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суббота, 30 июля 2016 г.

CULINARY crusader Jamie Oliver admits he'd love a knighthood

School dinners hero Jamie talks exclusively to News of the World

I'd love to be knighted..but pals will call me Sir T***er!
By Polly Graham
CULINARY crusader Jamie Oliver admits he'd love a knighthood—but says his mates would dub him Sir T***er!
Teachers and parents across the country are calling for the hero chef, who already has an MBE, to get the top honour for his school dinners campaign.
This week he got the government to cough up £280million to improve menus.
But the 29-year-old Essex boy isn't finished yet. In an exclusive interview with the News of the World, he revealed:
He wants Turkey Twizzlers BANNED;
His pal Brad Pitt has BEGGED him to take the show to America;
And he'll continue his campaign against grotty grub in our SUNDAY mag, by creating menus for busy parents to whip up for their kids.
He joked: "It would be a nice compliment to get a knighthood but I don't think my mates would have it. They'd refuse to call me Sir Jamie —it would be more likely Sir T***er!"
He added: "Even if I don't get a knighthood, this week will have been one of the best of my life. It's been emotional.
"Making four powerful programmes is great but actually changing policy is brilliant."
His close friend Brad Pitt—who Jamie cooked for on his 40th birthday—agrees. "Brad thinks the project is brilliant," said Jamie.
"In fact he wants me to do it in America because where he comes from is one of the most unhealthy parts of the US.
"Brad wouldn't eat Twizzlers or any of that s**t, but when he is next over I'll get my favourite dinner lady Nora to cook him a good school meal."
No one could have predicted the huge support for his show, Jamie's School Dinners, in which he took over catering for 80 schools in London's Greenwich with just 37p per pupil to spend.
And this week the scruffy chef spruced up in a pukka bib and tucker to meet Prime Minister Tony Blair at Downing Street for the announcement that £280million extra would be spent on training dinner ladies, modernising kitchens and increasing cash per head to 50p at primary schools and 60p at secondary schools.
He joked about having to don a tie for the first time in years for his trip to No 10.
Powerful
"I knew I'd get mullered by you lot if I didn't, even though I find them really uncomfortable," he laughed.
But he believes Blair was forced to take action.
He said: "After the programme went out there was so much anger from parents. It was the talk at the school gates.
"I did get the impression that the government were ambushed but it is their job to listen. And they couldn't deny the powerful response from the parents."
But wasn't Blair simply jumping on the bandwagon to win votes for next month's general election?
"You know I don't bloody care," Jamie said. "I spent a year-and-a-half being a dinner lady trying to change this."
It all started when Jamie went to Kidbrooke School in Greenwich. He was stunned by the poor quality of what was on offer to kids—including the dreaded Turkey Twizzlers, which contain just one-third meat and 21g of fat.
"Turkey Twizzlers have become a symbol of everything I hate in school dinners. They should be banned," he fumed.
"It was insulting to the kids. They loved them, but that was all they were used to.
"I'm sure Bernard Matthews doesn't like me very much but my consideration is for the kids, not his £600million business. "
But his campaign won't stop at the school gates. He now wants to educate parents how to feed their little ones properly at home.
And he'll be creating simple and healthy dishes for his Sunday column that parents can rustle up.
"I understand why busy stressed parents buy into the fallacy that foods like Twizzlers and nuggets offer a quick, convenient solution.
"But I'll show them how to cook real food cheaper and quicker. A really thin piece of salmon fillet costs relatively nothing and you can cook it in three minutes. My daughter Poppy loves it."
Jamie is now taking one or two months "Jools time" travelling to Italy with her and their two girls.
"It's very important," he said. "Jools has been brilliant. She gives me confidence—and a slap if she thinks I'm being a t***er."
Last night David Jol, managing director of Bernard Matthews, hit back. He said: "We support Jamie's initiative but we think it's wrong to single out Turkey Twizzlers. We're not considering removing them from our range because the salt and fat levels are well within parameters set by schools."

Noel Edmonds in new split

Star's dividing house in two
 
By Dominic Herbert
TELLY legend Noel Edmonds has agreed to let his cheating wife live with him on condition that their £10million home is SPLIT IN HALF.

Noel, 56, has come up with the potty plot, which means Helen can stay in the mansion and still date her cross-dressing bisexual lover.
He's even bringing in builders to di-vide up the 36-room house. It's been taken off the market and lawyers have been told to hold fire on divorce plans.
But there's little chance of the pair—who have four kids—getting back together as Helen, 41, is still dating Pilates instructor Stuart Lord.
In January the News of the World revealed that she had been having a three-month affair with transvestite Lord, 41.
They frolicked naked on Dartmoor and Lord told her about his weird fetishes for rubber, women's clothing and gay sex.
He even visited the family home in Devon to give her Pilates sessions.
But Noel—who made millions from shows like Noel's House Party set in Crinkley Bottom—is now said to have banned Lord from the house.
A pal said: "It comes down to neither Noel or Helen wanting to give up their house. They will be sleeping in separate bedrooms but it all seems very strange and I'm not sure it will work."

пятница, 29 июля 2016 г.

Kate Moss lover is in the clear

PETE OFF THE HOOK: Doherty charges crumble

 
By Zak Newland & Ryan Sabey
JUNKIE rocker Pete Doherty's headline-hogging court case is set to be dramatically dropped, theNews of the World can reveal.
Doherty—currently dating Kate Moss—was arrested in February after a scuffle with filmmaker Max Carlish who sold pictures of him smoking heroin to a newspaper.
The Babyshambles singer was charged with robbery and blackmail and spent four days in custody.
Twist
But in a sensational twist, he has been told prosecutors are ready to spike the case when he next appears at Snaresbrook Crown Court on April 18.
His pal Alan Wass, who was arrested at the same time on the same charges, is also set to be cleared.
Doherty was delighted when a member of his legal team phoned him with news of the latest development.
A source close to the star said: "Pete is over the moon. Nothing is set in stone yet and until it gets to court he will not know for sure. But he got a call this week telling him the charges are likely to be dropped. He's extremely happy."
Following his arrest, Doherty spent a week at a London rehab clinic trying to kick his crippling addiction to heroin and crack cocaine. During his stay Pete, 26, treated visitors to impromptu gigs, playing songs from his old band The Libertines.
Cheer
The source added: "Apart from his relationship with Kate, Pete hasn't had a lot to cheer about recently. Now he just wants to put the whole mess behind him and move on with his music career."
Kate was urged to dump Doherty, 26, after photos of him smoking heroin were published but after his stint in rehab the romance is back on.
She even travelled to Wales this week where he is recording the first Babyshambles album, and sang on a track called F*** Forever.

I'm Princess of Wales

ROYAL WEDDING SPECIALBride's tell-tale gem shows world she's real royal

By Clive Goodman
ROYAL bride Camilla Parker Bowles branded herself the new Princess of Wales yesterday in an incredible public show of strength.

She and Prince Charles deliberately chose a brooch showing his fleur de lys crest for her to wear at yesterday's marriage service.
The insignia clearly shows they both want people to see her as the Princess of Wales.
Charles gave Camilla the distinctive crest when they first went public with their romance six years ago.
A senior royal aide yesterday confirmed the couple had taken a joint decision for Camilla to wear it so prominently.
He said: "They both made the choice and they're well aware of the significance and the signal it is sending out to the world."
Camilla had said that she would prefer to be known as the Duchess of Cornwall, one of Prince Charles's other titles.
Powerful
And royal aides had promised that Camilla would never use Princess Diana's old title.
But, as she walked into Windsor Guildhall for yesterday's civil wedding service, her Princess of Wales brooch was clearly visible on the lapel of her long oyster-coloured silk jacket.
One senior aide said: "She could have chosen a token from the Duke of Cornwall's crest, but she didn't.
"It's telling the world who she is and what she has become."
Camilla struck an elegant yet powerful and confident figure as she endured a day of gruelling royal protocol.
At one point she even corrected Charles when he made a mistake during the blessing service at St George's chapel.
For their wedding the couple were adamant that they did not want a service where Camilla promised to "obey" Charles.
The simple service was over in little more than 20 minutes after Camilla and Charles chose one with no readings, poetry or music.
Their plain gold wedding bands were handed to them by Camilla's son Tom and Charles's elder son Prince William. Charles wore his new wedding ring underneath the signet ring on his left hand.
Until recently his first wedding ring from Princess Diana occupied the same place.
Camilla's wedding ring could be seen alongside her massive art deco diamond engagement ring, a treasure from the Queen Mother's jewellery collection.
Her pearl and gold earrings are also understood to be from the Queen Mother's jewellery box.
Camilla looked sensational in her oyster silk basketweave jacket and long silk skirt during the civil ceremony. For the blessing she changed into a porcelain blue wedding gown with an embroidered floor-length overgown and small train.
Even the designer behind Princess Diana's sparkling wedding dress called Camilla's outfits "perfect".
Elizabeth Emanuel gushed: "I thought she looked lovely, very elegant. It was just very perfect for the occasion.
"She looked just right. The designers did a very, very good job. She looked great."
Camilla's confidence was clear when, outside the Guildhall, she took charge despite being surrounded by the royal family.
"Come forward," she told William as Charles's son held back while his father was posing for photographs. The couple had made a mutual decision not to kiss each other in public after either the wedding or the blessing services.
A family friend explained: "They didn't want anyone to compare his first wedding with this one. It was something they both decided."
Camilla and Charles were clearly delighted with the cheers from the crowds of nearly 20,000 well-wishers.
After the blessing a joyful-looking Camilla rushed towards familiar faces in the crowd and grinned: "We've done it at last!"
Pals Ruth Entwhistle, 53, and Alan Weston, 52, responded with: "Congratulations!"
The couple work closely with Camilla through a charity near her Wiltshire home.
Ruth said: "Camilla looked very happy but also very nervous at the whole event.
"It must have been an exciting but very stressful day for her.
"But she's got nothing to worry about. It went off without a hitch and I thought she looked fabulous in her outfits on the day."
Camilla may have assumed the mantle of Princess of Wales, but in the principality itself there was a distinct lack of wedding fever.
There were NO civic events in Wales and only a handful of official messages of goodwill.
Quiet
Caernarfon, which boasts the famous castle in which Charles was invested as Prince of Wales in 1969, has not even sent the royal couple a card of congratulations.
Caernarfon Royal Town Council official Vernon Pierce said: "There has been no public demand for a celebration so the council did not arrange anything.
"It's been very quiet. People seem to want to keep things low-key."
In Aberystwyth, where Charles studied Welsh at the town's university, the council had no plans to celebrate the marriage.
A town council spokesman said: "We've not put anything on and we haven't sent a card because there has been no demand."
In the Welsh capital of Cardiff, not one official reception was organised to celebrate the occasion.
A spokesman for Cardiff council said: "We aren't sending any gifts or cards, but we do offer our congratulations to the royal couple and wish them all the very best for the future."
At least Swansea, Wales' second city, sent a card.
A council spokesman said it read simply: "Best wishes from the people of Swansea."
The city did not send a wedding gift. but the spokesman confirmed the city did send a present when Charles married Diana in 1981.
We read their lips
OUR lip-reading expert followed the day's events. Here's what she found out..

Wills: "Which way are we going? Ah, this way"

Wills to Harry: "A bit nippy today"

Charles and Camilla in car on Park Street turning into crowds;

Camilla to Charles, looking at the crowds: "Quite a few here"

Camilla to Charles on arrival: "Here we are"

Sir Michael Wheaton to Charles as he leaves car: "Good luck, sir. Enjoy"

Leaving register office:

Wills to Harry and Tom Parker Bowles: "Very happy with that"

Charles to Camilla: "This way"

Camilla turning to Harry and Wills: "Come on"
Wills in response: "No. Go on, you go" 

Prince Harry cheats on Chelsy Davy

Prince's fling with Swedish beauty
Harry cheats on Chelsy
By Clive Goodman
TWO-TIMING playboy Prince Harry cuddled up to his new Swedish blonde squeeze right through the night—while unsuspecting girlfriend Chelsy Davy stayed home 5,500 miles away.
Stunning 17-year-old student Alexia Bergstrom confessed to a friend in Stockholm how Harry, 20, had sneaked off from the royals' Swiss ski break for steamy sessions with her this week.
She revealed the couple only just managed to stop short of going all the way as they snogged and groped each other passionately till morning— while one of Harry's pals was fast asleep in the same room!
Meanwhile Harry's big brother William was keeping up the young royals' hot-blooded reputation, too.
As pals tried to get him to stay at a Klosters nightclub where he'd been wowing the local talent, he grinned and decared: "No thanks—I've got sex waiting for me at home!"
Flirty
It was only on Wednesday night that Wills told the world how his kid brother is "madly in love" with official girlfriend Chelsy, 19.
But just hours later flirty Harry was romping with student Alexia in his suite at the Walserhof hotel in the posh winter sports resort.
The pair also shared a wild time in a private room above the nearby exclusive Casa Antica nightclub.
Alexia's pal said: "It was hot and heavy but they didn't have full sex."
The royal love bombshell will devastate Chelsy, who has been loyal to Harry through thick and thin.
Yesterday she was still in the dark, at home in Cape Town, South Africa, waiting for Harry to call. But this week the prince only had eyes for new girl Alexia.
The couple met during a blue-blood bar crawl of the hotspot town where Harry and William, 22, are enjoying one last boys' holiday with dad Charles before his marriage to Camilla Parker Bowles next Friday.
Wills brought girlfriend Kate Middleton on the trip—and was obviously very pleased he did! But Harry left Chelsy behind.
Alexia was on holiday with friends who own a chalet in the town when she ran into Harry's gang of 20 pals.
One of the party tried to chat her up during the nightly trawl of exclusive watering holes. Another holidaymaker told us: "He introduced her to Harry and you could see straight away he was very, very interested. He kept leaning into her at the bar to make sure he got her total attention.
"He was all over her from the very start. He just couldn't stop himself. Alexia's a real head-turner. Beautiful long blonde hair and the most fantastic figure, too.
"But she didn't have a clue Harry was a prince until after they'd got much more intimate. Even then she didn't change her mind about him.
"What she liked was that he was so in control all the time. His friend was very nice but so English and reserved. Harry was completely different. He really showed he knew how to make her feel special. She was very impressed when he bought her Champagne. Most men try it on after a bottle of beer!"
Ironically just as Harry started chatting up Alexia, Wills was telling journalists nearby about his brother's romance with Chelsy.
"He's just a young lad who's madly in love," said William.
Tough
And earlier in the evening Harry had seemed concerned when he broke a bead necklace, a gift from Chelsy. The prince scrabbled on the floor for the pieces saying: "It's special—my girlfriend gave it to me."
The young couple have struggled to make their long-distance romance work for just over a year. Student Chelsy vowed to wait for Harry, who starts training at the Sandhurst Royal Military Academy next month. One of her Cape Town friends confided: "She knows it's tough but she says he's worth it."
But on Friday night Chelsy seemed to be showing the strain. A boozy night out and a heart-to-heart with friends left her close to tears.
One reveller told us: "Chelsy was dancing and drinking all night and then something changed. She came over to her girlfriends and they spent more than an hour talking intensely about something that was clearly bothering her."
Chelsy and her pals emerged in the early hours of yesterday and she was whisked home in a waiting limo.
Only three weeks ago we revealed exclusively how Harry introduced Chelsy to Prince Charles during a secret dinner at Highgrove, the family's Gloucestershire country home.
Harry told his dad Chelsy was "The One" and said: "We want to be together forever." Charles gave his blessing to the relationship and instantly put it on a more formal basis within the royal family.
He even invited Chelsy to join them on this week's trip. But a friend said: "As Chelsy doesn't ski she thought she'd look a bit stupid."
Wicked Prince William had no fears about letting his hair down, though—and his jokes about nookie with girlfriend Kate Middleton proved it.
He and brother Harry had been partying for three hours with 20 friends at Casa Antica on Thursday. But as Wills left to walk back to his suite at the Walserhof hotel, pals tried to call him back.
That's when the clown prince provoked loud cheers by insisting with a laugh that there was "sex waiting" at home! Kate had already baled out of the revelling and opted for an early night after dinner at a restaurant.
Left to his own devices, William held court at a corner table in the tiny nightclub, with a constant stream of beauties dropping by.
The playful prince passed around a bottle of 56 degree proof Galliano liqueur as the girls chatted to him.
Cocktail
And, as the night wore on, William—by now gulping neat vodka from a whisky bottle—made a beeline for two blonde beauties on the other side of the room.
"Hello, how are you?" asked the prince. "What's your name? Do you want a drink?"
After taking orders for a Sea Breeze cocktail and a gin and tonic, William strode to the bar, settling on a stool close to the DJ booth.
After a while one of the girls went up to sit next to the prince.
She laughed: "I thought you'd forgotten about the drinks." William told the barman: "Put it on my tab."
The girl later told us: "The prince was extremely charming.
"We chatted about all sorts of things and he asked me where I was from."
But when another beauty approached William and asked him for a dance he shrugged and said he had to get away for some hot action with his girlfriend!
Nevertheless when the DJ started playing A-ha's classic Take On Me, Wills couldn't stop himself.
He waved his arms about to the music and leapt out onto the floor again. Another clubber told us: "He walked towards one of the girls and started thrusting his hips in and out at her, grinding away to the music.
"Those royal boys really know how to have fun."

среда, 27 июля 2016 г.

EXCLUSIVE: Prince Harry and Chelsy Davy vow to Charles

EXCLUSIVE: Harry and Chelsy vow to Charles
We want to be together forever
By Clive Goodman
PRINCE CHARLES has secretly met lovestruck Harry's girlfriend Chelsy Davy— and given her his royal seal of approval.

The young couple sat opposite Charles as Harry told him: "We want to be together for ever."
The hush-hush meeting had been arranged after he told his father: "Papa, she's The One."
Harry, 20, and sexy blonde Chelsy, 19, had dinner with Charles at Highgrove, Gloucs, last month when she paid her young prince a two-week visit.
The undercover operation—involving police, royal aides and friends—was so successful that Chelsy's trip remained a secret until she flew home to South Africa.
Marriage
Pals say the couple are clearing the way to put their romance on a permanant footing. Chelsy's family have already talked of marriage.
And those closest to Charles think Chelsy is a calming influence on his sometimes wayward son. A family friend revealed: "There has been a marked improvement in Harry's behaviour.
"It's early days and nobody is reserving Westminster Abbey yet, but perhaps marriage would give Harry some responsibilities and a solid centre to his life."
Harrywas delighted with the welcome Charles gave his girl.
The dinner date only came after a series of stalled attempts to get Chelsy together with the man she hopes will one day be her father-in-law. A family friend said: "It was a relief to finally get them all there together.
"They've been dating for a year now, on and off, and Chelsy is a fact of life. The Prince of Wales thinks she is charming."
Harry spent two weeks with Chelsy and her parents on a luxury holiday in Mozambique earlier this year, but was frustrated because his own family didn't seem to be taking Chelsy so seriously as his partner.
Another family pal told us: "Harry really likes Chelsy's family and they get on very well with him.
"He had a fantastic holiday with them and thinks they're kind, warm people. He was embarrassed that his family didn't show her the hospitality he'd received from the Davys."
Yesterday Chelsy was on a weekend break in Durban with older brother Shaun, soaking up the sun on the balcony of their dad's luxury apartment.
She is said to be planning to quit college in Cape Town to study in England near Harry, but Chelsy WON'T be joining Harry at Charles's wedding to Camilla Parker Bowles next month.
Nor will Wills' girlfriend Kate Middleton.
A senior aide explained: "There's no snub—it's fiancées, wives, family and very close friends only."


Gun war

BUCKLAND'S BRITAINWe put Government to test in shock series every voter MUST read.
This week...crime

By Chris Buckland
LIKE rats they scuttle through the alleyways and passages carrying a deadly plague.
Some are just kids, hoods hiding their faces. But not their shame. For they have no shame.
Their cheap weapons—re-activated replicas or £150 air-pistols modified to fire real bullets—are brandished like fashion accessories.
Tonight they are hidden in the sprawling estates in case of a police swoop on the latest distribution of white death:heroin, cocaine and its instantly addictive derivative, crack.
Welcome to Nottingham, the nation's gun capital. Welcome to Britain, where most official crime statistics are heading down but, according to a News of the World poll, fewer than one in five of us believe it.
The city once famed for Robin Hood is now notorious for robbing hoods and the miserable children, some as young as 12, they use as their distributors.
Around a third of all crime in the city and surrounding county is committed by under-18s. Kids—black, white and Asian (this is equal opportunity ruin)—reckon being the foot-soldiers of drug barons is a neat career move.
Who wants to slave in a burger bar for the minimum wage when the twisted glamour of drug-pushing can quickly lead to posh cars and girlfriends attracted by the smell of money and the stench of danger?
We are in St Ann's council estate, the type that can be found all over Britain, with its gangs, drug abuse, dysfunctional families and yobs running wild.
Bullet
One in five here have reading difficulties and only 25 per cent will leave school with five or more GCSEs. Unemployment is twice that of the rest of the city, robberies 50 per cent higher.
The majority are decent families, trying to live normal lives in an area where burglary rates are four times the national average and violence against the person twice as high.
Just two days ago a man was killed in broad daylight outside the Wheeltappers pub in Nottingham after a scuffle ended in a shooting.
The ultimate penalty—death—also awaits those who try to muscle in on a rival's territory, those who undersell competitors or fail to pay for supplies.
Worse, innocents who simply get in the way are shown no mercy. Some are victims of mistaken identity. Others are hit by a stray bullet in a gang shoot-out, like 14-year-old Danielle Beccan (right) who died last October on her way home from a night at the fair.
Or 22-year-old Marvyn Bradshaw. After being found guilty his killer, Michael O'Brien, screamed at his victim's family: "I'm not bothered. I'm a bad boy. Your son looked like a doughnut with a big hole in his head."
O'Brien's mother and stepfather were executed just weeks later, their murder thought to have been a £10,000 underworld hit ordered by a Nottingham gang that their son had crossed.
My guide to St Ann's is Shane, 38, a gangly ex-villain with convictions for possession of Class A drugs, possession of a firearm and cigarette smuggling. "There are hundreds of guns out there," he says. "Many use home-made bullets that can't be traced."
But why Nottingham? Why a friendly city, where around a fifth of the 275,000 population are students, a metropolis famed as a shopping, entertainment and cultural mecca?
In the city's dark side, three-quarters of those arrested for burglaries or robberies have tested positive for hard drugs.

Nottingham is a stark example of the drug and gang culture that has infected Britain, where half of crime such as theft is carried out to get cash for drugs, a problem costing us £18BILLION a year.
The main reason Nottingham is a haven for drugs gangs and Yardie gunmen is agreed on by ex-cops and dealers alike.
It is poor policing.
Peter Coles, who led the city's CID until 1996, blames poor detective skills and Yardies, whose motto is: "Shoot first. Then shoot again."
He says: "A lot of criminals in the city were mere council estate thugs a few years back. If you don't target them they become super-thugs sitting on millions and virtually untouchable.

"One family live in a council house but bring in 20 kilos of cocaine and heroin a week.
"But the government are more obsessed with league tables than catching the Mr Bigs."
With 34 murders in three years— 17 drug gang-related with most of the killers still free—the local force is overwhelmed and underwhelming.
And where Nottingham leads, Britain seems destined to follow.
The police are being hamstrung by paperwork, political correctness and the alienation of traditional supporters—the decent working and middle classes who see their concerns relegated while they are an easy touch for any minor infringement to improve the clear-up rate.
But the real trouble is for every jailed drug dealer, ten wait to take his place. For every wrap of heroin seized a kilo comes into Britain. For every junkie cured, a dozen are lured by cheaper prices and the spiking of cannabis with heroin.
The rats are winning this war.

Evil woman kidnapper made me a vice slave

REAL LIFE EXCLUSIVE STORIES:Mum tells of 4-day drug and sex nightmare

By Rachel Spencer
A TRAUMATISED mum has told how she was drugged, assaulted and forced to work as a sex slave—by a WOMAN.
The vile monster and her evil boyfriend are now serving 10-year jail sentences, but Jenny Godkin is still haunted by her ordeal which began as she walked to a newsagent near her Manchester home.
She was stopped by a seemingly friendly Sonia Browne, who asked for directions and then got her chatting.
"I was feeling vulnerable. I moved to Manchester to be with my boyfriend, but we'd split up so I felt quite isolated," said Jenny, 38 (right).
Browne, 42, asked if she wanted to go to her house for coffee with herself and her partner, Robert Nyack, 48, who was waiting in the car. "I liked the idea of making new friends in the area," said Jenny. She agreed to go with them — but instantly regretted it. I got into the car and her boyfriend was driving. She called him Rapture. I noticed him looking at me and found his stare creepy. I began to feel uneasy."
But when she got to the house Browne's two children were there. "That made me think the set-up was wholesome," said Jenny. Sadly, it was anything but.
The cunning vice queen had laced her coffee with liquid ecstasy and Jenny blacked out. When she came to, she was in bed with the pair and Browne was performing a sex act on her. "Rapture was lying at the side of the bed, and all of us were naked. I felt repulsed and I was paralysed with fear.
"I had no idea what they might have done to me while I was asleep.
"I felt drugged and out of control. As I drifted unconscious again, I registered that Rapture had climbed on top of me and started to have sex."
When Jenny, who has a 12-year-old son, woke the next morning she was told she was going to London.
First they stopped at her flat to collect her things and then threatened to hurt her and her family if she tried to escape. "My son was staying with my mother at the time. But I knew he would be there if they came back to get me. My greatest fear was what they would do to my son."
She was taken to a flat behind Victoria Station in London and in the next four days was kept drugged and forced to work as a prostitute. Jenny said: "They would find the punters for me. The sex happened mostly in cheap hotel rooms in Soho and King's Cross.
Drugged
"I must have had sex with at least 20 men during this period. I was so drugged up I can't remember the exact number. I sometimes had sex with punters in side streets.
"It was disgusting and horrible."
Jenny is epileptic and, with no medication, twice ended up in hospital during the four days after suffering serious fits.
On the fourth day Rapture announced that they were going back to Manchester. "When we got back they miraculously let me go.
"I know it sounds almost unbelievable what they forced me to do, but they had drugged me up to the eyeballs and I was terrified of what they would do to me and to my son." She called the police and last year the pair were found guilty of kidnap, false imprisonment and indecent assault on one woman, and of false imprisonment and kidnap on two others, including Jenny.
But the nightmare haunts Jenny, who tried to kill herself a few months after the ordeal. "My memories are always there, plaguing me. I suffer ongoing health problems," she said.
But she is rebuilding her life. She has moved back to her home town of Southport and is in a relationship with an ex-boyfriend.
She said: "Robert Nyack is a nasty piece of work, but it was Sonia Browne who called all the shots.
"When they come out of prison I want everyone to know what they look like. Hopefully then nobody will go through the same ordeal."

EXCLUSIVE: City workers do lunch at orgy club


Another hard day
at the office,dear?
By Rachel Spencer & Stella White
ONCE it was a respectable gymnasium, opened by the first Mr Universe, where muscular men pumped iron.
But now an entirely different kind of pumping takes place within its perspiration-beaded walls.
For the Len Stiles Gym is now Raquel's Health Club—and the office workers who flock there are after someVERY personal training.
Like most health clubs, Raquel's boasts saunas, steam rooms and Jacuzzis as well as all the usual gym equipment.
But here among the treadmills and rowing machines starkers City businessmen get secretaries to take everything down while career women end up as the group sex filling in a lunchtime sandwich of writhing male bodies.
Nurse
We sent our investigators to check out Raquel's after hearing about what really went on there.
What they discovered was a sexercise programme involving foot-fondling, ear-licking, lesbianism, group romping, a fake nurse, topless snooker and a sex-mad 30-stone Mexican.
Our team watched as men in suits from the City and smartly dressed women went in and out of the London club pretending to be keep-fit enthusiasts.
Reception at the club in Walthamstow, east London, was manned by Jo, a brunette in her late 30s wearing only a towel, with pierced nipples on show.
She told us: "You don't have to join in if you don't want to.
"We get a lot of first-time swingers here and you can just look if you want. We're pretty busy so you'll get a feel of what it's like."
She wasn't wrong. Jo led us past the bar, where two girls were playing topless pool, to the TV room where groaning naked men were watching hardcore DVDs. Then it was off to the Jacuzzi area where a bearded man and his girlfriend were having full sex amid the bubbles as an older woman stared at them intently.
In another whirlpool bath a second couple were going hard at it while two other men nibbled on her nipples and a third massaged her buttocks in the swirling water.
In the sauna two men lay on the bottom shelves, chatting to a plump lady on the upper level who occasionally leaned down to give their privates a playful tug.
Slapping and spanking sounds could be heard from the steam room. A red-haired Irishman named Sean, in his mid-twenties, introduced himself as a regular at the club and smirked: "I'll show you the ropes!
"I work in the City in recruitment. I've told my boss I'm out with a client so I've got to be back by four.
"God knows what they'd think if they knew what I was really up to. I come here two afternoons a week and I have sex with at least two girls every time."
Next stop was the closet-sized Voyeurs Room to watch what was going on inside the mirror-walled Exhibitionists Room.
There, naked male "gym members" were working out with a dumb belle. The slim blonde—in her late 20s—was bent over on the large crimson bed with her partner behind.
A portly retired lecturer was beneath the girl, nuzzling up to her breasts. And a third man was fondling her bottom.
Then three more men entered the room. One began massaging the blonde woman's feet while another licked her ears as a man with spikey hair had sex with her.
In the Couples Rooms the 30-stone Mexican was being straddled by a small woman shrieking as she surfed the waves of his wobbling belly.
Mirrors
In the next room a young blonde woman lay on the zebra-patterned bed as four men took turns with her, their bouncing buttocks multiplied by the mirrors surrounding them. Then a brunette joined her on the bed for a lesbian sex show.
Also in there was a woman in a nurse's uniform enjoying the company of three men. Then the big Mexican walked in and growled, ‘Do you wanna play?'
We didn't—and got out of there faster than Speedy Gonzales.

The trucker who took on Saddam

WEEKEND WARRIOR: Hero reveals horror of war
 

By Kevin Mervin

TODAY for the first time in terrifying, gripping and often heart-rending detail, one of Britain's brave part-time soldiers reveals the chilling TRUTH about the war in Iraq.

IN the shattering diary he kept faithfully throughout his Gulf service lorry driver and Territorial Army corporal Kevin Mervin lays bare the brutal and bitter realities of day-to-day life for our lads—and lasses—on the desert front line.

THROUGH his own down-to-earth words Cpl Mervin reveals how he saw children callously machine-gunned in the street by evil Saddam's rebel forces and found families torn to pieces by bullets from their own countrymen. He tells of spine-tingling firefights and a hair-raising ambush.

HIS war diary also reveals his revulsion at the arrogance of captured Iraqi thugs, his disgust at their five-star treatment—and the joy he shared with the ordinary people he liberated. Kevin's story will open the eyes of anti-war demonstrators around the world. Start reading it today.
THE Iraqi border. Near dawn. March 20, 2003.
Sheltering in his truck from a violent sandstorm in the midst of the biggest Allied army to gather since D-Day, part-time soldier Kevin Mervin picks up his pen.
The war against Saddam Hussein's brutal regime is about to begin. And so is a diary that will change Territorial Army corporal Kevin's life forever. As screaming shells and violent explosions light up the night air outside, Kevin—a lorry driver in civilian life who had no idea what he was in for—writes: "No turning back. This is it.
"My heart is pounding like a racehorse after running the Grand National and my stomach is tying itself in knots, for the war has started.
"A huge sandstorm has hit our location. The Iraqi army have taken advantage of this and launched an attack on our position, using a large number of T72 tanks to bombard us. Twelve Challenger 2 MBTs thunder past, heading for the T72s' position to take ‘em out.
"I can't believe what I'm witnessing. Is this for real? Are we really going to war. Am I going to die?
"A few weeks ago I was a lorry driver whose only worries were where I should stop for a pee on the M6. Now I'll be driving across a border and into a war and for what? Freedom, f*****g freedom?
"This better be worth it. They better appreciate it, the Iraqis, and the people back home, moaning about the war. Do they actually realise what we're going through? Have they been told? Nah, they won't listen anyway, they couldn't give a s**t."
Like every British soldier on the Kuwaiti border that night, army mechanic Kevin knew of the huge anti-war demonstrations back home. How millions were against it. How it was "unjust".
The 38-year-old dad-of-three had been a Terrier eight years. He loved the weekend warrior life in Northamptonshire—but he never expected to fight.
Now here he was about to duck bullets in a foreign land—sent by a country divided over whether he should even be there. He was worried and fed up.
But four days later, everything was to change in a bloody encounter Kevin would never forget.
March 24: Kevin and fellow soldier Stuart, both in the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers V, are in a patrol ordered into the town of Az Zubayrth to recover a broken-down army lorry. Kevin's diary records the full horror of what unfolded.
Rifle
"As we drove in I noticed a bunch of kids, five or six years old, running down the wasteland beside a wall. They were screaming and shouting. Then there was a burst of automatic fire—the children were running for their lives.
"I slowed down and flashed the warrior armoured vehicle accompanying our patrol in front—but they hadn't heard the shots and turned a corner out of sight.
"A man in civvy clothing came into view. He crouched down and took careful aim with his AK rifle, continuing to fire small bursts at the scattering children.
"No, no, no! This wasn't happening. I grabbed my rifle, jumped out of the cab of my Mercedes truck and got cover behind the front bumper. I lay down in the prone position and snapped a couple of rounds in his direction.
"The crack of my rounds whizzing past his head made him look at me, but he was soon distracted by the fleeing children, as if he was weighing up the situation —kill the kids first, then me.
"Stuart jumped out of his Foden (recovery vehicle) and went under the bumper ready to fire.
"The kids were well scattered and about 100 metres ahead of the chogie (army slang for hostile militia-men). He opted to fire at the children first and took aim again, letting off three rounds. Instantly a little girl fell to the ground like a rag doll. I couldn't believe my eyes. ‘You b*****d! You f*****g b*****d!' I shouted. He turned to face me now, pointing his rifle at me—but I didn't give him the chance to return fire.
"I was determined to drop him before he had the chance to drop me. I took aim and double-tapped a dozen rounds in quick succession in the hope he'd fall the same way the little girl had. Then Stuart let off a few rounds from his position, as did the warrior with its chain (machine) gun.
"The crew must've heard the commotion and come back. Chunks of masonry went in all directions as 5.56mm and 7.62mm rounds ripped through the target. The enemy fell, or rather squelched, to the ground—not entirely in one piece.
"The commander of the warrior poked his head out of the turret and beckoned me to get the f*** out of there. I wanted to see if the little girl was alive but there was no chance of that. I jumped back into the truck and wheel-spun the rear axle in my hurry to get away. Stuart did the same in the Foden. Eventually the warrior pulled over and let us pass. I stopped to allow Stuart to catch up then lit a cigarette hoping it would help. It didn't. I couldn't get that little girl out of my head.
Crying
"I started to scream in anger and frustration. ‘B*****d! B*****d! B*****d!' I shouted, punching the steering wheel. Then I jumped out of the cab and kicked the f*** out of the bumper as well. Stuart caught up. He jumped out of the Foden and joined me in kicking the bumper. His eyes were red raw. He too had been crying.
"Before this the only fighting I'd witnessed was a brawl in a pub. The only dead person I'd seen was my grandad. Boy, was all that changing fast." Within days they were capturing Saddam loyalists—and, with the attack on the children still burning in his memory, Kevin pulls no punches in his diary.
"Whatever the militia's excuse, it wouldn't bring back that little girl's life. To capture the Fedayeen (militia-men) alive was an immoral act as far as we were concerned, because we were obliged to treat them with respect: give them medical treatment, food, water and shelter. The food was far better than our ration packs.
"And what did we get in return from those b******s? Nothing but constant complaints and threats of lawsuits because they claimed they were being mistreated.
"I listened to these parasites while building a prisoner-of-war camp, complaints from the same b******s who would force children, some three years old, to drink petrol and then shoot them with a tracer round.
"The burning phosphorous round would ignite the petrol and make it explode inside their stomachs. The parents were forced to witness this. I kept thinking of my own three kids back at home. Of how I would feel.
"It was incredible to think that someone who killed innocent children one day, and was captured the next, could have their complaints backed up by goody two-shoes tree-huggers back home who hadn't even been to Iraq."
Despite anti-war feeling in Britain, Kevin and his comrades were seeing daily the joy of ordinary Iraqis at the fall of Saddam Hussein. Entering the town of Safwan they were greeted as heroic liberators by ecstatic crowds:
"It seemed the whole of the town's population had lined the streets. It gave me a tremendous buzz. I saw a little girl, no older than four, in a pink dress with a dirty face looking at me. I noticed where tears had made clean streaks down her cheeks.
"I quickly rummaged through the 24-hour rat (rations) pack next to me and pulled out a bar of chocolate. I threw it at her in a feeble attempt to ease my guilty conscience. Some young boys knocked her over to get the bar. She sat on the kerb, leaving them to fight over the chocolate. My heart went out to her. I jumped off the truck with a complete rat pack and handed it to her.
"She wouldn't take it at first so I took out a bar and opened it for her. Her eyes lit up. After a few mouthfuls, she looked up at me and smiled. This precious child must have thought everything was OK now. No more fear and no more pain and suffering.
Ambushes
"I wished I had a magic wand to make everything all right but chocolate was all I could give to try and make things better."
But behind the satisfaction of liberating the Iraqis lay the constant threat of ambushes.
Standing sentry duty one day, Kevin, his pal Stuart, also a TA corporal, and fellow regular army comrades Bobby and Tony were caught in a firefight as a group of Iraqi militants in a red pick-up attacked their position. Kevin wrote: "The truck slowly edged towards our position at the camp's north entrance.
"Then, as Stuart was walking to the Foden, the engine revs increased. ‘Stuart,' I shouted. ‘Take cover—this could turn nasty.' I ran to take charge of the gimpie (general purpose machine gun). Tony had crouched down to my left with his rifle over the top of the sandbags and the LAW (light anti-tank weapon) in easy reach.
"Then, when it was 20 metres away, automatic fire from the back of the pick-up filled the air.
"I returned fire with a few bursts from the gimpie with Tony, Stuart and Bobby joining in the exchange. The gimpie chopped out the front of the pick-up, stopping it instantly.
"The windscreen and offside panels were peppered with holes from the 7.62mm rounds of the gimpie and the 5.56mm rounds of the LSWs (light support weapons) and SA80 rifles. The two chogies in the cab slumped in their seats. Four chogies in the back dived out and took cover in the bushes. Seconds later they emerged, throwing their hands in the air, shouting what could have been obscenities or requests for mercy." It was over.
After moving north to Al Amarah in mid-April, Kevin and his comrades once again found evidence of the full brutal horror of Saddam's regime.
They were led to the back of a roadside breeze-block building by a weeping little boy and found the bodies of two adults and a child in a shallow grave. Nearby a man stood crying. The boy ran to him. Kevin wrote:
"The bloke picked up the boy and hugged him. Stuart and I looked on, slightly confused. ‘I'm his father,' he said.
"‘If you're his father, who are the bodies?' Stuart asked. The man replied, ‘The woman is my wife, the girl is my daughter. The man is my wife's father.' Then he explained what had happened.
"The militia had wanted the shack as a gun position to take out coalition vehicles. The owner, the boy's grandfather, refused them entry—a big mistake.
Shot
"The militia shot the boy's sister to try to make the grandfather change his mind but it made him even more stubborn. He was determined not to let them have it.
"So they forced him to dig the shallow pit and put the little girl in. But its size must have raised his suspicions—they wanted it big enough to hold two adults.
"Sure enough, the grandad and the little girl's mother were forced to kneel in front of the pit, then shot in the back of the head, falling into their own graves."
Unofficially, Kevin and his mates are told the Iraqi army has surrendered on April 16. Kevin flew back to England on April 26.
"As we stepped off the plane we were greeted by a cold early morning mist. Taxis had been arranged to take us home.
"By 0800 I was ringing the front doorbell. When my wife Helen answered, I didn't know who was most surprised. After the welcome tears and hugs, I lay down on the sofa with my four-year-old daughter Rachel."
Kevin's mind flashed back to another little girl, lying like a rag doll in the road. And to a crying little boy standing over the shallow grave of his murdered mum.
"Then Rachel looked at me with her innocent blue eyes and asked, ‘You're not leaving again, are you, Daddy?'
"I looked at her and smiled. Back here was where I belonged. ‘C'mon darling, let's watch Bear In The Big Blue House. I think it's just started', I said."