Newly married Jordan and Alex Reid celebrated Valentine’s Day together and finally started their honeymoon two weeks after tying the knot.
Jordan, real name Katie Price, received her cage fighter hubby at the Heathrow Airport as he returned from India after filming his new reality show.
However, the 31-year-old glamour girl seemed quite annoyed when the waiting [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Heathrow’
Jordan, Alex Reid’s V-Day
British airport dismisses SRK’s body scanner image claims
Indian superstar Shah Rukh Khan’s claims that he signed print outs of ”nude” security scans of his body at Heathrow have been dismissed by the airport owner, BAA.
According to London’’s Telegraph, the airport has labelled Shah Rukh’s claims “completely factually incorrectâ€, reports The Age.
BAA said the claims “simply could not be true”, insisting the scanners [...]
Jordan ‘leaves Andre fuming after dumping kids for photoshoot with lover’
Jordan reportedly left former husband Peter Andre reeling after leaving kids with nannies to jet for a series of raunchy holiday shots with lover Alex Reid in Las Vegas.
Andre, who ended his marriage with the glamour girl last year, was said to be “livid†after learning the mum-of-three left the kids without informing him.
“It’’s [...]
Susan Boyle Airport Meltdown
Scottish singing sensation Susan Boyle sparked complaints from frequent flyers on Tuesday after she reportedly began singing into a mop in a bizarre meltdown at London’s Heathrow Airport.
The sometimes-unstable Susan stunned travelers by dancing and belting out songs into a mop head in a first-class lounge, while awaiting a British Airways (BA) flight to Chicago, [...]
London’s Gatwick airport reopens
Snow and ice are causing travel chaos across Britain as severe cold weather stops tens of thousands of people departing on Christmas-New Year holidays. British Airways said all domestic and European flights out of Heathrow, Europe’s biggest airport, were cancelled on Monday evening.
Victoria Beckham Dress Collection Stolen
Police in the UK are on the hunt stylish thieves who lifted Victoria Beckham’s $630,000 collection of new dresses in a staged robbery.
The former Spice Girl is reportedly shocked over the robbery of up to 75 dresses from her exclusive fashion line. The frocks due to go on sale at tony New York department [...]
Federal-Mogul’s Alapont
I’m interviewing Federal-Mogul CEO Jose Maria Alapont later on today at a hotel in London. I’ll be interested to get his views on the general state of the supplier industry, as well as on Federal-Mogul (where things look reasonably bright of late). Alapont served some time in senior positions at Delphi as well as Valeo before that, so he should have a good perspective on things.
One thing I have picked up – the guy is on a tight schedule and hitting the ground running when he lands at London Heathrow first thing this morning on a flight from the US. Good luck to him on staying awake. I’m fine heading west and with the sun. When you get to your destination you just have to stay up extra late. Not a huge deal and there’s usually a bar that can help ease you in. But the other way, travelling east against the sun? Grim. There’s no escape from jet lag as the clock accelerates wildly. Crossing the Atlantic to enjoy the ambience of Heathrow at 7:00am while trying to keep your eyes open ahead of a busy day requires fortitude of spirit and coffee, lots of it.
FEATURE: OEMs move faster to shift contracts to stable suppliers
Pilot charged with being over alcohol limit at Heathrow
British police charged a United Airlines pilot late Tuesday after his arrest on suspicion of being drunk as he was about to help fly a passenger plane from Heathrow Airport, a spokesman said. Erwin Vermont Washington, 51, was charged with “exceeding the proscribed alcohol limit” after his
India for cooperation with UK in health, green tech: Prez
India will seek further upgradation and diversification of its “multi-dimensional” relationship with the UK through greater cooperation in sectors like infrastructure, health care and green technology, President Pratibha Patil said on Monday.
“I will not only be discussing areas in which we already cooperate but also seek greater cooperation and collaboration in other areas where opportunities [...]
Locked down
British efforts to clamp down on jihadist terrorists are showing partial success
A YEAR ago a British jury failed to convict eight British Muslims of conspiring to blow up transatlantic airliners by smuggling liquid explosives on board in soft-drink containers, although prosecutors thought they had close to a watertight case. Bombmaking equipment, lists of flights and even martyrdom videos were all produced in evidence. The jury agreed that the men had been up to no good but were unable to decide exactly what sort.
Had the plot succeeded, perhaps seven aircraft bound for America from Heathrow would have been downed and thousands of lives lost in the biggest terrorist act in British history. Sir Ken MacDonald, at the time head of the Crown Prosecution Service, points to the chaos in air traffic and trade relations that would have ensued. He believes that the economic consequences would have been severe. …
Lumley heads to Nepal to meet Gurkhas
Actor greeted by well-wishers in first visit to Nepal after she helped overturn government ruling on Gurkha veterans
Joanna Lumley received a rapturous welcome in Kathmandu today on her first visit to Nepal after leading an extraordinary campaign that forced the government into a humiliating climbdown over Gurkha veterans.
Hundreds of Ghurkas and well-wishers turned out to cheer the 63-year actor as she and her party arrived at Tribhuvan international airport.
“My friends of Nepal, I am your family coming to Nepal for the first time. I want to thank you so much. I want to say in the time-honored cry, ‘Ayo Gurkhali!’” Lumley told the crowd from the top of her car, reciting the soldiers’ traditional battle cry.
The crowd, who had waited for hours, offered the Absolutely Fabulous star Buddhist prayer scarves and marigold garlands. Many brandished signs that read “Joanna Lumley, daughter of Nepal” and “Ayo goddess Joanna” or “Here comes goddess Joanna”.
Lumley, whose late father was an officer in the Gurkha regiment, said a great injustice had been rectified when the government capitulated under the onslaught of the Lumley campaign in May and said all Gurkha veterans with four years’ service would be allowed to move to the UK. Before the government’s change of policy, only those who retired after 1997, when the Gurkhas were rebased from Hong Kong to Britain, were eligible. Gurkhas say there are about 26,000 ex-soldiers in Nepal who get a British pension.
Speaking from Heathrow before her departure, Lumley said: “It’s thrilling, it really is. We were met by the most wonderful group of Gurkhas outside Terminal Three, with silk scarves and bunches of flowers. It’s just incredible. I’ve never been to Nepal before, and this is really going to be just stunning. I feel so humbled by the fact I’m going to meet so many ex-Gurkhas and their families and see where they are and how they live.”
During her six-day trip, Lumley is scheduled to meet President Ram Baran Yadav and Madhav Kumar, the prime minister of Nepal.
Organisers of the visit say they expect thousands of veterans to travel to meet her, many of them walking on foot for days from remote areas of the country. “She is like a goddess to the Gurkhas,” said Falklands war veteran Gyanendra Rai. Rai was one of several Gurkhas who was refused the right to settle in Britain, despite fighting for the British in 1982 and being seriously injured.
“I don’t have the words to describe how happy I am that Joanna Lumley is coming to Nepal,” he said.
The Gurkhas have been part of the British army for almost 200 years and more than 45,000 have died in British uniform. Around 3,500 currently serve in the British army, including in Afghanistan.
Lumley is accompanied by Gurkha justice campaigner Peter Carroll, a Folkestone councillor, who approached Lumley after a woman in Kent tapped him on the shoulder and suggested he ask her to get involved, he said, adding: “The rest is history.”
“The campaign has been very long, from 2004 to 2009, and now we are making a different journey,” he said before leaving Britain. “It is nice to be sent off like this, and it will be nice to be received. We are so excited.
The people we are going to meet were a big part of the campaign, so it will be quite emotional.”
Lumley meeting Gurkhas in Nepal

Actress Joanna Lumley has arrived in Nepal at the start of a week-long trip to meet ex-Gurkhas and their families
Ms Lumley, whose father was an officer in the Gurkha regiment, fronted their campaign to gain UK settlement rights.
Accompanied by members of her family and by Peter Carroll, who started the campaign, Ms Lumley will meet Nepal’s prime minister and president.
The actress said she was "humbled" by a visit which would be "such a privilege".
"It’s thrilling, it really is," Ms Lumley said at London’s Heathrow Airport, prior to her flight on Saturday evening.
"We were met by the most wonderful group of Gurkhas outside Terminal 3, with silk scarves and bunches of flowers.
"I don’t think it can be anything other than wonderful"
Joanna Lumley
"It’s just incredible. I’ve never been to Nepal before, and this is really going to be just stunning," she added.
"I feel so humbled by the fact I’m going to meet so many ex-Gurkhas and their families, and see where they are and how they live.
"I don’t think it can be anything other than wonderful."
On Tuesday Ms Lumley will visit Jhapa and Dharan to meet Gurkhas.
Mr Carroll said some people were expected to walk for three days just to be there.
"I think it’s going to be an amazingly emotional experience," he said.
In May, the government said all retired Gurkha soldiers – originally from Nepal – with at least four years service in the British Army, could stay in the UK.
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BAA reels as Gatwick buyer pulls out
BAA fights to keep debt reduction strategy on track after planned airport sale left with only one potential buyer
BAA is fighting to keep its debt reduction plans on track after the planned sale of Gatwick airport, a key option in curbing borrowings of around £12bn, was left with only one would-be buyer following the withdrawal of a consortium led by Manchester Airports Group (MAG).
MAG pulled out of the bidding yesterday after refusing to meet BAA’s final price of £1.5bn – £100m more than the owner of Manchester airport was willing to offer. The departure of MAG leaves BAA dependent on one suitor whose involvement in the process has been shrouded in uncertainty for months.
The US-based investment fund Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP) remains interested in Gatwick, but it is not known whether it is in formal talks with BAA. It was angered by the airport group’s decision in May to appeal a Competition Commission ruling that it must sell Gatwick, Stansted and either Glasgow or Edinburgh airports over the next two years.
BAA’s new price tag of £1.5bn could be a block as well, with GIP’s offer believed to be in the same range as the MAG consortium, which includes Canadian infrastructure investor Borealis.
The Gatwick sale is a key plank in BAA’s drive to whittle down debts of around £9.5bn that are secured against its London airports, including Heathrow. A £4.4bn refinancing facility within the debt structure created to house BAA’s London assets, BAA (SP), requires payments of £1bn a year up to 2013. The first payment is due in March next year and BAA has earmarked the proceeds from the Gatwick sale for that purpose.
Failure to sell Gatwick by March next year will leave BAA with the option of raising new debt in order to meet the payment schedule. BAA is saddled with total borrowings of around £12bn after a consortium led by Ferrovial, the Spanish infrastructure group, loaded the business with debt in order to finance its acquisition for £10.3bn in 2006.
However, the option of raising new debt is also shrouded in doubt because the government has proposed a “special administration” regime which, in the event of BAA going bust, would give ministers powers over the group’s airports. BAA’s creditors have expressed concerns over proposals that would deny them the right to sell Heathrow in order to recover their loans.
In a submission to the Department for Transport last month, BAA indicated that the credit market was alarmed by the plans. It said: “Creditors have indicated that certain of the reforms would, if implemented in their current form, adversely affect their existing rights and materially shift the balance of risk and reward from the basis upon which they invested.”
Douglas McNeill, analyst at Astaire Securities, said BAA’s hopes of raising £1.5bn would be damaged by the withdrawal of MAG. “Selling Gatwick is an important part of BAA’s debt reduction plan, and it needs to keep as many bidders as possible interested in order to maximise price,” he said.
BAA’s valuation of Gatwick is underpinned by a formula called the regulatory asset base – or RAB – which gives the airport a value of just under £1.6bn. BAA had initially targeted a sale at a premium to the RAB price, but it is becoming increasingly likely that it will have to settle for around £1.4bn or scrap the sale process entirely.
BAA said it would not comment on the bidding process in public. However, one source close to the discussions said MAG’s exit could be a negotiating tactic to force BAA into accepting a bid of around £1.4bn. MAG declined to comment but it is understood the consortium is still interested in Gatwick, albeit at a lower price.
BAA is expected to cite the protracted sale process, launched in September last year, when it attends an appeal tribunal against the Competition Commission ruling in October. Colin Matthews, BAA’s chief executive, described the imposition of a partial break-up as “flawed” earlier this year and indicated that the group might struggle to sell three airports by the middle of 2011.
“Two years suggests a long time but it is not necessarily a long time to complete three transactions in a difficult market environment,” he said.
The tribunal is expected to deliver its verdict before Christmas.
British Airways jet evacuated
Passengers escape down emergency slides as flight BA288 prepares for take-off in Phoenix, Arizona
Hundreds of passengers have been evacuated from a British Airways jet after smoke filled the cabin just before take-off.
The Boeing 747 had been preparing to depart for Heathrow from Phoenix Airport in Arizona this morning when passengers reported an acrid smell. All on board escaped down the plane’s emergency slides.
A passenger on flight BA288, Corinne Casazza, said: “There was this really strong smell of fuel and I could hear people panicking behind me. They were upset and finding it hard to breathe because of the smell.
“People were coughing and choking and those with children were very worried and so they brought them to the front where they could breathe.
“We asked if we could open the doors but were told we couldn’t because we were still moving.
“There was a lot of pushing and shoving – everyone just wanted to get off the plane.”
Another passenger said the cabin filled with smoke and people had to cover their faces because of the smell.
“It was horrific – it smelt like rubber burning, or something like that,” she said.
No serious injuries were reported but about 15 people had minor cuts and bruises
A BA spokesman said: “The plane was being pushed back from the stand when there were reports of smoke. A decision was taken to evacuate the aircraft following the usual procedures.”
Fire crews found smoke in the cabin and in the cargo compartment, but no fire was discovered, said a spokeswoman for Phoenix fire department. Safety officials believed the smoke and smell were caused by an electrical problem.
BA has organised hotel rooms for the stranded passengers while engineers examine the plane.
Airport passenger numbers fall 5.9%
• 12.7m passengers pass through company’s seven airports
• Lowest figure for nine months
• Edinburgh bucks the trend
The number of travellers using major UK airports declined to its lowest level for nine months in June, BAA said today.
The airport operator said a total of 12.7m passengers passed through its airports last month, a reduction of 5.9% on the same period last year.
But the firm, which saw a 7.3% fall in May, said this was the best underlying figure since last September.
BAA had posted a 2.3% decline in passenger numbers in April but this rose to 6.8% when the effect of a late Easter was stripped out.
Heathrow recorded a comparatively modest fall of 3.1% because of its large number of transfer flights.
Stansted, the base for several low-cost carriers including Ryanair and easyJet, was the worst affected airport, falling 11.5%.
In the six months to June 2009, the Essex airport is down 14.4%, compared with the same period last year, as carriers have slashed capacity at the airport.
Domestic traffic was down 8.1% in June, European scheduled flight passengers were reduced by 2.8% and travellers on North Atlantic routes were 9.4% lower.
Long-haul flights were the most resilient sector, almost flat on last year at a 0.2% reduction.
Edinburgh was the only airport to register an increase in traveller numbers, at 1.4% – its third month of growth.
Gatwick had 7.6% fewer passengers in June, while Glasgow and Aberdeen dropped 10.9% and 9.8% respectively.
BAA is embroiled in a battle against the Competition Commission’s decision to make it sell three of its airports.
The commission ruled earlier this year that BAA’s ownership of seven UK airports was anti-competitive and ordered the firm to sell Gatwick and Stansted airports as well as either Glasgow or Edinburgh.
BAA had already decided to sell Gatwick in West Sussex and said last month the sale process was continuing.





Turn green words into green deeds
Despite government talk, transport emissions are rising because carbon-generating schemes are being given the go-ahead
Two key transport announcements were made yesterday. The UK government launched a Carbon Reduction Strategy for transport which set out a vision with little action on the ground. Far less noted was the launch of a National Transport Plan for Wales, cancelling an extension of the M4 planned for south-east Wales. A saving of a cool £1bn, with plans to invest instead in improvements to the existing road, together with sustainable travel initiatives.
The decision to cancel the M4 in south-east Wales can be seen as a watershed. As the first cancellation of a motorway extension in recent times, a low-carbon transport strategy is being led not from Whitehall but from Cardiff.
Clearly, the UK government recognises the need to promote low-carbon transport, and its proposals to integrate transport modes, promote walking and cycling and reduce the need to travel are welcome. But here’s the rub: transport emissions are increasing because, on the ground, schemes that generate carbon are being given the go-ahead. This is true at a national level through approval of Heathrow’s third runway, as well as at regional and local levels.
The government’s own assessment found that helping people to find alternatives to car use is one of the most effective and cost-efficient ways of reducing emissions from transport. Sustrans’ TravelSmart programme provides tailored travel advice direct to households and has reduced car use by more than 10% in the towns and cities where it has operated. Further city pilots and work with local authorities are welcome, but government has missed an opportunity to invest in a national Smarter Choices programme as a way of promoting change through better information. If the government invested the £250m earmarked for electric cars in Sustrans’ TravelSmart, it could reach about 10m households across the country and achieve reductions in car trips of about 10%, together with significant increases in levels of walking, cycling and public transport use.
The decision from the Welsh assembly has set the bar very high for the first litmus test of the low-carbon transport strategy. Today the UK government will announce decisions on English regional funding for transport. With the majority of English regions having prioritised road schemes it rests with the government to put its low-carbon transport strategy into action and ensure that we are indeed travelling towards a low-carbon future.