Get involved: send your photos, videos, news & views by texting WFNEWS to 80360 or email » »
8:03am Saturday 19th July 2008
Dwain Chambers has lost his High Court bid to be allowed to compete at next month's Olympic Games in Beijing.
Mr Justice Mackay refused to grant an injunction to temporarily suspend a lifetime ban on the sprinter competing at the Olympics.
The ban was imposed by the British Olympic Association (BOA) because of his self-confessed past use of performance-enhancing drugs.
The judge issued his ruling on Friday morning after spending Thursday listening to the conflicting arguments over the athlete's attempt to win an injunction suspending the bylaw before a full trial of the issues in March next year.
Mr Justice Mackay returned to the London court to give his ruling to a packed courtroom and the athlete himself.
The judge said: "Many people both inside and outside sport would see this bylaw as unlawful.
"In my judgment it would take a much better case than the claimant has presented to persuade me to overturn the status quo at this stage and compel his selection for the Games."
ONE man’s dream of building a community leisure park in the midst of Epping Forest has become a reality after nearly 40 years of hard work.
IN the month that the Olympic baton is officially passed to London, the Shoreditch Festival fuses themes of sport and art with a party atmosphere.
Timon of Athens is one of Shakespeare’s more obscure plays, rarely performed and many experts have questioned if Shakespeare wrote it alone, or if it was a collaboration with another writer of the time.
Over 10,000 teenagers descended on Victoria Park, Hackney, at the weekend for the Underage Festival, a unique music event which is only open to under-18s. ANNA BINNS saw what all the fuss was about.
After painting Kentish Town red, The Creative Arts Company is taking its first steps towards bringing a splash of colour to Waltham Forest Crystal Wilde talks to its founder Amanda Parker.
CLAIRE HACK visits the British Museum’s latest big-budget exhibition focusing on the husband, lover, tyrant known as emperor Hadrian, arguably the most notorious Roman ruler after Julius Caesar.
Last updated 05.15 with 11 incidents
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Need a change? Search thousands of jobs locally and across the UK.
Search Now »
Find friendship and romance online with Two’s Company
Search Now »
Tens of thousands of houses and flats for sale and rent.
Search Now »
Every major make and model, thousands of options to choose from.
Search Now »