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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Kalyeena Makortoff Banking correspondent)
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Woodford fund investors could be in line for £306m in compensation
FCA orders fund’s administrator, Link, to ringfence sum as part of conditions related to its takeoverThe administrator of the failed fund run by the former star stock-picker Neil Woodford could be forced to pay investors up to £306m in compensation, the City regulator has said.The Financial Conduct Authority said on Monday it was ordering the fund’s administrator, Link, to ringfence the sum as part of conditions related to Link’s takeover by the Canadian cloud-based software company Dye & Du
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Severin Carrell Scotland editor)
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King Charles vows to continue Queen’s ‘inspiring example’ in Holyrood speech
During a motion of condolence, Nicola Sturgeon said the Queen’s death was a moment of ‘profound sorrow’ for many ScotsDeath of the Queen and King Charles’s accession - latest updatesKing Charles III has pledged he will “seek always the welfare of our country” as he addressed Scotland’s nationalist-led parliament for the first time as monarch.In a short ceremony at Holyrood – a motion of condolence to mark the Queen’s death at Balmoral last week – the King said his mother “found in the hills of t
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ben Jennings)
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Ben Jennings on King Charles III and political impartiality – cartoon
Discover and buy more of Ben’s cartoons here Continue reading...
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jonathan Liew)
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Nat Sciver’s exit should tell women’s cricket it has some thinking to do | Jonathan Liew
Last week England’s brilliant all-rounder said she was taking a break. The women’s game has grown so fast, but at what cost?It’s fine to be sad. It’s fine to cry, even if it seems a little silly because, after all, it’s not like you knew her personally. It’s fine to feel bereft, disorientated, to sense the floor subsiding just a little.Equally, it’s fine to feel nothing at all, perhaps even wonder what all the fuss is about. Though she meant different things to all of us, her loss will touch us
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Charlotte Graham-McLay in Wellington)
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As Māori language use grows in New Zealand, the challenge is to match deeds to words
While the sight and sound of te reo Māori is becoming common in Aotearoa, advocates say the journey to a bilingual society is only beginningWhen New Zealand’s biggest chocolate maker recently released one of its popular products with Māori-language packaging, the reaction showed how far New Zealand has come in embracing its indigenous tongue – but also how far it still has to go.While most took Whittakers’ decision to temporarily rename its milk chocolate blocks as Miraka Kirīmi in their stride,
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Geneva Abdul)
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‘Worth the wait’: queueing begins for chance to pay respects to the Queen
Vanessa Nanthakumaran is one of the first in line to thank the Queen for her service during her lying in state in LondonVanessa Nanthakumaran never expected to be first in line of the hundreds of thousands of people expected to queue in London in the coming days for the Queen’s lying in state at Westminster Hall.At 11.30am, Nanthakumaran, 56, was walking past the Houses of Parliament when she learned that the line would start riverside, just south of Lambeth Bridge. Continue reading...
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Sophie Zeldin-O'Neill)
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Met police suspend officer involved in fatal shooting of Chris Kaba
Suspension comes a week after death of unarmed 24-year-old in south LondonThe Metropolitan police officer who fired the shot that killed 24-year-old Chris Kaba has been suspended from frontline duties, the Metropolitan police have confirmed in a statement.The unarmed man was shot dead by police in Streatham Hill, south London, last Monday night. Kaba was driving a vehicle that was stopped after the activation of an automatic number-plate recognition camera, which indicated that the car had been
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Pippa Crerar Political editor)
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How the coming days will set the tone of Liz Truss’s time at No 10
An emergency budget will give her chance to get back on the front foot – but first she must gauge the nation’s mood in the period of mourning for the QueenAs Liz Truss processed out of Westminster Hall behind King Charles, over the brass plaques marking the trials of Guy Fawkes and Charles I and the spot where the Queen Mother lay in state, she looked like she was personally bearing the weight of history on her shoulders.Her face grave and drawn, the new prime minister may have been reflecting o
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Richard Luscombe)
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‘We’ve experienced an anomaly’: Bezos’s latest Blue Origin launch fails
New Shepard rocket fails shortly after launch, but uncrewed capsule jettisons successfullyAn uncrewed rocket belonging to Jeff Bezos’s space company, Blue Origin, failed shortly after launch in Texas on Monday morning, a potential setback for the Amazon founder’s wider ambitions of sending humans into orbit.The malfunction of the New Shepard booster, a type of rocket that is similar to the one Blue Origin has used this year to send three crews of up to six people on suborbital flights, came 1min
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tumaini Carayol at Flushing Meadows)
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Carlos Alcaraz regains his freedom with exhilarating US Open win | Tumaini Carayol
The teenager came to New York burdened by pressure of his rapid success but leaves as champion and world No 1Just one month ago, as the tennis tours swung to the North American hard court season at the beginning of August, Carlos Alcaraz was feeling burdened by his rapid success. The early stages of his rise had seemed so easy – he won big titles for fun, outperformed the likes of Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal, and the Spaniard flew up the rankings with a smile on his face. But now he was deal