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Plane hypocrisy of leaders in condemnation of Belarus | Letters

Diverted Ryanair flight | Jenny Harries | Other lives | Charles, Prince of Wales | Funny pub signs US and European leaders have condemned Belarus for forcing a Ryanair flight carrying an opposition activist to land, notes Roshan Pedder, but seem to have forgotten about a similar incident concerning Edward Snowden. Photograph: EPA US and European leaders have condemned Belarus for forcing a Ryanair flight carrying an opposition activist to land, notes Roshan Pedder, but seem to have forgotten about a similar incident concerning Edward Snowden. Photograph: EPA Letters Mon 24 May 2021 13.12 EDT Last modified on Tue 25 May 2021 00.19 EDT US and European leaders have rightly condemned Belarus for forcing a Ryanair flight carrying an opposition activist to land in Minsk (Report, 23 May). Would these be the same European governments that, in 2013, forced a plane carrying the Bolivian president to divert and land in Austria because of suspicions that the whistleblower Edward Snowden

Brace yourself for Piers Morgan in No 10 | Piers Morgan

Letters Trevor Peacock | Zac Goldsmith | Piers Morgan | Bobble hats Piers Morgan with Donald Trump. Photograph: Mathew Imaging/WireImage Piers Morgan with Donald Trump. Photograph: Mathew Imaging/WireImage Wed 10 Mar 2021 12.43 EST Last modified on Wed 10 Mar 2021 12.53 EST Another string to Trevor Peacock’s versatile bow (Obituary, 9 March) was his ability as a screenwriter, demonstrated just once, sadly, with the admirably bleak He Who Rides a Tiger, an underrated British film noir from 1965. Peacock’s screenplay was loosely based on the exploits of Britain’s most notorious cat burglar, Peter Gulston. While researching his script, Peacock was apparently invited to go on a “job” by Gulston, but wisely declined.

Rebuild the spire but spare the trees | Notre Dame

Notre Dame | Dogs | Cats | Big mistakes | Royal award Why use pristine oaks to repair Notre Dame, when no one will see these timbers, asks Robin Prior. Photograph: Nick Brundle Photography/Getty Images Why use pristine oaks to repair Notre Dame, when no one will see these timbers, asks Robin Prior. Photograph: Nick Brundle Photography/Getty Images Letters Fri 19 Feb 2021 11.41 EST Last modified on Sun 7 Mar 2021 23.13 EST A thousand ancient trees are to be felled to replace la forêt in the roof of Notre Dame (Report, 16 February). Why use pristine oak? No one will ever see these timbers. Surely this is an excellent opportunity to use glulam beams, which are stronger, highly sustainable, and do not require the felling of ancient trees. The cathedral’s original builders used the best and latest technologies. Why don’t we?

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