Win tickets to every event at Wembley Stadium in 2009

Child sex offenders are to face tighter travel restrictions after it emerged that existing laws would not curb Gary Glitter’s movements after he returns to Britain.
The measures to be announced by the Home Office today come as the 1970s glam-rock star heads for London after serving a 33-month sentence in Vietnam for molesting two girls.
Glitter, 64, was released yesterday and deported. He flew to Thailand but managed to avoid boarding his planned flight to Britain last night, complaining of fatigue and dizziness. He rented one of the small rooms at Bangkok airport that are available for passengers who want to rest and declared: “I’m not going back to London. You can’t make me. I’ve done my time. I’m a free man.”
The singer, who was told that he would be arrested if he tried to enter Thailand and whose requests to fly to Singapore or Hong Kong were denied, was travelling on a passport issued by the British consulate in Ho Chi Minh City last November. He has the same rights as any British citizen to travel to any country that does not require a visa.
Under the Home Office’s proposed measures, child sex offenders would have to renew their passport annually and new rules would make it easier for police to seek an order restricting an offender’s movements. The ministry also wants to extend the length of time — currently six months — that child sex offenders can be barred from travelling abroad.
Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, said: “I want to see anyone who poses a threat to our children dealt with as firmly as possible. I’ve spoken to child protection experts and the police and they have told me that these changes will further restrict the ability of child sex offenders to harm children both here and overseas.”
She said that it was her view that with his criminal record, Glitter, who, in his heyday, earned £800,000 a year, should not be travelling anywhere in the world.
The proposals came after the disclosure that police were powerless to impose a sexual offences prevention order on Glitter on his return to Britain. At present police require recent evidence that a person is at risk of re-offending. In future there will be no timescale on the evidence.
Registered sex offenders will also have to give more than the present seven days’ notice of their intention to travel abroad, making it easier for police to seek an order to ban them from going overseas and for their passports to be confiscated. The measures require legislation, so they will not be in place when Glitter returns.
The singer was driven from jail to Ho Chi Minh City airport via the British consulate and put on a flight to Bangkok. As he boarded his lawyer, Le Thanh Kinh, said: “Everything is OK. He is happy to be going home. He was in a good mood.”
On his arrival in Bangkok Glitter was met by Thai immigration police. He said: “I am not getting back on the plane with all the press there and I’m not going to the first-class lounge to be hassled by them. And I’m not going to London. I’ve done my time. I’m a free man.”
British Embassy officials were called in. Thai immigration officials declined to force Glitter back on the plane and the British police officer escorting him admitted that he had no jurisdiction to make him board the aircraft. As the officials pondered the situation, flight TG901 pulled away from the gate with Glitter still at the airport.
The singer, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was due to be met by police at Heathrow and told that he was being placed on the sex offenders’ register. He will join 30,000 people on the register and will be required to give police his name, date of birth, home address and national insurance number. He will be kept under the highest level of surveillance and be visited weekly by police and probation staff. If he breaks the terms of his registration he could face a prison sentence of up to five years.
Off the air
— Gary Glitter is thought to receive up to £50,000 a year from royalties and performance fees
— Glitter was enjoying a revival until he was charged in 1997 and had expected to appear in a Spice Girls film
— He used to earn about £100,000 a year from the National Football League in America, which played his Rock and Roll parts one and two after touchdowns. They dropped the songs after his conviction
Source: Times database
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
The inside track on current trends in the charity, not for profit and social enterprise sectors
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
05/2005
£13,500
08/2008
£109,950
2005 / 55
£59,500
Great car insurance deals online
£Excellent+ executive benefits
Torres and Partners
London
£49,229 - £62,035 pro rata
Charity Commission
London/Liverpool/Taunton
Alstom Power
Europe
Six Figure
Rolls Royce
Midlands/Europe
From £89,950
Special Offers now available
At the new sophisticated
Encore Las Vegas Resort!
Cruise the Islands of Hawaii - Pride of America
List your property with two leading travel websites
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths
News International associated websites: Globrix | Property Finder | Milkround
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
Paedophiles should be confined to an area where they cannot have any contact with or sighting of any children, and kept there for the rest of their lives.To let them loose in society is just playing russian roulette with innocent and vulnerable children's lives. They cannot be "cured".
margaret, near Preston, U.K
Psychiatrists say paedos are untreatable so can't be Sectioned under Mental Health Laws. They don't believe what they do is wrong, and that children "enjoy" sex with adults. Try telling that to damaged adults abused as children!
NB Jacqui Smith - They remain a threat to children unless locked up.
Dragon, Windsor, England
Never mind the annual renewal, why should child molesters even be issued with passports in the first place?
Such people shouldn't be free to leave prison, much less free to travel the world.
Sean, Surrey, UK
I wondered how long it would be before the autocrats at Labour started to try and curtail freedom of movement and here we go. Pick on a (justifiably) demonised minority and in goes the thin end of the wedge. Now just watch this expand to others in the same way councils now use "anti-terror" laws.
Robert, Edinburgh, UK
Why do the government need to introduce new laws to prevent people leaving the country? If a foreign government wants to exclude the likes of Glitter then they will just deny them a visa or turn them away.
Stopping individuals leaving when there is no evidence of a crime is a dangerous precedent.
Catherine, Glasgow, UK
We should not inflict our undesirables on other countries. Those who misbehave abroad, dragging the name of the UK thro' the mud, should suffer revocation of their passports. Temporarily (to encourage them to grow up) in the case of, say, drunken hooligans? Permanently for the likes of Glitter/Gadd.
G. Green, Bristol, UK
It seems peculiar that people who want to protect UK children want to keep Garry Glitter in the UK and prevent him from traveling abroad. As long as Glitter is abroad he presents no threat to UK,children which is not the case if he remains in the UK
Bob, Washington DC, USA
Yet another victim of the Great Witchhunt!
So now your fine NGOs and Law Enforcement Agencies want to have UK kids molested???
PAN, Eger, CZ
That's it Britain keep them all here and expose all our children. Weekly checks? What about the rest of the time? When they are caught in the far east at least prisons there will be terrible, and hopefully they will learn this behaviour will not be tolerated - in this country prisons are just hotels
Chris, S'bury,
It seems a bit odd to me, if he has been refused entrance to Thailand and every other country he tries refuses him, then surely he has no choice but to return to the UK. He can't live at an airport for ever.
So, his claim to be a free man, is not accurate as the world doesn't want him.
Steph, Wellingborough, UK
If he's banned from Thailand, why on earth can't the Thai immigration service just force him onto the flight to the UK??
David, Perth, Western Australia