Latest news with #Arter


Irish Daily Mirror
30-05-2025
- Sport
- Irish Daily Mirror
Ex-Ireland international makes temporary Bournemouth return after Dubai spell
Former Ireland international Harry Arter will make his return to Bournemouth colours this summer. The 35-year-old was most recently spotted playing in the UAE with Second Division team Precision FC, a side that also included former Manchester United and West Ham prospect Ravel Morrison. Speaking in an interview last January with the Dubai-based side, Arter described his time at Bournemouth as his career highlight. Having spent his first three seasons there in League One, and the next two in the Championship, he helped them win promotion to the Premier League. Arter made a total of 69 appearances in the top-flight with Bournemouth, and another 25 while on loan at Cardiff City. 'My career highlight is getting promoted with Bournemouth to the Premier League,' he said last January. 'It was an incredible rise for the club and, as a group of players, we were kind of mirroring the club's journey. 'We had setbacks as young players and three or four years previous to that the club nearly went out of business, so it was a real good time for the club and for us as individuals.' Arter will be back in Cherries colours in June when a legends team travels to North Carolina to take part in The Soccer Tournament (June 4-9). Arter will join Dan Gosling, Charlie Daniels, Lewis Grabban and Junior Stanislas, among others. The 19-time capped former Ireland midfielder left Bournemouth in 2020 for Nottingham Forest, but after his first season at the club he was told that he could leave. However, Forest's promotion to the Premier League meant a contract extension until June of last year was triggered. After loan spells at Charlton and Notts County, he left last summer and joined Precision.


Euronews
15-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Euronews
İstanbul's creative renaissance: contemporary art and sustainability in the cultural capital
ADVERTISEMENT İstanbul is a city where tradition meets innovation. Its contemporary art scene is thriving, blending creativity with sustainability. At İstanbul Modern, designed by Renzo Piano, director Çelenk Bafra champions regional talent through immersive exhibitions like Ömer Uluç's 'Beyond the Horizon'. Artist Deniz Sağdıç turns waste into striking portraits, using denim, plastic and discarded materials to explore identity and environmental responsibility. Finally, at Arter, director Emre Baykal highlights Türkiye's evolving creative landscape through bold installations that reflect a growing public engagement with contemporary art across generations.
Yahoo
03-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Donald Trump must pay $821,000 legal bill over 'Steele dossier' lawsuit, UK court rules
LONDON (Reuters) -Donald Trump must pay over 626,000 pounds (about $821,500) in legal fees to a private investigations firm the U.S. president sued over a dossier which alleged ties between his 2016 election campaign and Russia, a London judge ruled on Thursday. Trump brought a data protection lawsuit against Orbis Business Intelligence over allegations in a dossier written by its co-founder, former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele, but Trump's claim was thrown out last year. The so-called Steele dossier alleged ties between Trump's 2016 election campaign and Russia as well as other salacious accusations, all of which Trump strenously denied. Trump had been ordered to make a payment of around 290,000 pounds towards Orbis' legal fees but failed to do so, Orbis' lawyers said at a previous hearing in January. This meant Trump was barred from being represented at a further hearing this week to consider Orbis' total legal bill and whether its costs were reasonable. Paul Arter, a costs lawyer for Orbis, said that Trump had very strong negotiating skills and was paying one of his own lawyers 750 pounds an hour. Arter said the case was very important to both parties, with Orbis having concerns about its survival should it lose, while Trump was seeking to protect his reputation. Faced with an opponent 'renowned as an aggressive litigator' who 'has a history of pursuing vendettas, certainly legally', it justified the rates Orbis were paying for their lawyers, Arter said. Judge Jason Rowley ruled that Trump owed Orbis 530,615 pounds, less than the more than 680,000 pounds Orbis had sought, but more than the 452,000 Orbis offered to accept. He also said Trump should pay another 95,000 pounds relating to the dispute over costs, making a total of just over 626,000 pounds. ($1 = 0.7621 pounds)


Reuters
03-04-2025
- Business
- Reuters
Donald Trump must pay $821,000 legal bill over 'Steele dossier' lawsuit, UK court rules
LONDON, April 3 (Reuters) - Donald Trump must pay over 626,000 pounds (about $821,500) in legal fees to a private investigations firm the U.S. president sued over a dossier which alleged ties between his 2016 election campaign and Russia, a London judge ruled on Thursday. Trump brought a data protection lawsuit against Orbis Business Intelligence over allegations in a dossier written by its co-founder, former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele, but Trump's claim was thrown out last year. The so-called Steele dossier alleged ties between Trump's 2016 election campaign and Russia as well as other salacious accusations, all of which Trump strenously denied. Trump had been ordered to make a payment of around 290,000 pounds towards Orbis' legal fees but failed to do so, Orbis' lawyers said at a previous hearing in January. This meant Trump was barred from being represented at a further hearing this week to consider Orbis' total legal bill and whether its costs were reasonable. Paul Arter, a costs lawyer for Orbis, said that Trump had very strong negotiating skills and was paying one of his own lawyers 750 pounds an hour. Arter said the case was very important to both parties, with Orbis having concerns about its survival should it lose, while Trump was seeking to protect his reputation. Faced with an opponent 'renowned as an aggressive litigator' who 'has a history of pursuing vendettas, certainly legally', it justified the rates Orbis were paying for their lawyers, Arter said. Judge Jason Rowley ruled that Trump owed Orbis 530,615 pounds, less than the more than 680,000 pounds Orbis had sought, but more than the 452,000 Orbis offered to accept. He also said Trump should pay another 95,000 pounds relating to the dispute over costs, making a total of just over 626,000 pounds. ($1 = 0.7621 pounds)