Leicester Mercury

Vandals damage town park fencing, play area

OUTDOOR TABLE TENNIS NEAR

- By ADRIAN TROUGHTON

CAFE WAS ALSO TARGETED BY YOBS

VANDALS have bent and torn down metal fencing and damaged an outdoor table tennis area at a town centre park.

The yobs struck at Welland Park, in Market Harborough, on Sunday night or early Monday morning.

They targeted the area outside the cafe, which has been temporaril­y fenced off to prevent people using its picnic benches during lockdown.

Fencing around the bandstand was also damaged in the attack.

Police were called just before 8pm on Sunday to investigat­e reports that a number of youths had gathered in the park, breaching the coronaviru­s lockdown restrictio­ns.

However, when police officers arrived at the scene, none of the youngsters was present.

A police spokeswoma­n said: “We have received a report relating to some damage which was caused to fencing outside a cafe in Welland Park, Market Harborough.

“It’s believed to have occurred sometime overnight on Sunday into Monday.”

A spokesman for Harborough District Council said: “Sadly, the table tennis area and the metal fencing around the cafe in Welland Park was damaged in the early evening on Sunday.

“We have reported this criminal damage to the police.”

WEATHERMAN Des Coleman is urging men not to put off getting checked for prostate cancer until a rainy day.

A winner of two Royal Television Society awards, the ITV Central weather presenter, West End singer and actor (he played Lenny Wallace in EastEnders) has won three separate battles with cancer following early diagnosis.

In a bid to encourage other men to seek help, he is supporting the #PlayDomino­TalkProsta­te initiative launched by the Leicester’s Centre for BME Health.

In a short YouTube vlog, the Derby-born performer praises the campaign launched by Pamela Campbell-Morris, the Project Initiator and Community Champion at the Centre for BME Health, and urged men, particular­ly African Caribbean men, to not ignore the warning signs.

He said: “I know a thing or two about cancer, you know. I was at drama school, minding my own business and cancer tried to get me, but we caught it early and a couple of years later it came back again, and I caught it early and then a couple of years ago I had it in my stomach but guess what, we caught it early again.

“There’s a common denominato­r here, catch it early! This is exactly what can happen if you get prostate cancer. If you catch it early, it’s treatable. “Everybody can get it but one in four black guys can get it, so if you’re sitting there thinking ‘la de da, it isn’t going to happen to me’ then think again. All we’re trying to say is take care of yourselves and the best way of doing that is getting yourself checked out.”

Statistics show one in four African Caribbean men will develop prostate cancer at some point in their lives, compared to one in eight men from other background­s.

Pamela Campbell-Morris said: “Des has first-hand experience of overcoming cancer, not once but three times. He is living testament to the fact it is important not to turn a blind eye to any changes you experience.

“He knows that seeking help and early diagnosis literally save lives – it saved his.”

The #PlayDomino­TalkProsta­te campaign is about raising more awareness, predominan­tly among those of African and African Caribbean communitie­s, about prostate cancer and the steps they can take to prevent it.

Pamela added: “I hope people will take courage from Des and all that he has been through and find the inner strength to go out of their comfort zones and get checked.”

Des has twice beaten a serious strain of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He also survived a gastric tumour thanks to life-saving surgery.

The Centre for BME Health is working to reduce health inequality in the region by sharing resources and promoting research.

It is funded by the University of Leicester and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaborat­ion (ARC) East Midlands. NIHR ARC East Midlands is a partnershi­p of regional health services, universiti­es and industry which turns research into cost-saving and high-quality care through cutting- edge innovation.

Professor Kamlesh Khunti, director of the NIHR ARC East Midlands and Professor of Primary Care Diabetes and Vascular Medicine at the University of Leicester, said: “Des’s unique experience­s of battling cancer show just how important it is to seek help. We know prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in the UK proving how vitally important it is men take the necessary steps to get themselves checked for this preventabl­e disease.”

Prostate problems can cause urinary symptoms, such as needing to rush to the toilet or needing to go more often than normal. However, urinary symptoms are usually caused by problems that aren’t cancer such as an enlarged prostate or a urine infection.

 ?? HFM ?? WRECKED: Some of the damage done by vandals
HFM WRECKED: Some of the damage done by vandals
 ??  ?? ‘GET HELP EARLY’: TV’s Des Coleman
‘GET HELP EARLY’: TV’s Des Coleman

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