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Cotton, Slavery And Poetry: Theatre Turns Spotlight On Its Challenging Past

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A Manchester theatre is facing up to its history at the heart of the 19th Century cotton industry, which depended on slavery in America.

A colossal clash of styles greets visitors who step inside the Royal Exchange.

You see the giant pink Victorian marble pillars and the domed glass roof of the opulent grand hall.

But you can’t fail to notice the industrial 1970s metal frame and brightly coloured staircases of the theatre module, which looks like a spaceship that’s landed in the middle of the floor.

Amid that visual onslaught, it’s easy to overlook some slightly dilapidated wooden boards high on one wall.

They bear names – Liverpool, New York, Alexandria, Paris, Sudan – and some numbers.

It still may not be immediately clear that they are the only obvious remnants from the building’s original purpose.

They show the final prices from when the Royal Exchange was the main trading floor in the cotton capital of the world.

Five thousand merchants gathered in the building in the mid-19th Century to strike deals to export the cloth that had been manufactured in the city’s mills. It was rebuilt as business boomed, with much of the current building dating from 1874.

Manchester was known as Cottonopolis, and the Royal Exchange was the “parliament of the cotton lords”.

Activity peaked in the 1920s when the Royal Exchange had 11,000 members. But trading stopped in 1968 – the date 31 Dec on the boards was its final day.

The hall was transformed into a theatre when the seven-sided spaceship was installed eight years later.

The building’s history and the rest of Manchester’s industrial past have generally been sources of pride and celebration.

But when Roy Alexander Weise was appointed joint artistic director with Bryony Shanahan in 2019, becoming the first person of colour to hold that position, he suddenly had second thoughts.

“Some people reflected back to me that as a black person, they just would never walk into here,” he says, sitting beneath the trading boards in the echoing hall.

“It’s been a place that has, like, sold their ancestors, and people feel a really visceral… they really repel from the idea of coming here because of what it has stood for in the past.”

The traders in fact sold consignments of cotton goods, but until slavery was abolished in America in 1865 those goods were usually made with cotton picked by the hands of enslaved people in the southern states.

Although many people in Manchester opposed it, the system of slavery – the mass enforced labour, subjugation and torture of people taken from Africa and the descendants of those people – was partly fuelled by the global cotton trade.

The Royal Exchange (along with another market in Liverpool for raw cotton) was the epicentre of that trade.

And the prices had a direct effect on the other side of the Atlantic. A freed slave named John Brown wrote: “When the price rises in the English market, even but half a farthing a pound, the poor slaves immediately feel the effects, for they are harder driven, and the whip is kept more constantly going.”

Weise says: “I think I’ve always known the history of this building, but not in a great amount of detail.”

He accepted the job running the theatre that now occupies the trading hall despite his fears of becoming “a sell-out”, deciding it was better to try to change its purpose and status from the inside.

Because of the pandemic, his first show there as director – Katori Hall’s Olivier Award-winning The Mountaintop, about Martin Luther King’s last night before his assassination – only opened last month.

Now he and Shanahan are confronting the building’s past head-on, and trying to make it welcoming for people who may not previously have stepped inside, with a long-term series of works.

Osimhen On Fire, says West Ham legend, Di Canio

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Osimhen has a different spirit, he’s not dull like Lukaku

Premier League legend Paolo Di Canio has taken an extraordinary swipe at Chelsea frontman Romelu Lukaku, branding the striker ‘functional’ and ‘dull’ amid his six-game goal drought.

The Belgium international overcame an injury scare to start Chelsea’s 1-0 win over Brentford on Saturday evening, where the Blues survived a late onslaught to come away with all three points.

Lukaku, though, cut an often frustrated and forlorn figure up top before he was substituted in the 76th minute, having fluffed the few opportunities that fell his way.

The 28-year-old has now gone six appearances without a goal – four of which have been in the Premier League – and last netted in a 3-0 win over Aston Villa in September.

Lukaku had no such issues last season with Inter, scoring routinely in Serie A, but former West Ham star Di Canio feels the difficulty in the Premier League is far higher and the Belgian has struggled as a result, also criticising his style of play.

“I heard [Inter icon turned pundit Giuseppe] Bergomi comparing [Victor] Osimhen and Lukaku. But Osimhen has a different spirit, he’s not dull like him,” Di Canio told Italia’s Calcio Club.

“When the difficulty increased he scored no goals in five games with Chelsea. And it’s not Chelsea’s fault, they are top of the table even without his goals.”

He continued, “Lukaku does not score. Lukaku is a functional player, just as [Fernando] Llorente was in Antonio Conte’s Juventus.

“Even if Lukaku is stronger than Llorente, Lukaku is still functional to a certain type of game.”

Napoli’s Nigerian forward Osimhen has netted five goals in seven Serie A appearances this season, while he also netted a brilliant brace against Leicester City in the Europa League.

Despite Lukaku’s recent struggles in front of goal, Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel is not worried, saying, “I am not concerned as I felt him a bit tired, and then isolated because we were defending too deep as a block.

“I felt him a bit tired. Altogether we produced a very strong 60 to 75 minutes, including Romelu and Timo. Both of them, Romelu and Timo, were too far away to help us escape the pressure. That was the problem, but I have no concerns.”

Nigerian Filmmaker To Shoot First-Ever Nollywood Movie On Moving Train

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Rogers Ofime, an award-winning Nigerian filmmaker, has announced plans to shoot Nollywood’s first-ever movie on a moving train.

The project is going to be the first of its kind in Africa; the entire movie would be shot on a moving train, from its arrival, transit, and departure.

The movie would be shot at the Mobolaji Johnson Rail Station at Yaba Lagos State.

Ofime told newsmen in Lagos that 95-percent of the movie will be shot along the Lagos-Ibadan route.

The Lagos-Ibadan railway was inaugurated recently for a full paid operation by the Nigerian Railway Corporation after about a year of free test-run.

Ofime, best known for producing several notable Nigerian television soap operas, including ‘The Johnsons’, ‘Tinsel’ and ‘Hush’, announced that the film, titled, ‘Conversations in transit,’ would be shot in partnership with Nigeria Railway Cooperation.

Ofime, who is the executive producer of the movie, thanked the Minister of Transport, Rotimi Ameachi, MD/CEO of the Nigerian Railway Corporation, F.E Okhiria for allowing his team to partner with them and opening their facilities to the filmmakers.

Ofime, who has been producing movies for over a decade, hinted that the movie would showcase the infrastructural development in the transportation sector and Nigeria as a whole.

Fully Vaccinated, former US secretary of State, Colin Powell dies of COVID

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Colin Powell, US’s former Secretary of State, has died due to complications from COVID-19, his family said on Facebook.

His death comes even after being fully vaccinated against covid-19, further raising questions over calls by global heath organisation WHO for universal vaccination as the silver bullet to curbing a virus that experts maintain is not a death sentence and can be cured by other means.

The world has witnessed a spike in anti-vaccine protests by workers in United states, Italy, France and Nigeria who have been mandated to take the controversial jabs despite Nations like Israel with over 70 percent vaccinated still witnessing a spike in infection.

In a statement his family said General Powell, who also served as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, passed away on Monday.

The four star general is credited with shaping the foreign policy of Republican presidential administrations in the United States of America for decades.

Government Of Costa Rica Among Winners Of Prince Williams’ Earthshot Prize

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Celebrities joined Prince William in London on Sunday for the inaugural awards ceremony of his Earthshot Prize, an ambitious environmental program that aims to find new ideas and technologies around the world to tackle climate change and Earth’s most pressing challenges.

The winners announced Sunday included the government of Costa Rica, which was honored for a project that pays local citizens to restore natural ecosystems, and the city of Milan, which was handed a prize for its Food Waste Hubs program, which recovers food from supermarkets and restaurants and distributes it to those in need.

Actors Emma Thompson, Emma Watson and David Oyelowo joined William and Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, in handing out the awards at Alexandra Palace in north London.

Guests were asked to “consider the environment when choosing their outfit,” and Watson arrived wearing a gown made from 10 wedding dresses from the charity Oxfam. Kate wore an Alexander McQueen dress made for her in 2011, while her husband wore a dark green velvet blazer and a polo neck.

William and his charity, The Royal Foundation, launched the Earthshot Prize last year, inspired by President John F. Kennedy’s 1962 “Moonshot” speech that challenged and inspired Americans to go to the moon.

The prize, to be awarded to five winners every year until 2030, is billed as the most prestigious of its kind. Each winner will receive a grant worth 1 million pounds ($1.4 million) to develop and scale up their ideas.

“There’s been lots of amazing ideas over the past decades but it’s the implementation that really counts, so that’s what this is all about. So it’s really a reason to be cheerful,” Thompson said.

The other winners were a land-based coral farm in the Bahamas to restore dying coral reefs; a green hydrogen technology developed to transform how homes and buildings are powered; and an India-based technology that creates fuel from agricultural waste in a bid to stop crop burning.

William has said he wanted the initiative to inject some optimism into the climate debate, and on Sunday he urged young people not to give up hope for the future.

“For too long, we haven’t done enough to protect the planet for your future. The Earthshot is for you,” he said. “In the next 10 years, we are going to act. We are going to find the solutions to repair our planet.”

The United States will host next year’s award ceremony, he added.

The ceremony came days ahead of the COP26 U.N. climate change summit in Glasgow, which begins Oct. 31. William, his father Prince Charles and Queen Elizabeth II are all expected to attend.

Earlier this week William criticized the space race and space tourism, saying in an interview that the world’s greatest minds should be focused on repairing Earth instead of “trying to find the next place to go and live.”

Poland, Iraq, Zimbabwe Become Latest Members Of Minamata Convention On Mercury

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Poland, Iraq and Zimbabwe are latest countries to become members of the Minamata Convention on Mercury.

Poland on September 30, 2021 deposited its instrument of ratification to becoming the 135th Party to the Minamata Convention on Mercury.

Iraq did likewise on September 16, 2021, becoming as a result the 134th Party to the Convention.

On August 19, 2021, Zimbabwe had deposited its instrument of ratification successfully, becoming as a result the 133rd Party to the Minamata Convention.

The Minamata Convention on Mercury (“Minamata Convention”) is an international environmental convention for global community to work collaboratively against mercury pollution.

It aims at achieving environmentally sound mercury management throughout its life cycle.

The Convention was adopted at the diplomatic conferences held in Minamata City and Kumamoto City in October 2013.

The mercury accord entered into force on Thursday, May 18, 2017, after having garnered the required 50 ratifications.

Nigeria on Thursday, February 1, 2018, deposited its instrument of ratification to become the 88th Party to the Convention.

Today In History – Oct. 18 – 1922 -British Broadcasting Company (BBC) Founded

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1009 The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem is destroyed by the Fatimid caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, who hacks the Church’s foundations down to bedrock

1685 French King Louis XIV revokes Edict of Nantes cancelling rights of French Protestants

1867 Alaska Purchase: US takes formal possession of Alaska from Russia, having paid $7.2 million

1931 American gangster Al Capone convicted of tax evasion

1962 James Watson (US), Francis Crick (UK) and Maurice Wilkins (UK) win the Nobel Prize for Medicine for their work in determining the structure of DNA

1938 Spetume Florence Njangali is converted and becomes an active member of the East African revival movement within the Anglican Church. She will overcome barriers that had prevented women from obtaining a theological education and ordination as deacons.

Today’s Historical Events

Today in Film & TV

1922 British Broadcasting Company (BBC) founded, later called British Broadcasting Corporation

Today in Music

1946 Aaron Copland’s 3rd Symphony premieres

Do you know this fact about today? Did You Know?

In a bar decorated with bird tail in Elmsford, New York, a customer requests a glassful of “those cock tails” from bartender Betsy Flanagan, on this day in 1776

Would you believe this fact about today? Would You Believe?

Count Bernard von Bulow becomes Chancellor of Germany, famous for first referring to Germany’s need for ‘place in the sun’ and global empire, on this day in 1900

Today in History – Oct. 17 – 2006 – The United States’ Population Reaches 300 Million

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1854 French and British forces bombard Sevastopol for the first time during the Crimean War

1907 Guglielmo Marconi’s company begins the first commercial transatlantic wireless service between Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada and Clifden, Ireland

1937 Martyrdom of Alexander Ivanovich Shchukin, Archbishop of Semipalatinsk, shot by the Soviets for preaching against destroyers of churches.

1943 Burma railway completed, built by Allied POWs and Asian laborers for use of the Japanese army

1949 Singer Stuart “Stew” Hamblen is converted to Christianity in Billy Graham’s 1949 Los Angeles Crusade. He will go on to write two popular Christian hits, “It Is No Secret (What God Can Do)” and “This Old House.”

1973 OPEC oil ministers use oil as an economic weapon in the Arab-Israeli War, mandating a cut in exports and recommending an embargo against unfriendly states

2017 Islamic State headquarters Raqqa declared under full control of US-led alliance by Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) spokesman Talal Sello after 4 months of fighting

Today’s Historical Events
Today in Film & TV
1939 “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington”, directed by Frank Capra and starring James Stewart and Jean Arthur, is released

Today in Music
1963 The Beatles record “I Want to Hold Your Hand” at EMI Studios in London

Today in Sport
1860 1st British Open Men’s Golf, Prestwick GC: Willie Park Sr. wins inaugural event by 2 strokes from fellow Scot Tom Morris Sr

Do you know this fact about today? Did You Know?
The United States population reaches 300 million, on this day in 2006

Would you believe this fact about today? Would You Believe?
Chicago declared the ‘rattiest city’ in America for the sixth year in a row by pest control service Orkin, on this day in 2020

C.A.R Declares Unilateral Ceasefire In Fight With Rebels

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Central African Republic President Faustin-Archange Touadera has declared a unilateral cessation of fighting against armed groups, saying he hoped it would lead to peaceful dialogue.

The country has seen recurrent rounds of rebel violence since former president Francois Bozize was ousted in 2013. Armed groups control large swathes of territory and about one-quarter of the nearly 5 million population has been displaced.

The spokesman for the main rebel alliance, the Coalition of Patriots for Change (CPC), told Reuters he welcomed the initiative and the CPC would respect the ceasefire if the government did. Past peace accords have quickly fallen apart.

Touadera said on television that he believed the ceasefire would help protect civilians from violence and allow them to access humanitarian aid and basic services.

The latest fighting between the CPC rebels and the army was sparked by a court decision to bar former President Bozize from running in last year’s presidential election, in which President Faustin-Archange Touadera won a second term.

Touadera announced he would hold a national dialogue with his opponents shortly after being sworn in, but the talks have not yet materialized.

The authorities blame the CPC for frequent attacks on civilians, including one which killed 20 people last week.

CPC spokesman Abakar Sabone said the group also wants peace but is fighting in self-defence.

Cambridge University College To Be 1st UK Institute To Hand Back Artifact To Nigeria

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A Cambridge University college says it would return a looted bronze cockerel to Nigeria later this month, making it the first U.K. institution to hand back one of the artifacts known as the Benin Bronzes.

Jesus College announced in 2019 that it would return the Okukor, a statue that was taken from the Court of Benin in what is now Nigeria.

British colonial forces took the artwork in 1897, and it was given to the college in 1905.

The college removed it from public view in 2016 after students protested, saying it represented a colonial narrative.

The college set up a working group to examine the legacy of slavery, and the group concluded that the statue “belongs with the current Oba at the Court of Benin.”

The Oba of Benin is head of the historic Eweka dynasty of the Benin Empire, centered on Benin City in modern-day Nigeria.

The college said Friday that it will hand over the statue to Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments in a ceremony at Cambridge on Oct. 27.