Category Archives: health

George Alagiah: BBC Journalist And Newsreader Dies Aged 67

    George Alagiah, one of the BBC’s longest-serving and most respected journalists, has died at 67, nine years after being diagnosed with cancer.

    A statement from his agent said he “died peacefully today, surrounded by his family and loved ones”.

    “George was deeply loved by everybody who knew him, whether it was a friend, a colleague or a member of the public.

    “He simply was a wonderful human being. My thoughts are with Fran, the boys and his wider family,” she said.

    Alagiah died earlier on Monday, but “fought until the bitter end”, his agent added.

    BBC director general Tim Davie said: “Across the BBC, we are all incredibly sad to hear the news about George. We are thinking of his family at this time.

    “George was one of the best and bravest journalists of his generation who reported fearlessly from across the world as well as presenting the news flawlessly.

    “He was more than just an outstanding journalist, audiences could sense his kindness, empathy and wonderful humanity. He was loved by all and we will miss him enormously.”

    BBC World Affairs editor John Simpson tweeted: “A gentler, kinder, more insightful and braver friend and colleague it would be hard to find.”

    Fellow journalists including LBC’s Sangita Myska, the Guardian’s Pippa Crearer and Sky News’s Mark Austin were among those to also pay tribute.

    Austin tweeted: “This breaks my heart. A good man, a rival on the foreign correspondent beat but above all a friend. If good journalism is about empathy, and it often is, George Alagiah had it in spades.”

    Myska noted Alagiah’s influence on British Asian reporters.

    “Growing up, when the BBC’s George Alagiah was on TV my dad would shout “George is on!”. We’d run to watch the man who inspired a generation of British Asian journalists. That scene was replicated across the U.K. We thank you, George. RIP xx”

    Former BBC North American editor Jon Sopel wrote: “Tributes will rightly be paid to a fantastic journalist and brilliant broadcaster – but George was the most decent, principled, kindest, most honourable man I have ever worked with. What a loss.”

    Alagiah was a fixture on British TV news for more than three decades, presenting the BBC News at Six for the past 20 years.

    Before that, he was an award-winning foreign correspondent, reporting from countries ranging from Rwanda to Iraq.

    He was diagnosed with stage four bowel cancer in 2014 and revealed in October 2022 that it had spread further.

    Alagiah won awards for reports on the famine and war in Somalia in the early 1990s, and was nominated for a Bafta in 1994 for covering Saddam Hussein’s genocidal campaign against the Kurds of northern Iraq.

    He was also named Amnesty International’s journalist of the year in 1994, for reporting on the civil war in Burundi, and was the first BBC journalist to report on the genocide in Rwanda.

    George Maxwell Alagiah was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka before moving to Ghana and then England in childhood.

    His main childhood memory of Sri Lanka was leaving it. His parents were Christian Tamils; the country, then called Ceylon, mired in ethnic violence.

    His father, Donald, was an engineer specialising in water distribution and irrigation. Feeling unwelcome and unsafe in his own land, he took his young family to Africa in search of a new and better life.

    The family initially prospered there but Alagiah’s parents decided to educate their children in England when a coup soured the atmosphere in Ghana. At the age of 11, his father dropped him off at boarding school in Portsmouth; they both had to hold back the tears.

    His childhood of change and assimilation helped shape his personality and informed his professional judgement.

    There was some racism. He was almost the only boy of colour; there were “Bongo Bongo land” taunts in the showers. He gave up asking people to say his name correctly (his family pronounced it, “Uller-hiya”).

    “In those days,” he reflected “you were almost apologetic if you had a ‘funny name’.” The alternative was to stick out like an “exotic cactus in a bed of spring meadow plants.”

    But, in some ways, his school in England – St John’s College – was a closed and unreal society, which sealed him off from the huge social changes going on outside its walls. The anti-immigrant sentiment in many parts of the country was something that largely passed him by.

    As he grew up, he became, he believed, the “right sort” of foreigner in a land where “class trumps race every time”.

    Later, he attended Durham University, where he met, and later married, Frances Robathan.

    After graduating, he spent seven years at South Magazine, proud of its editorial line which painted an unequal world as an unstable one.

    He joined the BBC as a foreign affairs correspondent in 1989 and then became Africa correspondent, the continent of his childhood.

    It was often a depressing experience. He interviewed child soldiers in Liberia, victims of mass rape in Uganda and witnessed hunger and disease almost everywhere.

    “There is a new generation in Africa”, he wrote, “my generation, freedom’s children, born and educated in those years of euphoria after independence, we have had a chance. We didn’t do much with it.”

    One of his proudest professional moments came when he broadcast some of the first pictures of the ethnic cleansing in Kosovo in 1999, he said.

    Other stories he covered in news reports and documentaries included the trade in human organs in India, street children in Brazil, civil war in Afghanistan and human rights violations in Ethiopia.

    He interviewed figures including South African President Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe.

    Moving to news presenting, he fronted the BBC One O’Clock News, Nine O’Clock News and BBC Four News, before being made one of the main presenters of the Six O’Clock News in 2003.

    He anchored news programmes from Sri Lanka following the December 2004 tsunami, as well as reporting from New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and from Pakistan following the South Asian earthquake in 2005.

    He was appointed an OBE for services to journalism in 2008.

    ‘Energised and motivated’

    After Alagiah’s initial cancer diagnosis in 2014, the disease spread to his liver and lymph nodes, which needed chemotherapy and several operations, including one to remove most of his liver.

    He said he was a “richer person” for the experience upon returning to presenting in 2015, and said working in the newsroom was “such an important part of keeping energised and motivated”.

    He had to take several further breaks from work to have treatment, and in January 2022 said he thought the cancer would “probably get me in the end”, but that he still felt “very lucky”.

    Speaking on the Desperately Seeking Wisdom podcast in 2022, he said that when his cancer was first discovered, it took a while for him to understand what he “needed to do”.

    “I had to stop and say, ‘Hang on a minute. If the full stop came now, would my life have been a failure?’

    “And actually, when I look back and I looked at my journey… the family I had, the opportunities my family had, the great good fortune to bump into [Frances Robathan], who’s now been my wife and lover for all these years, the kids that we brought up… it didn’t feel like a failure.”

    Alagiah had two children with Frances.

    British Asian Stars Unite To Promote Covid Vaccine

    Autism: ‘They Said Bleach Would Cure My Daughter’

    Same Difference

    “I’ve had people offer me products to ‘kill the autism’ – bleach, salts, supplements.”

    For Yvonne Odukwe, a Nigerian living in Newport, community stigma around her daughter’s autism is a barrier – but it’s only half of a “double whammy”.

    She and others say black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) people can also face poor engagement from authorities.

    The Welsh Government said its national autism team “regularly engages with BAME communities” among other steps.

    “It’s a double layer,” said Yvonne, mother of 19-year-old Jasmine.

    “I’m fighting the mainstream and then I’m also fighting my community because they’re not accepting me and, in many cases, blaming and shaming me.”

    Autism is a lifelong development disability which affects how people see, hear and interact with the world.

    Yvonne, a mother-of-three, said that like many parents of autistic children, she’d had to fight to get Jasmine support, but many parents from backgrounds like…

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    Music Boosts Memories For Ethnic Minority Dementia Patients

    Same Difference

    Charities are using tailored music to bring back memories for dementia patients from ethnic minorities.

    To mark World Alzheimer’s Day, the BBC has created a catalogue of world music to help people from all cultures living with dementia.

    Music producer Naughty Boy is supporting the BBC Music Memories project, his mother has dementia.

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    Kuli Kohli- Writer With CP

    Same Difference

    Born in an Indian village with cerebral palsy, Kuli Kohli was lucky to survive. Neighbours told her parents they should throw her in the river, instead they brought her to the UK. As she grew up here, writing became her means of escape – and transformed her life in ways she never expected.

    Waiting to be called on stage in her home town of Wolverhampton, Kuli Kohli felt sick with anxiety. She was petrified her words wouldn’t come out and worried she would fall flat on her face. Her heart soared and her nerves clattered. Self-doubt raced through her mind. “Why am I putting myself through all of this?” she asked herself.

    The host welcomed Kuli to the empty chair that was waiting for her. It was dark, a spotlight illuminated the stage, and a small wave of applause rippled around the room.

    Emerging from the side of the stage…

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    Three Generations Of Bachchans Have Coronavirus

    Three generations of a high-profile Bollywood family have tested positive for Covid-19, officials in the Indian state of Maharashtra say.

    Results on Sunday showed the actress Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, a former Miss World, and her daughter Aaradhya, eight, were infected with coronavirus.

    Her husband Abhishek and father-in-law Amitabh, both also actors, were taken to hospital on Saturday with the virus.

    Both men were said to have mild symptoms.

    Abhishek Bachchan tweeted that they would remain in hospital “till the doctors decide otherwise”.

    Aishwarya Bachchan, 46, is one of Bollywood’s most famous faces both in India and abroad, featuring in several Bollywood and Hollywood films.

    She won the Miss World pageant in 1994 and is Goodwill Ambassador for UNAIDS. In 2003 she was the first Indian actress to be a jury member at the Cannes Film Festival.

    Aishwarya and her daughter are said to be asymptomatic. Her husband tweeted to say they would be self-isolating at home.

    Outpouring of support

    On Saturday Amitabh Bachchan told his millions of Twitter followers he had tested positive for Covid-19.

    “I have tested Covid positive, shifted to hospital, hospital informing authorities, family and staff undergone tests, results awaited,” he wrote.

    Bachchan, 77, has been involved in 200 films over five decades.

    He and Abhishek, 44, were taken to Nanavati Hospital in Mumbai on Saturday. Abhishek described them both as having mild symptoms.

    Amitabh is currently in the isolation unit of the hospital, news agency ANI reported, quoting a public relations officer for the hospital. He urged anyone who had been close to him in the past 10 days to get tested.

    His wife Jaya had tested negative, officials said. It was not clear whether results for other family members were yet in.

    Mumbai municipal officials have since put up banners outside the actor’s house in the city, classifying it as a “containment zone”.

    The news has led to an outpouring of support for the family on social media. Among those paying their respects were actress Sonam K Ahuja and former India cricket player Irfan Pathan.

    “Dear Amitabh ji, I join the whole Nation in wishing you a quick recovery! After all, you are the idol of millions in this country, an iconic superstar! We will all take good care of you. Best wishes for a speedy recovery!” said India’s Health Minister Harsh Vardhan.

    Bachchan Snr has enjoyed starring roles in hit movies such as Zanjeer and Sholay. Since rising to fame in the 1970s, he has won numerous accolades including four National Film Awards and 15 Filmfare Awards. France has also bestowed its highest civilian award, the Legion of Honour, for his contribution to cinema.

    Outside acting, Bachchan Snr had a brief stint in politics and was elected as a member of India’s parliament in 1984 at the behest of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. But he resigned three years later, disillusioned by a corruption scandal under Mr Gandhi’s government.

    In recent months, he has been prominent in helping the government get its message across in the fight against coronavirus.

    India saw a record rise in the number of coronavirus cases by 27,100 on Sunday, with the total climbing to nearly 850,000 – the third highest caseload in the world. There have been complaints about a lack of both testing and frontline medical staff.

    A family considered acting royalty

    Indian megastars don’t come bigger than the Bachchans, a family considered acting royalty.

    At the helm of the dynasty is Amitabh Bachchan, one of the most famous people on the planet, with billions of fans spanning continents.

    Over five decades, the 77 year old actor has starred in hundreds of Bollywood films, fronted prime time television shows and is revered, even worshipped – by his die-hard followers.

    Little wonder then, that news he has coronavirus is massive news in India and beyond. In 1982, the nation stood still as Amitabh Bachchan spent months in hospital after a film stunt went horribly wrong.

    This time he is said to be stable, with only mild symptoms. The star who has 43 million Twitter followers, has been tweeting thanks to his well wishers from hospital.

    His son Abhishek Bachchan, and daughter-in-law Aishwarya Rai Bachchan who both tested positive, are big stars in their own right too.

    As attention is focused on this one family, thousands of other Indians are contracting Covid-19 every day. The country is seeing a sharp rise in cases, now the third highest number in the world after the US and Brazil.

    Coronavirus: Mosques Told Not To Reopen Despite Government Plan

    A senior Imam has advised mosques not to open until they can hold congregational prayers, despite government plans for places of worship.

    The government is expected to announce that churches, mosques and synagogues in England can open their doors for private prayer from 15 June.

    But as mosques are primarily for congregational prayers Muslim leaders have warned the plans lack clarity.

    Imam Qari Asim said opening them would “cause more challenges”.

    Full services and weddings will still be banned under the measures, which the prime minister is expected to outline to his cabinet on Tuesday.

    Northern Ireland already allows private worship but Scotland and Wales have not yet done so.

    Downing Street says any changes are contingent on the government’s five tests for easing lockdown continuing to be met.

    Imam Asim, chairman of the Mosques & Imams National Advisory Board (MINAB), has called on mosques not to reopen until it is safe to do so and they are able to hold congregational prayers.

    He said: “The fundamental difference between mosques and some other places of worship is that mosques are first and foremost used for congregational prayers.

    “Individual prayers can be performed anywhere, primarily at homes. Accordingly, opening the mosques on 15 June will cause more challenges for mosques and imams as the expectation from the community will be to resume collective worship.”

    Harun Khan, secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, said communities needed “unambiguous guidance” so they could ensure the safety of everyone.

    He said: “Mosques are provisioned primarily for congregational worship, so there is currently significant uncertainty and concern from mosque leaders on how the new regulations can actually be implemented.”

    Mr Khan added that the MCB, an umbrella group of Muslim associations, had been consulting with communities across the country and it was clear proactive planning about reopening mosques had been taking place.

    MINAB has also called on the government to allow small groups to meet for the five daily prayers in mosques, so long as social-distancing and other measures are respected.

    The group has prepared guidelines for mosques to start putting in place ahead of their eventual reopening, with particular concern about the impact of coronavirus on BAME communities.

    Cardinal Vincent Nichols, the Archbishop of Westminster and the most senior Roman Catholic in England and Wales, thanked the government and said the move was the first, measured step in restoring church services.

    He said it was important that “every care is taken to ensure that the guidance given for this limited opening is fully observed, not least by those entering our churches”.

    But he added that not every Catholic church would be open on 15 June.

    “Local decisions and provision have to lead this process,” he said.

    A No 10 spokesperson said Mr Johnson recognised the importance of people being able to have space to “reflect and pray, to connect with their faith, and to be able to mourn for their loved ones”.

    Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said ensuring places of worship could reopen was a priority as their “contribution to the common good of our country is clear” and said faith communities had shown “enormous patience and forbearance” since the lockdown came into effect.

    Places of worship have been closed for almost two months, and in some cases even longer, after closing their doors due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Mr Jenrick has warned that large gatherings will be difficult to manage for some time, particularly with the demographics in some religions meaning many could be vulnerable to the virus and because practices such as singing could enable the virus to spread more freely

    While the burden of the lockdown has fallen evenly across the population, religious groups have been forced to sacrifice major festivals that punctuate their practice over the year.

    Christians were unable to attend Holy Week services, Muslims have experienced Ramadan without communal Iftar meals each day.

    The Jewish community experienced Passover without extended Sedars and Sikhs were unable to mark the festival of Vaisakhi.

    Although places of worship will reopen solely for private prayer, it seems the government was persuaded that if the public was ready to re-engage in retail therapy, then people of faith ought to be allowed to enter places of worship.

    All the major religious groups are preparing new hygiene protocols, doors are likely to be opened only for limited periods, numbers attending will be carefully controlled and there will be no communal worship.

    But at a time of widespread grief and anxiety about the future, this will be a welcome opportunity to seek comfort and consolation in sacred spaces around the country.

    FAMILY OF HARROW THREE YEAR OLD WITH RARE GENETIC DISORDER APPEAL FOR MORE ASIAN STEM CELL DONORS

    Same Difference

    A press release.

    The family of a “cheeky” three-year-old from Harrow, diagnosed with a rare genetic disorder, are appealing for more people of Asian descent to sign up as stem cell donors. Working with blood cancer charities Anthony Nolan and DKMS, the family want to diversify the stem cell register and give their little boy a fighting chance of finding the best possible donor.

    Veer Gudhka is one of only a few hundred people in the UK to have inherited a life changing illness called Fanconi Anaemia which results in a decreased production of all types of blood cells.

    He was diagnosed in August “by chance”, after a period of being very lethargic in December 2018, which led to the discovery that he had low blood platelets. Veer’s energy levels returned to normal in the new year. However, investigations continued, and in August he was diagnosed with the serious genetic…

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