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music fans at two of the

Bestival, on the Isle of Wight, will ask its visitors to come by public transport or share cars. Photograph: David Pearson/Rex Features

Nearly 100,000 music fans at two of the UK's biggest summer music festivals will be cheered to know that next year's pop-fuelled hedonism will come with a shrunken carbon footprint.

The Lovebox festival in London and Bestival on the Isle of freshwater pearl Wight have both promised to join the 10:10 climate change campaign and cut their carbon emissions by 10%. Glastonbury – said to be Europe's largest music festival, with a crowd of 177,000 – is also considering coming on board.

The campaign, launched on 1 September, encourages people and organisations to cut their carbon footprints by 10% during 2010. It has nearly 38,000 individuals and more than 1,200 companies signed up, including Tottenham Hotspur football club, Adidas, Pret A Manger, Microsoft UK and O2 as well as 56 councils representing 10 million constituents. Franny Armstrong, director of the eco-documentary The Age of Stupid and founder of 10:10, welcomed the festivals' decision. "It's brilliant news that the big festivals will be cutting their emissions next year. Perhaps they could also agree to 10% less mud?" she said. 10:10 hopes to sign up all the major festivals by next summer.

Tom Findlay, one half of the dance music duo Groove Armada, which runs Lovebox, said the festival had always promoted social causes. "I was very fired up by the whole notion of the 10:10 campaign," he said. "You feel so powerless sometimes. I think it's important that people are empowered to freshwater pearl jewelry feel that at home you can make a difference."

The festival has already started working out how to cut its emissions. "A lot of it is just enormous practical common sense," he said. "There is no one fundamentally brilliant idea to solve it." One idea is to improve transport logistics so that fewer trucks travel to the site. Lovebox is also looking into using solar-powered stages and water fountains to cut the number of water bottles used.
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It began with a scuffle in a snooker hall

It began with a scuffle in a snooker hall. By all accounts, the altercation at the Manor Club in Haringey, north London, last January was over nothing in particular, a respect issue between two "mid-level" members of two of the capital's most violent Turkish gangs.

Losing respect in gangland Britain these days is, say police, sufficient to ignite long-running feuds. When you lose face in a stand-off between the Bombacilar and the Tottenham pearl jewelry Boys, north London's most prominent and feared Turkish crews, the fallout can be fatal.

In the following weeks tensions grew, finally erupting on 22 March as Holloway shopkeeper Ahmet Paytak, 50, locked up his grocery store after another slow Sunday. A motorbike, an unusual red and black Benelli TNT, mounted the pavement outside. Its pillion passenger took aim; the assassin couldn't miss. Paytak was murdered in the doorway of Euro Wine and Food at 10.40pm. Moments later his 21-year-old son was shot in the leg as he turned sterling silver jewelry to face the killer. The gunman has never been found, despite a £20,000 reward and the almost immediate realisation that the wrong man had been killed. Paytak was innocent, a "case of mistaken identity", according to murder squad officers.

But the blunder failed to stem the bloodshed. Quite the opposite. Shootings between the Bombacilar and the Tottenham Boys increased. "The levels of violence have been   shocking, and the number of shootings there, in London terms, is very high," said Metropolitan police commander Steve Kavanagh.

Three weeks ago the feud's most audacious killing took place. Oktay Erbasli, a prominent member of the Tottenham Boys, was waiting at traffic lights at a busy junction in his Range Rover when a motorcycle pulled alongside. A hitman linked to the freshwater pearl beads Bombacilar gang opened fire, killing the 23-year-old, but missing his five-year-old stepson seated beside him. Within the tit-for-tat mentality of gangland retribution, reprisals are inevitable. In Erbasli's case it came within 72 hours: Cem Duzgun, 21, had been playing snooker in a Clapton social club with friends when two hooded men approached at 10.50pm and opened fir
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