Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Ferry wise to keep gloves on

Supreme Court’s terror risk ruling keeps Begum out

- BY CHRIS HUGHES Defence and Security Editor c.hughes@mirror.co.uk @defencechr­is

IT’S been a long time coming but colour. For some hardy souls it was yesterday saw the unmistakab­le even a good enough day to take a dip sense spring was finally in the air. in Belfast Lough and watch the waves

Temperatur­es rose to 12C – three or with an ice cream. four degrees above the norm for late While temperatur­es slip back to February as snowdrops and crocuses normal levels, the new week will be began to pepper our greenways with dry.

12C

Expected temperatur­es today with long periods of sunshine everywhere

THE Supreme Court has barred runaway Islamic State bride Shamima Begum from returning to the UK to try to get her British citizenshi­p back.

Judges ruled that her right to a fair hearing cannot override the rights of the nation’s citizens to safety.

The 21-year-old, pictured in Westernsty­le clothes at the camp in Syria where she is being held, appeared to be upset after learning of the court’s decision.

The Government was celebratin­g the court victory but human rights group Liberty, which intervened in Ms Begum’s case, said it sets “an extremely dangerous precedent”.

She was 15 in 2015 when she and two other girls from London went to join IS in Syria where she married a fighter. Ms

Begum was found in a Syrian refugee camp in 2019, and the then-home Secretary Sajid Javid stripped her of her British citizenshi­p on security grounds.

Last year the Court of Appeal ruled she could return here to pursue her bid to win back citizenshi­p.

The court found that she was prevented from fighting her case from the al-roj detention facility in Rojava, north Syria, where she is barred from talking to her lawyers.

The Home Office argued that allowing her home would expose the public to greater risk of terrorism. Supreme Court judges yesterday ruled the Government had acted appropriat­ely. Her case is now on hold until her circumstan­ces

change. Lord Reed, the Supreme Court President, said: “The right to a fair hearing does not trump all other considerat­ions, such as the safety of the public. If a vital public interest makes it impossible for a case to be fairly heard then the courts cannot ordinarily hear it.

“The appropriat­e response in the present case is for the hearing to be postponed until Ms Begum is in a position to play an effective part in it without the safety of the public being compromise­d. That is not a perfect solution, as it is not known how long it may be before that is possible.” The ruling has sparked anger in some quarters.

Rosie Brighouse, a lawyer with Liberty, said: “The right to a fair trial is not something democratic government­s should take away on a whim, and nor is someone’s British citizenshi­p.

“This approach does not serve justice. It’s a cynical distractio­n from a failed counter-terror strategy and another example of this government’s disregard for access to justice and the rule of law.”

Tory MP David Davis said: “Regardless of what individual­s like Shamima Begum have done, the UK cannot wash our hands of Brits in Syrian camps. The correct approach [is] to return them to the UK to answer for their crimes.”

But think-tank the Henry Jackson Society said: “This decision is justified from a national security and natural justice viewpoint.” Home Secretary Priti Patel said: “Our priority remains maintainin­g the safety of our citizens.”

IT’S the morning after the night Colin Jackson lost his world hurdles record after nearly 27 years. But while most athletes might be waking up with a sore head and a bad temper, he needs me to remind him what happened.

The sporting legend was training for this weekend’s Dancing on Ice when American Grant Holloway, 23, finally broke the 60m indoor hurdles time Colin set in March 1994 – by just 0.01 seconds.

“Oh, that? Oh, crikey Moses, I’m not sad about that at all,” he laughs when I explain why I’m asking how he is feeling.

“Goodness gracious, for a moment I thought, ‘Oh my God, do you know something I didn’t know?’. The record? Oh, no no no, that’s no problem at all.

“Who wants to be the old guy sitting in the stand who is the fastest person in the world? Who kids point to and say, ‘What, that old man is the fastest?’ No, you want to see the fastest people on the track, not watching in the stand.

“I’m a fan of athletics and I want to see my sport progress. I want to see athletes who are faster than I was.

“Besides, you only borrow a world record, you don’t own it.”

Surely, he must have felt a tinge of sadness when the news came through?

“Not at all. My immediate reaction was that I must message Grant at some point to congratula­te him. Then I was back to my training. I’m not trying to play it down, it’s just the way I am.

“I retired the best in the business, I can’t do more than that. Of my generation I was the best around, and that’s it.”

True, there are few who will reach the success that Britain’s best hurdler enjoyed, including an Olympic silver, two world records and 12 years undefeated at the European Championsh­ips.

My sister’s signed most autographs.. she had 13 years in Casualty COLIN ON HIS ACTRESS SISTER SUZANNE PACKER

But the 54-year-old Welshman insists when he retired on a high in 2003 he left behind his famous determinat­ion to be the best. “I’m not interested in anything competitiv­e any more. What I like to do now is have a good time,” he says.

“I love it when people want to challenge you and they think you are going to be competitiv­e. It happens all the time. It could be a game of tennis or it could be literally beating me to the supermarke­t checkout.

“And they’re going, ‘I beat you!’, and I’m like, ‘Why do you think I’m going to compete with you on this? I’m not interested in that. I’ve got a cabinet full of trophies at home’.”

For someone who is no longer competitiv­e, Colin is doing a good job of staying in the front pack in Dancing on Ice. Despite one skate-off, he and partner Klabera Komini, 27, continue to impress, coming joint second in the last show.

And with so many favourites having to leave due to injuries or positive Covid tests, including the frontrunne­r, actor Joe-warren Plant, there’s every chance the duo will make it to the final – now a week earlier than planned.

He says: “We’re doing movie week on Sunday, and I’ll be doing Saturday Night Fever. So I’m disco dancing all the way, which is hilarious. The disco strut is pretty tricky actually. John Travolta does it well but he doesn’t do it on ice.”

Colin is one of the few contestant­s not

POISE Strictly 2005 and, main picture, on ice this series with partner Klabera to have had to miss a week or pull out during a mishap-fraught series, and he says the show is desperate to avoid another contestant having to leave.

“If you slip over on the ice and are down a second longer than you should be, the medical staff come rushing over asking if you’re OK,” he says.

“I play the game with them as well sometimes, laying on the ice for longer than I should just to wind them up.

“I have had injuries but I think maybe coming from profession­al sport it’s easy to just deal with them.

“I’ve fallen over, sprained wrists, and I’ve got the onset of something like a tennis elbow from repeating exercises.”

And he reveals he is skating through

I was the best of my generation and I have a cabinet full of trophies COLIN ON NOT HAVING TO PROVE HIMSELF ANY MORE

pain on every programme because of a long-term problem.

“I had seven knees ops as an athlete and I suffer from chronic pain. I’ve learned to handle the pain because I live with it every single day,” he says.

“I’ll be having surgery as soon as the series is over. I want to be able to enjoy life without the worry that in three or four years my knees will be kaput and I’ll have to have a really serious knee replacemen­t.”

Performing in front of judges isn’t a new experience for Colin – he came second in Strictly Come Dancing in 2005, then won the show’s Christmas special a year later. Technicall­y, it is not his first time on Dancing on Ice either – he took part in a one-off special before the 2012 London Olympics, finishing fifth out of eight.

However he doesn’t believe that gives him an unfair advantage. “Everybody had their skillset. Amy is a gymnast, Denise and Jason are great performers and used to being onstage, which is a massive advantage.

“There is a cast of people with different abilities, which makes it a bit fair for everyone,” he says.

Many viewers have been shocked to see a famous face among family members supporting him. His older sister is Casualty actress Suzanne

Packer, 58, who played nurse manager Tess Batemen in the hit BBC drama for 13 years until 2015.

Colin, made an CBE in 2003, laughs: “I thought people knew but obviously not, and it created shockwaves.

“She’s been my biggest fan. She’s always surprised when I take on challenges like this, and more surprised about how well I do. Now every week, she says, ‘I can’t believe you did that!’.

“At the start, she said, ‘I don’t think you should be doing this at the age of 54’. I love proving her wrong. We’re really close, she lives 300 metres away from me on the outskirts of Cardiff.”

He says they both knew what they wanted to do in life since childhood, with their parents supporting them. “One day Dad would take me to the track, Mum would take Suzanne to drama class, the next day vice-versa.

“I just loved sport because I didn’t want to do a serious job. I had no idea you could make money from it.

“As kids we spent hours showing each other our autographs, asking which one looks best. It was probably Suzanne who ended up signing the most autographs in her life.”

But may there be another significan­t other cheering Colin on? The Olympian, who came out in 2017, hints there may be. “Is there anyone special I’d like to spend my life with? You will soon find out,” he says.

His next challenge is as the new race director for Wings for Life World Run, an app run held in May where more than 100,000 people raise money to find a cure for spinal cord injury.

First though, he is focused on the hurdle of avoiding eliminatio­n. He says: “How great would that be? Wales wins the Triple Crown [in Six Nations rugby] and I get into the next round. That would be the perfect weekend.”

Dancing on Ice, ITV at 6pm tomorrow.

 ?? Helen’s Bay ?? SHORE THING Pals swim in Belfast Lough yesterday
CONE AND GET IT Ice cream van in Co Down
COAST IS CLEAR
Helen’s Bay SHORE THING Pals swim in Belfast Lough yesterday CONE AND GET IT Ice cream van in Co Down COAST IS CLEAR
 ??  ?? SYRIAN CAMP Ms Begum yesterday. Inset, she fled aged 15
SYRIAN CAMP Ms Begum yesterday. Inset, she fled aged 15
 ??  ?? FOUND Shamima Begum in 2019
FOUND Shamima Begum in 2019
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? FAME Suzanne on Casualty
FAME Suzanne on Casualty
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? GOLDEN BOY He amassed medals haul, and CBE in 2003
GOLDEN BOY He amassed medals haul, and CBE in 2003

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