
Greta Thunberg news latest: Climate campaigner breaks silence after being deported by Israel over Gaza aid boat
Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has arrived in France after being deported by Israel for attempting to break the country's 18-year naval blockade of Gaza.
The 22-year-old activist told reporters in France that Israel had violated international waters by intercepting the Gaza-bound, UK-flagged Madleen that she and 11 other activists had sailed from Sicily to the Egyptian coast.
'I was very clear in my testimony that we were kidnapped on international waters and brought against our own will into Israel,' she said.
She laughed off criticism from Donald Trump, who had described her as an angry person, saying: 'I think the world needs a lot more young angry women to be honest, especially with everything going on right now.'
At least five of the 12 activists arrested on board the Madleen flotilla are expected to be deported on Tuesday, according to Israeli broadcaster Kan.
The group were picked up off the coast of Egypt earlier on Monday morning and taken to the Israeli port of Ashdod, where they were detained. They had been attempting to take a symbolic amount of aid into Gaza.
Greta Thunberg accuses Israel of war crimes
Greta Thunberg has accused Israel of systematic war crimes against Palestinians
Speaking to reporters after arriving in Paris, the activist said: 'The real story is that there is a genocide going on in Gaza and a systematic starvation following the siege and blockade now, which is leading to food, medicine, water that are desperately needed to get into Gaza is prevented from doing so.
'But of course there are many attempts like this mission both by sea and land to break that siege and open up a humanitarian corridor.'
'This is a continued violation of international law and war crimes that Israel is systematically committing against Palestinians by not letting aid come to starving people, and mass slaughtering in every possible way,' the 22-year-old Swede said.
She added: 'We were 12 peaceful volunteers sailing on a civilian ship carrying humanitarian aid on international waters. We did not break laws. We did nothing wrong.'
Jabed Ahmed11 June 2025 04:00
Israel commits 'extermination' in Gaza by killing in schools, UN experts say
UN experts have said in a report that Israel committed the crime against humanity of "extermination" by killing civilians sheltering in schools and religious sites in Gaza, part of a "concerted campaign to obliterate Palestinian life."
The United Nations Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel was due to present the report to the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council on 17 June.
"We are seeing more and more indications that Israel is carrying out a concerted campaign to obliterate Palestinian life in Gaza," former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, who chairs the commission, said in a statement.
"Israel's targeting of the educational, cultural and religious life of the Palestinian people will harm the present generations and generations to come, hindering their right to self-determination," she added.
The commission examined attacks on educational facilities and religious and cultural sites to assess whether international law was breached.
Israel disengaged from the Human Rights Council in February, alleging it was biased. Its diplomatic mission said on Thursday that the commission's latest report was an "attempt to promote its fictitious narrative of the Gaza war", and proved that its members "care more about bashing Israel than protecting the people of Gaza."
In its report, the commission said Israel had destroyed more than 90% of school and university buildings and more than half of all religious and cultural sites in Gaza.
Jabed Ahmed11 June 2025 03:00
How many times have sailors tried to break Israel's naval blockade on Gaza?
There have been at least eleven occasions when Israel has intercepted activists or pro-Palestinian militants attempting to break its blockade on Gaza, we can report.
Israel's blockade on Gaza has been in place since late 2007.
The most significant incident happened in May 2010, when a six-boat flotilla was intercepted by the Israeli navy around 90 miles from Gaza. Nine people were killed after Israeli commandos opened fire on activists, having boarded the flagship vessel, the Mavi Marmara, Israel claims the activists began attacking the soldiers first. Neither account has been confirmed.
There were additional, major attempts by activists in July 2011, June 2015 and August 2018. The vessels were all boarded without incident by Israeli forces. Like the Madleen, several were taken to the Israeli port of Ashdod.
Several smaller efforts were also intercepted by Israel, largely in the two years between 2009 and 2011.
In March 2011, the Israelis intercepted a freighter called the Victoria in the Mediterranean with 50 tonnes of concealed weapons allegedly bound for Gaza.
Last month, two drones hit another vessel destined for Gaza while it was off the coast of Malta. It was run by the same organisation that manages the Madleen, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition. The FFC claimed those drones were Israeli. Israel declined to comment.
Jabed Ahmed11 June 2025 01:57
Who was on board the Madleen?
There were a dozen activists aboard the Gaza-bound Madleen when it was intercepted by Israeli forces off the coast of Egypt on Monday morning.
Below is a list of the 12 people:
Greta Thunberg, a Swedish climate and social justice activist
Rima Hassan, a member of the European Parliament representing France's far-left La France Insoumise party
Omar Faiad, a French journalist with Al Jazeera who is covering the trip
Yanis Mhamdi, a journalist at the French independent media outlet, Blast, also there to report on the trip
Pascal Maurieras, a French activist and experienced flotilla participant
Thiago Avila, a Brazilian journalist, social activist and politician who has been a vocal supporter of the Palestinian cause for almost two decades
Baptiste Andre, a French physician who is expected to assist passengers or demonstrators injured in possible confrontations with Israeli forces
Yasemin Acar, a German activist of Kurdish descent and part of the FCC's steering committee
Reva Viard, a climate activist from France
Suayb Ordu, a Turkish activist
Sergio Toribio, a crew member from Spain and a member of the marine conservation NGO, Sea Shepherd
Marco Van Rennes, a Dutch marine engineering student and crew member
Tom Watling11 June 2025 00:58
Yemen missile launched toward Israel 'most likely' intercepted, military says
The Israeli military said on Tuesday that a missile launched from Yemen toward Israel had 'most likely' been intercepted, hours after Israel deployed its navy to hit targets in the Yemeni Red Sea port of Hodeidah.
Israel threatened Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthi movement – which has been attacking Israel in what it says is solidarity with Gaza – with a naval and air blockade if its attacks on Israel persist.
'Additional interceptors were launched due to the possibility of falling shrapnel from the interception,' the Israeli military said in a later statement after sirens sounded in several areas.
Andy Gregory10 June 2025 23:58
Watch: Israeli government criticises Greta Thunberg 'selfie yacht'
Andy Gregory10 June 2025 22:57
Activists 'shielded by their passports', says Freedom Flotilla Coalition
The activists on board the flotilla acknowledge that 'by virtue of their passports', they are 'shielded from the daily brutality' endured by Palestinians, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition has said.
In a statement, the FCC said it 'acknowledges that by virtue of their passports of privilege, the Madleen 12 are shielded from the daily brutality and horrendous systemic torture Palestinians endure under Israeli occupation.
'According to Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, as of June 4, 2025, there are over 10,400 Palestinians held captive in Israeli dungeons. Of those, more than 400 are children and more than 3,500 are held without trial, charge, or minimal due process.'
Andy Gregory10 June 2025 21:55
Thirty six people killed near aid sites in Gaza, health officials say
Palestinians desperately trying to access aid in Gaza have come under fire again, with 36 people killed and 207 injured on Tuesday, the Palestinian health ministry said.
Experts and humanitarian aid workers say Israel's blockade and 20-month military campaign have pushed Gaza to the brink of famine. At least 163 people have been killed and 1,495 wounded in a number of shootings near aid sites run by the new Israeli and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
In southern Gaza, at least eight people were killed while trying to obtain aid around Rafah, according to Nasser Hospital.
In northern Gaza, two men and a child were killed and at least 130 were wounded on Tuesday, according to a spokesperson for the al-Awda Hospital, which received the casualties. They said most were being treated for gunshot wounds.
Witnesses told The Associated Press that Israeli forces opened fire at around 2am local time, several hundred yards from the aid site in central Gaza. Crowds of Palestinians seeking desperately needed food often head to the sites hours before dawn, hoping to beat the crowds.
The Israeli military said it fired warning shots at people it referred to as suspects. It said they had advanced toward its troops hundreds of yards from the aid site prior to its opening hours.
UK will never accept forced displacement of Gazans, vows Foreign Office minister
Sir Keir Starmer's government 'will never accept the unlawful transfer of Gazans from or within Gaza', a Foreign Office minister has vowed.
Hamish Falconer told the Commons: 'The situation in the West Bank cannot be seen in isolation from events in Gaza – extremist rhetoric advocating forced displacement of Palestinians, denial of essential aid.
'The creation of new Israeli settlements in the Strip is equally appalling and dangerous. This government will never accept the unlawful transfer of Gazans from or within Gaza, nor any reduction in the territory of the Gaza strip.
'The humanitarian situation remains catastrophic in Gaza. While Israel's ground and air operations expand, Gazans have now been pushed into less than 20 per cent in the territory.
'Hospitals have been destroyed and damaged. The entire population of Gaza is now at risk of famine. Meanwhile, Israel's newly-introduced measures for aid endanger civilians and foster desperation – they are inhumane.'
Andy Gregory10 June 2025 19:58
Greta Thunberg accuses Israel of war crimes
Greta Thunberg has accused Israel of systematic war crimes against Palestinians
Speaking to reporters after arriving in Paris, the activist said: 'The real story is that there is a genocide going on in Gaza and a systematic starvation following the siege and blockade now, which is leading to food, medicine, water that are desperately needed to get into Gaza is prevented from doing so.
'But of course there are many attempts like this mission both by sea and land to break that siege and open up a humanitarian corridor.'
'This is a continued violation of international law and war crimes that Israel is systematically committing against Palestinians by not letting aid come to starving people, and mass slaughtering in every possible way,' the 22-year-old Swede said.

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Telegraph
9 minutes ago
- Telegraph
LA riots, BLM, Save Gaza: get ready for a summer of destructive far-Left activism
The gods of intersectionality must be beaming down upon America right now. As if by clockwork, the Mexican flags – the most potent symbols of the anti-ICE protests now convulsing the nation – have been joined by…what else?….Palestinian flags and other totems of Gazan liberation. It's an almost inevitable co-branding of arch-Left ideologies. The encroachment of pro-Palestinian elements into the anti-anti-migrant riots parallels a nascent – yet similar – alignment between pro-Palestine and the #blacklivesmatter movement. While actual #BLM flags have yet to join their Mexican and Palestinian counterparts on America's chaotic city streets, the protestors are clearly taking their cues from #BLM's summer of rage following the death of George Floyd five years ago. As the New York Post reported this week, one key supporter of the current anti-ICE protests, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, has also backed #BLM protests. For the moment, at least, the melding of migrants and the Palestinian cause appears to be the most worrisome. Kaffiyeh-clad rioters, faces covered in masks and carrying various Palestinian-related paraphernalia, have attacked police cars and hurled Molotov cocktails in both Los Angeles and New Orleans this past week. This is the globalising of the intifada. Thousands of anti-Israel protestors have long demanded it – except it's now taking place right here in America. According to Israel-based media watchdog group Honest Reporting: 'in the pages of major newspapers and the broadcasts of primetime news….mentions of the Palestinian flag are fleeting. The presence of anti-Israel groups is buried or ignored entirely.' The media is unlikely to maintain this ignorance for much longer. Honest Reporting has identified that leading anti-Zionist groups such as Students for Justice in Palestine and Within Our Lifetime have urged their members to support, if not directly join, the anti-Trump protests. This could fundamentally shift the tenor of the Anti-Trump movement from ad-hoc to something multi-national and truly terrifying. No protest movement in American history has been as well-coordinated and spectacularly violent as the last 19 months of Gaza mayhem. If we combine this with the LA riots – thousands of illegal migrants facing deportation and with nothing to lose – summer 2025 could make BLM's weeks of chaos five years ago seem like an Easter Parade. Of course there's nothing necessarily organic between marauding for Gaza and rioting for migrant rights. But that's where #intersectionality conveniently kicks in. The false belief that alignment with one identity-based cause demands alignment with all identity-based causes explains why Gay groups and feminists bafflingly champion Hamas despite the fact it is a misogynistic and homophobic terror group. With their focus on ethnic minorities and Trump militarism, the current riots were almost purpose built for intersectional co-option. The blueprints are certainly in place. Long before the death of George Floyd ignited BLM's summer of fury in 2020, the group enshrined anti-Zionism into its foundational manifesto. Along with advocating for boycott and divestment from Israel, BLM accused Israeli authorities of training US police forces. Those forces, BLM continued, were then unleashed upon America's ethnic minorities. The truth, of course, is more nuanced. US police officers do train in Israel, as part of a joint intelligence, education and community outreach program established after the September 11th attacks. US police officers also train in other foreign nations; Police Scotland, for instance, hosted a contingent of American police to help with de-escalation training back in 2022. But, as many frustrated pro-Israel advocates now routinely sigh, 'No-Jews/No-News'. Only Israel's shared police programs make headlines. Back in January, intersectional activists worked overtime to connect the wildfires devastating Los Angeles with Israel's war with Hamas in Gaza. Now they're doing the same thing with the anti-ICE riots. Ultra-odious broadcaster Mehdi Hasan described the LA riots and Gaza crisis as 'movements of mutual aid and solidarity.' Notorious anti-Zionist site Mondoweiss was even more intellectually-elastic when it described the LA protests and Greta Thunberg's recent failed 'relief mission' as 'represent[ing] the same imperial logic: any challenge to injustice will be met with state violence.' Most worrisome, widely-read social media accounts are busily 'connecting the dots between Los Angeles and Palestine,' laying out the same accusations of police training scheme touted a decade ago by BLM. The posts go on to describe other supposed strategic similarities: Israel's arrest of Palestinian terrorists, for instance, is akin to US arresting illegal migrants. 'Shared abuse: abduction and family separation' is how they spuriously describe it. You get the idea. Such libels are indeed bloody and – considering the recent violent anti-Semitic attacks in Colorado and Washington, DC – easily have the power to become far more so. With Trump showing no signs of backing down in his mission to rid America of illegal migrants, intersectional rhetoric is almost certain to ratchet up far louder. And as always, Israel and Jews will continue to serve as the most convenient targets.


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Awkward moment Greta Thunberg covers her head as she is flown out of Israel after failed bid to reach Gaza - and pilot praises IDF and wishes for the return of all hostages over the tanoy
Greta Thunberg appeared to cover her head with her coat as she was flown out of Israel after she and other activists attempted to reach Gaza on a 'freedom flotilla' aid ship. Passengers filmed and took pictures of Thunberg as she was being deported by Israeli authorities on Tuesday, a day after Israeli forces detained her and a crew of 11 others in international waters. The 22-year-old looked disheveled and tired as she sat at the back of the El Al jet from Ben Gurion to Paris, with a picture showing her putting her blue waterproof jacket on her head. A video clip circulating online appears to show her with the coat pulled all the way down over her face at another point in the journey. In a separate clip shared on social media, apparently from the same flight, a member of airline staff can be heard praising the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF). 'We want to thank our security forces and the IDF for protecting our homeland and wish for the swift return of all hostages,' the voice, said to belong to the pilot, is heard saying. The announcement was met with cheers from passengers. The footage of Thunberg covering her face emerged after a campaigner who was detained alongside the prominent activist claimed that Israeli officials had deprived her of sleep during her time in detention. The Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC) said in response to the footage that Thunberg was 'exhausted' during the flight and was trying to rest when the video was taken. Thunberg and 11 other activists on the Madleen ship, who had planned to sail to Gaza to deliver aid, were intercepted by Israeli Navy boats in international waters in the early hours of Monday. The group was taken to the Israeli port of Ashdod, where four, including Thunberg, agreed to be deported immediately. 'I did not recognize I entered Israel illegally,' Thunberg told reporters when she landed in Paris on Tuesday. 'We were kidnapped in international waters... this is a violation of international rights.' All of the activists have been banned from Israel for 100 years, the rights group that represents them said in a statement. The eight who were not deported were taken into custody after they refused to leave Israel voluntarily, rights group Adalah added. A spokesman for the FFC today commented on the footage of Thunberg on the plane: 'Greta was exhausted by the arrest and detention and wanted to rest peacefully, even though she had an uncomfortable seat. 'During the detention she could hardly sleep, the Israelis woke her up every time she fell asleep,' they added. 'The clip is vague and apart from the focus on her head, it shows nothing.' Thunberg, who arrived in France on the deportation flight before travelling home to Sweden, told reporters yesterday that 'people were not being treated well' during her detention. 'I was not able to to say goodbye to people and I don't know what's happening. And there were many, many issues,' she said. Pressed for details on her treatment, she described the experience as 'very dehumanising. 'But of course, I have to stress nothing compared to what Palestinians are going through. I would prefer not to go into detail,' she insisted. She went on: 'I do know that there were major issues with people actually getting to talk to lawyers. 'When you look at the state of the world, everything feels meaningless. But unless you try to do everything you can, we lose our hope.' Asked by reporters about a viral picture of her smiling as an Israeli soldier offered her a sandwich when the boat was intercepted, Thunberg branded the gesture a PR stunt. Israel had shared pictures of the crew receiving sandwiches and water from soldiers, and said the crew were 'safe and unharmed'. Fellow activist Baptiste Andre, who also returned on the deportation flight on Tuesday, told French media that 'there were acts of mistreatment' when Israeli authorities brought the group to the port of Ashdod. The French doctor said that there had been 'no acts of physical violence' against his team, but claimed that members of the group, 'especially Greta', were put through 'sleep deprivation' and experienced 'mockery' from officials. 'As soon as [Thunberg] fell asleep, the immigration services came to wake her up,' he said. He added that music was also 'turned up loud' and that members of the immigration services 'danced in front of us'. Andre also alleged that the group had 'difficulties in accessing water and food' during their more than 24 hours in detention. 'It took three hours to get a piece of bread,' he said, adding that the detainees had difficulty accessing food, water and toilets. Andre has since returned to France after being deported from Israel by plane on Tuesday. Israel is expected to expel four of the eight activists still in the country to France by the end of the week, the French foreign minister said Wednesday. An Israeli NGO earlier said that one of the French campaigners, along with a Brazilian activist, was briefly put in solitary confinement during their detention. Rima Hassan, a member of European Parliament from the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party who is of Palestinian descent, was placed in solitary confinement, as was Brazilian activist Thiago Avila, with Hassan later removed, Israeli human rights group Adalah said. 'Israeli authorities transferred two of the volunteers, the Brazilian volunteer Thiago Avila and the French-Palestinian European Parliament member Rima Hassan – to separate prison facilities, away from the others, and placed them in solitary confinement,' Adalah said in a statement.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Can Scottish arts community survive without its sponsors?
A quick recap, then a look at why this matters. Swedish activist Greta Thunberg pulled out of an appearance at the Edinburgh International Book Festival (EIBF) in 2023 on account of its long-standing relationship with Edinburgh-based investment firm Baillie Gifford. She viewed this hook-up as an example of 'green-washing' by a firm gaining from investments in companies whose interests were inimical to her beliefs. 'Green-washing efforts by the fossil fuel industry, including sponsorship of cultural events, allow them to keep the social license to continue operating,' she said in a statement. 'I cannot and do not want to be associated with events that accept this kind of sponsorship.' Following Ms Thunberg's withdrawal, and on the eve of the festival, over 50 authors published an open letter calling on the EIBF to end its relationship with Baillie Gifford. In May 2024, the EIBF announced it was doing just that. The Hay Festival, also sponsored by Baillie Gifford, announced the same decision a week earlier. Full disclosure: I was entirely on the side of the authors in the 2023 row and had little time or patience for the arguments of those who opposed them. Certainly not the cultural warriors of the right, who viewed the campaign as a chance to pour scorn on the 'wokerati' – but not even those festival directors and high-placed arts practitioners in the invidious position of having to defend tie-ins with companies such as Baillie Gifford. Grow up, they said, the arts wouldn't exist in their current form without this sort of corporate sponsorship. Really? I'm not so sure. Anyway, if you're right would that be such a bad thing? Fast forward another year and we have just had the launch of the 2025 EIBF. In the absence of Baillie Gifford as a corporate sponsor (a relationship which was always and self-evidently transactional in nature) we now have (cue drum roll) Sir Ian Rankin. As revealed in The Herald, the sainted knight has stepped in – though stepped up might be a better phrase – and agreed to help back the festival financially, along with fellow author Jenny Colgan and other organisations and companies including Edinburgh-based legal firm Digby Brown and privately funded arts charity the Hawthornden Foundation. I'm not saying it was easy to fill the funding gap left by Baillie Gifford, and I don't know how well it has been plugged, but the festival has announced its largest number of events since the pre-pandemic days. Just saying. But don't think this issue is going away. Even as I write this, in Tel Aviv Greta Thunberg is being forced onto a plane, a method of travel she abhors and avoids for conscientious reasons. This is following her detainment while attempting to deliver aid to Gaza aboard UK-flagged humanitarian vessel The Madleen. Greta Thunberg was detained by Israeli authorities while attempting to deliver aid to Gaza (Image: AP) Along with the wider situation in Gaza and the West Bank and the ongoing climate emergency – and as tensions, tempers, emotions and body counts mount – there will be more and more scrutiny by more and more activists of more and more companies and institutions with links to, say, arms sales to Israel or fossil fuels or [insert injustice of your choice]. This will inevitably impact on the UK's arts institution and, as Edinburgh gears up for August, it will be inevitably be felt in Scotland. Actually it already is. A body signing itself the 'Edinburgh International Festivals' was one of the co-signatories supporting a recent open letter by Sir Alistair Spalding and Britannia Morton of London's Sadler's Wells venue published in the Financial Times (ha!). In it the authors complained about the 'relentless negativity' of 'activist groups' such as the one which 'pushed out' Baillie Gifford from its place as a sponsor of the arts. They added: '[P]artnering with businesses ensures our work goes further and has a greater impact. It adds more value and enables growth, ambition and risk taking.' Quoted in The Art Newspaper last week, corporate fundraising expert Martin Prendergast addressed the open letter and said 'the causes are right but the targets are wrong'. But creative producer Naomi Russell had a different take. 'I think protest and resistance drive change and historically this has great precedent,' she told the publication. 'That can be uncomfortable for the powers and established structures.' And so we come full circle: which side are you on? It's a question being asked a lot these days. Think carefully before you answer. Read more: Reel life Do you remember your first time? No not that. I mean the first time you realised there was more to the big screen than the latest James Bond or superhero offering. The first time you had your eyes opened to the kinds of films that maybe did not have car chases or shoot-outs and maybe did have subtitles and which – just as important – were shown in venues dedicated to what you later learned was called 'art-house cinema'. If you don't, I'm sorry. If you do, you'll know why I'm so delighted that Edinburgh's Filmhouse has announced its re-opening date: Friday June 27, just in time for this year's Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) to return to its spiritual home. I was 16 the first time I went to the Filmhouse – in 1982, to see Jean-Jacques Beineix's Diva. It was also the first subtitled film I had ever seen. A little later, still at school, I saw Francis Ford Coppola's 1983 film Rumble Fish. It's still my favourite of his films and definitely in my all-time top five. Matt Dillon in Francis Ford Coppola's 1983 film Rumble Fish (Image: Universal/Criterion) In the same year I also saw director Nicolas Roeg discuss working with Gene Hackman in a Q&A following a screening of Roeg's film Eureka. Many decades later I found myself in my usual spot on the back row of Cinema One and chatting to an older man in the next seat. I told him about my love of the Filmhouse, and about these seminal events in my cinematic life and how vividly I could still remember them. It turned out I was talking to former EIFF director Jim Hickey, who ran the Filmhouse between 1979 and 1993. He was the one on stage interviewing Roeg that night 30 or so years earlier. I could have cried. Him too, probably. It's a very personal story, but it is in no way meaningless because so many people in Edinburgh have similar ones to tell. That's why the Filmhouse's absence since the collapse in 2022 of parent organisation the Centre for the Moving Image has left such a huge hole. Sure there's still work to do to keep Filmhouse 2.0 afloat. But now, thanks to the efforts of those who battled to keep the flame alive, it has returned. Eureka! Read more: And finally The Herald's theatre critic Neil Cooper has been busy recently. His peregrinations have taken him first to Edinburgh's Royal Lyceum where he watched The Mountaintop, a production of Katori Hall's Olivier Award-winning play about Martin Luther King Jr's last night alive. Five stars for that one. Just around the corner at the Traverse Theatre he took in Ramesh Meyyappan's radical reworking of King Lear, then watched the entertaining Meme Girls at Oran Mor in Glasgow, part of the ongoing A Play, A Pie And A Pint season, and hot-footed it to Pitlochry for Nan Shepherd: Naked And Unashamed, the latest chapter in the cult Aberdeenshire writer's move from the margins of literary history to the centre. Elsewhere music critics Keith Bruce and Teddy Jamieson have also been busy, Keith at Glasgow Royal Concert Hall where he heard the Royal Scottish National Orchestra perform 'the mighty juggernaut' that is Dmitri Shostakovich's Symphony No 11 and Teddy at Glasgow's O2 Academy where he watched Morrissey. A slew of Smiths songs will have pleased many in the audience but Teddy was left wondering who the bequiffed Narcissus is really addressing these days.