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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jamie Grierson)
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Cressida Dick ‘felt intimidated’ into resigning as Met chief, review says
Sadiq Khan says Winsor report ‘clearly biased and ignores the facts’ after it says due process not followedCressida Dick “felt intimidated” into stepping down as head of the Metropolitan police after an ultimatum from Sadiq Khan, according to a report the mayor of London has labelled “clearly biased”.Khan responded angrily to the findings – revealed last week by the Guardian – which said due process was not followed, claiming the review into the circumstances of Dick’s resignation “ignores the f
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Imogen Davis)
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Cocktail of the week: Native’s compostopolitan – recipe | The good mixer
The much-loved vodka-citrus refresher gets a sustainable twistThis delicious take on the iconic cosmopolitan has a sustainable twist, and is also fun to (try) to pronounce, especially after a couple. Like all the dishes and drinks at Native, it takes inspiration from the land. We are big believers in “what grows together, goes together”, and this drink is very much a product of that thinking. We use Sapling’s wonderful, fresh-tasting vodka, which is distilled from Wildfarmed’s organic wheat (we
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Geneva Abdul)
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Drummie Zeb, lead singer of UK reggae band Aswad, dies aged 62
Angus Gaye was lead vocalist and drummer of first British reggae band signed by international label Musician Angus “Drummie Zeb” Gaye, the lead vocalist and drummer for the British reggae band Aswad, has died aged 62, according to a statement.“It is with deepest regret and profound loss that we have to announce the passing of our brother Angus ‘Drummie’ Gaye,” the band said. “Drummie has left us to join our ancestors and leaves a huge void both personally and professionally.” Continue reading...
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rupert Neate Wealth correspondent)
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Fund owned by secretive ‘Czech sphinx’ buys €43m château near Paris – reports
Billionaire Daniel Křetínský, who also has a stake in Royal Mail, made a fortune snapping up unloved assetsAn investment vehicle linked to Daniel Křetínský, a secretive Czech billionaire who owns stakes in Royal Mail, J Sainsbury and West Ham United, has bought a castle near Paris for €43m (£37m), according to filings seen by Bloomberg.Křetínský’s fund is said to have bought the more than 100-room Château du Marais in the village of Val-Saint-Germain, a town of about 1,400 people about 40km sout
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Kenneth Rogoff)
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Will the dollar’s recent rises end in whiplash? | Kenneth Rogoff
Some previous surges were followed by sharp declines, but world instability means the euro and yen could fallThe US dollar has been on a tear this summer. The Japanese yen and the euro have fallen to their lowest levels against the greenback in two decades; the euro, long worth more than one dollar, is now hovering close to parity. The US Federal Reserve’s broad trade-weighted dollar index has almost reattained the peak it reached in March 2020 amid the panic triggered by the start of the Covid-
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Alice Dearing)
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Finally, there is no ‘wrong’ hair for swimming | Alice Dearing
Hair is part of black women’s identity. Now all swimmers have the right to wear the hair we were born withJust one month before I was due to compete in last year’s Olympics, the biggest achievement of my life so far, I was swept up in an international cultural scandal – because of my hair. A swimming cap to accommodate thicker, longer hair, was banned by the International Swimming Federation (Fina) on the grounds that it did not follow “the natural form of the head”.In the run-up to the competit
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Azadeh Moaveni)
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Shamima Begum’s is a story of trafficking, betrayal and now, it seems, a state cover-up | Azadeh Moaveni
Allegations that her smuggler was a spy cast an entirely new light on the Home Office’s decision to strip Begum of her citizenshipThe parents of the Bethnal Green girls – as we used to call them before two were killed, leaving only Shamima Begum as the media’s jihadi bridezilla – knew from the start that something was off.After the girls ran away from their homes in east London in February 2015 and turned up in Syria with the Islamic State, the authorities dissembled at every turn. The school, t
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Greg Wood)
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Talking Horses: Brad The Brief bids for big breakthrough at Haydock
Hugo Palmer’s gelding needs to find only a pound or two on form from earlier this year to be a major player in this contestThe Group One Betfair Sprint Cup at Haydock on Saturday looks like an unusually open renewal, with just 4lb separating the top eight runners on Timeform’s ratings.Minzaal, Naval Crown and Emaraaty Ana, last year’s winner, all have obvious chances but offer little value at single-figure odds, while Kinross has yet to win at this six-furlong trip. That could leave the way open
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jasper Jolly)
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From Slough to Seattle: the challenges facing Starbucks’ new boss
Surprise move to Seattle comes as global coffee chain faces unionisation driveWhen Reckitt Benckiser announced the surprise departure of its chief executive, Laxman Narasimhan, on Thursday, the Durex to Dettol maker cited “personal and family reasons”.Those reasons became clear a few hours later: Narasimhan is swapping the Reckitt office in Slough for a perch in Seattle as he joins the Starbucks chain. Continue reading...
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Guardian sport)
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Swimming caps designed for natural black hair finally permitted by Fina
Soul Cap product had been banned from Toyko Olympics‘This plays a huge part in our mission to improve inclusion’Fina has approved a swimming cap designed for athletes with natural black hair, a year after it was banned from the Olympic Games.The International Swimming Federation’s decision in June last year to bar the Soul Cap from use at the Tokyo Games – a decision based in part on the cap “not following the natural form of the head” and the governing body stating that “athletes competing at t