Gaddafi’s forces ousted with help from international airstrikes as regime accuses coalition of trying to push Libya into civil war Libyan rebels have entered the key oil town of Ras Lanuf after routing Muammar Gaddafi’s forces in Brega with help from UN-backed airstrikes that tipped the balance away from the military. Brega, the main oil export terminal in eastern Libya, fell after a skirmish late on Saturday, with rebels continuing their push westwards to Ras Lanuf and its large oil refinery. “There is no Gaddafi army in Ras Lanuf,” said rebel fighter Walid al-Arabi, quoting rebels who had returned from the town, and that the frontline was now west of Ras Lanuf. Earlier, rebel commander Ahmed Jibril, manning a checkpoint on the western edge of Brega, said: “There are no Gaddafi forces here now, the rebels have Brega under their full control, it is free.” The two oil towns are responsible for a large chunk of Libya’s oil production, which has all but stopped since the uprising that began on 15 February and was inspired by the toppling of governments in Tunisia and Egypt. The Gaddafi regime on Saturday acknowledged the airstrikes had forced its troops to retreat and accused international forces of choosing sides. “This is the objective of the coalition now, it is not to protect civilians because now they are directly fighting against the armed forces,” Khaled Kaim, the deputy foreign minister, said in the capital, Tripoli. “They are trying to push the country to the brink of a civil war.” The fall of Ajdabiya after days of artillery duels and air bombardment delivered the Libyan revolutionaries their first significant victory over Gaddafi’s forces since the coalition air strikes began a week ago. The Libyan army sat outside town, astride the main coastal highway, blocking the rebels’ attempts to advance west toward the capital and recapture territory lost as Gaddafi found his footing after the initial shock of the uprising. On Friday, the insurgents moved rocket launchers and other weapons down the road from Benghazi, then said they fought through the night with the dug-in enemy. “We hit them with our rockets and RPGs,” said Mohammed Rahim, a former regular soldier wearing a makeshift uniform of blue camouflage jacket and green trousers. He went over to the rebels at the beginning of the uprising. “The fighting went on all night. It was a big battle. All the fighters came from Benghazi for it.” However, the destruction of tanks on the edge of the town suggested it was air strikes by coalition forces, ostensibly to protect civilians, that had finally broken the back of strong resistance by army forces before the rebels moved in. The length of time it took the insurgents to overcome the army, and the rebels’ reliance on air strikes to destroy the bulk of its armour before finally taking Ajdabiya, confirmed how dependent the poorly armed and inexperienced revolutionaries are on foreign air forces to fight their war for them. Six wrecked tanks marked the road into the town alongside artillery guns and rocket launchers mangled by the missiles from beyond the clouds. Ammunition littered the ground. Other guns were left intact and were hauled away by the rebels for the next battle. On the other side of Ajdabiya, where the road heads west out of town, were more destroyed tanks and armoured vehicles. Others sat by the roadside unscathed. Abandoned piles of weapons and ammunition, including Russian-made tank shells and rocket-propelled grenades, suggested Gaddafi’s forces had left in a hurry. The rebels swiftly arrived with transporters to remove the armour to add to an expanding revolutionary tank force that has yet to see action. Corpses of Gaddafi’s fighters lay among some of the clusters of armour, but around others there was no sign of bodies, perhaps further evidence that they had fled from their tanks in fear of the air strikes. At least 20 tanks were destroyed or abandoned along with artillery guns and rocket launchers. The strikes also appeared to have destroyed a military barracks. One of the rebel fighters, Mansour Mahdy, acknowledged that the battle would not have been won without foreign planes. “We are very grateful to the west. Everyone wants to thank France. Was it France this time? Or America? We thank them all,” he said. Days of air strikes were carried out by both countries, alongside British aircraft. The rebels took control of a mostly empty town, raising the revolutionary flag – the pre-Gaddafi-era ensign – and firing off more bullets in celebration. As word spread that the fighting was over, residents began to return in hundreds of cars . The few among the town’s 130,000 people who endured the siege were relieved but stunned. Some gave accounts of Gaddafi’s security men hunting down rebel sympathisers when they occupied the town. One man said he was looking for his brother and feared he had been executed or taken to prison in Tripoli. Other residents said they had not been badly treated and that, after the initial street battles and occasional shelling, the hardest part had been to endure a town with no electricity or water and dwindling food supplies. The local hospital closed after most of the staff fled because they feared they would be targeted by Gaddafi’s forces after some doctors publicly sided with the rebels. One elderly man did not seem to view it as liberation. He said he feared the fighting would return. He did not seem entirely trustful of the rebels either. “We never had this before, all these men with guns. This was a peaceful town. Now everyone has run away. We did not ask for this,” he said. The victory will provide a boost to morale in rebel-held territory after a string of defeats that saw the army even invading the de facto rebel capital of Benghazi until Gaddafi’s forces were destroyed by the first air strikes. But for all the celebrations, the rebels’ struggle to overcome the relatively limited defences of Ajdabiya does not bode well for their bellicose threats to march all the way to Tripoli. If Ajdabiya is the example, it offers the prospect of a protracted conflict or military stalemate, largely decided by how far the western allies are prepared to go in support of the rebels’ advance. Unless the regime cracks under other pressures, such as a sudden collapse of support for Gaddafi from within his own system, there appears little prospect of the rebels marching on Tripoli unless Britain, France and the US are prepared to offer rolling air cover for the revolutionaries that obliterates the regime’s ability to fight. The revolutionaries were able to move swiftly along the coastal road and retake Brega and Ras Lanuf, which they held at the beginning of the uprising. But moving on to the larger and more politically important town of Sirte may prove to be a challenge too far. Sirte is Gaddafi’s birthplace and he once proposed making it Libya’s capital. He is likely to reinforce the town because its fall would be a devastating blow. A rebel assault on Sirte would also raise a dilemma for Nato and the coalition leading the air strikes. The UN resolution permits military action in defence of civilians. Until now, it has been Gaddafi’s forces threatening rebel-held cities such as Benghazi, Misrata and Ajdabiya. But a rebel assault on Sirte would present the question of whether the coalition is prepared to launch air strikes to help take a town that has not risen up against Gaddafi. If not, it appears unlikely the rebels will be able to overcome the regime’s defences in Sirte on their own. Alternatively, if Gaddafi’s forces make a stand in the desert, where no civilians are threatened, that would also present the coalition forces with difficulty in justifying air strikes in support of the rebels. The revolutionary leadership had not expected Gaddafi’s forces to hold out for as long as they did at Ajdabiya, a sign that they are not entirely deterred from fighting by the air strikes. The rebels’ military spokesman, Colonel Ahmed Omar Bani, has said that promises of weapons had been made by several foreign government that he declined to name, although none had so far delivered any. But given the rebels’ poor combat record on the battlefield, where the civilian volunteers who have joined their ranks have proved to be ill-disciplined and prone to flee in chaos, there may be a reluctance to supply weapons that might fall into the hands of Gaddafi’s military. For all its insistence that it will not accept a divided Libya, the revolutionary council is increasingly adjusting to the reality that it may be facing stalemate and governing the rump of a country until Gaddafi’s regime implodes. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Chris Halliwell, 47, accused of murdering 22-year-old who went missing after leaving Swindon nightclub last weekend Police have charged a 47-year-old taxi driver with the murder of Sian O’Callaghan, who went missing after leaving a nightclub in Swindon last weekend. Wiltshire police said Chris Halliwell, 47, of Ashbury Avenue, Swindon, was charged on Saturday night and would appear before magistrates in Swindon on Monday. The Wiltshire district prosecutor, Simon Brenchley, said: “I have been working closely with Wiltshire police and now have authorised them to charge Christopher Halliwell with Sian O’Callaghan’s murder. Having reviewed the evidence, I am satisfied that there is sufficient to charge him, and that it is in the public interest to do so. “I must remind the media to take care in reporting events surrounding this case. Mr Halliwell has been charged with a serious offence and is entitled to a fair trial. It is extremely important that nothing should be reported which could prejudice any trial. I will keep liaising closely with the police as their investigation continues.” Halliwell remains in police custody at Gablecross police station in Swindon. O’Callaghan’s body was found near Uffington in Oxfordshire on Thursday. The 22-year-old office administrator vanished after leaving a club in Swindon in the early hours last Saturday. Police are continuing to try to identify a second body found as part of the inquiry at another location, a farmer’s field in Gloucestershire. Crime Stephen Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Tests at Fukushima No 2 reactor reveal radiation at 10m times normal levels amid warnings crisis could last months Radioactivity levels in one part of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant are 10m times higher than normal, Japanese officials have said, amid warnings that the operation to avert disaster at the facility could last for months.. Tests on the surface of a pool of water that has formed in the No 2 reactor revealed radioactivity of 1,000 millisieverts (mSv) per hour – four times the level deemed safe by the government. The worker carrying out the test reportedly fled before taking a second reading. Hidehiko Nishiyama, a spokesman for Japan’s nuclear and industrial safety agency [Nisa], said, “This is quite a high figure,” adding that the water “is likely to be coming from the reactor”. The discovery prompted another evacuation of workers at the site, halting work to pump and store radioactive water that has built up in the turbine buildings of three of the plant’s six reactors. Evidence of dangerous contamination in the No 2 reactor emerged after three workers were exposed to high levels of radioactivity while repairing the cooling system at the No 3 reactor. Two of the men received suspected beta ray burns after stepping into water with radiation levels 10,000 times higher than normal. Reports said the workers were due to be discharged from hospital on Monday. Modest progress was made over the weekend to remove contaminated water and step up work to cool the reactors with fresh water, rather than corrosive seawater. But Yukiya Amano, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), warned that Japan’s nuclear emergency could go on for weeks, and possibly months. “This is a very serious accident by all standards,” he told the New York Times. “And it is not yet over.” With just one pump currently being used to extract radioactive water, two more will be taken to the site, while the US military is also sending barges loaded with 500,000 gallons of fresh water to nearby Onahama Bay, the US 7th fleet said. Two of the six reactors at the plant, owned and operated by Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), are considered safe, having achieved “cool shutdown”, but the remaining four have yet to be brought under control. Nisa said that temperature and pressure inside all six reactors had stabilised. The unusually high levels of radioactivity in the puddles “almost certainly” indicated that water had seeped from a reactor core, Yukio Edano, the chief government spokesman. Edano denied the situation was deteriorating, but conceded that the myriad problems facing the power plant workers were no closer to being resolved. “We are preventing the situation from worsening,” he said. “We have restored power and pumped in fresh water, and we are making basic steps towards improvement. But there is still no room for complacency.” The deterioration in the state of the reactors is the latest in a string of complications to have hit the Fukushima operation since the plant was seriously damaged by the 11 March earthquake and tsunami along Japan’s north-east coast. The nuclear crisis has raised fears about the safety of food in the area, while Tokyo, 150 miles to the south, experienced a brief rise in radioactivity in tap water that prompted a one-day ban on consumption by infants. Bans have been imposed in the shipment of milk and leafy vegetables from the Fukushima region, while several countries introduced restrictions on Japanese food imports. Last week, the US became the first country to ban the import of milk and some vegetables from contaminated areas. Growing concern over food safety spread to the fishing industry over the weekend, when officials said seawater samples taken 30km off the coast of the Fukushima plant contained 1,850 times the normal level of radioactivity. But Nisa said the tainted seawater posed no risk to health. “Ocean currents will disperse radiation particles and so it will be very diluted by the time it is consumed by fish and seaweed, and even more by the time they are consumed by humans,” Nishiyama said. “There is no need to worry about health risks,” Officials said on Friday they suspected one or more of the reactors had been damaged, leading to water leakages and raising the possibility of large amounts of radiation finding their way into the environment. Tepco has yet to determine the source of the leak. A Nisa spokesman said the length of time workers spend inside units is being closely monitored. “It is definitely a severe environment, but the amount of time workers are allowed in there is strictly controlled so that their exposure does not exceed the limit,” Minoru Ogoda said. He added that most of the radioactivity found in the No. 2 came from iodine-134. The substance has a half-life of just 53 minutes, meaning it dissipates quickly. The setbacks have fueled criticism of Tepco’s handling of the crisis in recent days, and heightened concerns over the safety of up to 600 workers at the plant. The government urged the company to be more transparent after it emerged that Tepco knew radiation levels had risen dramatically days before the workers were injured. “Regardless of whether there was an awareness of high radioactivity in the stagnant water, there were problems in the way work was conducted,” Nishiyama said. The men were exposed to radiation of between 173 and 180 mSv, lower than the upper limit of 250 mSv per year introduced by the health ministry soon after the disaster. Japan disaster Japan Nuclear power Energy Natural disasters and extreme weather Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …To tweak the punchline of an old joke — what's this talk of invading, Paleface? Unleashing the bellicosity that's been kept corked since MSNBC put the kibosh on his “Psycho Talk” segments, Ed Schultz has weighed in at The Huffington Post in an op-ed titled “Why I Support President Obama's Decision to Invade Libya.” Psst, Ed — we haven't invaded Libya , at least not yet. And I'd venture to say that most Americans don't expect we will, at least if Obama is to be believed. Remember how he said American troops would not be sent there? The president was pretty emphatic about it, as I recall. Agreed, it was all of eight days ago, distant enough that it slipped down your memory hole. What's most amusing about Schultz as shill for Obama's exercise in foreign-policy resume building is that Schultz vilified Sen. John McCain during the 2008 campaign as a “warmonger.” It brought considerable attention to Schultz at the time, which was surely his motivation for saying it, and Schultz has repeated it ad nauseum ever since. Now Schultz is gushing about actions taken by Obama that are indistinguishable from those that President McCain would have taken. Correction — this isn't amusing. It's pathetic. Schultz writes at HuffPo that after nearly a decade of war in Afghanistan and eight years in Iraq, “I think many of us have war fatigue. I think we all deserve clarity on this issue. However, it's important to note, President Obama explained this won't be a long-term operation. Matter of days, not a matter of weeks. Not even months.” Obama, and Schultz, believing this based on the confident expectation that wars always go according to plan. Republicans, Schultz writes, “are hammering the president not because he is not invading the entire Middle East, but because he's not doing it the way they would want to do it.'” (italics in original). Wow, talk about getting tied up in nots. As for those shadowy Republicans who want to invade “the entire Middle East” — insert frantic Maddow hand-waving here — Schultz cites exactly none. “This president, President Obama, has made his choice,” Schultz writes. “And it is his leadership. He inherited Iraq. He inherited Afghanistan. And now, he has made a decision to invade Libya.” Enough with the hand-me-downs, he wants his own splendid little war.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left It’s time for your weekly podcast from our own Driftglass and Bluegal , otherwise known at The Professional Left. Enjoy the podcast and don’t forget to vote for Bluegal if you’d like to help send her and Driftie to Netroots Nation this year at Democracy for America’s site . You can listen to the archives or make a donation to help keep these going at http://professionalleft.blogspot.com/ . And here are some related links to this week’s podcast. 1. Lewis Black signs on as Donald Trump’s campaign manager. 2. Paul Wolfowitz . 3. Yeats’ “The Second Coming” . 4. Tom Friedman, “The Mustache of Understanding” . 5. Ginni Thomas hired by Bib-and-Tucker Carlson . 6. Steve Forbes gets eated. 7. Constantine’s Sword .
Continue reading …Our own Blue Gal is in the running for a Netroots Nation scholarship. Our esteemed friend and colleague Blue Gal is applying for a Democracy for America Scholarship , to help defray the cost of Netroots Nation for herself and her fiance Driftglass. Vote here to send these terrific podcasters/bloggers (contributors to C&L since 2007) to Netroots Nation. There are a lot of good people up for the scholarships, but let me tell you why you should support Blue Gal. Not only has she been blogging since 2004, you’d be hard pressed to find another blogger who so generously champions small blogs. (She also organizes the Blog against Theocracy blogswarm every year.) And that’s not all. She’s one of the people who make the wheels work behind the scenes here and writes most of our nightly open threads. A vote for Blue Gal doesn’t mean you can’t vote for anyone else — you get three. A full list of applicants is here . But we’d really, really, really like it if you’d click here to vote for Blue Gal . Thanks!
Continue reading …Our own Blue Gal is in the running for a Netroots Nation scholarship. Our esteemed friend and colleague Blue Gal is applying for a Democracy for America Scholarship , to help defray the cost of Netroots Nation for herself and her fiance Driftglass. Vote here to send these terrific podcasters/bloggers (contributors to C&L since 2007) to Netroots Nation. There are a lot of good people up for the scholarships, but let me tell you why you should support Blue Gal. Not only has she been blogging since 2004, you’d be hard pressed to find another blogger who so generously champions small blogs. (She also organizes the Blog against Theocracy blogswarm every year.) And that’s not all. She’s one of the people who make the wheels work behind the scenes here and writes most of our nightly open threads. A vote for Blue Gal doesn’t mean you can’t vote for anyone else — you get three. A full list of applicants is here . But we’d really, really, really like it if you’d click here to vote for Blue Gal . Thanks!
Continue reading …Our own Blue Gal is in the running for a Netroots Nation scholarship. Our esteemed friend and colleague Blue Gal is applying for a Democracy for America Scholarship , to help defray the cost of Netroots Nation for herself and her fiance Driftglass. Vote here to send these terrific podcasters/bloggers (contributors to C&L since 2007) to Netroots Nation. There are a lot of good people up for the scholarships, but let me tell you why you should support Blue Gal. Not only has she been blogging since 2004, you’d be hard pressed to find another blogger who so generously champions small blogs. (She also organizes the Blog against Theocracy blogswarm every year.) And that’s not all. She’s one of the people who make the wheels work behind the scenes here and writes most of our nightly open threads. A vote for Blue Gal doesn’t mean you can’t vote for anyone else — you get three. A full list of applicants is here . But we’d really, really, really like it if you’d click here to vote for Blue Gal . Thanks!
Continue reading …Cardiff International Arena Tonight, Cardiff’s premier gig-shed has turned into a family parlour. Five picture frames hang from the stage, gold and old-fashioned, each of them holding a member of Elbow. Every now and then, each portrait breaks its composure – to scratch a nose, brush a sleeve, or, in Guy Garvey’s case, exhale like Henry VIII after a particularly heavy supper. Eventually the lights lower, the frames empty, and the band arrive for real, raising half-empty pint glasses like welcome flags. The gesture is returned by 7,500 people – and before a note has been played, the audience is theirs. If any British band belongs to the people in 2011, it’s Elbow. By now, we all know their rags-to-riches story: forming in Bury 20 years ago, getting dropped twice, throwing everything into their fourth album, The Seldom Seen Kid (revived romances, personal bereavements and tons of orchestral experiment) before winning the 2008 Mercury prize. Their new album Build a Rocket Boys! is all about hearth and home – a canny move for a band that set life’s little intimacies to a stadium-sized soundtrack. And in the middle of the mêlée we find renaissance man Garvey – 6 Music DJ, thinking woman’s crumpet, national treasure. Tonight he is dressed in a three-piece suit and black tie, like a local undertaker or hearty pub landlord. His presence on stage remains refreshingly unshowy, too – he rocks from heel to toe as if he’s trying to keep balance on starboard as the band open up with “The Birds”, their new album’s opening track. Then he realises he’s got a catwalk, which he starts pounding up and down like a bear, his voice switching from smoky growl to high tenor as he rambles – a voice that has never sounded better than it does tonight. The band beam at him broadly as he does so, happy to make honey, while they let their queen parade. “What we going to do with you?” go the backing vocals; we hear the warmth, and the years, in those words. And then we’re off. Garvey gets a sweat on; his jacket comes off to womanly wolf-whistles. “Hardly, but thank you,” he deadpans. The gig becomes a mixture of proggy musical adventure and Phoenix Nights turn. “Join me in worshipping the orb,” says Garvey, introducing “Mirrorball”, as a glittery sphere descends from the ceiling. He asks if anyone is standing next to someone they love but haven’t told yet; later, he gets the crowd to applaud the audience member furthest from the stage. This is one of several antics tonight that veers dangerously towards excessive schmaltz. Elbow just about get away with it, as there is grit behind their pearls. It helps that they have become a momentous live band, their rockier tracks sounding like juddering juggernauts. “Grounds for Divorce”, for example, keens, yearns and growls, Garvey smashing a snare drum as the crowd whoa-oh along. Recent single “Neat Little Rows” also gains extra backbone, the despair and death in its lyrics becoming much more apparent here (“lay my bones on cobblestones, lay my bones in neat little rows”). Even in Elbow’s softer songs, however, these shadows linger darkly, most impressively tonight in “The Loneliness of the Tower Crane Driver” – the song Elbow campaigned to play at the 2008 Mercury prize ceremony, a song about the crushed dreams of a manual worker, rather than one of their album’s more conventional ballads. “Send up a prayer in my name,” Garvey begs tonight, as the band build the song into a huge, drenching climax. “They say I’m on top of my game,” he exhales – and hands across the crowd rise to dab at eyelashes. As the night draws on, Garvey returns to the catwalk, this time with a piano and his bandmate, Craig Potter, the man who also produced The Seldom Seen Kid . They play one of only three songs tonight from Elbow’s pre-Mercury days, 2005′s “Puncture Repair”, a song about leaning on a friend who “patches you up”, and the rest of the band join them soon after. The band finish with the expected flourish – “One Day Like This”, their perennial wave-a-lighter number, which will soundtrack emotional TV moments for ever more. As Garvey sings, however, we’re reminded it’s a song about being hung over, feeling desperate and clinging on to hope, and how we feel better when we pull together. It also becomes clear that Elbow are still part of the crowd’s real world, and not the world of rock worship – a real rarity on a stage of this size. Long may these five ordinary men keep on doing this extraordinary thing. Elbow Pop and rock Jude Rogers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Cardiff International Arena Tonight, Cardiff’s premier gig-shed has turned into a family parlour. Five picture frames hang from the stage, gold and old-fashioned, each of them holding a member of Elbow. Every now and then, each portrait breaks its composure – to scratch a nose, brush a sleeve, or, in Guy Garvey’s case, exhale like Henry VIII after a particularly heavy supper. Eventually the lights lower, the frames empty, and the band arrive for real, raising half-empty pint glasses like welcome flags. The gesture is returned by 7,500 people – and before a note has been played, the audience is theirs. If any British band belongs to the people in 2011, it’s Elbow. By now, we all know their rags-to-riches story: forming in Bury 20 years ago, getting dropped twice, throwing everything into their fourth album, The Seldom Seen Kid (revived romances, personal bereavements and tons of orchestral experiment) before winning the 2008 Mercury prize. Their new album Build a Rocket Boys! is all about hearth and home – a canny move for a band that set life’s little intimacies to a stadium-sized soundtrack. And in the middle of the mêlée we find renaissance man Garvey – 6 Music DJ, thinking woman’s crumpet, national treasure. Tonight he is dressed in a three-piece suit and black tie, like a local undertaker or hearty pub landlord. His presence on stage remains refreshingly unshowy, too – he rocks from heel to toe as if he’s trying to keep balance on starboard as the band open up with “The Birds”, their new album’s opening track. Then he realises he’s got a catwalk, which he starts pounding up and down like a bear, his voice switching from smoky growl to high tenor as he rambles – a voice that has never sounded better than it does tonight. The band beam at him broadly as he does so, happy to make honey, while they let their queen parade. “What we going to do with you?” go the backing vocals; we hear the warmth, and the years, in those words. And then we’re off. Garvey gets a sweat on; his jacket comes off to womanly wolf-whistles. “Hardly, but thank you,” he deadpans. The gig becomes a mixture of proggy musical adventure and Phoenix Nights turn. “Join me in worshipping the orb,” says Garvey, introducing “Mirrorball”, as a glittery sphere descends from the ceiling. He asks if anyone is standing next to someone they love but haven’t told yet; later, he gets the crowd to applaud the audience member furthest from the stage. This is one of several antics tonight that veers dangerously towards excessive schmaltz. Elbow just about get away with it, as there is grit behind their pearls. It helps that they have become a momentous live band, their rockier tracks sounding like juddering juggernauts. “Grounds for Divorce”, for example, keens, yearns and growls, Garvey smashing a snare drum as the crowd whoa-oh along. Recent single “Neat Little Rows” also gains extra backbone, the despair and death in its lyrics becoming much more apparent here (“lay my bones on cobblestones, lay my bones in neat little rows”). Even in Elbow’s softer songs, however, these shadows linger darkly, most impressively tonight in “The Loneliness of the Tower Crane Driver” – the song Elbow campaigned to play at the 2008 Mercury prize ceremony, a song about the crushed dreams of a manual worker, rather than one of their album’s more conventional ballads. “Send up a prayer in my name,” Garvey begs tonight, as the band build the song into a huge, drenching climax. “They say I’m on top of my game,” he exhales – and hands across the crowd rise to dab at eyelashes. As the night draws on, Garvey returns to the catwalk, this time with a piano and his bandmate, Craig Potter, the man who also produced The Seldom Seen Kid . They play one of only three songs tonight from Elbow’s pre-Mercury days, 2005′s “Puncture Repair”, a song about leaning on a friend who “patches you up”, and the rest of the band join them soon after. The band finish with the expected flourish – “One Day Like This”, their perennial wave-a-lighter number, which will soundtrack emotional TV moments for ever more. As Garvey sings, however, we’re reminded it’s a song about being hung over, feeling desperate and clinging on to hope, and how we feel better when we pull together. It also becomes clear that Elbow are still part of the crowd’s real world, and not the world of rock worship – a real rarity on a stage of this size. Long may these five ordinary men keep on doing this extraordinary thing. Elbow Pop and rock Jude Rogers guardian.co.uk
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