London 2012 Olympics: Britons Staying for the Games and Tourists to Flock in - Amadeus Research - ibtimes.co.uk London 2012 Olympics: Britons Staying for the Games and Tourists to Flock in - Amadeus Research - ibtimes.co.uk
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London 2012 Olympics: Britons Staying for the Games and Tourists to Flock in - Amadeus Research - ibtimes.co.uk

London 2012 Olympics: Britons Staying for the Games and Tourists to Flock in - Amadeus Research - ibtimes.co.uk

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A 13 percent rise on the number of tourists visiting the UK compared with last summer is expected because of London 2012, with around a quarter coming from North America, Amadeus research suggests.

Britons flying away on their summer holidays in the three weeks ahead of the 27 July opening ceremony is expected to be down by 5 percent.

However the number leaving in the three weeks after the Games' conclusion on 12 August will be 10 percent higher than in the same period the year before.

On the whole 2 percent fewer Londoners will be leaving the capital city than they did in the summer of 2011.

Amadeus's research is based on global air reservations through all online and offline travel agencies, which make up around half of the total number of bookings.

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London 2012 Olympics: legal wrangles over selections spark fears best athletes may not be representing GB - Daily Telegraph

Not every decision is as controversial as the Cook case. Most sports are not lucky enough to have a world No 1 in their ranks, nor enjoy such depth that they feel they can afford to leave top-ranked competitors at home.

But many sports are grappling with the unique challenge of having to select athletes to fill places that ordinarily would not be available.

“There were always going to be more appeals and challenge this year with it being a home Games,” says Liz Nicholl, chief executive of UK Sport, which is responsible for monitoring how the £500 million-plus investment in British elite athletes is spent.

“There is more at stake, more athletes who are not used to the selection procedures, so there are going to be more appeals. If you had just missed out you would want to make sure you knew why.”

The problem with the current system is that the athletes, never mind the public, may never know. There is no requirement on sports to publish their selection criteria, the appeals process is confidential, and neither governing bodies or the BOA is obliged to explain why athletes are ignored.

All appeals pass through Sports Resolution, a UK Sport-funded arbitrator. Its decisions are binding on athletes and sports but it only publishes its decisions if both parties agree. So far only rhythmic gymnastics decision has been revealed to public scrutiny.

GB Taekwondo’s omission of Cook is the most secretive decision as well as the most contentious. The governing body has never published its selection criteria and refused to answer any questions about the process or reasons behind the decision to drop a player who would have been the No 1 seed in the Olympic competition.

Despite receiving £4.8 million of public money since 2009, the sport is unaccountable - and apparently indifferent - to the public who pay its administrators’ wages. Taekwondo say all the athletes are aware of its criteria, which has been agreed by UK Sport and the BOA, and, to reveal it, would give away a competitive advantage to its rivals.

Cook’s omission may well be justified, according to the rules, but when the decision flies so obviously in the face of results, how can anyone be sure?

With no explanation of why the sport’s brightest talent has been dropped, the suspicion has grown that Cook’s face no longer fits following his decision to leave the governing body’s performance programme.

If that were the case, Nicholl told The Daily Telegraph, it would be “completely unacceptable”. That may well not be the reason for his exclusion, but without an explanation, it is impossible to judge.

Fencing and judo are more forthcoming than taekwondo - both publish their selection criteria - but they are still sensitive about selections that have faced appeal.

Fencing has four challenges from athletes excluded from their 10-strong team. The sport delayed Monday’s planned announcement of their team disciplines as a result, but a spokesman said they are confident they have followed agreed procedure.

Judo’s 14-strong team was approved by the BOA on Tuesday, but the sport has faced several appeals. In keeping with the opaqueness around this process, they refuse to say how many.

In future, it should surely be a condition of funding and inclusion in Team GB for the Rio Games in 2016 that selection criteria are published in full. Only then can the public have confidence that their unprecedented investment in elite sport is delivering the best athletes to the Games.

Sadly for London, it may be too late to be certain.

ORIENT RENEW STADIUM BID

The Olympic Stadium mystery is set for another twist with Leyton Orient chairman Barry Hearn set to lodge a new bid to occupy the arena in a ground share with West Ham.

Hearn pulled out of the most recent round of bidding in March, declaring the stadium “unfit for football” if the running track is retained.

The terms of the stadium tender have since been rewritten, however, largely to try to evade a legal challenge from Hearn, and he believes the new terms may work for Orient.

Crucially, the new tender allows seats to be built over the track, something that West Ham see as central to their bid. Hearn’s complaint has always been that the seats are too distant but, if spectators can be brought to pitchside, he will be interested.

With West Ham having solved the seating problem, Hearn will offer the London Legacy Development Corporation the prospect of another football tenant providing week-in, week-out income.

The LLDC will have to consider it, no matter how much the prospect is likely to irritate West Ham.

TORCH DUTY FOR CLARKE

Open Champion Darren Clarke will carry the Olympic torch next week when it arrives in Portrush, his home town of on the north Antrim coast.

The arrival of the torch in Ulster and then Dublin next week is a key part of the round-Britain relay, and Clarke is one of a number of Irish sports stars expected to be involved



London, France's sixth biggest city - BBC News

More French people live in London than in Bordeaux, Nantes or Strasbourg and it is now thought to be France's sixth biggest city in terms of population. What is attracting a new generation of young French professionals to the city?

On a wet Friday night in Hackney, a group of young professional women walk into a pub. Laughing about the British weather, they shake their umbrellas, peel off their raincoats and make their way to the bar.

Like many Londoners at the end of a busy working week, they have come to unwind over a few drinks.

But if you move a bit closer, you realise they are all speaking French. They are not tourists, exchange students or off-duty au pairs. They all work in creative industries, have lived in east London quite some time and consider it home.

London has a long-standing French community - but it is no longer confined to the streets around the embassy in South Kensington, where you will find French bookshops, patisseries and pavement cafes patronised by impeccably dressed mothers dropping off their children at the posh Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle.

Start Quote

I came to London from Paris straight after graduating from art school, just to have a look - that was seven years ago ”

End Quote Malika Favre

Today there are French people in every corner of London and their numbers have been growing, with the result that in next week's parliamentary election in France they - along with expats in Scandinavia - will be voting for a candidate to represent them in the National Assembly.

The French consulate in London estimates between 300,000 and 400,000 French citizens live in the British capital - many in London's cutting-edge creative hub, in the East End.

"I came to London from Paris straight after graduating from art school, just to have a look," says Malika Favre. "That was seven years ago and I've no intention of going back."

Malika is much in-demand as an illustrator. Her commissions include a bold, playful design for a new edition of the Kama Sutra, an album cover for a French rock band and artwork for a Californian beachwear company.

Being in London and speaking English gives her access to a wider client base - Malika sees the city as a gateway to globalisation and also relishes freedom from French bureaucracy.

"With a new venture in Paris you always think first of what is going to go wrong. I find the system much easier here - you don't have so many rules and so much paperwork," she tells me.

Marine Schepens, who works for a fashionable advertising agency, says UK companies are more prepared to give young people a chance because it is easier to terminate their contracts than in France.

This fluidity makes employees less risk-averse too.

"I changed careers a year ago but I would have never done that if I was still in France. I'd have thought, 'I'm so lucky to have a job - I must hang on to it.'"

Nadege Alezine, a journalist from Bordeaux, says life in London is not for the faint hearted. She runs a website aimed at the French community called bealondoner.com

"If you want security and nice holidays you stay in France. If you crave adventure and want to get new skills, you come here," she says.

That is not to say she does not miss France. Sipping her drink, she sighs.

"Life in France was easy. You know, good food and wine. I lived near the sea and not far from the ski slopes. And sometimes when London's grey and rainy I think, 'What on earth am I doing here?'"

All the young women I met complained about London's over-priced property. London rents are twice those in Paris.

"In Brick Lane, we had bedbugs and rats," says Malika, "and for the same money I paid for one room, friends back home had their own flats."

Of course, many people living in London have it far worse, but by choosing the East End Malika and her friends are following in the footsteps of her compatriots centuries ago.

The French first came en masse to the East End in the 17th Century. These Huguenots, who had endured years of persecution in France because of their Protestant faith, were offered sanctuary here by King Charles II.

They called their flight Le Refuge - coining the word refugee.

Many settled east of the City of London, where food and housing were cheaper. There are many French street names around nearby Spitalfields Market such as Fournier Street, Fleur de Lys Street and Nantes Passage.

The Huguenots were skilled craftsmen but some feared that they were depriving Londoners of work. A protectionist priest, a certain Dr Welton, called them "the offal of the earth".

Today competition for jobs is intense, especially among the young, and cross-channel migrants are not always welcomed with open arms.

Recently the French consulate commissioned a report called The Forgotten People of St Pancras. It focuses on the young French who arrive in London on a one-way ticket and sometimes find themselves in desperate straits.

The Centre Charles Peguy, a French charity in Shoreditch, helps new arrivals to find work and a place to live.

Cedric Pretat, one of the advisers, says the numbers have shot up this summer.

"Many French people imagine that because of the Olympics, lots of new jobs have been created in London which is not true. But people arrive with this dream."

He adds: "Others are escaping from things in France such as family problems, educational problems and areas like Department 93, because people who live in that part of Paris sometimes have trouble finding a job."

Department 93 is shorthand for Seine Saint Denis, just north of Paris - the French suburb which is home to many French nationals of African origin and a large immigrant population.

To the average French person, it conjures up images of riots, bleak high rises, youth unemployment and racism. It is the most-discriminated-against postcode in France, although ethnic minorities from other suburbs have also had a tough time.

Hamid Senni, a business consultant based in London, was one of eight children born to Moroccan immigrants in the south of France. A well-meaning teacher at his school suggested he change his name to Lionel.

Start Quote

Cleo Soazandry

It's like my eyes opened up when I came here - I think the American dream is also present here in the UK”

End Quote Cleo Soazandry

"Because of your name you will be discriminated against, because of your skin colour, and even the address on your CV can stop you from getting a job," he says.

"As for your skills and competencies - none of that counts in France if you don't fit in the box - so I left," he adds.

Hamid now advises many French companies on how to diversify their workforce and he lectures at Sciences Po, one of the country's most prestigious universities.

But he says that in the early days it was much easier to get someone to pick up the phone, if he called from London than from Paris.

I first met him five years ago when he had just written a book. It was called De la Cite a la City and focused on his journey from a rundown suburban estate (Cité) in Valence to London's booming financial district.

Hamid suspects the success of the far right in the first round of the recent presidential elections, the highest share of the vote ever achieved by the Front National in a nationwide poll, might have pushed more young French people across the channel.

"France is really struggling to create jobs and things have got worse because some people are saying the whites should come first," he says.

Cleo Soazandry, another young French national with African roots, has a mother from Madagascar and a father from Guinea. Her parents met in France where Cleo was born. In her early teens, the family moved from Paris to London.

"I was really pushed by my teachers here," she says. "Suddenly I realised I could actually become somebody here, be ambitious."

Cleo adds that seeing black presenters on television made a deep impression on her as there were virtually none in France at the time.

"It's like my eyes opened up when I came here - I think the American dream is also present here in the UK."

Listen to The French East End on BBC Radio 4 on Wednesday, 30 May at 11:00 BST and listen again via the Radio 4 website.



London financial stocks track Spanish woes - Financial Times

May 30, 2012 9:05 am



Josh Wilson has left Vauxhall Motors for Guiseley - wirralnews.co.uk


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