News Service


News

Two murders investigated as racist

In the recent furore about the murders of young people, it may have been overlooked that two look distinctly as though they were racially motivated. Hastings On Sunday evening, 24 August 2008, 16-year-old Mohammed Al-Majed died in Kings College hospital in London after suffering brain damage two days earlier in an attack outside a Hastings

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Review

Gone too far!

An award-winning play by first-time playwright Bola Agbaje, Gone too far!, explores Black identity in a clever, funny and very entertaining way. ‘Nigeria, England, America, Jamaica; are you proud of where you’re from? Dark-skinned, light-skinned, Afro, weaves, who are your true brothers and sisters? When two brothers from different continents go down the street to

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News

Appeal for funds to send Iraqi man home

The International Federation of Iraqi Refugees (IFIR) is appealing for funds to send the body of Mohammad Hussain home to Iraq to be buried after he died from cancer on 3 August 2008. According to the IFIR, for the eight years Mohammad was in the UK he was a constant and fierce defender of refugee

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News

Control order bans contact with ex-Guantanamo detainee

A recent court hearing has banned a desperately ill man, whose daily movements are restricted by a control order, from having any contact with Moazzam Begg, who was detained in Guantanamo Bay for nearly three years. Mahmoud Abu Rideh, a refugee from Palestine, whose health is in a serious condition after numerous suicide attempts since

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Comment

Media hysteria around new book

A recent guide on how to deal with race equality issues with pre-school age children has been mercilessly distorted by sections of the media. Two of the UK’s experts, one Black, one White, one in the Lords, one a ‘commoner’ and both seasoned practitioners, helped produce a three hundred-plus page book on one of the

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Review

Victory for Southall Black Sisters

On 18 July at the High Court, Southall Black Sisters (SBS) won a major victory against Ealing Council which had cut funding for its services for BME women suffering from domestic violence. The Court found that the council failed to pay proper regard to equality legislation, in particular the Race Relations Act, when making its

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News

Pupils speak in support of Kamal Begi

Students at an east London school are hoping against hope that their campaign will stop the deportation of their Afghani classmate, Kamal Begi. Kamal Begi, a Brampton Manor student, and his uncle have lost all their appeals for asylum and are under threat of deportation, despite having lived in the UK for over six years.

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News

Vigils in memory of Habib Ullah

Last week, members of the local community and family and friends of Habib Ullah, who died after being arrested by police on 3 July, gathered in High Wycombe town centre to hold two vigils in his memory. The vigils were held to provide the local community with more information and to raise awareness about Habib’s

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Interview

Convictions in three Black murder cases

IRR News reports on three recent trials of young White men convicted for their part in the deaths of three Black men. Tomorrow, 29-year-old Michael Ross will be sentenced for the murder (suspected of being racially motivated) of Shamsuddin Mahmood. Next week, another young man will be sentenced for his part in a murder in

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Comment

Family question police role in death of Asian man

On 3 July 2008, during a police search of a car in High Wycombe, 39-year-old Habib Ullah, became ill, was taken to hospital and pronounced dead. His family are concerned that the police version of what happened may not be accurate. They also are angry that they were not informed about the death till the

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