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City names first black, hijab-wearing Lord Mayor

City names first black, hijab-wearing Lord Mayor

Yahoo19-05-2025

The new Lord Mayor of Sheffield has made history as the first black woman wearing a hijab to be appointed to the role.
Labour's Safiya Saeed was inaugurated as the city's 128th Lord Mayor at a council meeting on Monday.
Members of her family travelled from her home country of Somaliland for the ceremony at Sheffield Town Hall.
Saeed said: "I am honoured to be the first black woman wearing a hijab to take this role. I came to Sheffield in 1985, and this city has truly become my home, a place where I have always felt I belong."
The single mother-of-five, who was first elected as councillor for Burngreave in 2021, founded Reach Up Youth, a community project supporting young people, particularly those from Black and ethnic minority backgrounds.
In her speech to the meeting she said she wanted "every voice, no matter how quiet, to feel heard in the heart of this city".
The role of Lord Mayor is purely ceremonial, they do not have any powers but act as an ambassador for the city.
Meanwhile, politicians have also been selecting a new leader and two new party leaders.
With 36 Labour councillors, 28 Liberal Democrats, 14 Green, five Sheffield Community Councillors and one independent the council is in no overall control.
However, with the most councillors Labour's Tom Hunt was re-elected as council leader.
After Shaffaq Mohammed stood down from the role , Martin Smith has been named as leader of the Liberal Democrats.
Mohammed, who was nominated for a life peerage in the House of Lords in 2024, will remain as a councillor fo Ecclesall.
In the Green Party, Angela Argenzio replaced Douglas Johnson as leader, with Johnson stepping back after six years at the helm.
Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North
Youth mentoring group among BBC award winners
Councillor 'never imagined' House of Lords honour

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The clashes between National Guard troops, police and protesters in recent days have evoked memories for some Angelenos of the deadly riots that erupted after LAPD officers were acquitted of brutally assaulting Black motorist Rodney King in 1992. But leaders who were involved in dealing with the uprising more than three decades ago say what has unfolded with President Trump's deployment of soldiers to Los Angeles and surrounding communities bears no resemblance to the coordinated response that took place then. 'It's not even close,' said former LAPD chief and city councilman Bernard Parks, who was a deputy chief in the police department during the 1992 unrest. 'You get a sense that this is all theatrics, and it is really trying to show a bad light on Los Angeles, as though people are overwhelmed.' The chaos of 1992 unfolded after four LAPD officers who were videotaped beating King the prior year were not convicted. 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