:00:12. > :00:16.European commission gives countries more time to reduce their budget
:00:16. > :00:20.deficits. After months of protests across Europe, six countries are
:00:20. > :00:25.encouraged to focus more on stimulating growth. The fact that
:00:25. > :00:33.more than 120 million people are now at risk of poverty or social
:00:33. > :00:37.exclusion in Europe is a real worry. We will assess the warning from the
:00:37. > :00:41.OECD as it cuts its growth forecast for the British economy.
:00:41. > :00:46.Also tonight, Britain is accused of holding up to 85 Afghan nationals
:00:46. > :00:50.for months without charge at camp Asti on.
:00:50. > :00:55.Sealed with a kiss - history is made in France with the country's first
:00:55. > :00:58.gay marriage. And crushed Range Rovers, part of
:00:58. > :01:04.written's exhibition at what is known as the Olympics of
:01:04. > :01:09.contemporary art. In Sportsday, Heather Watson is not out of the
:01:09. > :01:19.French Open. She's beaten in her first match
:01:19. > :01:31.
:01:31. > :01:34.since recovering from glandular fever.
:01:34. > :01:38.Good evening. The European commission has sounded a retreat
:01:38. > :01:42.from austerity in the first concrete sign that Brussels is growing
:01:42. > :01:45.increasingly alarmed by its social cost across the Eurozone. Six member
:01:46. > :01:55.states including France and Spain are to be given more time to reduce
:01:55. > :01:59.their budget deficits in an attempt to kick-start their economies.
:01:59. > :02:05.After three years of protest over spending cuts, the EU confirmed
:02:05. > :02:10.today a shift away from putting austerity first. It has granted
:02:10. > :02:14.several countries more time to bring visits under control. Budgetary
:02:14. > :02:17.discipline has not been abandoned, but is no longer the priority.
:02:17. > :02:23.European officials now feel the consequences of recession and
:02:23. > :02:29.unemployment more than debt and deficits. The fact that more than
:02:29. > :02:34.120 million people are now at risk of poverty or social exclusion in
:02:34. > :02:39.Europe is a real worry. In the unemployment lines, there are 6
:02:39. > :02:45.million young people. The EU says the cost of inaction would be very
:02:45. > :02:50.high. So six countries have been given more time to reduce their
:02:50. > :02:53.deficits - France, Spain, and the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal and
:02:53. > :02:58.Slovenia. France has been given two more years to get its deficit under
:02:58. > :03:03.3%, but it has been told to reform its costly pension scheme by the end
:03:03. > :03:08.of the year. The French president has bristled at the report, saying
:03:08. > :03:11.the European Commission cannot dig take to it what they have to do. The
:03:11. > :03:18.EU's new emphasis will be on freeing up the labour market as the best way
:03:18. > :03:23.of boosting growth. Today in Greece, medical students were
:03:23. > :03:26.protesting as the central bank warned that unemployment would rise
:03:26. > :03:33.to 28%, with the recession continuing. There were similar
:03:33. > :03:39.warnings for Spain. Eurozone policymakers have finally realised
:03:39. > :03:42.that the most important issue of the Eurozone is to tackle the high
:03:42. > :03:49.unemployment in southern European countries. If this does not happen,
:03:49. > :03:53.we could see social unrest in many countries. This was Portugal at the
:03:53. > :03:58.weekend. Europe's leaders are aware that patients with austerity is
:03:58. > :04:03.wearing thin. Today a leading international body, the OECD,
:04:03. > :04:08.slashed its forecast for the Eurozone, predicting that the
:04:08. > :04:12.economy would shrink by 0.6% this year. This week, Europe 's leaders
:04:12. > :04:19.are warning that a generation might turn against the entire European
:04:19. > :04:24.project unless they can deliver on jobs and growth.
:04:24. > :04:27.With me now is our chief economics correspondent. The OECD has cut its
:04:28. > :04:35.forecast for growth not just for the Eurozone, but the British economy as
:04:35. > :04:40.well? Yes. The OECD's idea of a three speed economy among leading
:04:40. > :04:44.industrialised nations, for the US, it says there will be decent growth.
:04:44. > :04:48.Japan, where have there has been the military stimulus, will have
:04:48. > :04:51.reasonable growth. On the other hand, a sharp downgrade for the
:04:51. > :04:55.Eurozone. The OECD says the situation is dire and the
:04:55. > :05:01.authorities need to protect over two. The UK is perched somewhere in
:05:01. > :05:05.between. It has downgraded the UK a bit. Some growth this year and next
:05:05. > :05:08.will stop it gives its backing to George Osborne's deficit reduction
:05:08. > :05:13.plan, but says the government could do more to bring down youth
:05:13. > :05:17.unemployed in. For the OECD, the key thing in the UK is what happens in
:05:17. > :05:22.the Eurozone, given its importance as a trading partner.
:05:22. > :05:24.Britain is being accused of holding up to 85 Afghan nationals for months
:05:24. > :05:28.without charge at Camp Bastion in Helmand province. Lawyers
:05:28. > :05:31.representing some of them say it amounts to unlawful detention. Today
:05:31. > :05:39.the Defence Secretary said they would be handed over soon to the
:05:39. > :05:42.Afghan authorities. Taliban insurgents, responsible for
:05:42. > :05:48.the deaths of hundreds of British soldiers. Since last November, the
:05:48. > :05:53.UK has refused to return suspects to the Afghan authorities for fear that
:05:53. > :05:58.they would be tortured. The solution seems to be to hold them here
:05:58. > :06:04.indefinitely and without charge at Camp Bastion in a facility where UK
:06:04. > :06:10.lawyers claim up to 85 men are being held illegally. The BBC has had
:06:10. > :06:14.exclusive access to court documents relating to eight of the detainees,
:06:15. > :06:18.who are now challenging their detention in the UK courts. This
:06:18. > :06:25.man, who does not want to be identified, says his cousin is one
:06:25. > :06:29.of the eight and has been held for 13 months. TRANSLATION: He told us
:06:29. > :06:33.that he cannot get information about the reason for his arrest. He asked
:06:33. > :06:39.us to find out the charges against him. He did not commit any crimes
:06:39. > :06:43.and was not doing anything illegal. British forces in Afghanistan are
:06:43. > :06:48.allowed to detain suspects for 96 hours. The Ministry of Defence has
:06:48. > :06:51.confirmed that up to 90 suspects are being held. Lawyers for eight say
:06:51. > :06:58.they have been held for between eight and 14 months. The Afghans
:06:58. > :07:02.want the men returned. TRANSLATION: This is against Afghan law. It is
:07:02. > :07:09.also in humans. The prisoners should be handed over to the Afghan
:07:09. > :07:13.authorities after 96 hours. These detentions put the government into a
:07:13. > :07:19.real legal bind. For months now, it has been unable to transfer the men
:07:19. > :07:21.back to the Afghan law enforcement agencies. Detaining them may be
:07:21. > :07:27.unlawful, and there is a legal challenge pending. Perhaps that is
:07:27. > :07:33.why today, the Ministry of Defence has reacted by saying it has now
:07:33. > :07:39.found a safe way to transfer the men back to the Afghan authorities.
:07:40. > :07:42.These people are to be handed over to the Afghan authorities for proper
:07:42. > :07:48.investigation and prosecution through the Afghan judicial system
:07:48. > :07:53.as soon as we are able to do that. The legal challenge, funded by legal
:07:53. > :07:57.aid, is being handled by this lawyer who specialises in claims against
:07:57. > :08:02.the military. This afternoon, his team spoke for the first time the
:08:02. > :08:06.two of the detained men. They are complaining about solitary
:08:06. > :08:12.confinement for the first month or so, repeated and lengthy
:08:12. > :08:15.interrogations involving harshing, which is a technique where you get
:08:16. > :08:20.right in someone's intimate space, a few inches away, and shout foul
:08:20. > :08:27.abuse at them. The Ministry of Defence refused those allegations,
:08:27. > :08:31.but the legal battles look set to continue.
:08:31. > :08:37.The introduction of gay marriage has engulfed fans in fierce protest and
:08:37. > :08:42.widespread anger. Earlier today, the first took place as two men tied the
:08:42. > :08:46.knot at a ceremony in Montpellier amid tight security. The couple
:08:46. > :08:49.exchanged their vows only a day after the "Marriage for All" law was
:08:49. > :08:53.passed. It makes fans the 14th nation in the world to allow gay
:08:54. > :09:03.marriage. Of course here, it is still the cause of much political
:09:04. > :09:05.
:09:05. > :09:12.controversy. This report contains flash photography.
:09:12. > :09:15.A day for pushing the boundaries, and yet a service familiar to many.
:09:15. > :09:22.The nuptials were traditional. Heartfelt vows were exchanged, and
:09:22. > :09:29.then the case. All of it greeted with cheers and tears of family and
:09:29. > :09:33.supporters. 40-year-old gay rights activist Vincent Auburn and
:09:33. > :09:36.29-year-old civil servant Bruno Boileau are France's first gay
:09:36. > :09:40.couple to marry. Five years since they met, just 24 hours since the
:09:40. > :09:45.new bill officially became law. It was not just our big day, they said,
:09:45. > :09:49.it was a day for gay and lesbian couples everywhere. Our country made
:09:50. > :09:56.a step to equality. It is a very important moment for all French
:09:56. > :10:02.citizens. But not everyone in France approves of these flowers they have
:10:02. > :10:09.taken. This past weekend, thousands marched against this bill in Paris,
:10:09. > :10:14.the demonstrations infiltrated by an increasingly violent extreme right.
:10:14. > :10:19.Files Warhol and prom is to give same-sex couples equal rights in
:10:19. > :10:24.marriage and adoption -- Francois Hollande promised to give same-sex
:10:24. > :10:28.couples equal rights. But he has been accused of ignoring the
:10:28. > :10:32.economic problems of the country. No president has fallen faster in the
:10:32. > :10:36.polls during a first year in office. It is now a legal obligation for
:10:36. > :10:40.mayors in France to marry same-sex couples. Some find themselves
:10:40. > :10:42.trapped between the law and their conscience, and some from the right
:10:42. > :10:51.say they will delegate their responsibilities to a socialist
:10:51. > :10:55.colleagues. TRANSLATION: I can't be hypocritical. I am not going to
:10:55. > :10:59.marry two people of the same sex when in my head, I am against it.
:10:59. > :11:03.Liberty, equality, fraternity, the founding principles of the Republic,
:11:03. > :11:08.and they must apply, says this socialist government to, to all
:11:08. > :11:12.French, irrespective of their sexuality. That same argument has
:11:12. > :11:17.been used in Britain by a Conservative David Cameron, and it
:11:17. > :11:21.has divided his party just as it has divided France. So jubilation in
:11:21. > :11:24.some quarters, consternation in others. The happy couple will
:11:24. > :11:31.celebrate tonight, but not in public. And in the current climate,
:11:31. > :11:35.they made need protection for some weeks to come.
:11:35. > :11:39.A Taliban source in Pakistan has told the BBC that one of the
:11:40. > :11:44.movement's most senior leaders, Wali-ur-Rehman, has been killed in a
:11:44. > :11:48.US drone strike. The United States had offered a $5 million reward for
:11:48. > :11:52.Rehman, who was wanted in connection with the killing of seven murders of
:11:52. > :11:56.the CIA in Afghanistan four years ago. A minute's silence has been
:11:56. > :11:59.held in Woolwich in south London to remember Drummer Lee Rigby, who was
:11:59. > :12:03.killed there week ago. Local people and soldiers gathered
:12:04. > :12:12.side-by-side pay their respects. Police have renewed their appeal for
:12:12. > :12:17.eye witnesses to come forward. Aside from the odd tweet and Facebook
:12:17. > :12:22.message, no one really planned this but they came anyway. At about the
:12:22. > :12:30.time Lee Rigby was hacked to death a week ago, this busy Woolwich Street
:12:30. > :12:34.came to a silent, sorrowful standstill. Just some of the
:12:34. > :12:38.hundreds who visited this place in the last seven days, leaving their
:12:38. > :12:42.tributes. Among them, Billie holiday, former servicemen and
:12:42. > :12:49.father-in-law of a soldier at the barracks where Lee Rigby was based.
:12:49. > :12:56.That could have been anyone us. Anyone of us that served, anyone of
:12:56. > :13:02.us supports Help For Heroes, because he was targeted because he had one
:13:02. > :13:09.of these sweatshirts on. I made a point of wearing mine today, just in
:13:09. > :13:13.his memory. Another face in the crowd, the woman now famous for
:13:13. > :13:21.confronting the two attackers. She returned to Woolwich for the first
:13:22. > :13:29.time. It took me awhile to recognise place. Very overwhelming, all of
:13:29. > :13:37.these flowers, it's quite powerful. I do it again, no doubt about that.
:13:37. > :13:41.It's murder, cowardly murder. suspects are in custody, one still
:13:41. > :13:46.in hospital, one now at a police station. But police flooded the area
:13:46. > :13:50.today, searching for more witnesses. It's a pretty big operation.
:13:50. > :13:56.Officers on every corner here. The investigation already has CCTV and
:13:56. > :14:00.mobile phone footage. But what they are looking for is the spark of a
:14:00. > :14:04.memory, perhaps someone has seen something but haven't called the
:14:04. > :14:07.police until now. As one officer put it to me, it might be the last piece
:14:07. > :14:13.of the jigsaw. The flowers are close to filling all of the available
:14:13. > :14:18.space here, but still more arrive. Friends of Lee Rigby have left
:14:18. > :14:27.pictures of happier times. And those who didn't know him, words carefully
:14:27. > :14:30.chosen to express deep feelings. The social networking site Facebook is
:14:30. > :14:35.to review how it deals with what it is calling controversial, harmful
:14:35. > :14:39.and hateful content, after several countries, including nationwide and
:14:39. > :14:43.Nissan, withdrew their advertising. It follows complaints from women's
:14:43. > :14:47.groups about Facebook posts and images which they say were
:14:47. > :14:51.misogynistic and degrading to women. Rory Cellan-Jones has the story, and
:14:51. > :14:56.his report contains examples of some of the posts. It started in a
:14:56. > :15:00.student bedroom, grew into the network more than a billion used to
:15:00. > :15:05.socialise and all along, Facebook has felt confident enough to ignore
:15:05. > :15:09.most criticism. Now a week-long campaign by women angry about the
:15:09. > :15:14.sense of material has forced a response. We are not just talking
:15:14. > :15:18.about sexist joke here or there. It's hundreds and hundreds of pages
:15:18. > :15:21.which show pictures of women lying in pools of blood, battered, bruised
:15:21. > :15:26.and beaten, with black eyes, and captions on them suggesting they
:15:26. > :15:30.should be raped or beaten. campaign has highlighted the fact
:15:30. > :15:34.that this kind of image was appearing next adverts, asking the
:15:34. > :15:38.companies involved how they felt about that. Some, including the
:15:38. > :15:41.nationwide, here on a page recon show, decided to suspend their
:15:41. > :15:49.advertising campaigns. Now Facebook says it will act to curb hateful
:15:49. > :15:53.content. When the Facebook got started it was very simple, with few
:15:53. > :15:57.controls on what users could say. Mark Zuckerberg's Boehm prided its
:15:57. > :16:00.way on the way users police themselves. Now it's a huge, global
:16:00. > :16:04.business earning billions from advertisers. Facebook has to listen
:16:04. > :16:09.if they don't like what they see next to their ads. And here is what
:16:09. > :16:12.one of those advertisers is saying will stop sites like Facebook should
:16:12. > :16:15.have stringent processes and guidelines in place to ensure that
:16:15. > :16:20.brands are able to protect themselves from appearing alongside
:16:21. > :16:23.inappropriate content. There's no advertiser or brand in the world
:16:24. > :16:30.that would want to be associated with the kind of content that has
:16:30. > :16:33.been publicised over the last seven or eight days. Certainly in the
:16:33. > :16:37.short term, until Facebook get a grip on it and until that content
:16:37. > :16:40.has been resolved and the wider issue of gender hate has been
:16:40. > :16:44.resolved, advertisers will be thinking about how they spend their
:16:44. > :16:48.money. At a conference today, Facebook's most senior woman said
:16:48. > :16:52.there was a fine line between protecting people and allowing free
:16:52. > :16:55.expression. The same people who were protesting is also publicly
:16:55. > :17:02.acknowledged we are not behind everyone else, we are the most
:17:02. > :17:06.protected site, we do not approve of violence against women. Facebook
:17:06. > :17:14.never wanted the job of policing its users but, as a grown-up company,
:17:14. > :17:17.commercial pressures are forcing it to do just that. For the hundreds of
:17:18. > :17:21.thousands fleeing the violence in Syria, like in refugee camps in
:17:21. > :17:25.neighbouring countries, such as Jordan, can be desperate and
:17:25. > :17:29.uncertain. Reliant on handouts with no way of earning a living. Syrian
:17:29. > :17:36.women, often without a male guarding your breath, are particularly
:17:36. > :17:43.vulnerable, sometimes forced to turn to prostitution to survive. There
:17:43. > :17:51.are now more than half a million Syrian refugees in Jordan. Many are
:17:51. > :17:59.crammed into camps. They fled their homes to become exiles. The majority
:17:59. > :18:09.are women and children, with little money and few possessions. They are
:18:09. > :18:12.told when to move and told when to wait.
:18:12. > :18:20.TRANSLATION: They entered the houses, they rape and kill in front
:18:20. > :18:24.of our eyes and they shoot. Everything happens there now. But
:18:24. > :18:29.beyond the nowhere land of the camps, many more Syrians are
:18:29. > :18:33.struggling to survive in the cities. And here, women can face choices
:18:33. > :18:39.they couldn't have imagined before the war. Jordan provides a refuge.
:18:39. > :18:43.There is at least stability here. But with the economic collapse back
:18:43. > :18:46.in Syria, more and more women are coming here now to work as
:18:46. > :18:52.prostitutes. We've been told of growing numbers operating in
:18:52. > :19:01.brothels here and in the border areas. The war has created a
:19:01. > :19:04.desperation that is pushing women to sell themselves for money. Using
:19:04. > :19:14.secret filming, we spoke with several women caught up in the
:19:14. > :19:29.
:19:29. > :19:35.trade. One woman said she'd lost her young Syrian women become a
:19:35. > :19:38.commodity. Others are married off to older men from the Gulf for up to
:19:38. > :19:45.�2000, money to support their families. They can be sexually
:19:45. > :19:54.exploited and abandoned. As this teenager discovered after two months
:19:54. > :20:02.of marriage. TRANSLATION: I can't describe him as
:20:02. > :20:12.a man. The way he treated me... He treated me savagely. He was a
:20:12. > :20:14.
:20:14. > :20:23.monster. He was hitting me so much. The bruises are still on my body. He
:20:23. > :20:31.changed and said, I don't love you. And I only married to for pleasure #
:20:31. > :20:37.you for pleasure. Destitute families approach marriage brokers, like this
:20:37. > :20:42.woman, a refugee herself. What do you feel in making marriages like
:20:42. > :20:44.this must remark TRANSLATION: You ask me what I feel about doing
:20:44. > :20:48.this. Ask yourself, how would you feel of
:20:48. > :20:55.one of your children didn't have anything to eat or drink. How would
:20:55. > :21:03.you feel? Anthony and then I'll answer you. -- Anthony and then I
:21:03. > :21:06.will answer you. Desperately short of resources, the UN struggles to
:21:06. > :21:15.provide shelter for refugees. And every day the war scatters more
:21:15. > :21:18.women into a world of agonising choices. The government has
:21:18. > :21:23.introduced legislation intended to stop businesses claiming tax relief
:21:23. > :21:25.for costs met by other firms. Ministers say the loophole has been
:21:25. > :21:29.used in particular by energy companies claiming against
:21:29. > :21:33.installation costs dating back decades. They estimate it could have
:21:33. > :21:37.cost the exchequer almost �1 billion in lost revenues. England have been
:21:37. > :21:43.playing the Republic of Ireland in a friendly at Wembley, part of the
:21:43. > :21:47.football Association's 150th anniversary celebrations. The two
:21:47. > :21:54.teams hadn't played since 1985, when the game was marred by violence.
:21:54. > :21:58.What was the score? It ended in a drawer, it felt like an end of
:21:58. > :22:01.season International. That match 18 years ago was one of the darkest
:22:01. > :22:04.episodes in recent England footballing history. Little wonder
:22:04. > :22:08.that the FA appealed to the home fans to refrain from political
:22:08. > :22:14.chanting, head of a game that many hoped would underline recent
:22:14. > :22:17.political progress and heal old wounds. The winds of change in
:22:17. > :22:21.Anglo-Irish relations are nothing new, but in football it has taken
:22:21. > :22:26.time. A generation, in fact, since Ireland fans were last seen at
:22:26. > :22:32.Wembley. Now, 18 years after the last game between the two countries
:22:32. > :22:37.ended in a riot, they would meet again. The fans did ads they'd been
:22:37. > :22:45.asked. First, showing appreciation for Ashley Cole, England's captain
:22:45. > :22:49.for the night, and then each other, both anthems impeccably observed.
:22:49. > :22:54.England may have looked like Germany in the new strip, but initially they
:22:54. > :23:00.didn't play like them. Shane Long leaping to put the visitors won up.
:23:00. > :23:06.England now new and they responded well. The elusive Frank Lampard
:23:06. > :23:09.timing his run to perfection and poaching an equaliser. The second
:23:09. > :23:13.half was tame. Ashley Cole came close to capping his big night but
:23:13. > :23:18.this wasn't the confidence boost England wanted ahead of key World
:23:18. > :23:21.Cup qualifiers. The hosts had chances to win later on but 1-1 it
:23:21. > :23:26.finished, honours even, but then this game was always more about
:23:26. > :23:29.respect than a result. Tonight showed what many have always argued,
:23:29. > :23:34.that this game should have been played years ago. It was only a
:23:34. > :23:40.friendly but it mattered. In the 1995 abandoned match, it now seems
:23:40. > :23:44.an awful long time ago. The Turner prizewinner Jeremy Deller has
:23:44. > :23:48.created what has been described as an aggressive antiestablishment
:23:48. > :23:52.exhibition, to represent Britain at the Venice Biennale. It features a
:23:52. > :23:57.tax on the royal family, Tony Blair and the artist pet hate, Range
:23:57. > :24:00.Rovers. The Biennale, often called the Olympics of contemporary art,
:24:00. > :24:09.sees 88 countries and host exhibitions. Will Gompertz has been
:24:09. > :24:13.taking a look. Venice, the man-made masterpiece created by wealthy
:24:13. > :24:16.merchants and fine artists. Both gathered here once again. The
:24:17. > :24:20.International art fest that is the Venice Biennale. There's 88
:24:20. > :24:24.countries represented at this year's event, or putting on exhibitions
:24:24. > :24:31.which inevitably say something about how they see themselves and want to
:24:31. > :24:35.be seen. A crisis-ridden Spain presents rooms of rubble. Russian
:24:35. > :24:39.oligarchy appears to be the beam of its presentation. The Americans seem
:24:39. > :24:43.to want to bring a sense of order to a chaotic world. The British
:24:43. > :24:47.pavilion has been handed over to Turner prize winning artist Jeremy
:24:47. > :24:52.Deller, whose show opens with this. Amy mural of a hen harrier carrying
:24:52. > :24:55.off a range Rover, a reference to an incident in 2007 when it was alleged
:24:55. > :25:01.that two such birds were shot down above the Queen's Sandringham
:25:01. > :25:05.estate. His dislike of Range Rovers continues with this film, which you
:25:05. > :25:09.watch on a seat made out of a crushed range Rover. When everything
:25:09. > :25:13.was put in place I realised there's a lot of aggression and a lot of
:25:13. > :25:17.destruction. But I wasn't really expecting that. I think it's because
:25:17. > :25:22.I was trying to get things off my chest that I'd been thinking about
:25:22. > :25:28.for years. The sociopolitical beams continue. Here, and my two William
:25:28. > :25:33.Morris, the arts and crafts leader, Phil Roman Abramovich's yacht into
:25:33. > :25:39.Venice's famous lagoon. I'm able to act almost my fantasies. These
:25:39. > :25:42.murals are fantastic fantasy scenes. They are not going to happen,
:25:42. > :25:44.unfortunately, but this is the next best thing, is to show them to the
:25:44. > :25:48.world and for the world to think about them happening and what it
:25:48. > :25:54.would be like if a giant bird destroyed Range Rovers, or William
:25:54. > :25:57.Morris came back from the dead as a colossus and destroyed Roman
:25:57. > :26:01.Abramovich's yacht. That would be an amazing thing and I'd be excited if
:26:01. > :26:05.that did happen. The critical response to the show, although that
:26:05. > :26:12.is universally positive, has been generally warm. Very nostalgic,
:26:12. > :26:20.folk-arty feel, banners and murals. Quite a simple political message,
:26:20. > :26:24.which is basically - look out for obtuse social justice, live more
:26:24. > :26:28.sentiently. At best, that is what art is supposed to be about.
:26:28. > :26:33.social commentary makes a loving nod to traditional craft and the British