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Lifestyle Apr 28, 2026

Linett Kamala Revives Maypole with Dancehall‑Infused Basstone Pole

British‑Jamaican DJ Linett Kamala reimagines the traditional English maypole by blending dancehall,…
Reimagining the Maypole: A London Community SessionIn a bustling Kilburn community centre, a towering green pole festooned with LED ribbons becomes the centrepiece of an unexpected folk celebration. Six participants circle the pole while dancehall and drum‑and‑bass thump from speakers, turning a centuries‑old English ritual into a vibrant, multicultural jam.From Jamaican Roots to Kilburn: Linett Kamala’s Basstone MaypoleLinett Kamala, a British‑Jamaican DJ who first made headlines as one of the first female turntablists at the 1985 Notting Hill Carnival, has spent decades weaving music, education and community work. After discovering a living maypole tradition in a rural Jamaican school in 2020, she purchased an old pole online and transformed it into the "Basstone Maypole"—a sci‑fi‑inspired instrument featuring:Programmable LED light strings replacing traditional ribbonsSchool Tannoy speakers on the crown playing birdsong and ambient tracksA bass‑heavy subwoofer at the base delivering the low‑end pulse of sound‑system cultureThe pole debuted at the February Light Up Kilburn festival, drawing families, ageing ravers and curious locals who reported hearing wild parakeets echoing alongside the bass.Redefining English Folk Identity in a Multicultural BritainThe project highlights how English folk symbols, once tied to colonial narratives, can be reclaimed and reshaped by diaspora communities. By linking the maypole to Jamaican quadrille history and contemporary sound‑system aesthetics, Kamala demonstrates that heritage is not static but a tapestry of intertwined cultures. Attendees like Louise, a Canary Wharf professional, describe the experience as "re‑lighting the fire" of a childhood memory, while newcomer Paulette notes the pole’s urban presence challenges the notion that folk traditions belong only to the countryside.Future of Hybrid Folk Practices in Urban SpacesKamala’s success suggests a growing appetite for hybrid cultural events that blend tradition with modern subcultures. As community centres across the UK seek inclusive programming, similar LED‑enhanced, genre‑crossing installations could become fixtures in festivals, schools and public squares, fostering dialogue about identity, history and collective creativity.
#Linett Kamala #Maypole #Sound System Culture
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Entertainment Apr 28, 2026

Newcastle Jazz Band Knats Bridge North‑South Divide with DIY Grit

A self‑made quartet from Newcastle, the Knats have turned school‑yard defiance into a BBC Proms slo…
Newcastle’s Knats Turn Regional Grit into International Jazz BuzzThe duo of King David-Ike Elechi and Stan Woodward have evolved from a rebellious school‑rock club to a BBC Proms‑featured jazz outfit, proving that northern optimism can thrive on the world stage.The Rise of Knats: From Bedroom Experiments to the BBC PromsFormed after a “Whiplash moment” in a local music club, the pair built a DIY sound on a Tesco guitar and church‑learned drums. Over a decade they added Ferg Kilsby (trumpet), George Johnson (sax), Sandro Shar (piano) and poet‑vocalist Cooper Robson, shaping a genre‑bending style that blends hip‑hop beats, drum‑and‑bass, and classic jazz influences from Charles Mingus to Miles Davis.Key Milestones and Numbers Driving Knats' MomentumBBC Proms appearance – first major national platform.Collaboration with former Black Midi frontman Geordie Greep (pro‑bono production).Support slot for R&B legend Eddie Chacon on his UK tour.Upcoming release of debut album A Great Day in Newcastle on 1 May via Fontana.Spring 2026 tour across the UK, preceded by a US showcase at SXSW in March.Shifting the UK Jazz Landscape Beyond LondonThe Knats’ story highlights the persistent north‑south disparity in live‑booking opportunities and arts funding. While London‑based initiatives like Tomorrow’s Warriors dominate the narrative, the band’s success underscores a growing appetite for regional jazz scenes, especially as they champion free‑for‑kids programmes reminiscent of the defunct county bands.Future Trajectory: From Regional Roots to Global StagesWith a debut album that tackles themes from toxic masculinity to local pride, the Knats aim to cement a “Geordie jazz” identity while eyeing broader exposure. Their plan includes establishing a free youth jazz hub in Newcastle by age 30, ensuring the next generation can bypass the London bottleneck and keep the northern jazz renaissance alive.
#Knats #King David-Ike Elechi #Stan Woodward
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Politics Apr 28, 2026

Amnesty International Demands War Crime Probe into US Strike on Yemen Detention Center

Amnesty International has formally requested an investigation into a US air strike in Yemen, allegi…
Amnesty International has formally requested an investigation into a US air strike in Yemen, alleging it constitutes a war crime and resulted in the deaths of at least 68 detainees.The Saada Strike and the March-May CampaignThe rights group released a report on Tuesday detailing a strike on April 28, 2025, targeting a detention facility in Saada in northwestern Yemen. The facility had operated for years as part of a larger prison complex and had previously been visited by representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross and the United Nations, who found no evidence the compound was being used for military purposes.The organization argues that the Trump administration’s approach to air strikes in Yemen from March to May 2025 should have triggered alarm regarding the erosion of safeguards for civilians.Casualty Analysis and Systemic FailuresAmnesty International’s investigation highlights a disturbing pattern of civilian harm, citing the Saada strike as one of the deadliest civilian incidents linked to a US strike in recent years. The report details the following casualty figures:68 detainees killed in the Saada strike47 detainees injured156 people killed in a separate US strike on a school in Minab, Iran, including 120 childrenThe group asserts that the US failed to take all feasible precautions to avoid civilian harm, a violation of international humanitarian law.Erosion of Civilian Protection ProtocolsThe impact of these strikes extends beyond immediate casualties, creating a humanitarian crisis for survivors. Amnesty interviewed six Ethiopian men wounded in the attack, revealing that five were unable to work due to their injuries and relied on family support.One survivor, identified as Jirata, 30, testified that he lost one leg and had a metal rod inserted in the other. He stated, “I have lost hope, and I have nothing left that keeps me going. The US government caused all this.”Nadia Dar, director of Amnesty International USA, criticized the administration for systematically weakening safeguards while displaying a “dangerous disregard for the lives of civilians endangered by armed conflicts.”Future Implications for US Military OversightWith no public findings released by the US military a year after the incident, Amnesty is calling for a shift in accountability mechanisms. The organization is urging Washington to conduct prompt, transparent, and independent investigations into strikes in Yemen and Iran.The report suggests that the next major development will likely involve increased pressure on the US Congress to enforce stricter oversight of military operations and mandate reparations for civilians harmed in these conflicts.
#Amnesty International #United States #Yemen
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Politics Apr 28, 2026

Mapping the Destruction: How Israel Systematically 'Wiped Out' Lebanon's Bint Jbeil

Israeli forces have systematically destroyed over 1,500 buildings in Bint Jbeil, Lebanon, as part o…
The Systematic Destruction of Bint JbeilIn the historic heart of Bint Jbeil, a 400-year-old Great Mosque once stood as a testament to the city's enduring cultural memory. Today, it lies in ruins, alongside more than 1,500 buildings systematically destroyed by Israeli forces in an escalating military campaign in southern Lebanon.Through the meticulous analysis of satellite imagery and open-source intelligence, a visual investigation by aljazeera.net's fact-checking team has revealed a deliberate Israeli policy to render southern Lebanon permanently uninhabitable.The border villages and towns of southern Lebanon are witnessing a relentless military escalation beyond conventional warfare. Israeli operations have expanded into a policy of systematically "wiping out" civilian homes, residential neighbourhoods and vital infrastructure, analysis of the map shows.This pattern has drawn direct comparisons to the Israeli military's brutal tactics in the Gaza Strip, which lies in ruins. Most of Gaza's 2.3 million people remain forcibly displaced.Legal experts, analysts and local officials warn that the ultimate objective is the "emptying of residential geography", carving out a depopulated "buffer zone" at the forward edge of the border that permanently prevents displaced residents from returning and establishes a violently enforced demographic reality on the ground.Israel says it wants to create a buffer zone in southern Lebanon to prevent attacks from Hezbollah.A Visual Map of ObliterationBint Jbeil has emerged as the epicentre of this devastation, functioning as a concentrated model of Israel's border strategy. By verifying and geolocating visual evidence, Al Jazeera's digital investigation team tracked 14 distinct videos published by Israeli soldiers and journalists between 16 and 24 April.The resulting map of the blasts exposes a highly concentrated campaign of destruction. The data reveals that 93 percent of the documented demolitions – 13 out of the 14 incidents – occurred within the Nabatieh governorate.Half of these catastrophic explosions were focused squarely within the Bint Jbeil district, systematically flattening entire blocks in the towns of Bint Jbeil, Beit Lif, and Ainata. Another 43 percent of the blasts targeted towns administratively tied to Nabatieh, such as Khiam, Kafr Kila, and Rab El Thalathine, while a single significant demolition was recorded further west in the coastal town of Naqoura.These figures underscore a methodical blueprint to dismantle civilian infrastructure. Aerial data and satellite imagery collected up to late April reveal a staggering reduction in Bint Jbeil's urban mass. According to Bazzi, more than 70 percent of the city has been totally destroyed, with another 20 percent partially damaged, bringing the affected urban footprint to more than 90 percent.Approximately 3,000 housing units have been completely levelled. The demolitions have been heavily concentrated in the city's commercial centre and its oldest, most historic neighbourhoods, including Ain al-Saghira and the Mosque Quarter.The destruction has stretched far beyond residential buildings to the city's eastern and western outskirts, targeting power stations, water networks, schools and hospitals, including the Salah Ghandour Hospital.Furthermore, Bazzi added that agricultural land has been razed and subjected to incendiary weapons and white phosphorus munitions, describing the scorched-earth tactics as a "compound crime" under international humanitarian law, which strictly prohibits the intentional destruction of civilian property and livelihoods.Strategic Military Objectives and Buffer ZonesIsraeli military reports openly highlight the strategic importance of Bint Jbeil and the neighbouring town of Maroun al-Ras. Sitting at high altitudes, these areas overlook illegal northern Israeli settlements such as Avivim, Yir'on, Dovev, Malkia and Dishon. The Israeli military command views absolute control over these vantage points as crucial for field superiority and for directing artillery fire deeper into Lebanese territory.The Israeli military recently announced that its 98th Division had completed the encirclement of the Bint Jbeil area as part of "Operation Northern Arrows". The stated goal is to neutralise the threat of antitank missiles and push back Hezbollah's Radwan Force. Currently, five military divisions are deployed deep in the area, tasked with dismantling Hezbollah's subterranean and surface infrastructure.Israeli media coverage frequently evokes the 2006 war's brutal battles in Bint Jbeil, where eight Golani Brigade soldiers were killed, framing the extensive destruction of the city in 2026 as an act of military retribution.Hezbollah had claimed victory in the 2006 war as it had prevented Israel from achieving its war goals.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently stated that his forces were continuing to strike Hezbollah mercilessly and were close to concluding the battle in Bint Jbeil. Netanyahu confirmed he had issued clear, unequivocal instructions to the military to continue expanding the security belt and to intensify their fortified presence within the newly created buffer zone.Humanitarian Crisis and Future OutlookIn direct response to the expanding demolitions, Hezbollah released a defiant video message in Arabic and Hebrew, vowing to thwart Israel's efforts to establish a buffer zone over the ruins of southern Lebanese communities."Any security belt, no matter its depth, will prevent our activation when we decide to do so," the group warned. The broadcast served as a clear reminder of Hezbollah's intact arsenal of rocket launchers, drones and precision-guided missiles.The video featured a previous statement by Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem, who declared that illegal Israeli settlements "will not be safe, even if the Israelis enter any area in Lebanon". Hezbollah fighters continue to launch precise, deadly strikes using missiles and explosive drones against Israeli troop gatherings operating within the ruins of the border villages.For the 2,000 families forcibly displaced from Bint Jbeil, the loss of their homes, heritage and livelihoods is absolute. Yet, despite the destruction of historic mosques and neighbourhoods, the resolve of its residents remains unshaken.Bazzi urged immediate international intervention to halt the blatant violations of international law, maintaining that Israel's attempt at erasure would ultimately fail to uproot the people from their land.
#Israel #Lebanon #Bint Jbeil
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Sports Apr 28, 2026

Lewis Hamilton's Mission 44: Transforming Diversity in Formula One

Lewis Hamilton's Mission 44 foundation is making significant strides in diversifying Formula One by…
The LeadSports people can be more than the sum of their athletic achievements. Lewis Hamilton stands unquestionably as one of the greatest drivers in the history of Formula One having delivered both records and outstanding performances that will be hard to surpass. Yet it is indicative of his character that the seven-time world champion rates them all as sitting only alongside what might ultimately be his most significant and long-lasting legacy.The Mission 44 InitiativeMission 44 came about because Hamilton was acutely aware of the lack of representation of black people and those from disadvantaged backgrounds in motorsport. In 2021 he established the Hamilton commission to investigate the causes and subsequently created Mission 44 to address them. The foundation supports schoolchildren facing poverty and a lack of role models encouraging a pursuit of science, technology, engineering or maths (Stem) skills and careers in motorsport.Investment and ReachHamilton put his money where his mouth is by investing £20m in the project and its impact was felt immediately. Focusing on grassroots investment to make education more inclusive and to help young people into Stem careers, there have been 550,000 young people involved across the world and 50,000 helped specifically in the Stem and motorsport areas, with over £9m awarded in grants.Transforming Lives in MotorsportYet alongside the numbers are the human stories. In order to directly influence motorsport, in 2022 Mission 44 launched its scholarship programme in partnership with the Royal Academy of Engineering, which would meet the costs of scholars from black or mixed black backgrounds to study for a master's degree in motorsport engineering. This year it will fund them to the tune of up to £43,000 per person, as well as offering vital mentoring, networking and career support. It has proved to be life-changing.The Future of Diversity in F1Unsurprisingly then, the foundation has not remained static in its ambitions. Owuye notes perhaps the greatest barrier she experienced was her background – state educated and with parents she describes as not having professional jobs and who had not attended university. "A defining factor or an obstacle in all of the things that led to this point would be socioeconomic background over anything else and being working class," she says. "Formula One as an industry historically has tended to hire from, and still do, the kind of elite universities and there's not a great deal of socioeconomic diversity at those universities. So naturally, as a result, you see that underrepresentation filter into the industry."
#Lewis Hamilton #Mission 44 #Formula One
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Entertainment Apr 28, 2026

Salon Review: A Fabulous Party of Art and Conversation

The article reviews a salon exhibition featuring 43 paintings by various artists, curated by Matthe…
The Concept of a Salon Exhibition The gallery appears to have been set for a party. Mismatched chairs are scattered through the space – ornate gothic throne, wing-backed recliner, stackable school chair. Each points towards a white window painted on to the wall, into which one of 43 equally miscellaneous paintings has been inserted. These paintings are the other party guests, and you must decide who to sit with. Engaging with the Artworks It is a ragtag bunch, and so I decide to start with the people I recognise. But on my way to meet a portrait by Denzil Forrester of the young Haile Selassie, its surface resembling scuffed and polished stone, I am distracted by the glitter of light from a small work by Andrew Cranston. It comes from a young woman who seems to have been transplanted from Dumbarton into a glamorous late Vuillard, her coat shimmering like the scales of a fish caught by late summer sun. The Curator's Vision The host of this “salon”, and the person whose sensibility knits it together, is Matthew Higgs, director of New York’s White Columns gallery and magpie impresario. Some of these artists he has worked with for years, while others, such as Adam Keay, who contributes an oddly compelling beach scene, were invited on the strength of a chance encounter. The Experience of Discovery If you can stick it out to the 40-minute point at which things get really psychedelic, you will discover that you have attracted the attention of security guards. This is because exhibitions are not, for the most part, designed to encourage you to spend a long time in front of art works so much as move you through to the gift shop. But Higgs understands that to have a meaningful experience with a painting requires no technical expertise but only time, an open mind and, ideally, a chair.
#The Guardian #Salon Review #Matthew Higgs
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Science Apr 28, 2026

Five Ways to Fight Back Against the Growing Rejection of Science

Helen Pearson argues that despite a wave of anti‑science rhetoric—from political leaders to misinfo…
In a climate where climate denial, vaccine skepticism and "alternative facts" dominate headlines, Helen Pearson shows that the tide of evidence‑based practice is still rising. Drawing on five years of interviews with over 200 experts, she offers concrete steps for citizens, educators and policymakers to push back against the growing rejection of science. The Rise of Anti‑Science Rhetoric in Politics and Public Health Recent statements from high‑profile figures have amplified doubt: Donald Trump labeled climate change a "con job", while U.S. health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has slashed 25,000 staff positions at science agencies and publicly undermined vaccines. In the UK, only 40% of respondents believe information about science is "generally true". These attacks echo the 1992 backlash against evidence‑based medicine, when a small group of doctors faced accusations of "dangerous innovation". Numbers Showing Declining Trust and Funding Cuts Public trust in scientific institutions fell from 58% in 2018 to 40% in 2025 (Ipsos UK). U.S. federal science staffing reduced by 12% between 2022‑2025, equating to 25,000 jobs lost. Investment in AI‑driven evidence synthesis reached $126 million in 2025, signaling a counter‑trend toward better access to research. Over 70% of English school leaders now report using research to guide decisions, up from 45% in 2010. Evidence‑based anti‑poverty programmes have impacted an estimated 850 million lives worldwide. Why the Erosion of Evidence Matters Across Sectors The decline in trust is not just an abstract concern; it directly affects health outcomes, climate action and economic policy. When citizens reject vaccine data, disease outbreaks become more likely, increasing healthcare costs. Climate denial stalls emissions‑reduction legislation, jeopardizing global temperature targets. In education, ignoring rigorous studies on tutoring and phonics can widen achievement gaps. What Experts Predict for the Future of Evidence‑Based Decision‑Making AI‑powered synthesis tools like Consensus will become mainstream, allowing anyone to query a database of >250 million papers within seconds. Curricula that embed critical‑thinking and "evidence literacy" are expected to be adopted in at least 60% of OECD schools by 2030. Funding bodies are likely to tie grant eligibility to open‑access data sharing, accelerating transparency. Grass‑roots fact‑checking networks will grow, with community‑led platforms verifying claims in real time. Ultimately, Pearson reminds readers that science is a human endeavour—messy, iterative, and sometimes uncertain—but its collective weight still outpaces anecdote. By asking for evidence, checking peer review, and supporting institutions that champion rigorous research, individuals can help tip the balance toward reason.
#Helen Pearson #The Guardian #Evidence-Based Medicine
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Politics Apr 28, 2026

Kashmir Seminary Declared Unlawful Under Anti-Terror Law

An Islamic seminary in Kashmir, Jamia Siraj-ul-Uloom, has been declared unlawful under India's anti…
The Lead An important Islamic seminary in Kashmir has been declared unlawful under anti-terror laws, prompting backlash from prominent religious and political leaders in the Indian-administered territory. Seminary Under Scrutiny Kashmir Divisional Commissioner Anshul Garg issued the order based on a police dossier that alleged “sustained and covert links” between the seminary, Jamia Siraj-ul-Uloom, and the banned political party Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI), local media reported. The seminary, one of the largest in southern Kashmir, is recognised by the Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education and has over 800 students. The Data Analysis The seminary has more than 800 students and has “produced doctors, scholars and professionals from homes that could never afford private education”. The move was handed down under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), a much-criticised law that allows authorities to designate someone a “terrorist” without evidence. The Impact Analysis Leaders in Muslim-majority Kashmir criticised the move as part of an ongoing campaign of overreach by New Delhi. “Declaring Jamia Siraj-ul-Uloom ‘unlawful’ under UAPA is the latest act in a calculated dismantling of Kashmir’s civic life,” wrote Aga Syed Ruhullah Mehdi, a member of Jammu and Kashmir parliament, on X. The Prediction The decision is likely to escalate tensions in the region, where Kashmiri leaders have pushed back against what they describe as a curtailing of religious and other freedoms. Kashmir voters elected local officials in 2024, in the first elections in a decade. However, most powers remain with the New Delhi-appointed lieutenant governor, including control over police, public order and the transfer and posting of officials.
#Kashmir #India #Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA)
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Environment Apr 28, 2026

London’s Queen Elizabeth II Garden Opens, Offering a New Haven for Urban Wildlife

The Queen Elizabeth II Garden opened to the public on 28 April 2026, converting a former car‑park i…
Opening of the Queen Elizabeth II Urban Wildlife Garden On 28 April 2026 the newly‑created Queen Elizabeth II Garden in central London welcomed its first visitors. The 30,000 m² site, formerly a surface‑level car park, was redesigned by landscape architects Weston Williamson into a mosaic of native meadows, wetland ponds, and woodland glades. The garden is open daily, free of charge, and features interpretive signage, a visitor centre, and a series of guided tours aimed at families and school groups. Visitor Projections and Biodiversity Metrics Planned planting of 150+ native wildflower and shrub species to attract pollinators. Construction of two shallow ponds designed to support amphibians such as the common frog and newt. Target of 200,000 visitor entries in the first twelve months, based on foot‑traffic modelling from similar urban parks. Estimated creation of habitat for over 30 bird species, including the skylark and green woodpecker. Boost to Urban Biodiversity and Community Engagement The garden represents a strategic effort by the Royal Parks and the Greater London Authority to reverse the city’s biodiversity decline. By re‑wilding a high‑visibility site, the project provides a living laboratory for ecological research and citizen‑science initiatives. Local schools have already signed up for curriculum‑linked programs, and a volunteer “Friends of the Garden” group is coordinating monthly habitat‑monitoring events. Future Role of Green Spaces in London’s Climate Resilience Experts see the Queen Elizabeth II Garden as a template for future climate‑adaptation projects across the capital. The wetland areas are expected to mitigate surface‑runoff during heavy rainstorms, while the dense planting will contribute to urban cooling and carbon sequestration. If the garden meets its biodiversity targets, it could accelerate the city’s ambition to increase green cover by 15% by 2035.
#Queen Elizabeth II Garden #London #Wildlife Conservation
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