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New York’s gay marriage bill is a major boon for rookie governor Andrew Cuomo—to the semi-ridiculous tune of propelling his name into the 2016 presidential race, writes Chris Cillizza in the Washington Post . “It’s not just that he delivered on a major civil rights issue for the Democratic base…

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I played banjo with Billy Bragg at Glastonbury festival

Forget the mud, the toilets and the crowds. Glastonbury first-timer Tim Dowling’s biggest challenge was to get a gig. But who would invite him on stage? Step forward Billy Bragg . . . On the train I tell myself I won’t write about the mud. There’s always mud, I think, and everyone always writes about it. Let’s just say the going is extremely soft, even liquid. The ground sucks at your boots when you walk and, once you’ve crossed a few hundred metres of it, it sucks at your soul a little, too. When people talk about Glastonbury in terms of numbers, the scale of it can be hard to fathom. I can’t really picture 137,000 people, or imagine the throughput of the 3,200 toilets laid on to accommodate them. But there is one statistic that struck me with a certain force: over the three days no fewer than 2,200 acts were scheduled to perform. Whether anyone watched them or not, several thousand people will be able to say they played Glastonbury 2011. And when I turn up early on Saturday morning, I mean to be one of them. I am going to play the banjo at Glastonbury. Finding someone to play with proves more challenging. Despite some cajoling from the Guardian music desk, Noah and the Whale do not wish to be associated with, or photographed anywhere near, a banjo. Instead I manage to book a brief jam session with Fisherman’s Friends , a sea-shanty group from Cornwall, under a giant giraffe. I can’t see why an a cappella group would need banjo accompaniment, but I am not in a position to be choosy. Unfortunately they are, and I’m left standing under the giraffe by myself. Later they reschedule for 6pm. I am obliged to strike out on my own. Although I would like to claim toting a banjo around a huge muddy festival as an additional hardship, I can’t. Everybody’s carrying stuff. Parents are happily hauling pushchairs through the mire. People are walking around the site in wedding dresses. I pass a man wearing butterfly wings, Spock ears, a purple feather fascinator and a high-visibility vest. I decide the Stone Circle – a sort of catch-all spiritual focal point on a rise at the southern edge of the site – might be a good place to kick off my Glastonbury career, but it soon becomes clear that anyone seeking to draw attention to themselves in the circle faces impressive competition. I climb up on one of the stones and play for a bit, but no one comes near. Some festival-goers appear to be attempting to commune with the other stones, either by leaning against them or laying on hands. On the stone directly opposite four people dressed as Teletubbies are having their picture taken. Around the campfire at the centre of the circle all one hears is a series of sharp staccato gusts, as balloons are filled with nitrous oxide and sold to punters by enterprising, red-faced men. It’s sort of peaceful. After about 20 minutes a small child with a painted face clambers up on the stone beside me and listens while I play. “How many Glastonburys have you been to?” I say, trying to make small talk. “Six,” he says. I notice he has something written on his forearm. “It’s my first one,” I say. “What’s that written on your arm?” He grabs hold of his wrist and reads it out carefully. “Please. Return. This. Child. To . . .” I have to go, because I’m appearing with Billy Bragg , who has graciously consented to let me play a song with him in his regular 3pm slot, Bill’s Big Roundup, on the Left Field stage. “The song is called Way Down Yonder in the Minor Key,” he told me when I spoke to him on the phone the previous Thursday. “But don’t listen to the recording, because I don’t play it that way any more. You need to find the version I play live. Your best bet is a YouTube clip from a Canadian children’s programme called Peggy’s Cove , where I’m singing it to a puppet lobster.” “OK,” I said. “It might have been a crab, I don’t know,” he added. It was a lobster. After watching the clip several dozen times, I think I’ve memorised the chords, as well as all the lobster’s lines, but as I approach the backstage area behind the Left Field tent, my hands are shaking. I once drove hours hours through a blizzard to see Billy Bragg play, and the prospect of meeting him would be very exciting were it not alloyed with a sense of impending doom. He pulls his guitar out of his case and talks me through the song’s basic structure. It’s simple enough, but I get a bit lost in the run-through. “The thing is, Tim, I’m a bit like you,” he says. “Not much of a musician.” I pause to admire the way he has welded a charming bit of self-deprecation to an insult so neatly that at first I mistake the whole thing for a compliment. During our brief rehearsal I never once play the song right. I wait backstage while Bragg begins his show, which immediately follows a debate on the future of green employment. Onstage with him are Emmy the Great and singer-songwriter Leon Walker, late of Dartmoor prison, who Billy met though his campaign to provide musical instruments to offenders, Jail Guitar Doors. I am, in every possible sense, out of my depth. After their third song I get introduced, I walk out, I sit down and, well, I’m afraid I don’t remember too much after that. I’m pretty certain I missed the passing A chord in the first chorus (I’ve always assumed that “passing” is in its musical sense more or less synonymous with “optional”) because every time it came around again Bragg turned and gave me a quick, hard stare to make sure I didn’t forget again. Later I also recall something Bragg said to Leon about me just before we went on. “We’re treating him as a musician today, not a journalist,” he said, sounding as if he’d only just decided it. “Bring him in gently, he’s one of us.” I’ll take that – if I never play Glastonbury again, I can be content with the memory of Billy Bragg’s extreme generosity. Which is just as well, because the Fisherman’s Friends cancel our six o’clock. I am left to wander the site. In the Craft Field I see a stall where people are taught how to build ovens out of cob, an ancient, handmade clay-and-straw building material. This strikes me as odd, since the whole festival already seems like a giant machine for churning straw into wet clay with the feet. We’re all making cob, hundreds of acres of it, smooth and oven-ready. In a dystopian urban mockup called Shangri-La, I am suddenly surrounded by nurses in platinum blond wigs, who prod me and look into my eyes. They tell me I have a virus. They recommend tequila. I realise I haven’t seen much music. I slog over to see Pulp at the Park stage, where the mud is so sticky that to stand still is to risk permanent cementation. As the sun sets the woman next to me offers me something brown and homemade from a lemonade bottle. “What is it?” I say. “After Eight vodka,” she says. “Oh, no thank you,” I say. There is a long pause while we listen to Pulp. “So what do you do?” I say. “Just crush up After Eight mints with vodka?” “No, I melt them,” she says. “Actually, I think I’d better have some of that.” This begins a chain of events that I could probably summarise as more drinks. My legs turn to lead. I watch Coldplay’s set on a hospitality bar telly. Glastonbury runs on a 24-hour clock, but I do not. I find myself listening to people who are drinking whisky at 2.30am complain of being defeated by tiredness. I decide it’s time to find my tent while I still can. It sits directly under a guard tower – tower R2 – where a watchman’s walkie talkie brings news from around the festival all night. “We have a very distressed individual wishing to leave the site,” it chirps at 4am. This makes it hard to sleep, but I find it reassuring to know that if I become distressed in the night – a distinct possibility – I need only shout up to him. The next morning the sun has dried the mud into leathery lumps and rolls. At midday I wander off to the Pyramid stage – my first visit – to see the Low Anthem . At this hour it’s easy to get to the front of the stage, where security guards are handing out cups of water. I notice the Low Anthem has a banjo onstage. That’s at least two banjos, out of just 2,200 performers. I think I smell a trend. Glastonbury 2011 Billy Bragg Festivals Tim Dowling guardian.co.uk

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I played banjo with Billy Bragg at Glastonbury festival

Forget the mud, the toilets and the crowds. Glastonbury first-timer Tim Dowling’s biggest challenge was to get a gig. But who would invite him on stage? Step forward Billy Bragg . . . On the train I tell myself I won’t write about the mud. There’s always mud, I think, and everyone always writes about it. Let’s just say the going is extremely soft, even liquid. The ground sucks at your boots when you walk and, once you’ve crossed a few hundred metres of it, it sucks at your soul a little, too. When people talk about Glastonbury in terms of numbers, the scale of it can be hard to fathom. I can’t really picture 137,000 people, or imagine the throughput of the 3,200 toilets laid on to accommodate them. But there is one statistic that struck me with a certain force: over the three days no fewer than 2,200 acts were scheduled to perform. Whether anyone watched them or not, several thousand people will be able to say they played Glastonbury 2011. And when I turn up early on Saturday morning, I mean to be one of them. I am going to play the banjo at Glastonbury. Finding someone to play with proves more challenging. Despite some cajoling from the Guardian music desk, Noah and the Whale do not wish to be associated with, or photographed anywhere near, a banjo. Instead I manage to book a brief jam session with Fisherman’s Friends , a sea-shanty group from Cornwall, under a giant giraffe. I can’t see why an a cappella group would need banjo accompaniment, but I am not in a position to be choosy. Unfortunately they are, and I’m left standing under the giraffe by myself. Later they reschedule for 6pm. I am obliged to strike out on my own. Although I would like to claim toting a banjo around a huge muddy festival as an additional hardship, I can’t. Everybody’s carrying stuff. Parents are happily hauling pushchairs through the mire. People are walking around the site in wedding dresses. I pass a man wearing butterfly wings, Spock ears, a purple feather fascinator and a high-visibility vest. I decide the Stone Circle – a sort of catch-all spiritual focal point on a rise at the southern edge of the site – might be a good place to kick off my Glastonbury career, but it soon becomes clear that anyone seeking to draw attention to themselves in the circle faces impressive competition. I climb up on one of the stones and play for a bit, but no one comes near. Some festival-goers appear to be attempting to commune with the other stones, either by leaning against them or laying on hands. On the stone directly opposite four people dressed as Teletubbies are having their picture taken. Around the campfire at the centre of the circle all one hears is a series of sharp staccato gusts, as balloons are filled with nitrous oxide and sold to punters by enterprising, red-faced men. It’s sort of peaceful. After about 20 minutes a small child with a painted face clambers up on the stone beside me and listens while I play. “How many Glastonburys have you been to?” I say, trying to make small talk. “Six,” he says. I notice he has something written on his forearm. “It’s my first one,” I say. “What’s that written on your arm?” He grabs hold of his wrist and reads it out carefully. “Please. Return. This. Child. To . . .” I have to go, because I’m appearing with Billy Bragg , who has graciously consented to let me play a song with him in his regular 3pm slot, Bill’s Big Roundup, on the Left Field stage. “The song is called Way Down Yonder in the Minor Key,” he told me when I spoke to him on the phone the previous Thursday. “But don’t listen to the recording, because I don’t play it that way any more. You need to find the version I play live. Your best bet is a YouTube clip from a Canadian children’s programme called Peggy’s Cove , where I’m singing it to a puppet lobster.” “OK,” I said. “It might have been a crab, I don’t know,” he added. It was a lobster. After watching the clip several dozen times, I think I’ve memorised the chords, as well as all the lobster’s lines, but as I approach the backstage area behind the Left Field tent, my hands are shaking. I once drove hours hours through a blizzard to see Billy Bragg play, and the prospect of meeting him would be very exciting were it not alloyed with a sense of impending doom. He pulls his guitar out of his case and talks me through the song’s basic structure. It’s simple enough, but I get a bit lost in the run-through. “The thing is, Tim, I’m a bit like you,” he says. “Not much of a musician.” I pause to admire the way he has welded a charming bit of self-deprecation to an insult so neatly that at first I mistake the whole thing for a compliment. During our brief rehearsal I never once play the song right. I wait backstage while Bragg begins his show, which immediately follows a debate on the future of green employment. Onstage with him are Emmy the Great and singer-songwriter Leon Walker, late of Dartmoor prison, who Billy met though his campaign to provide musical instruments to offenders, Jail Guitar Doors. I am, in every possible sense, out of my depth. After their third song I get introduced, I walk out, I sit down and, well, I’m afraid I don’t remember too much after that. I’m pretty certain I missed the passing A chord in the first chorus (I’ve always assumed that “passing” is in its musical sense more or less synonymous with “optional”) because every time it came around again Bragg turned and gave me a quick, hard stare to make sure I didn’t forget again. Later I also recall something Bragg said to Leon about me just before we went on. “We’re treating him as a musician today, not a journalist,” he said, sounding as if he’d only just decided it. “Bring him in gently, he’s one of us.” I’ll take that – if I never play Glastonbury again, I can be content with the memory of Billy Bragg’s extreme generosity. Which is just as well, because the Fisherman’s Friends cancel our six o’clock. I am left to wander the site. In the Craft Field I see a stall where people are taught how to build ovens out of cob, an ancient, handmade clay-and-straw building material. This strikes me as odd, since the whole festival already seems like a giant machine for churning straw into wet clay with the feet. We’re all making cob, hundreds of acres of it, smooth and oven-ready. In a dystopian urban mockup called Shangri-La, I am suddenly surrounded by nurses in platinum blond wigs, who prod me and look into my eyes. They tell me I have a virus. They recommend tequila. I realise I haven’t seen much music. I slog over to see Pulp at the Park stage, where the mud is so sticky that to stand still is to risk permanent cementation. As the sun sets the woman next to me offers me something brown and homemade from a lemonade bottle. “What is it?” I say. “After Eight vodka,” she says. “Oh, no thank you,” I say. There is a long pause while we listen to Pulp. “So what do you do?” I say. “Just crush up After Eight mints with vodka?” “No, I melt them,” she says. “Actually, I think I’d better have some of that.” This begins a chain of events that I could probably summarise as more drinks. My legs turn to lead. I watch Coldplay’s set on a hospitality bar telly. Glastonbury runs on a 24-hour clock, but I do not. I find myself listening to people who are drinking whisky at 2.30am complain of being defeated by tiredness. I decide it’s time to find my tent while I still can. It sits directly under a guard tower – tower R2 – where a watchman’s walkie talkie brings news from around the festival all night. “We have a very distressed individual wishing to leave the site,” it chirps at 4am. This makes it hard to sleep, but I find it reassuring to know that if I become distressed in the night – a distinct possibility – I need only shout up to him. The next morning the sun has dried the mud into leathery lumps and rolls. At midday I wander off to the Pyramid stage – my first visit – to see the Low Anthem . At this hour it’s easy to get to the front of the stage, where security guards are handing out cups of water. I notice the Low Anthem has a banjo onstage. That’s at least two banjos, out of just 2,200 performers. I think I smell a trend. Glastonbury 2011 Billy Bragg Festivals Tim Dowling guardian.co.uk

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Just as it looked like LulzSec was gearing up for an extended reign of cyber leaks and hijinks, the notorious hacker squad decided to hang up its modem—but not without one last hurrah, reports Reuters . “Our planned 50 day cruise has expired, and we must now sail into the…

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Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann are in a dead heat in Iowa, with 23% and 22% respectively, says a new poll by the Des Moines Register . Herman Cain is third with 10%, and all others candidates are tracking in the single digits. While Romney is a well-known name in Iowa,…

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Israel accused of trying to intimidate Gaza flotilla journalists

Foreign Press Association urges Israel to withdraw threat of 10-year ban against journalists travelling with flotilla The Foreign Press Association has accused the Israeli government of using “threats and intimidation” to stop media coverage of a 10-ship flotilla due to sail to the Gaza Strip this week. The ships are sailing to protest against Israeli restrictions on Gaza and to commemorate last year’s flotilla, which was intercepted by the Israeli navy, who killed nine of the Turkish participants. Israel has restricted the supply of goods and the movement of individuals in Gaza since Hamas took control in 2007. Two of the ships, the Tahrir and the Audacity of Hope, are docked in Athens, where the harbourmaster has banned the latter from leaving port until its seaworthiness is established. Some of the other ships, including the Irish ship Saoirse, have already set sail from European ports. The ships are expected to meet in the Mediterranean before approaching Gaza later this week. The flotilla is expected to carry up to 500 passengers. A Dutch-Italian boat will carry three members of the European parliament and one member of the Israeli parliament. Passengers on the Audacity of Hope include the author Alice Walker and Hedy Epstein, an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor. Passengers have been undergoing training in non-violent resistance techniques and instruction in what to expect if Israeli soldiers board their ship. They have also been provided with T-shirts with the message “Unarmed Civilian”. Israel has been engaged in a diplomatic campaign to prevent the flotilla from setting sail. Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, said last week that the flotilla was not “useful” and consular officials tried to persuade US nationals in Athens not to join the flotilla. On Sunday Israel warned journalists, who will make up a minority of the passengers, not to travel with the flotilla. In a letter to editors, Oren Helman, the director of the government press office, wrote that the flotilla had been organised by western and Islamist extremists: “The flotilla intends to knowingly violate the blockade that has been declared legally and is in accordance with all treaties and international law.” He said journalists who participated in the flotilla would be breaking Israeli law and would be banned from Israel for 10 years, as well as facing confiscation of equipment and other measures. The Foreign Press Association, which represents the international media in Israel, said the threat to punish journalists covering the Gaza flotilla raised serious questions about Israel’s commitment to freedom of the press. “Journalists covering a legitimate news event should be allowed to do their jobs without threats and intimidation. We urge the government to reverse its decision immediately,” it said. Gaza flotilla Israel Gaza Palestinian territories Middle East Conal Urquhart guardian.co.uk

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Libya unveils its latest weapon against Nato: women at arms

More than 500 females of various ages armed to the teeth and swearing loyalty are paraded in front of international media Screaming and chanting his name, the 500 women and girls vowed their undying love for one man. Not a pop star or Hollywood actor, but Libya’s Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. “Kill all the people in Libya first, then come for Muammar Gaddafi,” said 14-year-old Fatima Hassan. “I will kill myself if Muammar Gaddafi is killed. I know our people will kill themselves if he dies.” The event in Tripoli on Sunday was billed as a graduation ceremony for women who had been given weapons training in defence of the regime. Around 50 international journalists, invited and escorted by government minders, arrived to find them clapping, singing, ululating, punching the air and waving green flags in a tented hall set up with chandeliers and two colossal flatscreen TVs. There were elderly women and little girls in the hall, and every age in between. Some held aloft pictures of a luminous Gaddafi, one framed in green Christmas tinsel. A woman waved a green flag and wore a sparkly green cape, green scarf and green bandana with badges showing Gaddafi’s face. Next to her was a woman wearing a watch that displayed his image. Reporters pondered whether the event had been stage managed entirely for their benefit. The Gaddafi groupies painted the first dozen rows green, but behind them were hundreds of empty seats. Outside was a rattle of gunfire as some enthusiastic graduates fired their new weapons into the air with little regard for where the ammunition might land. There was also much idolatry, most of all from the teenager Fatima, who said her father is an engineer and she attended an international school near Edgware Road in London. “We love Muammar Gaddafi and we want to save our country,” she said. “He made us happy. He makes us eat and makes the country free to do what we want. Before, we weren’t free. My grandparents tell us that before Gaddafi, it was bad, there was no bread. He saved us.” Pledging to fight for the man depicted on her necklace, she explained: “There are no women and children now.” Fatima claimed her five brothers have gone to fight for the regime against rebels in Benghazi and Misrata. Asked how she would feel if they were killed, she replied: “It doesn’t matter. I don’t care. It’s for the leader.” With government minders hovering nearby, there was similar fervour from Habib Abdul Qasem, 39, a nanny dressed in military fatigues. “Of course I will defend myself and my country,” she said. “We are an armed nation; everyone in this country has weapons. I keep a gun in my house. I’ve never used it but if the conditions change I will use it against the Crusasders.” Nadia Ali, 30, an unemployed interior designer, added: “We want a Libya that’s strong. Muammar Gaddafi is our father. There is some problem in the rebels’ head. Muammar Gaddafi is a good man who loves the Libyan people. He gave us something.” Gaddafi’s detail of female bodyguards has become the stuff of legend during his near 42-year rule. It is not yet clear what role the newly-trained women will play militarily and whether they could be pressed into action if the Libyan army is overstretched. Moussa Ibrahim, a government spokesman, said: “Libyan women are now joining the armed forces against Nato. We are training them. Their main role is defending homes. We have no plan to send them to the front line. They are not trained for that, and our army is very effective.” But he added with a rhetorical flourish: “We are going to make sure that every mother, the symbol of love and creation, is a bomb, a killing machine.” Ibrahim insisted that the regime is stronger than ever and there has been no discussion of surrender. “We are prepared to give 1.2m weapons away and we have been training many, many, many ordinary Libyans.” The set piece over, journalists were shepherded back to their official bus, but it remained stationary for long minutes as the celebratory gunfire came ever closer. There was growing anxiety on board over the potential for stray bullets. When this was expressed to a government minder, he replied tartly: “Your planes are bombing the Libyan people and you are afraid of a bullet?” Libya Middle East Middle East Muammar Gaddafi David Smith guardian.co.uk

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The prominent Chinese human rights activist Hu Jia has been freed from prison, after serving three-and-a-half years for “inciting subversion,” reports the BBC . Hu’s wife posted the news on Twitter this morning. “We are fine and happy. Need to rest for some time. Thank you everyone,” the message said. With…

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Gay Girl in Damascus hoaxer accused of defending himself with new persona

Tom MacMaster says complimentary anonymous commenter in online forum using same IP address was friend who was visiting Tom MacMaster, the US graduate student behind the Gay Girl in Damascus blog hoax , has been accused of creating another fake Arab female online identity to defend his own reputation online. A comment on the website Mondoweiss under the name “Miriam Umm Ibni”, mounting a spirited defence of MacMaster’s conduct in posing as “Amina”, a lesbian Syrian woman, was traced by fellow users to the same IP address in Edinburgh that he used for the Amina hoax. The Guardian has seen screengrabs of the IP data, emailed by one of the site’s hosts Adam Horowitz, that show the post originated from the address 188.74.64.53. Journalists, bloggers and web users unmasked MacMaster earlier this month as the unlikely hoaxer behind the Amina blog, in part after its posts were traced to the address. In an email, later posted on the site, MacMaster acknowledged that “Miriam Umm Ibni” was a fake identity, but denied being behind it, saying a “friend of mine who would really like to remain nameless” had posted the comment in his defence. It came from the same IP address because she had been staying with his wife and him, he wrote. “Like many of my friends, many of whom are committed pro-Palestinian, anti-war and anti-colonialist activists, she was outraged by some of the slanders made against me online. And, like many of my friends, she’s been urged by me to defend me. She did so. She’s that kind of person.” MacMaster said he had received death threats after being exposed as the Amina blogger, who shot to international attention after he wrote a post , posing as the blogger’s cousin, saying “she” had been kidnapped by Syrian security forces. “Some people, I suppose, are angry at the uniqueness of their experience being called into question when someone can successfully impersonate that voice. Others question the ‘right’ of a simple non-Arab goy [a Jewish name for a non-Jewish person] to speak on these issues in any form. Still others have trouble understanding the concept of fiction.” He added that he had “signed an agreement forswearing all use of sockpuppets”. Contacted directly by the Guardian, MacMaster declined by email to explain the circumstances further, saying only that he was “committed to maintaining all confidences that were given to me in either personae and will continue to do so”. He also declined to elaborate on the details of the “agreement” or why he considered it binding. Mondoweiss describes itself as “a news website devoted to covering American foreign policy in the Middle East, chiefly from a progressive Jewish perspective”. The post on which the comment appeared argued “that western audiences will only embrace Arab gay movements if those movements attempt to mimic western gay movements”, and described MacMaster as “vile”. The author of the post, “Seham”, told the Guardian by email that he used a pseudonym to retain his anonymity “given my work on Palestinian issues”. In response, “Miriam Umm Ibni” wrote: “MacMaster, misguided though he may have been in his actions, _did_ [sic] highlight real issues … He misguidedly placed himself in the guise of an Arab woman but he did so from real compassion. “He is (or was) a real ally (though considering how so-called progressives are calling for his blood I wouldn’t be shocked if he’s turning into a rightwinger).” After MacMaster’s exposure, a second supposedly lesbian blogger , “Paula Brooks”, founder of the US site LezGetReal.com, was revealed also to be a man. Last week, MacMaster updated the Gay Girl blog with a post entitled: “That kinda sucks: Not that anyone cares.” Gay rights Syria Blogging Esther Addley guardian.co.uk

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Heatwave to end with a bang as thunderstorms predicted

Forecasters expect Monday to be hottest day of the year but for heavy rains to drown out the sunshine Thunderstorms are to bring the short-lived heatwave to an abrupt finish on Monday evening, forecasters warn. Sunday is the hottest day of the year, with temperatures rising above 28C. And although Monday will see the mercury tipping as much as 30C, by evening the hot weather could be broken by thunder and heavy showers. Paul Mott of MeteoGroup, the weather division of the Press Association, said: “It’s certainly the hottest day of the year – temperatures in St James’s Park in central London reached 28.4C (83.1F). “And tomorrow the weather will get even hotter, at least in the south-eastern areas of the UK. There will be plenty of sunshine over England and Wales, although the north-west will be a bit cloudier. “But there will be a breakdown in the weather in the evening and on Tuesday, with heavy showers and localised thunder storms spreading east across England. “And by Wednesday the heat wave will definitely be over. If anything it will be a bit colder than average, 20C (68F) in London and down to 15C (59F) elsewhere.” London parks were packed with scantily clad sun worshippers, taking advantage of the blue skies. But those heading to the coast may have been disappointed to find temperatures as low as 15C. In Brighton, beach goers made do with temperatures of 19C (66F), although the mercury will rise to 24C (75F) tomorrow. Andy Murray, first on Centre Court on Monday for a last-16 showdown with Frenchman Richard Gasquet, will be glad to play his match before the weather turns. But despite the occasional threat of showers, Wimbledon is likely to see some prolonged sunny spells throughout the week. On Saturday, the Met Office issued a heat-health alert for the east Midlands, east of England and the south-east, warning of dangers of high temperatures, particularly for the very old, the very young and those with chronic conditions. Weather guardian.co.uk

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