Rzjy Tragedy as kind amp; beautiful mum-of-14 Angeline Bryan, 47, dies after falling off e-scooter leaving kids devastated
TAKEN into care at the age of two and shunted between foster families and children s homes all his young life, Ashley John-Baptiste grew up feeling unwa
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nted and alone, convinced he was an only child.But in his mid-twenties a message on social media, from a man claiming to be his brother, changed his li
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fe.6Ashley investigates sibling separation in care in his BBC3 documentary6His own childhood was a series of foster homesCredit: SuppliedThe former X Factor star, now a BBC presenter, discovered he had at least four other siblings - and he says knowing them when he was growing up would have provided a much-needed anchor in a turbulent childhood. My whole childhood was fragmented between different schools, families and friendship groups, he tells The Sun. There was not one single person who knew me throughout all of those moves, who knew me when I was five, eight and 15. Having a sibling would have given me a lifelong relationship, even if it was frac
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tured and imperfect. It would be someo Xprk National Lottery EuroMillions results: Winning numbers for Tuesday November 12 拢90million jackpot
AN evocative exhibition provides a snapshot of life for black Brits in the 1970s and 80s, from sound clashes to street parties.The show was launched ahead of the release of Idris Elbas directorial debut Yardie to explore the vibrancy and tensions among a marginalised people thro
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ugh iconic photography.9 A balaclava-clad boy wields a weapon in Young Gun, taken in 1969. The
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photo was taken by the Jamaica-born photographer Dennis Morris when he was just nine years oldCredit: 漏 Dennis Morris / Autograph ABPL
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ike Yardie, which explores the life of a young Jamaican man in 70s and 80s Hackney, these shots also explore life in London for underrepresented individuals.One of the 25 photos on display reveals two men smoking a spliff in a bedsit, both in the shirts and flares of the 70s.In another, a young boy stands before a brick wall, effortlessly cool in his white-framed sunglasses and immaculate buttoned-up shirt.Dennis Morris, who took that photo, moved to Britain from Jamaica in the ear