SBC was ordered to repay Ms X £2,760 for the rent payments made and to reduce her rent account balance to zero, as well as pay £300 for the "avoidable distress and uncertainty".
"He's one of the biggest music producers in the world, worth millions and millions of pounds, but I can tell you we weren't paying him a big fee in those days!"Another highlight was Patti Smith's appearance at the 2003 festival.
The punk pioneer performed at a former Ulster University student union building, Conor Hall, to an audience of 300 people."It was kind of spit and sawdust but it was probably one of the most mesmerising performances I've ever seen in my life," Mr Kelly said.Looking to the future, Mr Kelly isn't chasing scale or status.
"We don't need to be the biggest festival in Ireland.. If we do 100 shows and each of them are amazing, I'm happy with that."The Cathedral Quarter, Belfast's nightlife and arts epicentre, has changed significantly in the last 25 years, he explained, and a "spiritual need" for music, comedy and theatre "is there and growing".
"When we started there was no Black Box, there was no Mac Theatre, the Oh Yeah Music Centre... there was no real infrastructure in the area, all that has improved greatly."
These spaces need protected, he added.Here I'll set out this debate – starting with the potential upsides for the region.
South America is rich in commodities. Its biggest economies - Brazil and Argentina - are major exporters of soybeans and petroleum as well as, in Brazil's case, iron ore used in steel production.The US's huge tariffs on Chinese goods, and China's retaliatory 125% on US imports, may create opportunities for South American exporters.
For example, Brazil could increase agricultural exports to China to replace previous US supplies. China is already Brazil's largest export destination, followed by the US.There is a precedent. When Trump hit China with tariffs during his first term of office, China shifted some commodity purchases from the US to Brazil, boosting Brazilian soybean exports.