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DR MAX PEMBERTON: Meghan's deathly silence on Harry's woes says so much about their relationship. This is not what a successful marriage looks like...

DR MAX PEMBERTON: Meghan's deathly silence on Harry's woes says so much about their relationship. This is not what a successful marriage looks like...

Daily Mail​6 days ago
Prince Harry 's gap year in Lesotho in 2004 led to him setting up the charity Sentebale in 2006 in memory of his mother to fight HIV /AIDS in Lesotho and Botswana.
Before a damning report came out this week into its operations by the Charity Commission, Harry had already stepped back in March.
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Prince Harry's former charity Sentebale slashes UK staff to just ONE amid donations collapse and toxic infighting
Prince Harry's former charity Sentebale slashes UK staff to just ONE amid donations collapse and toxic infighting

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

Prince Harry's former charity Sentebale slashes UK staff to just ONE amid donations collapse and toxic infighting

The charity founded by Prince Harry has laid off all but one of its London staff amid ongoing funding concerns. Sentebale, an HIV /Aids awareness charity, was plunged into crisis earlier this year following a very public feud between the Duke of Sussex and the charity's chairwoman Dr Sophie Chandauka. Four of the five employees based in the organisation's London office have now been made redundant, including its global head of finance and compliance, the Times reports. Last night Sentebale confirmed to the Daily Mail that there is now only one full-time staff member operating at its UK headquarters. They added that 'between April and September there will be a total of seven departures across three locations'. A redundancy letter, sent to staff in April and seen by The Times, stated that the group 'does not have' donor funding and that it is in 'retrenchment'. Harry set up Sentebale with Prince Seeiso of Lesotho in 2006 to work with disadvantaged young people in Lesotho and Botswana, with both men honouring their late mothers. But the pair stepped away from the charity this month following a damning report into an explosive race row sparked by Dr Chandauka. The UK Charity Commission had launched a probe into the acrimonious boardroom battle - but criticised both sides in its findings. The probe said it could find 'no evidence' of 'widespread or systemic bullying or harassment, including misogyny or misogynoir' at Sentebale after Dr Chandauka made a series of incendiary allegations about the behaviour of the Duke of Sussex and his fellow trustees. But it also criticised the trustees, who included Harry, who resigned en masse in March after the row was made public. Scores of donors - loyal to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex - allegedly stopped donating to the charity, costing hundreds of thousands of pounds in essential funding. The watchdog acknowledged the 'strong perception of ill treatment' felt by all parties, including Dr Chandauka, and the impact this may have had on them. It ruled that failures leading up to, and following, the dispute had led to 'mismanagement in the administration of the charity'. A Sentebale spokesperson said the charity had 'suffered from the negative impact of the adverse media campaign launched by the duke and former trustees on 25 March'. In a sign the two parties remain deeply entrenched, they added that this was as a result of the Charity Commission probe 'which has made fundraising extremely challenging for Sentebale and so we have been reliant on reserves'. The spokesperson told the Daily Mail: 'First discussed in 2024, the Sentebale Board took a deliberate and responsible step to right-size its workforce in all three locations due to increasing uncertainty relating to international donor funding such as USAID and uncertainty relating to events such as polo.' The Senetable Polo Cup - which historically raised around £740,000 a year - has not taken place for the last two years. The spokesperson added: 'The global restructuring was intended to improve efficiencies, transition senior executive roles to Southern Africa and to respond to changing service delivery demands. 'False is the notion that any restructuring was because of a 'funding crisis', but was a planned restructuring.'

Dr Anne Merriman obituary
Dr Anne Merriman obituary

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • The Guardian

Dr Anne Merriman obituary

My friend Anne Merriman, who has died aged 90, was a pioneering doctor and founder of the Hospice Africa charity, which aims to offer 'palliative care for all those in need' across the continent. While working in Singapore in the 1980s, Anne devised an affordable morphine-based painkiller, and took it to Africa in the 90s. In 1993 in Kampala, Uganda, she founded Hospice Africa, establishing a hospice model that could be adapted for other countries. By 2023, Hospice Africa had cared for more than 37,000 patients in Uganda, and today it helps provide home-based palliative care in more than 35 countries across Africa. Born in Liverpool, Anne was the third of four children of Josie (nee Dunne), a typist, and Thomas Merriman, a primary school headteacher. Aged four, Anne had opened a magazine about missionaries in Africa and told her mother she was 'going to help these children'. That conviction deepened when, at 14, she watched The Visitation, a film about medical nuns in Africa. After her secondary education at Broughton Hall Convent grammar school, Anne crossed the Irish Sea in 1954 to join the Medical Missionaries of Mary. As a young sister she studied medicine at University College Dublin, and on gaining her degree in 1963, she departed for Nigeria for the first of two postings there. In 1973 Anne left the order and returned to Liverpool to work as a consultant and senior lecturer in geriatric medicine at the David Lewis Northern hospital for four years. The hospital closed in 1978, and Anne continued to develop her compassion-driven approach to palliative care while revamping the geriatric medicine units at hospitals in Whiston and St Helens. Anne's mother was good friends with my grandmother, and our families had in common a favourite holiday cottage in the Lake District. Despite her love of that area, and her ties to Liverpool, after Josie's death in 1981 Anne moved abroad again, first to Malaysia in 1983, to take up an associate professor role in the department of public health at the Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang, then to the National University of Singapore the following year as a senior teaching fellow. From her flat she started the volunteer-led Hospice Care Group, which became the country's Hospice Care Association. With help from the university hospital, she developed a groundbreaking formula of affordable pure oral morphine – comprising morphine powder, water and a preservative. On becoming medical director of the newly opened Nairobi hospice in 1990, Anne took that formula to Kenya. It was Kampala, though, that became home for the last chapter of her life, and where she decided to set up Hospice Africa. There, Anne also helped to establish the African Palliative Care Association (2003) and the Institute of Hospice and Palliative Care in Africa (2009). Anne was made MBE in 2003, and was posthumously conferred with Uganda's National Independence Diamond Jubilee medal. She is survived by two nieces, Paula and Jane.

Three women charged over newborn's death in female genital mutilation case
Three women charged over newborn's death in female genital mutilation case

The Independent

timea day ago

  • The Independent

Three women charged over newborn's death in female genital mutilation case

Three women in Gambia have been charged over the death of a one-month-old girl who had undergone female genital mutilation, the police said. The child's death is the first such case since the country stopped short of reversing a ban on the practice last year. The West African nation banned female genital cutting in 2015, but the country was rocked by a renewed debate about the practice last year following the first prosecutions of female cutters. It was the first time the practice — also known as female circumcision and outlawed in many nations — was publicly discussed. Eventually, the Gambian parliament upheld the ban, but many say the practice continues in secrecy. Three women were charged on Tuesday under the ban, the Women's (Amendment) Act 2015. One woman is facing life imprisonment, and the other two were charged as accomplices. 'Preliminary findings indicate the child was allegedly subjected to circumcision and later developed severe bleeding,' the police said in a separate statement on Sunday, following the infant's death. 'She was rushed to Bundung Maternal and Child Health Hospital, where she was pronounced dead on arrival.' The United Nations estimates that about 75 per cent of women in Gambia have been subjected as young girls to the procedure known by its initials FGM, which includes partial or full removal of a girl's external genitalia. The World Health Organisation says it's a form of torture. More than 200 million women and girls across the world are survivors of FGM, most of them in sub-Saharan Africa, according to U.N. estimates. In the past eight years alone, some 30 million women globally have been cut, most of them in Africa but also in Asia and the Middle East, UNICEF said last year. The procedure, typically performed by older women or traditional community practitioners, is often done with tools such as razor blades and can cause serious bleeding, death and complications later in life, including in childbirth. Supporters of the procedure argue that cutting is rooted in Gambia's culture and the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. Religious conservatives behind the campaign to reverse the ban described cutting as 'one of the virtues of Islam.' Those against FGM said its supporters are seeking to curtail women's rights in the name of tradition. The chair of the National Human Rights Commission, Emmanuel Daniel Joof, called the incident 'a national wake-up call and added: 'Our task now is clear: enforce it (the law) fully and fairly, without fear or favour.' Civil society groups expressed 'sorrow and outrage' over the death of the one-month-old girl. 'Justice must not only be done but must be seen to be done, to send a strong message that the rights and lives of girls in The Gambia are not negotiable,' the Banjul-based Edward Francis Small Centre for Rights and Justice said. However, the collective Concerned Citizens called on the Gambian government to stop targeting female circumcisers. 'The people of The Gambia have consistently expressed, through various lawful means, their opposition to the ban and have instructed their elected Members of Parliament to repeal the said prohibition,' they said in a statement.

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