News
Port Authority has ‘moral obligation to creditors’
MILFORD HAVEN PORT AUTHORITY should honour the debts owed by Mustang Marine to local business, says Labour Parliamentary Candidate for South Pembrokeshire Delyth Evans.
MHPA Chief Executive Alec Don said last week that the Port Authority would not repay the almost £600,000 owed to local companies by the failed boat building firm despite admitting that Mustang had been a joint venture with the Port Authority. Delyth Evans said: “It is unacceptable for Alec Don to say he has no moral responsibility to Mustang’s creditors. Alec Don was a director of Mustang Marine. He signed off the company’s accounts. The Port Authority annual report described Mustang Marine as a subsidiary company. Businesses owed money by Mustang were given repeated assurances that the Port Authority would honour their bills. If this doesn’t count as a moral obligation, I don’t know what does.” Ms Evans has written to the UK Government Minister responsible for Trust Ports, Stephen Hammond, to ask for a full investigation into the MHPA’s handling of the Mustang closure. She explained why she felt an investigation was necessary. “Alec Don says he can’t pay Mustang’s creditors because of his responsibility to the Port Authority’s wider business. If the local firms owed money by Mustang are not paid, there is a chance some of them will go under as well. As a Trust Port, surely the MHPA has a duty to help these businesses? There is a further question about the pay out of £103,000 to Mustang directors when they knew full well the company was in trouble and couldn’t pay its debts. This is why I want the Department of Transport to investigate the matter.”
Entertainment
Boots, beer and barn dancing coming to Broad Haven
Live country music night promises fun for all at village hall
A NIGHT of country music, dancing and Western-style fun is coming to Broad Haven next month as the Havens Hoedown rolls into the village hall.
The event, taking place on Friday, March 20, will feature live music from local band Red Skies, along with line dancing and a relaxed, social atmosphere aimed at bringing the community together.
Doors open at 7:00pm, with music starting at 8:00pm. Organisers are encouraging attendees to embrace the theme, with cowboy hats and boots very much welcome on the night.
As well as the live entertainment, honky tonk shots will be available to purchase, and the evening will follow a bring-your-own format for other drinks.
Tickets are priced at £12.50 and are available from Broad Haven Post Office, or by contacting the organisers via email or Facebook.
Event organisers said the hoedown is designed to be a fun, inclusive night out for residents across the Havens and surrounding communities.
They added: “We wanted to create something a bit different — a lively evening where people can enjoy great music, have a dance, and spend time together locally without needing to travel far.”
The Havens Hoedown is expected to be popular, and early ticket purchase is advised.

Entertainment
Migrants’ stories film wins international award ahead of release
Aberystwyth University researcher’s documentary recognised at Amsterdam festival
A DOCUMENTARY telling the personal stories of migrants living in Istanbul has won an international film award ahead of its official release later this year.

‘HOPE: In the Shadows of the Bosphorus’, directed and produced by Aberystwyth University research fellow Dr Latif Tas, explores the experiences of internal and international migrants alongside long-standing residents in Turkey’s largest city, which has a population of around 16 million.
The film has received the Best Jury Choice Award at the ARFF International Amsterdam Film Festival and has also been shortlisted for recognition at the Manchester Lift-Off Film Festival 2026.
Turkey hosts one of the largest refugee populations in the world, including around 3.1 million people displaced by the war in Syria. The country has also experienced significant migration flows linked to conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Ukraine.
As a former resident of Istanbul and an academic researching migration in both Turkey and the UK, Dr Tas said many of the tensions and dynamics seen in the city mirror those experienced in other global urban centres such as London, Paris, Berlin and New York.
Reacting to the award, Dr Tas, from the Department of Law and Criminology at Aberystwyth University, said: “It is a great honour for me to win and for migrants’ stories to be heard and recognised internationally, especially after putting so much time and effort into this limited-budget project with a small but dedicated team.
“This film is not designed to make a political statement or be propaganda. It simply tells real people’s stories in their own words. I remain silent throughout the film, allowing different characters — both hosts and migrants — to express their perspectives within their own environments.”
Giving an insight into the documentary, he added: “We hear people complaining about migrants taking jobs, but we also hear stories of migrants living in unbearable conditions. We have residents who welcome newcomers and migrants who carry their roots wherever they go.
“Some migrants would face persecution or even the death penalty if they returned to Iran, Afghanistan or Syria. I hope the documentary will help people reflect on how we manage these changes and challenges and how we can better understand one another’s experiences.”
Dr Tas said Istanbul’s history as a crossroads of cultures made it an ideal setting to explore migration.
“Istanbul is a city that belongs to everybody but also nobody,” he said. “For centuries it has been a hub for people across the world, from Romans to Ottomans. In modern Turkey, there are millions who have moved internally, particularly from Kurdish regions, as well as millions arriving from neighbouring countries affected by conflict.
“While migration levels may be higher because of Turkey’s proximity to war-torn regions, this is not just a story about Istanbul — it is a story shared by many major cities around the world.”
An Aberystwyth University 150th Anniversary Award winner, Dr Tas has published two books on informal justice in migrant communities and minority life under authoritarian regimes. His academic career has included positions at the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study and a Marie Curie Global Fellowship.
He has interviewed hundreds of migrants across a wide range of settings, including refugee camps, transit zones, safe houses, police stations and affluent neighbourhoods.
“My interviews for academic work always had deadlines, angles and word counts,” he said. “I was often left with the uneasy feeling that I had captured a fact, not a person. This film is, in part, a response to that limitation.
“My worldview is shaped by both scientific inquiry and creative empathy. From journalism and science, I bring a commitment to truth and systems-thinking. From the arts, I have learned to slow down and sit with uncertainty. Migrants are not case studies in this film — they are narrators, authors and co-creators of their own stories.”
Supported by Aberystwyth University’s Impact Fund, ‘HOPE: In the Shadows of the Bosphorus’ will be officially released in April 2026.

Crime
Cardigan man admits child image offences at Swansea Crown Court
Guilty pleas entered to multiple charges as court awaits sentencing
A MAN from Cardigan has admitted a series of serious sexual offences involving indecent images of children when he appeared before Swansea Crown Court.
Leof Sceaga, aged 57, entered guilty pleas on Friday (Feb 20) during a hearing before His Honour Judge P H Thomas KC.
The court heard that Sceaga had previously been arrested in connection with multiple child sex offences. A “dip test” examination of a personal electronic device seized by police in May 2025 identified a number of Category A and Category C indecent images of children — the most serious and least serious classifications respectively under sentencing guidelines.
Officers later seized a further device on December 18 as part of the continuing investigation.
During Thursday’s hearing, Sceaga pleaded guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children, possessing extreme pornography, and breaching a Sexual Harm Prevention Order.
The case was adjourned for the preparation of reports, and the court is now awaiting sentencing.
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