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Ghana’s Paa Kwesi Asare wins 2023 BBC News Komla Dumor Award
Benzilla_clicks/3news.com Ghanaian TV presenter and journalist Paa Kwesi Asare has won the 2023 BBC News Komla Dumor Award. The 36-year-old is the eighth recipient of the award and the first to come from Ghana, like the late Komla Dumor. Asare is currently the head of business news at Ghana’s private TV3 channel, where he has…
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China cuts key interest rate as recovery falters
STR/AFP By Peter Hoskins Business reporter China’s central bank has cut its key interest rates for the second time in three months as the world’s second-largest economy struggles to recover from the impact of the pandemic. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) lowered its one-year loan prime rate to 3.45% from 3.55%. The country’s post-Covid…
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Donald Trump confirms he will skip Republican presidential debates
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images By Jaroslav Lukiv BBC News Donald Trump has confirmed that he will not take part in Republican presidential debates with his rivals in the race for the White House. The ex-president said one latest poll showed he had “legendary” numbers ahead of other hopefuls to be the party’s nominee for…
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The untold story of London’s original fast food
Despite London being a global food capital, many will be surprised to learn that eels have been a locally sourced component of its table for hundreds of years. In the 1740s, pleasure boaters would jauntily sail from central London down the River Thames to an islet once known as Twickenham Ait in Richmond, mooring at…
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Nurse Lucy Letby to be sentenced for murdering seven babies
Cheshire Police Nurse Lucy Letby is due to be sentenced later after being found guilty of murdering seven babies, making her the UK’s most prolific child serial killer in modern times. The 33-year-old was also convicted of trying to kill six other infants at the Countess of Chester Hospital. The trial lasted for more than…
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Kelso Cochrane: Trying to unlock the secrets of a 64-year-old racist murder
By Sanchia Berg BBC News The family of a black man murdered in 1959 is demanding access to the police file on his unsolved killing. Kelso Cochrane was stabbed to death on a west London street, in what’s believed to have been a racist attack. Nobody was ever charged for the crime. The Metropolitan Police…
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Ridley Scott’s Napoleon: Was the French leader really a monster?
Ahead of his new epic, with Joaquin Phoenix as Napoleon, Scott has caused anger with his comments about his lead character, comparing him to Hitler and Stalin. What’s the truth of the matter, asks Neil Armstrong. It was the opening of his campaign, and the British veteran unleashed a salvo of shots at the French…
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The weird wind that can supercharge heatwaves and wildfire
Hot “hairdryer” winds that whip down mountainsides may have played a role in some of this year’s devastating heatwaves and wildfires – and they may become more of a problem with climate change. It’s a word that, in German, also means “hairdryer”. And that’s just what it’s like. A hot, dry wind that sweeps down…
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Maiden Pharmaceuticals: Fury in The Gambia a year after cough syrup deaths
By Vineet Khare BBC Hindi, Banjul, The Gambia In September last year, Ebrima Sajnia watched helplessly as his young son slowly died in front of his eyes. Mr Sajnia, who works as a taxi driver in The Gambia, says three-year-old Lamin was set to start attending nursery school in a few weeks when he got…
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Zimbabwe election: Chicken and chips put a taste for democracy to the test
Getty Images By Shingai Nyoka BBC News, Harare Free fried chicken and an endorsement from an unbeaten former world boxing champion have formed part of the intriguing choreography of election campaigning in Zimbabwe. Nonetheless, finger-licking crowds and cheers for US boxing legend Floyd Mayweather Jr have not distracted from fundamental concerns about the polls themselves…