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Friday, June 6, 2014

Latest roadworks bulletin


Latest roadworks in the area notified by Denbighshire County Council are;

A5 from area boundary to Queen Street, Llangollen, temporary traffic lights from June 23-27 to allow gully repairs.

Outside Dobson & Crowther, Berwyn Road, Llangollen, temporary traffic lights from June 23-26 to allow gas works.

A5 Regent Street, Llangollen, temporary traffic lights from June 9-13 to allow retaining wall works.

A5 from area boundary to Queen Street, Llangollen, until June 26 stop/go to allow cyclic maintenance work

A5, Canoe Centre, Berwyn Road, Llangollen, from June 26-July 7 temporary traffic lights to allow water works.

Police appeal following A5 assault

An appeal for witnesses is being made following an incident on the A5 on Wednesday, June 4 involving a cyclist and a motorist.
 
At around 11am a motorist travelling from Llangollen is believed to have been assaulted by a cyclist after both stopped at the side of the A5 road near Berwyn.
 
The motorist sustained minor injury however police remain keen to trace witnesses and anyone who may hold information.
 
PC 1751 Mark Roberts who is investigating said: “At the time of the incident, a number of motorists passed by so it’s possible that people witnessed the assault.
 
"Furthermore, the cyclist is believed to have been riding with a group of up to 12 individuals – some of whom were described as wearing yellow high visibility jackets which possibly had a blue band at the lower part of the jacket.
 
“I appeal to anyone who witnessed the incident or has information to please contact me or my colleagues at Llangollen police station on 101 quoting reference number R083184.
 
Alternatively, individuals with information can contact the Crimestoppers charity anonymously on 0800 555 111.
 

Plas Newydd fete will be held tomorrow


* The grounds of Plas Newydd - setting for tomorrow's summer fete. 

Llangollen Rotary an Inner Wheel Clubs are staging their annual summer fete in the grounds of Plas Newydd tomorrow (Saturday).

One of the organisers, Enid Law, said: “Its an afternoon out for all the family.
“The children can enjoy  the Punch and Judy and Magic Show and this year we have a children’s roundabout.

“There will be plenty to buy at the stalls - plants, cakes, toys and bric-a-brac and many more.
“Prizes can be won at the sideshows  and the grand raffle will be drawn.

“At 2.30pm a special ceremony will take place when  King Ben from Ysgol Bryn Collen and Queen Angharad from Ysgol Y Gwernant will be crowned by the Mayoress, Mrs Lube.
“Following the crowning all children in fancy dress will form a parade led by Chem, Llangollen’s town crier.

“Why not end the afternoon with delicious home-made refreshments in the tea tent."
The fete opens at 2pm. Entrance is free and all proceeds are to be shared between Macmillan Cancer Care, Wales Air Ambulance and local charities.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Special offer unveiled at Llan Leisure Centre

 
Llangollen Leisure Centre has asked us to promote the following offer ...  
 
 
 

Eisteddfod helps Kosovan family track down relative's 1966 appearance

 

* Ramadan, left, and Myrvete Gashi with their son, Lutfi.
  
THE big-hearted backroom team at Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod have helped a family uprooted by the bitter war in Kosovo to recall happier times when one of its members performed at the world famous festival almost 50 years ago.
 
It was back in 1966 that a young man named Sali Krasni appeared with the Yugoslavian folk dance group Rugova at Llangollen.
 
Sali died in his sixties about 25 years ago but members of his family never forgot how fondly he used to speak about his thrilling trip to north Wales.
 
Sadly, all pictures and mementos relating to the memorable occasion were lost when the family home was destroyed by the brutal war in Kosovo in the late 1990s, which saw forces under Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic attempt to suppress the ethnic Albanian majority's independence campaign.
 
* Sali Krasni, from the
1967 programme.
Like many ethnic Albanians, Sali’s family saw no alternative but to flee their native country and seek asylum in Britain 16 years ago.
 
Over the years Sali’s daughter, Myrvete Gashi, often thought how wonderful it would be if any records of his Eisteddfod appearance could be located.
 
So on a recent holiday visit to Llangollen from their home in Enfield, north London, she and three other members of the family decided to call into the Eisteddfod office at the Royal International Pavilion, Llangollen, to see if any trace of it could be found.
 
And their luck was in because the day they chose for the unscheduled visit just happened to be the one day of the week when the Eisteddfod’s two volunteer archivists, Jean Audrey Speare and Helen Roberts, were in the office.
 
They delved back through the records and soon came up with some fascinating pieces of information relating to the appearance of Sali and his folk group.
 
Not only did they uncover photos of the group, including Sali, in an old festival programme but also a newspaper of the day featuring a picture of him.
 
The archive team provided their unexpected visitors with copies of the originals before a colleague took them on a guided tour of the pavilion, which will once again come alive with the Eisteddfod in July.
 
The Eisteddfod’s Festival Support Co-ordinator Christine Dukes, who greeted the group from Kosovo, said: “They just walked through the door of the office and said they had called in on the off chance that we might have some details about their relative who appeared at the festival in 1966 as they had lost everything during the war in their country.
 

* The family look through the old records with the help
of the archives team. 
“Jean and Helen looked back through the archives and came up with a programme showing pictures of the folk group. They also managed to find a copy of a local newspaper of the time which had in it a picture of their relative.
 
“We arranged for them to get copies of everything and then I took them on a tour of the pavilion.
 
“Of course, I explained that the whole site would have looked very different back in 1966, which was before the pavilion was built.
 
“We were very happy to be able to help them and, luckily, they came on the only day of the week that our archivists, who are both volunteers, are in the office.”
 
Along with Sali’s daughter, 65-year-old Myrvete, was her husband Ramadan Gashi, 69, their married daughter, 36-year-old Lendita Olloni, and son Lutfi Gashi, 45.
 
Lutfi, who lives in Enfield, north London and works as a joiner, said: “Our family had a very bad time in the war in Kosovo in the late 1990s and came to England as asylum seekers 16 years ago.
 
* Sali Krasni appeared with the
Yugoslavian folk dance group Rugova.
“We lost our home in a village called Drenovc when it was destroyed by the bombing and had to leave the country for our own safety.
 
“It was because of this that we lost everything relating to the appearance at Llangollen of my grandfather, Sali, with his folk group in 1966.
 
“But I remember he often would talk with great fondness about his time at the Eisteddfod and my parents and I said that one day we would come to north Wales to try to find out more about it.
 
“We came to the office in Llangollen to see if they could find anything and we were very lucky that they found for us some lovely pictures of my grandfather which they arranged for us to have copies of.
 
“It was very good to be able to find out some information about him after all this time and the family is very grateful to the very kind ladies in the office who did so much to help us.”
 
He added: “After going to the Eisteddfod site we spent a night in Llangollen and also visited other attractions in the area including the steam railway.
 
“It is a very nice town and it was good to see the place from where my grandfather brought back so many happy memories.” 
 
The curtain raiser for this year's Eisteddfod will mark the return of opera superstar Bryn Terfel to Llangollen.
 
The acclaimed bass baritone will be playing the lead in a special English-language production of Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street featuring an all-Welsh cast.
 
This year's will also feature concerts by Dutch jazz sensation Caro Emerald and veteran British rockers Status Quo as well as a world premiere of a new work, Adiemus Colores, by top composer Karl Jenkins.
 
He will conduct his Latin American themed work with American tenor Noah Stewart, Venezuelan trumpeter Pacho Flores and Latvian accordion player Ksenija Sidorova to the accompaniment of the Llangollen International Eisteddfod Orchestra.
 
The Friday night concert, Spirit of Unity, will feature the Cape Town Opera, Africa’s premiere opera company, famed for their "vibrant vocalism and high-octane stage performances". 
 
Appearing with them will be Wales’ representative in Cardiff Singer of the World, Gary Griffiths, the Wales Millennium Centre Only Kidz Aloud Chorus under the baton of celebrity conductor Tim Rhys Evans and British Sinfonietta, one of the UK's leading independent professional orchestras.
 
The Choir of the World competition for the Pavarotti Trophy on the Saturday night is the blue riband event of the week-long festival which will close with a Sunday night concert by Status Quo. 
 
To book tickets and for more details about this year’s Eisteddfod go to the website at www.international-eisteddfod.co.uk
 

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Libs Dems slam "misleading" broadband claims

During a debate in the National Assembly on the digital economy, Welsh Liberal Democrats called for an end to "misleading" broadband claims which they claim often see customers paying for high speed broadband contracts which do not reflect the speed of service they were advertised.
 
Eluned Parrott, Welsh Liberal Democrat Shadow Minister for Economy, said: “I am very concerned that many people in Wales may not be getting a fair deal from their broadband provider.  Customers are paying for high speed broadband contracts but in reality they only receive very slow broadband speeds which do not match the level of service that was advertised.
 
“Many businesses and individuals have contacted me to say that the current system is very unfair, because companies are able advertise that their broadband service is ‘up to’ a certain speed even if the majority of customers will receive a lower speed in practice. 
 
“The EU is taking steps to ensure that operators must be more transparent about the actual broadband speeds provided and end misleading advertising.  Under current OFCOM rules, advertised speeds must only be achievable by 10% of a provider’s customers, which is clearly unfair.
 
“The measures being proposed by the EU would help end excessive claims of internet companies who claim to deliver more megabytes than they actually do.&nb sp; Welsh Liberal Democrats are calling on the Welsh Government to work with the UK Government on these measures to ensure that we can bring an end to the unfair treatment of customers by powerful telecoms companies.”
 

Crumpton speaks out on local health service

Martin Crumpton, chair of Keep Llangollen Special, gives a personal take on the local health service...

"When they said ‘North Wales’s health is changing’ they neglected to mention it would be for the worse. I think I can speak with some authority; I’ve just come off the Terminally Ill Register after two-and-a-half years, and I haven’t come through unscathed. I’m on first-name terms with many of the ambulance crews.

* Martin Crumpton, left, gives a TV interview during
the fight to save  the Cottage Hospital.
"I don’t think it’s at all unreasonable to ask our planners to hang fire on the old hospital until the problems of the new health centre are resolved, do you? I really don’t want to get maudlin, but I wondered at the time of the crash on the A5 right below my cottage a few weeks ago if there might have been a better outcome if the cottage hospital just cross the river had still been operational before the airlift to Stoke.

"Somehow, happening so close to me, I felt involved and saddened. Even while the emergency services were arriving at such incredibly short times, I couldn’t help wondering what might have happened if there’d been a blockage at the single-file section due to accident, breakdown or congestion, and silently cursed the maniac behind this proposal.
 
"Then, of course, I couldn’t help reflect on the number of times the emergency services had made the difference between life and death, not just for me but my wife as well when she lay bleeding for over an hour after a fall before we discovered her. Frankly, it scares me. Now I’m wheelchair-bound I couldn’t get her to A&E by myself, as I did when she broke her wrist during the icy winter a couple of years ago.
 
"I think what really makes me livid is the thought that heart attack and stroke victims could be kept waiting in a queue because there’s no hospital close enough or because the route to the Maelor is blocked by a queue.
 
Please, right now, write now and register your objections, your fears and your own experiences. It has to be today."