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World Economy Apr 09, 2026

From Queens to the Dominican Republic: Sisters Bring Success with Sustainable Chocolate

Two sisters, Janett and Erika Liriano, daughters of Dominican immigrants, have launched a successfu…
Janett and Erika Liriano, growing up in Queens as daughters of Dominican immigrants, were encouraged to dream big. By their late 20s, Janett had been named a Forbes 30 Under 30 Listmaker and was chief of staff at a biopharmaceutical firm, while Erika was making a name for herself in venture capital.However, feeling unfulfilled, they decided to leave their lucrative jobs and move to the Dominican Republic to start a chocolate company. Inspired by their parents' homeland and the country's rich cacao resources, they aimed to create a vertically integrated cacao company that would benefit local farmers.The Dominican Republic produces about 60% of the world's organic cacao, but most of its export is raw beans, with the majority of profit made in countries like Belgium, Germany, and the US. The sisters saw an opportunity to change this and create a more equitable supply chain.After months of research and planning, they launched Inaru Chocolate, a company that contracts directly with farmers and pays them a fixed rate, ensuring fair prices and better livelihoods. The company pays farmers 3% of every product sold, resulting in 30 to 50% higher earnings than what most other buyers offer.In 2023, they opened a 7,000-sq-ft chocolate factory outside Santo Domingo, employing 35 people and producing high-end chocolate. Their business model has attracted brands like the W Hotel and Zingerman's, with 80% of their business coming from B2B sales.The sisters' journey hasn't been easy, facing challenges like securing funding and navigating language barriers. Despite these obstacles, they have raised $12m in investments and are committed to creating jobs and empowering local farmers in their parents' homeland.
#janett #farmers #chocolate
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Commentisfree Apr 09, 2026

Starmer urges Britain to boost energy, defence and economic resilience as Iran conflict escalates

Prime Minister Keir Starmer argues that the war in Iran highlights the need for a resilient Britain…
Britain has weathered a succession of crises since the 2008 financial collapse— austerity, Brexit, Covid, the Ukraine war and recent political turbulence. Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the war in Iran must become a turning point, forcing the country to build lasting resilience at home and with its European partners.Starmer stresses that the UK’s response to the Iranian aggression has been guided by de‑escalation, diplomacy and the swift reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. While Britain avoided direct offensive action, it intercepted drones, shot down missiles and protected British lives and interests alongside allies who share the same stance.The government’s approach, he explains, is to reduce escalation, work with allies and safeguard economic stability. In a world that is “more volatile and dangerous than at any other point in my lifetime,” such a strategy is presented as essential for protecting British interests.Starmer links global instability to domestic pressures, noting that the same tensions that threaten security also drive up energy prices, disrupt supply chains and strain household finances. To counter this, his administration has capped energy bills and invested heavily in homegrown energy sources, aiming to free the UK from reliance on external gas suppliers.On the defence front, the UK has announced the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War, reinforcing European alliances and expanding military capacity. Parallel to these security measures, the government has launched an ambitious industrial strategy, strengthened workers’ rights and pledged to lift more than half a million children out of poverty through a new child‑poverty programme.Starmer argues that these policies are not isolated reactions but part of a broader shift toward long‑term resilience. By building secure, domestic energy, robust alliances and a stable economy, Britain can “shape its future and deliver on priorities that matter to working people.”He concludes that Britain will not attempt to recreate the pre‑2008 world; instead, it will forge a stronger, more secure, and more resilient nation capable of withstanding future shocks.
#our #not #britain
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Sport Apr 09, 2026

England's Six Nations Title Hopes Hit by Injuries and Pregnancies

England's Women's Six Nations campaign has been dealt a blow with prop Hannah Botterman ruled out o…
England's hopes of winning the Women's Six Nations title have been hit by a series of setbacks, including injuries and pregnancies. Prop Hannah Botterman has been ruled out of their opener against Ireland with an ankle injury, and her participation in the tournament is uncertain.The team is already dealing with several injuries, two retirements, and four pregnancies, including that of Rosie Galligan, whose partner is England teammate Marlie Packer. Coach John Mitchell said that Botterman's ankle is not yet mechanically sound, and they will have more information on her return timeline next week.England remain favorites for the grand slam, but Mitchell acknowledged that the team has been affected by the post-World Cup euphoria. Ellie Kildunne will start at full-back, with Claudia Moloney-MacDonald and Jess Breach on the wings. New captain Meg Jones, who took over from pregnant Zoe Stratford, will start at outside centre.Mitchell believes that the team has built a legacy and has the opportunity to create a dynasty. However, he also acknowledged that there will be challenges along the way, including a Lions tour in 2027 and the fact that several players are becoming mothers.
#you #england #there
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Technology Apr 09, 2026

Nasa Outlines Critical Steps for Safe Artemis II Crew Splashdown

The Artemis II crew is set to return to Earth on Friday after a historic 10-day lunar flyby mission…
The crew of Artemis II is preparing to return to Earth on Friday, following their historic 10-day lunar flyby mission. Nasa leaders have outlined the critical steps needed to ensure a safe splashdown off the coast of San Diego. The Orion capsule will travel at nearly 24,000mph before making a final splashdown several miles off the coast of San Diego. The operation requires multiple teams and careful coordination to safely extract the crew from the spacecraft. Nasa's associate administrator Amit Kshatriya emphasized the importance of the mission, stating, "To every engineer, every technician that's touched this machine, tomorrow belongs to you. The crew has done their part. Now we have to do ours." Jeff Radigan, lead flight director of the mission, highlighted the precision required for re-entry, noting the team has "less than a degree of an angle" to hit the correct flight path. "Let's not beat around the bush. We have to hit that angle correctly – otherwise we're not going to have a successful re-entry," he said. The splashdown is expected to occur at 5:07pm PT, with the USS John P Murtha ready to assist with recovery operations. The crew will undergo post-mission medical evaluations before being flown to Nasa's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Pilot Victor Glover, the first Black man to travel beyond low Earth orbit, reflected on the journey, saying, "We have to get back. There's so much data that you've seen already, but all the good stuff is coming back with us. There are so many more pictures, so many more stories."
#crew #there #out
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Stage Apr 09, 2026

Modern ‘A Doll’s House’ Stages London’s Banker Class and Feminist Struggle at Almeida

Anya Reiss’s contemporary rewrite of Ibsen’s classic, directed by Joe Hill‑Gibbins at London’s Alme…
What would Henrik Ibsen’s iconic heroine Nora look like in today’s Britain? In this bold re‑imagining, playwright Anya Reiss transports the 19th‑century drama into a world of high‑salary banking, social‑media façades and post‑pandemic consumer excess. Set against a sleek, white‑goods‑strewn stage designed by Hyemi Shin, the story follows Nora (played by Romola Garai) as the wife of a lucrative London banker, Torvald (Tom Mothersdale), who is also battling drug addiction. Though presented as a “trophy wife”, Nora is far sharper than her husband realises – she has secretly rescued the family from financial collapse and funded Torvald’s recovery, all while maintaining a veneer of festive, pre‑Christmas splurging. The familiar Ibsen plot points survive the update: a blackmail threat from Torvald’s colleague Nils Krogstad (James Corrigan) and a visit from the destitute, marriage‑for‑money‑failed friend Kristine (Thalissa Teixeira). Their interactions expose the tension between outward affluence and hidden desperation. Reiss’s version is unmistakably contemporary, peppering dialogue with references to Instagram, a stock market rattled by conflict in the Middle East, and the relentless pursuit of material status. This backdrop reframes the marital power struggle as a clash of class and modern capitalism, asking whether love can ever be insulated from market forces. Despite the heavy thematic load, the cast delivers a series of compelling performances. Garai’s Nora oscillates between calculated seduction – even donning a provocative nurse’s outfit for a flirtatious dance – and a keen intellect that refuses to be reduced to a mere commodity. Her portrayal suggests that, for Nora, the body has become a form of currency, yet she remains acutely aware of the performative nature of both marriage and motherhood. Notably, the children appear only through baby‑monitor audio, a deliberate choice that underscores the couple’s emotional distance and mirrors the original’s focus on Nora’s internal emancipation. The climax arrives in a charged confrontation where Nora questions, “Is love meant to be subject to the market?” The line encapsulates Reiss’s preoccupation with the commodification of intimacy, even as it feels like a summarising refrain rather than a fresh revelation. Ultimately, the production offers a nuanced, if occasionally over‑engineered, vision of Ibsen’s feminist aspirations. It hints at a future where Nora and Torvald might seek couples therapy to untangle their financial and emotional entanglements – a decidedly modern resolution. A Doll’s House runs at the Almeida Theatre, London, until 23 May.
#nora #her #torvald
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Tv And Radio Apr 09, 2026

Matthew Macfadyen’s ‘The Miniature Wife’ Squanders Satirical Potential in Overlong Comedy

The Guardian review argues that despite a promising premise and strong leads, the Sky Atlantic seri…
Matthew Macfadyen headlines the new Sky Atlantic series ‘The Miniature Wife’, playing scientist Les Littlejohn, a brilliant but ethically dubious researcher who accidentally shrinks his wife Lindy (Elizabeth Banks) to six inches tall. The premise promises a darkly comic exploration of marital power dynamics and modern misogyny. However, the show quickly abandons this fertile ground. Showrunners Jennifer Ames and Steve Turner opt for a frenetic, screwball tone that feels forced, leaving the underlying commentary underdeveloped. The central conceit – a miniature wife trapped in a dollhouse – is treated more as a visual gag than a vehicle for satire. The series is littered with side plots that never coalesce. A subplot about a misattributed short story attempts to touch on authorship and truth in the digital age, yet it remains a superficial gesture. Likewise, the ensemble cast—including Zoe Lister‑Jones as a lab overseer, O‑T Fagbenle as a lovelorn colleague, and Sian Clifford as Lindy’s agent—offers colorful moments but fails to achieve narrative momentum. Visually, the production delivers inventive set pieces: Lindy’s daring escapes from towering household objects and explosive laboratory experiments provide occasional laughs. Nevertheless, the novelty wears thin before the series’ nearly ten‑hour runtime concludes. The original short story by Manuel Gonzales required far more expansion than the show supplies, resulting in a stretched‑out narrative that would have benefited from a tighter format. In short, while Macfadyen’s performance is competent, it is largely wasted in a series that promises depth but delivers only scattered comedy. ‘The Miniature Wife’ may satisfy viewers seeking light‑hearted antics, but it falls short of the incisive satire its premise suggests. The series is available on Sky Atlantic, streaming on Now in the UK and on Stan in Australia.
#but #there #lindy
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Uk News Apr 09, 2026

British Couple Detained in Iran: Family Urges UK to Press for Release

The son of a British couple detained in Iran on espionage charges has called on UK Prime Minister K…
The son of a British couple detained in Tehran on espionage charges has called on Keir Starmer to prioritize their case in the “very opportune moment” of a ceasefire in the Iran conflict.Lindsay and Craig Foreman, from East Sussex, were arrested while on a five-day trip across Iran in January last year and have been held in Evin prison for 15 months.As Starmer visits the Gulf to discuss efforts to uphold the ceasefire, the couple’s family have called on the prime minister and the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, to raise the case in all diplomatic discussions.Lindsay’s son, Joe Bennett, said: “If peace is genuinely part of the agenda, then that has to include the release of innocent people. I don’t see how it can be peaceful and that’s the case.”The 31-year-old said it was a “very opportune moment” for the prime minister, and the government should “take courage” from the release this week of two French citizens. Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris had been detained in Iran for almost four years on espionage charges and were also held in Evin prison before they were released but barred from leaving Tehran.“Macron was incredibly vocal, he was championing above all else, and I think that’s where we can take some courage and have a look at how do we apply that kind of pressure in the right way,” said Bennett. “There’s a genuine opportunity for resolution here.”The UK government has faced claims that it is in denial about the extent of hostage-taking by foreign states and has failed to fulfil its promise to appoint a special envoy to combat the issue.Bennett has been campaigning for the couple’s release with significant cross-party parliamentary support. Despite several meetings with the foreign secretary, and a hearing into their case held by the all-party parliamentary group on arbitrary detention and hostage affairs, he said there had been no visible progress in 15 months.On Thursday morning, Bennett spoke with his mother in Evin prison. The past 48 hours had been tumultuous, he said, after a supposed ceasefire was agreed on Tuesday, little more than an hour before a self-imposed deadline by Donald Trump, who had threatened Iran’s “whole civilisation” would die if it did not meet his demands.The comments made Bennett feel “pure fear” until news of the two-week ceasefire was announced. The potential for peace talks had given the couple some hope that “they’ll be fought for” by the UK government, he said.“Yvette Cooper called it unjustifiable and that she would be fighting relentlessly to get them home. I need to see signs of that,” said Bennett.Despite a UN legal submission, significant cross-party parliamentary support, and several meetings with the foreign secretary and a hearing into their case by UK parliamentarians from the APPG on arbitrary detention and hostage affairs, he said there has been no visible progress to date towards securing their release.A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “The UK government continues work to safely return Craig and Lindsay to the UK.”
#bennett #iran #foreign
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Entertainment Apr 09, 2026

Helen DeWitt Rejects $175,000 Windham‑Campbell Prize Over Mandatory Promotion

American novelist Helen DeWitt declined the $175,000 Windham‑Campbell writing prize after the award…
Helen DeWitt, the American author of "The Last Samurai," announced she turned down the Windham‑Campbell writing prize—a $175,000 (£130,000) award—after learning that acceptance hinged on a series of promotional commitments.In a personal blog and a thread on X, DeWitt explained that the prize required her to attend a festival, appear on a podcast, and take part in a six‑ to eight‑hour filming session for a promotional video.She disclosed that, at the time, she was "close to breakdown" due to a cascade of professional and personal challenges, making the additional obligations impossible to meet.DeWitt likened the situation to the early‑career expectations of writers such as Thomas Pynchon or Cormac McCarthy, noting that the demands would be "horrifying" for anyone in a similar position.Correspondence with prize director Michael Kelleher showed limited flexibility: while he agreed to drop the podcast requirement, he maintained that DeWitt herself had to appear in the video, rejecting her proposal to feature other writers or her husband instead.Ultimately, DeWitt wrote that she must "regretfully decline to accept the prize on the specified terms," and the award was forfeited.The Windham‑Campbell prizes, founded in 2013 from the bequest of novelist Donald Windham, are intended to be "life‑changing" recognitions. This year’s recipients include British novelist Gwendoline Riley, and winners are selected confidentially.DeWitt argued that a prize structure that excludes writers unable to meet extra promotional duties contradicts the spirit of its generous founders. Kelleher responded that participation is optional and that the organization respects any decision not to engage, emphasizing the "power of literature to connect us all."
#Helen DeWitt #Windham‑Campbell Prize #literary award
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World Economy Apr 09, 2026

UK Thinktank Proposes Subsidized Energy for All Households

A UK thinktank has suggested that all households in the UK should receive a minimum amount of energ…
The New Economics Foundation (NEF) has proposed that the UK government provide subsidized energy to all households, funded through North Sea tax revenues. The plan would ensure that every household receives a set amount of energy at current rates, helping to protect the poorest households from rising energy costs.According to NEF, providing enough energy to heat two rooms, provide hot water, and run key appliances like a fridge and washing machine at frozen rates would require a subsidy of about £4.5bn. This amount is roughly equal to the expected windfall in tax revenues from the North Sea, generated by the high price of oil.The proposed measure, known as a price guarantee, would save all households more than £160 on their annual bills. However, this would amount to a saving of about 17% for those on low incomes compared with 11% for wealthier people. NEF argues that this would encourage those who can afford to pay to reduce their energy consumption and invest in energy-efficient measures.Alex Chapman, a senior economist at NEF, stated that similar measures have been successfully implemented in countries like Japan, South Korea, China, and India, as well as several European countries. He emphasized the need for the government to protect households' ability to meet their essential energy needs and to tax energy companies on their windfall profits.The energy cap is expected to rise by about £388 in July and could reach nearly £2,000 a year for dual-fuel households. NEF's proposal aims to mitigate the impact of rising energy costs on vulnerable households.
#energy #households #oil
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