Stormzy pledges £10m ‘to even the playing field’ for black people in the UK

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Stormzy and his company have pledged £10m over the next 10 years in the “fight to finally try and even” the playing field for black people in the UK.

The grime star made the announcement to help organisations supporting racial equality and social justice following protests around the world in the wake of the death of George Floyd in the US.

In a statement released through his company, #Merky, the 26-year-old said: “The uncomfortable truth that our country continuously fails to recognise and admit, is that black people in the UK have been at a constant disadvantage in every aspect of life – simply due to the colour of our skin.”

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The star was named best British male at the Brit Awards earlier this year

Stormzy, who joined a recent Black Lives Matter rally in the capital, grew up in south London.

Last year, he topped the charts with single Vossi Bop and became the first black British solo artist to headline Glastonbury Festival, before going on to be crowned best male solo artist for the second time at the Brit Awards earlier this year.

He said he is “lucky enough” to be in the position that he is, and that people who dismiss the idea of racism existing in Britain because of his success are wrong.

Stormzy said: “I reject that with this: I am not the UK’s shining example of what supposedly happens when a black person works hard.

More from Black Lives Matter

“There are millions of us. We are not far and few. We have to fight against the odds of a racist system stacked against us and designed for us to fail from before we are even born.

“Black people have been playing on an uneven field for far too long and this pledge is a continuation in the fight to finally try and even it.”

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Stormzy’s donation will support organisations, charities and movements involved in tackling racial inequality, justice reform and black empowerment in the UK.

He urged others who are able to also pledge to support similar causes.

Real name Michael Omari, Stormzy launched his own publishing imprint, #Merky Books, a collaboration with Penguin Random House, in July 2018.

It is due to publish the autobiography of Malorie Blackman, the author of the Noughts And Crosses books, in 2022, as well as a series of non-fiction books to launch in September, offering tips on topics from activism to writing.

Race and Revolution: Is Change Going to Come?

Sky News will broadcast a global debate show on Tuesday night at 8pm – looking at the issues raised by the Black Lives Matter protests, and examining institutional racism and how we fix it.

If you would like to be part of our virtual audience, and have a chance of putting a question to our panel, please send your name, location and question to newsdebates@sky.uk.

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The Remorseless Confessions of a Champion Underbidder

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Why intentional underbidding is an unbeatable spades strategy (dishonorable too, but I don’t care).

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Raveena Tandon recalls getting her debut film opposite Salman Khan

Image Source : INSTAGRAM/@BEINGSALMANKHAN.MUSKAN

Raveena Tandon recalls getting her debut film opposite Salman Khan

Actress Raveena Tandon made her Bollywood debut opposite Salman Khan in the film “Patthar Ke Phool” in 1991. Since then she has never looked back. In a career of over 29 years, Raveena has played a variety of roles.

Recalling how she got her first film, Raveena, in an interaction with actress Kiran Joneja on the latter’s online chat show “Insider Talk”, said: “I never wanted to become an actor, but when destiny wants something to happen it all happens simultaneously, so after finishing my 10th exams I did an internship with Prahlad Kakkar, also I had done a few modelling projects before that, when I was interning with Prahlad Kakkar people used to ask me what was I doing behind the cameras and why was I not acting in front of the cameras. Also, Prahlad used to ask me to model whenever a model didn’t turn up for the shoot on time! But those days were really fun. I truly enjoyed my internship days.”

She added: “One day I was in one of the studios in Bandra and my friend Bunty, who was a filmmaker I knew him because I had done a few advertisements with him, asked if I was in Bandra. I said yes. To that he said, ‘come outside, Salman (Khan) and I are passing by, just say hi to us’.”

On the chat show, Raveena then recounts how she met Salman Khan through a mutual friend, and how Salman was looking for a heroine for a new film produced by the late GP Sippy. The film she referred to was “Patthar Kse Phool”.

She also shared that her friends were much excited to see her opposite Salman Khan in the film. “I remember my friends were more excited that my co-actor is Salman Khan and they encouraged me to go ahead. So, that was how my journey of being a film actress begun,” Raveena recalled.

Raveena returns to the screen after a gap in “KGF: Chapter 2”, starring Kannada superstar Yash. The film is a follow-up of the 2018 Kannada blockbuster “KGF: Chapter 1”. Actor Sanjay Dutt plays the antagonist in the sequel.

Fight against Coronavirus: Full coverage



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COVID-19: Punjab govt mulls separate strategy for Lahore

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Buzdar told the meeting — to review measures to curb the spread of the deadly coronavirus in Punjab — that no delay would be tolerated in this regard. Geo.tv/Files

LAHORE: Separate strategy was to be devised for Lahore’s concerning coronavirus situation, Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar said Thursday, directing authorities to do so at the earliest amid a rising number of infections in the city.

While chairing a meeting at his office to review the measures to curb the spread of the deadly coronavirus in Punjab, Buzdar stressed that no delay would be tolerated in this regard.

The meeting — comprising Corps Commander Lahore Lt Gen Majid Ehsan, General Officer Commanding 10-Division Maj-Gen Muhammad Aneeq-ur-Rehman Malik, Director-General Rangers Punjab Maj Gen Muhammad Aamir Majeed, Health Minister Dr Yasmin Rashid, Punjab Chief Secretary Jawad Rafique Malik, Inspector-General of Police for Punjab Shoaib Dastgir, ACS (Home), Commissioner Lahore, and high ranking civil and military officers — expressed concern over the persistent surge in the number of coronavirus patients in Punjab, especially Lahore.

As of now, 22,749 individuals have been infected with COVID-19 in Lahore including 1,168 in the last 24 hours, while 300 lives have been lost in the city till date.

The participants agreed to devise a separate strategy for overcoming the pandemic in Lahore. They also decided to formulate an “expert working group” to set up a separate model for the provincial capital, with its recommendations to be presented to the National Command Operation Center (NCOC) for final approval.

It was decided that more steps were to be taken to stop communities from contracting the respiratory illness and all-out resources be utilised for the purpose, an official spokesperson said.

The participants agreed to further expedite concerted efforts through effective coordination between civil and military organisations. In addition, the meeting also took stock of various matters, including patients’ case management and increased number of beds in hospitals.

Strict compliance of wearing face masks in public was to be ensured, the participants agreed, noting that any violation of the standard operating procedures (SOPs) in the markets and commercial areas would not be tolerated.

Educational institutions would not be opened in the prevailing circumstances, it was decided.

The CM said people would have to demonstrate responsibility in the given situation, saying the government was dealing with the coronavirus challenge in a befitting manner. More steps would be taken in the light of experts’ recommendations, he added.

The meeting lauded the efforts of medical staff and the chief minister thanked the military leadership for extending full cooperation to deal with the coronavirus epidemic.

Lt Gen Majid Ehsan assured the government of every possible assistance to overcome and control the spread of coronavirus, saying it was a national challenge.

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Why Wine? Why Burgundy? Why Now?

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At a time of disease, strife, economic fear and upheaval, wine still has something to offer, as these 2017 village reds from the Côte de Beaune illustrate.

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Rugby clubs on standby for September return to action as IRFU look to tweak AIL

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The IRFU is targeting a September return for rugby clubs around Ireland and the union look set to re-model the Energia All Ireland League in an attempt to reduce costs for struggling operations.

ast season was cancelled when the government restrictions for the Covid-19 pandemic were introduced and many clubs have endured financial difficulty as a result of the lost income from the shut-down.

The IRFU has been working on a ‘Roadmap’ for clubs to return to action and today announced a ‘Competition Stage’ that earmarks the autumn for a return to action. The union has decided not to issue a specific date, pending further information from the government.

Clubs are currently in the ‘Safety Planning Stage’ which must be completed before they can return to training for five weeks before the campaign gets underway.

The season will be modified, with the governing body saying it “recognises concerns over travel, safety and expense and this will be reflected in the season’s structure. Clubs should expect that games at the start of the season will be kept local where practicable,” in a statement issued today.

“This is another welcome step in our return to rugby,” Greg Barrett, chair of the IRFU Rugby Committee said in the statement.

“There is a huge amount of work going on behind the scenes in clubs at present as they put Health & Safety plans in place to manage the risk of COVID-19. This announcement helps give us all something to work towards.

“It’s important for rugby players to have competitive sport to look forward to and they deserve to know that our return to rugby guidelines are built around their welfare.

“We will provide further clarity on what the 2020/21 season will look like, but what we can say is that the first matches permitted will keep travel to a minimum.

“This should help with concerns around travel, but our hope is that this will also serve as an opportunity for the rugby community to support their clubs and help generate some much needed cash-flow.

“For now, I would urge clubs to continue to focus on completing the COVID-19 Safety Planning Stage of our guidelines and availing of the education & training supports that the IRFU have put in place.

“That is ultimately what will lead to the resumption of rugby as we know it.”

Belfast Telegraph

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Toronto women wrestle with hard choice, PWHPA shifts away from one league – Sportsnet.ca

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Turning down an offer to play for the NWHL’s Toronto Six was difficult for Kristen Richards.

The 27-year-old Toronto teacher was tempted by a guaranteed spot on a quality women’s hockey team, plus the chance to earn a few thousand dollars. Refusing that opportunity means Richards will compete against national-team players for inclusion on the Professional Women’s Hockey Players’ Association’s Toronto roster.

Richards illustrated the complexity of the choice for players like her in a letter posted Thursday on her Twitter account.

“I wrote this when I was introduced to the idea of potentially going to the NWHL,” Richards told The Canadian Press. “I didn’t know what my best choice would be. I’m older. I’m in a full-time career.

“I’d love the opportunity to keep playing. The NWHL would give me the opportunity to play and be a big part of a team, versus my role in the PWHPA. The PWHPA is so strong that there’s no guarantee you’re going to make a team next year.

“What I came to terms with was the idea that there’s more for our game. I feel what the PWHPA is fighting for is more my view on what professionalism is.”

Richards believes there’s room for both entities in the women’s hockey landscape, however.

“What we forget about along the way is any opportunity in women’s sport right now is a good one,” she said. “Why are we women forced to say that we only deserve one league after all of this?”

PWHPA head Jayna Hefford agrees, which is a significant shift away from the “OneLeague” hashtag populating players’ social media posts last year.

“I do think they can co-exist,” Hefford said. “The challenge is in the messaging really because it’s not entirely clear that all the top players are part of the PWHPA.

“When you look at men’s hockey, everybody knows the best players play in the NHL. It doesn’t seem confusing on the men’s side that there’s multiple professional leagues.

“To put it in laymen’s terms, there’s McDonald’s and there’s Burger King. They do the exact same thing. Are they pressured to be one company?”

Almost 200 players formed the PWHPA after the Canadian Women’s Hockey League folded in the spring of 2019.

The biggest names in the women’s game are involved in the PWHPA — Hilary Knight, Kendall Coyne Schofield, Marie-Philip Poulin and Natalie Spooner to name a few.

Their goal is a league that pays them enough to be full-time professional players, and that offers the same competitive, medical and insurance supports the male pros get.

The union organized showcase tournaments and exhibition games under the Dream Gap Tour banner this past winter.

The U.S.-based NWHL, which ran a 24-game schedule last season, has expanded to Toronto. Some players have been offered contracts between $10,000 and $15,000.

PWHPA members on national teams have access to their respective hockey federation’s resources. Canada’s national team players receive monthly Sport Canada cheques.

PWHPA players like Richards and defenders Lauren Williams of Windsor, Ont., and Melanie Desrochers of Montreal do not.

“Ten thousand dollars to someone like me to play hockey is a lot of money,” the 23-year-old Williams said. “It comes down to I believe in the mission that we’re on.

“Sacrificing now may end up creating benefits that I never experience as a female hockey player, but I want that for the next generation coming.”

Desrochers, 28, insists she feel no animosity towards players who choose the NWHL.

“Why do we have to settle for just one thing?” she asked. “Everyone should have a place to play, but we also want to showcase the best product too.

“What it comes down to is maybe the philosophical view of how to get there. I personally just don’t want to settle for incremental growth year after year. We’ve tried that model with the CW.”

The PWHPA intends to operate groups of 25 players out of five hub cities that include Toronto, Calgary and Montreal.

Competition in Toronto will be tight because half of the Canadian women’s hockey team lives in the area.

“I can’t dedicate myself full-time to this sport. I can’t train like a lot of elite athletes do,” Richards acknowledged.

“I can’t tell you how many times it was a quick stop at McDonald’s on the way to practice versus having a nutritionist and someone helping you out.”

Hefford says Richards’ letter conveys the sacrifice PWHPA players are making in their hockey careers for a league they envision.

“I think it’s incredibly powerful,” Hefford said. “The national team players, it would be very easy to say ‘you know what I’ll just pick up my money, I’ll go play in the NWHL, I have everything I need from the national program and things are good.’

“That would be the easy decision, but for these players it’s the same thing. It would be easy for them to go play in the NWHL and make between ten and fifteen thousand dollars and add that to their salary of whatever their full time job is.

“They’re making a hard decision too.”



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EPA Said Giving Polluters A Pass Protected Its Workers. Its Own Union Says That’s Gaslighting.

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The Environmental Protection Agency defended its controversial decision to halt enforcement of bedrock anti-pollution laws amid the coronavirus pandemic on the grounds that doing so protected workers and offered flexibility to companies facing staffing shortages. 

Yet now the union representing the agency’s own workers say the Trump administration is putting them at risk by rushing to reopen federal offices, even as the White House looks to codify the leniency it gave polluters. 

In a letter sent to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), the EPA said its order in late March to temporarily stop policing pollution “appropriately balances” the need to keep essential services running with steps necessary to contain the spread of COVID-19.

“EPA is mindful of the health and safety of the public, as well as workers, EPA staff, and co-regulators,” Joseph Brazauskas Jr., an associate administrator at the agency, wrote in the May 8 letter, responding to the senator’s inquiry from a month earlier. “EPA is taking these important considerations into account as we all continue our work to protect human health and the environment.”

The letter, which HuffPost obtained, listed steps the agency took to encourage employees to work remotely, and said it was “evaluating options to provide as much flexibility to our employees as possible so that they can balance work and family responsibilities.”



A gas-burning power plant in Oregon.

But the union that represents EPA employees said the agency only made it more difficult to telework when management unilaterally imposed a labor contract on employees almost a year ago. The American Federation of Government Employees Council 238, which represents nearly 7,500 federal workers including much of the EPA, said the agency is now charging ahead to reopen regional offices.

“Lord forgive me, but you can’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining,” union president Gary Morton, a 26-year veteran at the EPA who left the agency last November, said by phone Wednesday. 

Citing concerns for workers as a reason to stop enforcement, he said, amounts to gaslighting. EPA enforcement of anti-pollution rules fell 22% between 2018 and 2019 alone, part of a yearslong downward trend since President Donald Trump took office vowing to gut the agency. 

“This is the same administration that has historically cut our budget, defunded us, put up obstacles to doing our work and called us ‘the swamp’ ― something to be ‘drained,’” Morton said. Defanging enforcement during the pandemic, he added, is “an attempt to cover up what the administration wanted to do from the very beginning.” 

The agency said its order meant “nobody is allowed to increase their emissions under our enforcement discretion.”

Lord forgive me, but you can’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining.
American Federation of Government Employees Council 238 President Gary Morton

But morale, Morton said, was so low workers at the agency began demanding the EPA adopt an employees’ “bill of rights” earlier this year. 

In a statement emailed to HuffPost, the EPA said it held “seven formal briefings with its unions over the span of 11 weeks to discuss the agency’s status and plans for reopening.” The unions, it said, ”have been regularly informed as the agency moves through its rolling reopening, and in fact, they know that we are encouraging employees to continue to telework, even in the first phases of reopening.”

“Employees continue to have maximum telework flexibilities and will not be forced to return to the office as EPA begins its measured and deliberate approach to reopening that ensures our employees’ health and safety,” the statement read. 

But the Trump administration has charged ahead with more efforts to slash regulations during the pandemic, particularly at the EPA. This month, the agency finalized a reinterpretation of a Clean Water Act rule, making it harder for states to reject pipeline permits. The EPA advanced its widely condemned “science transparency” rule, which aims to severely restrict the use of many epidemiological studies that used anonymized health data ― a common practice to preserve subjects’ medical privacy ― in the agency’s rulemaking process, giving industry-funded research more credence. Just last week, the president signed an executive order allowing companies to bypass key environmental reviews on mines, highways, pipelines and other infrastructure projects. 

Already, states received a tsunami of requests for environmental waivers based on dubious claims of COVID-19 impact, according to an analysis NPR published this week.

“We’ve been advised never to let a crisis go to waste,” Myron Ebell, who led Trump’s EPA transition team in 2017, told E&E News. 



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Maldives lifts all restrictions for visitors

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(CNN) — The Maldives is reopening to all visitors next month with no restrictions.

A spokesperson for the tourism board has confirmed the Indian Ocean destination will welcome back tourists of all nationalities in July.

While a previous draft proposal indicated travelers would need to present a medical certificate confirming proof of a negative Covid-19 test, the island nation is instead opting to allow tourists in without prior testing or a mandatory quarantine period.

There are also no new visa requirements or additional fees.

At present, anyone with a super yacht or private jet can head there, but normal travelers will have to wait a few more weeks.

Last month, the Maldives, which closed its borders in March, announced a phased reopening that indicated incoming flights to its main international airport would recommence in July.

“We are planning to reopen our borders for visitors in July, 2020,” read an official statement issued by the Ministry of Tourism on May 30.

The statement went on to stress that guests would not be charged any additional fees, referencing reports of extra tourist visa charges and landing fees.

Ready to reopen

The Maldives has recorded nearly 2,000 confirmed cases and five deaths from Covid-19 so far.

While the country has been shut to international tourists since recording its first cases, around 30 resorts have stayed open, with guests choosing to self-isolate here rather than return home.

Officials previously suggested the popular honeymoon destination would reopen towards the end of the year, but this has been brought forward.

To ensure safety, the government says it is issuing a “Safe Tourism License” to accredit tourist facilities that abide by government legislation and specific safety requirements like having a certified medic on call and holding an “adequate stock” of personal protection equipment.

The original proposal suggested incoming travelers would need to have a confirmed booking with a tourist facility with a license, but it seems this is no longer the case.

In a statement issued last month, Ali Waheed, the country’s minister for tourism, described the impact of the coronavirus pandemic as “more devastating than the 2004 tsunami and the 2008 global financial crisis.”

“For the first time in 47 years of tourism in the Maldives, we have experienced zero tourist arrival since this March,” before adding, “we cannot keep our borders closed for long.”

The Maldives welcomed more than 1.7 million visitors in 2019 and officials had been expecting numbers to rise to two million this year.

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