is head of armed forces that are still occupying six counties of my country in the north”. Asked if there would be violence, he said: “I wouldn’t know about that. There will definitely be protests, but I will probably be in jail because they [the garda] will lock as many of us up before she comes.”

But as he spoke, a member of the public started remonstrating with one of his colleagues. Businessman Padraig Sweeney said the protest was “out of line”.

“I run a B&B, and what we need in this city are more tourists from Britain. Welcoming the Queen means extending the welcome to more British people. That is what we want, not protests and living in the past,” he said.

Back at the market, Dubliner Briege Daly described the forthcoming royal visit as “progress”. As she rummaged through the stall, English rugby fans wearing the green, white and red Leicester colours mingled with residents, Irish Travellers, Nigerian and eastern European immigrants. Leicester were playing Leinster yesterday in the European Cup quarter-final at the Aviva Stadium.

She said: “It’s time to move on and let bygones be bygones. What’s in the past is in the past. I’m more worried about getting a bargain today.”

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Royal wedding planners powerless to evict protesters

Note: This article is from The Guardian.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Royal wedding planners powerless to evict Parliament Square protesters” was written by Sandra Laville, crime correspondent, for The Guardian on Thursday 7th April 2011 19.32 UTC

The prime minister, the home secretary and the mayor of London have all vowed that the ramshackle tented peace encampment yards from Westminster Abbey in Parliament Square will not become a backdrop to the perfect royal wedding tableau in on 29 April.

But the sound and fury emanating from the politicians belies an embarrassing powerlessness, the Guardian can reveal.

Despite numerous legal attempts, no one – from No 10 down – has been able to come up with any legal power to move the ragtag band of peaceniks, campaigners and eccentrics from the pavement between the Houses of Parliament and the abbey, where Prince William and Kate Middleton will marry on 29 April.

As the countdown to the wedding begins, Tory politicians are venting their fury at Scotland Yard, piling the pressure on senior officers to do something. The mayor of London, Boris Johnson, is understood to have made it clear in private to the Metropolitan police that he does not want anything – not a tin of paint, a placard or a tent flap – to spoil the wedding day.

David Cameron told the Commons that he could not understand why demonstrators were being allowed to sleep in the square, and stressed at prime minister’s question time that he wanted the peace camp removed before the wedding.

The home secretary, Theresa May, even created an amendment to the police reform and social responsibility bill, which outlaws the erection in Parliament Square of “any tent, or any other structure that is designed, or adapted… for the purpose of facilitating sleeping or staying in”. The legislation is about to enter its second reading in the House of Lords and will not be law in time for the big day.

At Scotland Yard, there have been high-level meetings to scour legislation and identify a clause that would give police the power to act. Given the level of political pressure, there have been conversations about the possibility of using emergency powers but, after a meeting at the Yard this week, it was concluded that there was nothing the Met could do. A senior police source said: “They are putting us under huge pressure, but … They made the laws and to date there doesn’t seem to be one we can act on. If there was we would have done it by now.”

Hopes had been resting on attempts by the Greater London Authority and Westminster council to remove the inhabitants of the camp, their 14 tents, placards, montage pictures of war victims and two home-made police boxes, by taking action through the courts. But most protesters have permission to stay on the Parliament Square pavement under a clause in the Serious and Organised Crime Act 2005.

There is a small chance that the GLA – which is responsible for the grass on Parliament Square – might be able to move two tents pitched on a patch of lawn at the edge of the square next week if an appeal by peace campaigners Brian Haw and Barbara Tucker fails in the high court. However, all Haw and Tucker need do is move their tents three feet on to the pavement.

Westminster council – which is responsible for the pavement – has more chance of success by arguing in the high court that the peace encampment is an obstruction under the Highways Act. But the case has is not due in court until 9 May.

“Unfortunately, we have no grounds to clear the camp away for the royal wedding, and, yes, it looks like they are going to be there on the day,” said a spokeswoman for Westminster council.

Meanwhile, some inhabitants of the camp – which was first settled 10 years ago when veteran peacenik Haw pitched his tent on the grass of Parliament Square – are making what they see as a generous gesture in a spirit of compromise.

One protester, Maria Gallastegui, has written to Buckingham Palace offering to cover up her placards for the day.

She received a noncommital reply – delivered to her police box. The Prince of Wales, the letter said, “appreciated” her offer and “careful note has been taken on the points you make”.

For their part, Cameron, May and Johnson seem unlikely to accept the olive branch. A Home Office spokesman told the Guardian: “We are still working with the police and other agencies to address this issue and find a solution to ensure that Parliament Square is in a fit and proper state for the royal wedding.”

Party like it’s 1981

Councils are to be given legal advice from the health and safety watchdog that they have no reason to ban royal wedding street parties. Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, has ordered the Health and Safety Executive to give an immediate ruling that street parties are not a health and safety threat, and will not be liable to legal action. Duncan Smith took action after the cabinet heard from the communities secretary, Eric Pickles, that some councils may be deterring street parties. Figures from the Local Government Association reveal there have been 4,000 applications for street parties in England and Wales. A government source said: “We are furious that councils may be making it difficult. Often it emerges that the Health and Safety Executive have done nothing wrong, but we end up with these myths.” Grant Shapps, the local government minister, said: “There is a tendency among some councils to gold-plate everything they do. We want it to be very clear that street parties are easy to set up.” A deadline of 8 April has been set for applications and at present Richmond borough council the London borough of Richmond leads with 64 applications. London’s boroughs have dealt with 500 applications, and outside the English capital, Bristol 53 and Cardiff 35.

Patrick Wintour

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