NewsBeat
Rachel Reeves to soften non-dom tax changes
Plans to abolish non-dom status will be amended to allow a more generous phase out of tax benefits, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced.
Reeves told an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos that changes would be made to upcoming legislation to increase the generosity of a facility to help non-doms repatriate their funds to the UK.
Non-dom status enables people who live in the UK to avoid paying UK tax on money made abroad because their permanent home for tax purposes is outside the country.
Labour pledged to scrap the status in its election manifesto, saying this would address unfairness in the tax system and raise extra money for public services.
However, critics have raised concerns the changes could prompt wealthy people to leave the UK.
A report published earlier this week by global analytics firm New World Wealth and investment migration advisers Henley & Partners found more than 10,000 millionaires left the UK in 2024, a 157% increase on the previous year.
Analysts cited factors including additional taxes affecting non-doms and other wealthy individuals as well as the growing dominance of the US and Asia in the tech sector and the dwindling importance of the London Stock Exchange.
Reeves told an event hosted by the Wall Street Journal: “We have been listening to the concerns that have been raised by the non-dom community.”
The size of the change to the Temporary Repatriation Facility, a three-year scheme to help ex non-doms bring their assets to the UK at a discounted tax rate, was described as a “tweak” that would not be expected to significantly change the money raised from the overall policy.
Downing Street said the tweaks, which will be made through amendments to the Finance Bill, did not change the government’s overall approach “to replacing the outdated non-dom tax regime”.
The prime minister’s official spokesman said the new system “addresses unfairness in our tax system, attracts the best talent and investment to the UK and ensures that everyone who is a long-term resident of the UK pays their tax here”.
A Treasury spokesperson said the changes were not expected to impact the £33.8bn the policy is expected to raise over the next five years by the government’s independent forecaster.
“The Temporary Repatriation Facility is designed to encourage non-doms to bring their funds to the UK, encouraging them to spend and invest this money here,” the spokesperson added.
However, Nigel Green, chief executive of global financial advisory firm deVere Group, said the announcement had “landed with a thud” among investors and wealthy individuals.
He said the “vague proposal to adjust the rules offers neither the clarity nor the assurances required to reverse the damage already inflicted”.
Conservative shadow chancellor Mel Stride said: “Labour’s Budget is falling apart in front of our eyes.
“At the election Labour said their plans would raise money, now they have been forced to admit their plans make the UK less attractive.
“But the damage is already done – tax revenue equivalent to hundreds of thousands of taxpayers has already been lost.”
Meanwhile, the Scottish National Party accused the chancellor of doing a “Davos deal for millionaires”, saying the government had become “rapidly out of touch”.
The party’s economy spokesman Dave Doogan said Reeves had “a listening ear for millionaires” but was “deaf to the difficulties of those millions still struggling with the cost-of-living crisis”.
Reeves chose to announce the relaxation in Davos as part of a multipronged effort to show willingness to change policy to help economic growth.
On Wednesday she also set out changes to visas to allow top talent in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and medicines research to come to the UK.
Some in industry feel there is an opportunity for the UK to poach top talent in science and pharmaceuticals from the US under the new administration, and in AI from European Union.
NewsBeat
Southport: Axel Rudakubana’s family ‘devastated’ and living in secret location
The family of Axel Rudakubana are “devastated” following his knife attack on a Southport holiday club, the church attended by his father has said.
The 18-year-old, of Banks, Lancashire, killed six-year-old Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and injured 10 others when he launched the attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on July 29.
In a statement, leaders of The Community Church in Southport, attended by Rudakubana’s father Alphonse, said the family had been moved to a secret location for their protection.
Church leaders Dave Gregg, Geoff Grice, Harry Pickett and Mike Rothwell, said: “Axel was born and went to school in the United Kingdom, he has autism and has struggled with mental health issues.
“Prior to the major incident in Southport, he had been living with his parents in the village of Banks near Southport.
“There has been the inevitable speculation about his family and background – with his father Alphonse being named in the national press.
“It has also been reported that his parents are both Christians and attend a local church.
“To prevent unnecessary intrusion into other churches in our town, we can confirm that over the last few years Alphonse Rudakubana has been a valued part of The Community Church family.”
“For the sake of clarity, Alphonse’s son and family never attended our Sunday gatherings, nor played any active part in church life. As a consequence we have nothing further to say other than the detail given in this statement.
“The Rudakubana family have been devastated following this terrible incident and they have been moved by the police, for their protection, from their home in Banks to a secret location that we are unaware of.
“As a church we continue to pray for peace and healing for all those impacted by the tragic events that took place in Southport and in our nation beyond.”
Leaders said the church community had been “saddened and shocked” by the attack.
They added: “This tragedy and the devastating murder of Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe, and Alice da Silva Aguiar has impacted our town and nation.
“The subsequent outpouring of love and support by the local community actually reflects the true nature and spirit of our town, but sadly, this was eclipsed by the appalling attack – fuelled by fake racially motivated news on social media – on the local mosque, which resulted in so many awful injuries to police and damage being caused to buildings and property.”
NewsBeat
America’s Cup: Ben Ainslie splits from Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos Britannia sailing team
Four-time Olympic champion Ben Ainslie has split from Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos Britannia America’s Cup sailing team.
Ainslie, 47, reportedly, external had a strained relationship with Manchester United co-owner Ratcliffe regarding plans for the next America’s Cup which prompted them to part ways.
Ainslie was Ineos Britannia’s team principal and skipper, having got the backing of Ratcliffe in 2018 in a bid to a deliver a first win for Great Britain in the yacht race since it started in 1851.
Ineos said in a statement that they could “not find agreement” with Ainslie on “terms to move forward” after last year’s event in Barcelona which was won by New Zealand.
Ineos plan to compete in the next America’s Cup under the Britannia name.
Ainslie’s team said in response they were “astounded” by Ineos’ future plans for the America’s Cup and it “raises significant legal and practical obstacles for them”.
Following the split, Ainslie’s America’s Cup team will be known as Athena Racing.
Ratcliffe did not address the split with Ainslie directly in the Ineos statement but said he was “enormously proud” of “developing a British boat that was truly competitive for the first time in decades”.
Ainslie won medals at five consecutive Olympics from 1996 onwards, including gold at four consecutive Games from 2000 to 2012.
Since winning gold at London 2012, Ainslie’s goal has been to claim the America’s Cup for Great Britain but all his attempts in a British boat, including those backed by Ineos, have ended in disappointment.
NewsBeat
ICC prosecutor calls for arrest of Taliban duo over ‘persecution’ of women | World News
The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) has told Sky News he is seeking the arrest of two senior Taliban figures over the “systemic and deliberate” persecution of women in Afghanistan.
Karim Khan KC, speaking on Sky News’ The World with Yalda Hakim, said the pair bore “criminal responsibility” over the treatment of women and girls in the country.
It comes after the ICC announced earlier on Thursday it had filed two applications for warrants for the arrest of Taliban supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and Afghanistan‘s chief justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani.
Mr Khan said: “The charges are gender persecution. It’s the systemic, we say, organised, deliberate, malicious suffocation of women, the targeting of girls and women, the denial of their rights to education, access to any public spaces, the inability to go to beauty salons, the inability to walk in the park, the inability really to have hope.
“And this isn’t something doctrinal. This has crossed every threshold and we say clearly is criminal. And that’s what we presented to the judges of the International Criminal Court to consider.”
The prosecutor said the evidence was “overwhelming” and that the charges amounted to the “crime against humanity of gender persecution”.
Human rights groups have heavily criticised Taliban leaders since they took back control of Afghanistan in 2021.
Under their leadership, women have faced a string of restrictions over their daily lives, including over work, education and freedom of movement.
Read more from Sky News:
Southport killer jailed
Red weather warning over Storm Eowyn
Sainsbury’s to cut 3,000 jobs
Mr Khan added: “This isn’t some acceptable choice from a menu of options that states can choose from. This isn’t about religious autonomy of doctrinal beliefs of Christianity or Islam or Buddhism or anything else for that matter.
“This has crossed every threshold in which women can either be seen or heard. Women can’t go to university. Girls don’t have an opportunity to go to school”.
There is no deadline for judges to rule on a request for a warrant, but a decision typically takes around four months.
NewsBeat
Priest who led Southport funeral fights back tears after sentencing | News
A priest who led Southport victim Alice da Silva Aguiar’s funeral after she was murdered by Axel Rudakubana fought back tears as he paid tribute to the nine-year-old after her killer was sentenced.
On Thursday (23 January) the 18-year-old was jailed for life with a minimum of 52 years for murdering Alice, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and stabbing several others in an act of “extreme violence” at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in July 2024.
Remembering Alice, Father John Heneghan described the young girl — whose Holy Communion he presided over months before she died — as “radiating joy.”
NewsBeat
Southport MP calls for ‘harsher’ Axel Rudakubana sentence
The MP for Southport, where Axel Rudakubana murdered three young girls, has demanded a review of the killers 52-year jail sentence – arguing it is “not harsh enough”.
Labour’s Patrick Hurley has asked the Attorney General to review if the sentence was “unduly lenient” claiming it does not “reflect the crimes”.
Rudakubana cannot apply to leave prison until the year 2077 after pleading guilty to the murders of Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, eight.
The killings triggered a wave of political outrage, including from Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer who called the attack, which wounded eight more children, “one of the most harrowing moments in our country’s history”.
In a statement Sir Keir said: “What happened in Southport was an atrocity and as the judge has stated, this vile offender will likely never be released.”
But Hurley argued Rudakubana’s sentence “is not severe enough, it is not long enough for the crimes committed”.
Attorney General Lord Hermer and Solicitor General Lucy Rigby now have 28 days to decide if they will refer the sentence to the Court of Appeal.
Critics of the judge’s decision would have to convince the Court of Appeal that the sentence – believed to be the second-longest minimum term ever – is not just shorter than they would have wanted, but “unduly” so.
Because Rudakubana acted nine days shy of turning 18, by law he cannot be sentenced to a whole-life order – which would mean he could never be released from jail.
Hurley joined Tory leader Kemi Badenoch in calling for law change to allow for whole life orders to be imposed on people aged under 18 in some cases.
Badenoch said “Rudakubana should never be released from prison” after destroying “countless lives” and sowing a “legacy of mistrust” across the country.
The Conservatives “will start to explore” how to change the law, she said.
Despite the severity of the attack the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) decided the attack did meet the legal definition of terrorism, due to a lack of evidence Rudakubana sought to advance any political, religious, or ideological agenda.
But Badenoch called the attack a “terrorist” incident, and called on others to stop “avoiding these hard truths”.
Leader of Reform UK Nigel Farage demanded the CPS chief resign for failing to class the case as terrorism.
“This barbaric and senseless attack was clearly both political and ideological,” Farage said.
“The British public needs to have confidence in the CPS and our police forces. Tens of millions of British citizens will find it incomprehensible how the CPS decided this was a non-terror incident and maintained that position.”
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper condemned Rudakubana’s attack as “horrendous, cowardly, and evil” and said the government had pledged to hold a national inquiry.
“We have vowed to get the answers the country deserves about how this horror was allowed to happen and to ensure that lessons are learned,” she said.
Further details would be set out soon, she said, but added “for today, all our thoughts are with the families enduring this unimaginable pain, and the example of strength and courage they have provided to us all”.
Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp backed the inquiry, but accused the government of overseeing an information vacuum after Rudakubana’s arrest, which sparked a wave of riots across the UK last summer.
Philp is one of many critics that have accused the CPS and government of withholding key details after the attack, such as Rudakubana’s three referrals to anti-extremism programme Prevent, his creation of enough ricin to kill 12,000 people and the extent of his fixation on violence and genocide.
Posting on social media, Philp said: “The prime minister and CPS could have been more open with the public. This would have avoided misinformation filling the void, and fuelling the riots.
“The inquiry must address this issue too.”
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey backed the inquiry, calling on the government to fulfil its “urgent duty to the families and our country to learn the lessons from what happened”.
“As a father I have found it difficult to read the sickening details about what happened in Southport that day, inflicting an indelible trauma on so many and taking three innocent lives.
“I cannot imagine the enduring pain their families are still going through. No punishment will ever seem like enough.”
In response to the attack two Reform UK MPs, Rupert Lowe and Lee Anderson, called for the return of the death penalty.
Mr Lowe said it was “time for a national debate” on the use of capital punishment “in exceptional circumstances”, while Mr Anderson posted a picture of a noose on his X account, with the caption: “No apologies here. This is what is required!”
NewsBeat
Reform UK MPs call for ‘national debate’ on the death penalty after Southport killer sentenced
MPs in Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party have called for a debate on the death penalty after a killer who murdered three girls at a children’s dance class was sentenced.
Axel Rudakubana, 18, was given life with a minimum of 52 years in prison for the horrific attack which was described as a “pre-meditated attempt to commit indiscriminate mass murder”.
Judge Mr Justice Goose said he was unable to hand him a rare whole life order because he was only 17 at the time of the attack on 29 July last year. He turned 18 just nine days later.
Southport’s Labour MP Patrick Hurley said the sentence was “not severe enough” and he had asked the Attorney General to review the sentence as “unduly lenient”.
The Attorney General’s Office said the case had been referred under the unduly lenient sentence scheme, which requires just one request in order for punishments handed out in court to be reconsidered.
Attorney General Lord Hermer and Solicitor General Lucy Rigby have 28 days to decide whether to refer the sentence to the Court of Appeal.
Meanwhile, Reform UK’s deputy leader Richard Tice has called for a “national debate” on the death penalty.
The MP told LBC: “I don’t think we should be afraid of having a national debate on important big issues like this. I think that many people in the country would like at least a debate.”
The last use of the death penalty in the UK took place in 1964.
Another Reform MP Rupert Lowe said it was “time for a national debate” on the use of capital punishment “in exceptional circumstances”.
A third, Lee Anderson, posted a picture of a noose on his X account, adding: “No apologies here. This is what is required!”
Party leader Mr Farage also called for the director of public prosecutions Stephen Parkinson to resign.
He said: “The British public needs to have confidence in the CPS and our police forces. Tens of millions of British citizens will find it incomprehensible how the CPS decided this was a non-terror incident and maintained that position. Those in positions of power have to be accountable and responsible for their actions.”
Prime minister Keir Starmer described the killer as a “vile offender” who “as the judge has stated… will likely never be released”. He added that the “thoughts of the entire nation” were with the families and all those affected by the “unimaginable horrors” that unfolded.
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey said: “I cannot imagine the eduring pain their [victims] families are still going through. No punishment will ever seem like enough.
“The government has an urgent duty to the families and our country to learn the lessons from what happened, and ensure a tragedy on this scale can never happen again.”
NewsBeat
Axel Rudakubana stopped by father week before Southport attack
Doorbell footage captured the moment Axel Rudakubana’s father ordered him out of a taxi the week before his murderous attacks in Southport.
Merseyside Police said Rudakubana had intended to travel to a school and his father stopped him over concerns he had about his son’s behviour.
A week later, the then-17-year-old murdered three girls and tried to murder eight more children and two adults at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class.
After admitting three murders and ten attempted murders, he was jailed for 52 years at Liverpool Crown Court.
Politics
Ben Habib warns Britain risks ‘wipeout’ if it doesn’t follow Donald Trump fundamentals: ‘Get on that bandwagon!’
Political commentator Ben Habib has warned that Britain risks being “wiped out” if it fails to follow America’s conservative reform agenda, as demonstrated by Donald Trump’s sweeping executive actions in his first days back in office.
Speaking on GBN America, Habib endorsed Trump’s extensive Day one policy changes, which included over 100 executive measures targeting immigration, climate policy and diversity programmes.
The former Brexit Party MEP cautioned that the UK faces an exodus of millionaires and expertise to America unless it adopts similar reforms.
“The world is a very fluid place for expertise and capital and it will go to where it finds its best home,” Habib said.
Ben Habib called on Starmer to follow in Trump’s footsteps
GBN AMERICA / PA / GB NEWS
Trump’s first day back in office saw him sign 45 executive orders, 11 memoranda, five proclamations and four sub-cabinet appointments, whilst revoking 78 Biden-era orders.
The flurry of activity began moments after his swearing-in at the US Capitol, before moving to a packed Capital One Arena where he signed orders dismantling key Biden policies.
LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
Ben Habib spoke on GBN America
GBN AMERICA
Major changes included declaring a national emergency at the southern border, ending federal diversity programmes, and withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement.
Trump also ordered the termination of electric vehicle mandates and established a new Department of Government Efficiency.
“With these actions, we will begin the complete restoration of America and the revolution of common sense,” Trump declared in his inaugural address.
The new president’s border initiatives included reinstating the “Remain in Mexico” policy and designating cartels as foreign terrorist organisations.
His order on federal workers stripped job protections from career officials in policy roles, making it easier to dismiss them.
Trump also signed measures requiring government employees to return to in-person work and establishing new rules for security clearances.
In a symbolic move, he ordered the renaming of Alaska’s Denali back to Mount McKinley and proposed changing the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.
The president celebrated his actions by tossing signing pens to supporters at the Capital One Arena.
Habib urged Labour leader Keir Starmer to look across the Atlantic, warning that without similar reforms, Britain would see “an even faster growing US, an even more attractive US with a further exodus of millionaires from the UK”.
“We have driven it out of the UK already through a really bad set of policies, even before Labour won the election,” he told GBN America.
He argued that Trump “is showing that what we have been doing for the last 27 years, the liberal, global approach to governance is not the way to run a country”.
“He is showing us the way to do it and we better get on that bandwagon or we will be wiped out,” Habib concluded.
NewsBeat
The missed chances to stop Southport killer Axel Rudakubana
A public inquiry will be held into the murders of three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport by 18-year-old Axel Rudakubana “that can get to the truth about what happened and what needs to change”.
The announcement came after it emerged Rudakubana was referred to an anti-extremism programme three times before he carried out the murders, and endangered his former teachers and peers.
Home secretary Yvette Cooper confirmed the 18-year-old had “contact with a range of different state agencies throughout his teenage years” before carrying out his “meticulously planned rampage”.
Ms Cooper said in a statement: “He was referred three times to the Prevent programme between December 2019 and April 2021 aged 13 and 14.
“He also had contact with the police, the courts, the Youth Justice system, social services and mental health services.
“Yet between them, those agencies failed to identify the terrible risk and danger to others that he posed.”
Announcing the inquiry, Ms Cooper continued: “Although, in line with CPS advice to preserve the integrity of the prosecution, we were constrained in what we were able to say at the time, the Home Office commissioned an urgent Prevent Learning Review during the summer into the three referrals that took place and why they were closed.
“We will publish further details this week, alongside new reforms to the Prevent programme.
“But we also need more independent answers on both Prevent and all the other agencies that came into contact with this extremely violent teenager as well as answers on how he came to be so dangerous, including through a public inquiry that can get to the truth about what happened and what needs to change.”
The 18-year-old pleaded guilty to the attack on the first day of his trial. The teenager from Banks, Lancashire, admitted 16 offences, including three counts of murder and 10 counts of attempted murder at Liverpool Crown Court on Monday.
Sir Keir Stamer said there are “grave questions” to answer about how the state failed the Southport murder victims. The prime minister welcomed the news that Rudakubana pleaded guilty and pledged to “leave no stone unturned” in investigating why the attack had not been prevented.
Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine; Bebe King, six; and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven; died following the attack at the dance class in The Hart Space on a small business park in the seaside town shortly before midday on 29 July.
The defendant admitted their murders as well as the attempted murders of eight other children, who cannot be named for legal reasons, class instructor Leanne Lucas and businessman John Hayes.
A week before launching a knife attack on the dance class, Rudakubana had attempted to travel to his former school as pupils broke up for the summer holidays.
The 18-year-old booked a taxi to go to Range High School in Formby on 22 July, The Independent understands, seven days before he would travel by taxi to The Hart Space in Southport.
On both occasions, he is said to have been wearing the same outfit – a green hooded sweatshirt with the hood pulled up, despite the summer temperatures, and a surgical mask.
Ten minutes after his taxi was booked, at 12.30pm, pupils were due to leave the school premises on their last day of term, it is understood.
On 22 July, however, his father followed him out of the house and pleaded with the taxi driver not to take him.
Rudakubana was permanently excluded from the secondary school over claims he was carrying a knife and later returned to attack someone with a hockey stick, it is understood.
Aged 17 at the time of the attack, Rudakubana was born in Cardiff to Rwandan parents and had moved with his family to the village of Banks in Lancashire about a decade ago.
Neighbours described the family as unremarkable, but it can now be reported that teachers had concerns about his behaviour from when he entered Year 9.
Rudakubana was excluded in around 2019 after telling Childline that he was being racially bullied and was bringing a knife into school to protect himself, it is understood.
It is not known if he was being bullied or if he ever brought a weapon into the school while he was a pupil.
After his exclusion, he returned to the school and assaulted someone with a hockey stick, the intended target being a former bully or someone he had a grievance with, it is understood. Rudakubana then attended two specialist schools, The Acorns School in Lancashire and Presfield High School & Specialist College in Southport, and teachers were concerned about his behaviour. His in-person attendance at Presfield was less than 1 per cent.
In a statement on Monday, prime minister Keir Starmer said: “The news that the vile and sick Southport killer will be convicted is welcome.
“It is also a moment of trauma for the nation, and there are grave questions to answer as to how the state failed in its ultimate duty to protect these young girls.
“Britain will rightly demand answers, and we will leave no stone unturned in that pursuit.”
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said ministers must give a “complete account” of who “knew what and when” about Rudakubana, as she piled pressure on the government.
Mr Justice Goose said Rudakubana will be sentenced on Thursday.
He is not expected to receive a whole life order because he was 17 at the time of the murders – the measures can normally only be imposed on criminals aged 21 or over, and are usually only considered for those aged 18 to 20 in exceptional circumstances.
Rudakubana also admitted possessing a knife on the date of the attack, production of a biological toxin, ricin, on or before 29 July and possession of information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing to commit an act of terrorism.
The terrorism offence relates to a PDF file entitled Military Studies In The Jihad Against The Tyrants, The Al Qaeda Training Manual which he is said to have possessed between 29 August 2021 and 30 July 2024.
The ricin, a deadly poison, and the document were found during searches of the home in Old School Close which he shared with his parents, who are originally from Rwanda.
NewsBeat
Keely Hodgkinson: Olympic 800m gold medallist voted 2024 Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year
Olympic 800m gold medallist Keely Hodgkinson has been voted the 2024 Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year.
The 22-year-old ended her wait for a global title with victory at the Olympic Games in Paris last summer and won BBC Sports Personality of the Year in December 2024.
Hodgkinson also retained her European 800m title and became the sixth-fastest woman of all time when she improved her British record to one minute 54.61 seconds at the London Diamond League.
Hodgkinson follows last year’s winner, England goalkeeper Mary Earps, athlete Eilish McColgan, and tennis player Emma Raducanu, who won in 2021.
The shortlist for the 2024 award was dominated by Olympic medal winners with Hodgkinson scooping it ahead of 1500m runner Georgia Bell, showjumper Laura Collett, cyclist Emma Finucane, heptathlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson, trampoline gymnast Bryony Page, shooter Amber Rutter and Paralympic cycling great Sarah Storey.
Elsewhere, diver Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix was named the newspaper’s Young Sportswoman of the Year after she won bronze in Paris.
Storey picked up the Disability Sportswoman of the Year after she added two more golds to her medal collection at the Paralympic Games.
Rowers Lauren Henry, Lola Anderson, Georgina Brayshaw and Hannah Scott won the Team of the Year for their dramatic victory in the women’s quadruple sculls at Paris 2024.
Ultra runner Jasmin Paris won the Helen Rollason Award for Inspiration, while retired PE teacher and cycling enthusiast Val French won the Grassroots Sportswoman of the Year.
BBC radio presenter Eleanor Oldroyd’s contribution to sports broadcasting was also recognised with a special Editor’s Choice Award.
-
Fashion8 years ago
These ’90s fashion trends are making a comeback in 2025
-
Entertainment8 years ago
The Season 9 ‘ Game of Thrones’ is here.
-
Fashion8 years ago
9 spring/summer 2025 fashion trends to know for next season
-
Entertainment8 years ago
The old and New Edition cast comes together to perform You’re Not My Kind of Girl.
-
Sports8 years ago
Ethical Hacker: “I’ll Show You Why Google Has Just Shut Down Their Quantum Chip”
-
Business8 years ago
Uber and Lyft are finally available in all of New York State
-
Entertainment8 years ago
Disney’s live-action Aladdin finally finds its stars
-
Sports8 years ago
Steph Curry finally got the contract he deserves from the Warriors
-
Entertainment8 years ago
Mod turns ‘Counter-Strike’ into a ‘Tekken’ clone with fighting chickens
-
Fashion8 years ago
Your comprehensive guide to this fall’s biggest trends
You must be logged in to post a comment Login