Arsene wenger official biography of vladimir
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Harriet Wistrich is one of the country’s most prominent human rights lawyers. In 2016 she founded the Centre for Women’s Justice and over the course of her career, she has won landmark victories in very difficult legal cases. She has helped women imprisoned after killing their abusers regain their freedom. She’s also represented women seeking justice from the Metropolitan Police over their deployment of undercover police officers who have had relationships and children with female activists.
After studying PPE at Oxford, Harriet moved to Liverpool and began her career working in film and documentaries. She retrained as a lawyer in her early thirties and in 1990 co-founded the pressure group Justice for Women.
Harriet lives in London with her partner, the journalist Julie Bindel.
DISC ONE: I Will Survive - Gloria GaynorDISC TWO: No Woman, No Cry (Live At The Rainbow Theatre, Lo
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It is the end of a glorious era for Arsenal football club. The club I love.
Arsène Wenger has transformed Arsenal and English football itself. Anyone who tries to argue otherwise hasn’t been paying attention or just isn’t living in the real world.
I want to thank him for everything he has done not just for the club, but for the community I represent in North London, and for inspiring countless young people to take up football.
Just consider his achievements. Three Premier League titles, the unbeaten 2003/04 season and a record breaking seven FA Cups. Thank you, Arsène.
For the beautiful football and the wonderful memories. Thank you.
So many games down the years, so many memories, the high and lows shared with family, friends and fans. The first match I took my eldest son to, Coventry at home. Such a special day.
I’ll never forget seeing Tony Adams score against Everton in 1998 to win the title, after being put through by Steve Bould. And then two weeks later watc
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Arsenal news: How fear of Vladimir Putin caused Gunners to pay £15m for Andrei Arshavin
The influence of Russian president Vladimir Putin lay behind Arsenal paying £15m – twice what they had originally wanted - for Zenit St Petersburg’s Andrei Arshavin in one of the most convoluted deals the club has known, a new book which sheds light on the workings of the transfer system has revealed.
Zenit are Putin’s boyhood club and run bygd the president of the state-owned energy leviathan Gazprom, who answered directly to the president. It was his controlling influence which led to the Russians refusing to compromise on price, despite Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger’s belief that by controlling the negotiations he could secure a breakthrough that would satisfy Putin.
The extraordinary three-month struggle to secure Arshavin’s signature – revealed in ‘The Deal’, the new autobiography by agent Jon Smith - ultimately succeeded when Uzbek-born billionaire and 30 per cent Arsenal shareholder Alish