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Bike Weeks returns to Brighton and Hove

Kick-start a summer of cycling by taking part in Bike Week from June 8 to 16.

THE week-long celebration of cycling will be delivered by Cycling UK and Love to Ride. Anyone who logs a bike ride during the week will be in with a chance of winning some great prizes.

To celebrate the many benefits of the bicycle, Love to Ride and Cycling UK are inviting people to share their cycling experiences with the #7DaysofCycling hashtag.

It’s completely free to take part and everyone is invited to join in, it doesn’t matter if you ride every day or if you haven’t been on a bike in years.

People who ride a bike to work are shown to be happier, healthier, wealthier and more productive. Getting more staff cycling to work can benefit employers too by reducing illness and sick leave; with cycle commuters taking half the sick leave of their non-cycling colleagues. Those who ride to work regularly also report improved mental health.

Getting more people in the city cycling also helps the local environment by reducing congestion and improving air quality. Congestion and pollution contribute to 40,000 premature deaths annually in the UK and road transport is the main source of emissions in Brighton & Hove.

Many of the city’s employers, including Brighton & Hove City Council, offer a Cycle to Work Scheme which enables employees to borrow up to £3,000, tax and National Insurance free, to buy a bike.

The council has partnered with the Green Commute Initiative (GCI), a social enterprise which offers a flexible bike scheme to staff. Through the scheme, council staff can buy a conventional or electric bike, there is no upper limit on the cost of the bike and a longer period is offered for loan repayments. With GCI, the bike is offered as a tax-free benefit-in-kind by the employer, so that employees don’t have to pay tax on the price of their bike.

For those who don’t want to commit to buying a bike, the BTN BikeShare scheme, which began in September 2017, has over 500 bikes available for hire from hubs across the city. The pay as you go bike rental costs start at 3p per minute, allowing residents and visitors to travel around the city cheaply and sustainably. Since its launch, the scheme has had more than 69,000 users who have made over 560,000 journeys, covering more than one million miles.

Cllr Anne Pissaridou
Cllr Anne Pissaridou

Chair of the Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee, Councillor Anne Pissaridou, said: “The benefits of cycling, which include boosting physical and mental health, are well documented and it is increasingly becoming a more popular way of getting from A to B. It also supports the local environment by reducing congestion and air pollution.

“Over the next year, we will be investing further in the city’s cycling infrastructure and developing the city’s cycle network. Our Local Transport Plan outlines plans to provide better surfaces, joined up and marked routes and improvements to the safety and quality of junction crossings for cyclists.

“I hope many residents are inspired to get back on their bike this week and cycle for fun, health and to commute.”

To sign up for Bike Week, click here:

FILM REVIEW: Sauvage

Inspired by Les garçons du bois de Bologne et de la rue  – in other words the male escorts of the streets and parks of Paris, this French-language film pulls no punches in revealing the sordid, depressing and unhappy lives of a group of young men who sell their bodies to get food, drugs and alcohol.

THE unnamed main character, played delicately and touchingly by Felix Maritaud, literally lives much of his life in the gutters of city streets or under the shade of trees in the park.

When we first meet him he is at the doctor’s surgery being examined, but it’s quickly clear that the ‘doctor’ is just a dirty old male punter who wants physical examination fantasy sex, which he duly gets .

Felix’s character seems to move from one disastrous encounter to the next with a kind of drug-dazed euphoria. Many scenes have him loitering for hours, gazing at the sunny sky, smoking joints, crack or crystal meth and often being  robbed, cheated of his fee or beaten up.

His on-off relationship with an ex turns sour and violent, and it looks as if life is lost for the dirty, illness- prone 22 year old.

Yet he seems to have a smiling resilience and resistance to what life has in store.

When he meets a real doctor because of his incessant coughing and chest pains, it turns out he has TB and protein and vitamin deficiencies.

Yet on he ploughs, getting involved with date rape, robbery and more violence.

Just when you start to despair of him and the depressing writing and direction of Camille Vidal-Naquet, he finally seems to find the man who will straighten him out and take him as a life partner.

We see a transformation to smart, clean and well-nourished man who is free of drugs. The two agree to go to Canada to start a new life, but the ominous music belies the reality: he does a runner at the airport and returns to his hunting grounds.

The final scene, which shows him lying in the woods, and closing his eyes is equivocal. Is this just a retreat into the sleep of oblivion and escape, or the final curtain on his short awful life ?

The cinematography of the piece is beautiful, filmed as it was in Strasbourg, and the film may on one level be as the director says a tribute to the street boys, or perhaps more likely a morality tale about modern rootless city life.

Sauvage is a Pecadillo Pictures film which is now available on dvd.

Review by Brian Butler

Stop Ken being deported! – Gay Rugby player faces deportation

Kenneth Macharia, a gay rugby player from Bristol, faces imminent deportation to Kenya, where he will face serious danger of harassment, blackmail, and sexual violence, as well as up to 21 years in prison.

KEN, a UK university graduate, sought political asylum after his student visa ran out. However, his appeal was rejected and he is due to be deported to Kenya, despite the high risk of homophobic persecution that he will face there.

Ken is a “high profile homosexual man” in Kenya and the Kenyan media repeatedly targets him, resulting in cruel harassment.

Last week, the High Court in Kenya ruled to uphold homophobic laws that would mean a prison sentence of up to 14 years for homosexuality. It is not safe for Ken to live in Kenya. He wants to remain in the UK with his friends and family, and continue to work and contribute to our society, as he has done for the last nine years.

Today, Ken is due to report to a police station in Bristol and will most likely be forced to leave the country.

Brighton Against Borders‘ in collaboration with LGSMigrants Brighton have organised an awareness raising standing demonstration at the Clock Tower in central Brighton from 5.30pm-6.30pm.

For more info about the Brighton demonstration, click here:

Go along to show solidarity with Ken, as well as all asylum seekers and LGBTQ+ peoples. Wear pink, the team colour of Ken’s rugby team the Bristol Bisons RFC who are also organising a demonstration at 11am this morning outside Bridgewater Police Station, TA6 4RR, Bristol. It’s very likely that Ken will be detained there, so as many people as possible need to turn up to show him support.

How can you help Ken?

Click here to sign the petition to stop the deportation (currently more than 156,200 people have signed).

Contact his local MP, James Heappey and  Home Secretary Sajid Javid, petitioning them to intervene in Ken’s deportation.

Tweet Sajid Javid on Twitter with the hashtag #KeepKenHome

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