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Two Israeli embassy staff shot dead outside Jewish museum in Washington DC

by Kimberly February 11, 2025
written by Kimberly

Two staff members from the Israeli embassy were shot dead outside a Jewish museum in Washington DC on Wednesday night by a gunman who shouted "free Palestine" during his arrest.

Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim were a couple, who the embassy said were in the "prime of their lives". Mr Lischinsky was reportedly about to propose to Miss Milgrim.

The suspect, Elias Rodriguez, 30, is now in custody and the FBI is investigating whether the attack was linked to terrorism or a hate crime.

Israel's foreign minister said the shooting was a direct result of "toxic antisemetic incitement" since the 7 October 2023 attack that prompted Israel's military campaign in Gaza.

  • Follow live coverage of the DC shooting
  • What we know about Israeli embassy staff shooting
  • Watch: Moment Jewish Museum shooting suspect is detained
  • Watch: BBC at the scene of shooting outside Jewish museum

The couple were leaving a networking event at the Capital Jewish Museum, organised by the American Jewish Committee, at about 21:08 (local time) when a man opened fire with a handgun at a group of four people.

The suspect then went inside the museum. Witnesses said that they initially thought the man was distressed and gave him water.

"We heard gunshots and then a guy came in… we thought he needed help," eyewitness Katie Kalisher told the BBC, referring to the suspect before they realised he was the alleged shooter.

Footage then captures the suspect shouting "free, free Palestine" while being detained by police.

Metropolitan Police Department chief Pamela Smith said officers "have not had any prior interactions" with the suspect, who is from Chicago, and did not see anything in his background "that would have placed him on our radar".

Analysis by BBC Verify suggests Elias Rodriguez has been working at the American Osteopathic Information Association since 2024.

The Israeli Ambassador to the US, Yechiel Leiter, told reporters that Mr Lischinsky had just bought an engagement ring and was planning to propose to Miss Milgrim next week in Jerusalem.

"They were a beautiful couple."

EPA
The shooting happened in a downtown area of Washington DC that has numerous tourist sites, museums and government buildings

Both US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have condemned the attack.

Writing on Truth Social, Trump said: "These horrible D.C. killings, based obviously on antisemitism, must end, NOW! Hatred and Radicalism have no place in the USA."

Netanyahu has spoken with the parents of both victims, according to a statement from his office.

He has promised increased security at Israeli embassies around the world following the attack.

"My heart aches for the families of the beloved young man and woman, whose lives were cut short by a heinous antisemitic murderer," he said.

"We are witnessing the terrible price of antisemitism and wild incitement against the state of Israel."

The sentiment was echoed by his Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar who accused European countries of "incitement".

"This incitement is also done by leaders and officials of many countries and international organisations, especially from Europe."

His comments follow pressure this week from the UK, EU and France over Israel's military action and control over humanitarian aid in Gaza, where experts have warned of a looming famine.

Reuters
US Attorney General Pam Bondi and Israeli Ambassador to the US Yechiel Leiter visited the site of the shooting

The shooting, which happened in a downtown area of the city that has numerous tourist sites, museums and government buildings, triggered a major police response and shut down several main streets.

American Jewish Committee CEO Ted Deutch said in a statement that the organization was "devastated" by the attack.

The event was billed as a networking opportunity to bring Jewish young professionals and the diplomatic community together. Its description said humanitarian aid organisers responding to humanitarian crises in the Middle East, including Gaza, were invited.

The Capital Jewish Museum, like many other Jewish institutions in the US, has struggled with security issues amid rising antisemitism.

"Jewish institutions all around town, all around the country, are concerned about security due to some very scary incidents that some institutions have faced and because of a climate of antisemitism," executive director Beatrice Gurwitz told NBC News in a separate news report before the attack on Wednesday.

The museum recently received a grant to upgrade its security in part, she said, because of a new exhibit on LGBT pride.

February 11, 2025 0 comments
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Market

US judge says he could hold Trump administration in contempt of court

by Layla February 11, 2025
written by Layla

A US judge has said he could hold the Trump administration in contempt of court for "wilful disregard" of an order to halt the departure of deportation flights carrying more than 200 people to El Salvador last month.

The administration had invoked a 227-year-old law meant to protect the US during wartime to carry out the mass deportation.

"The Court does not reach such conclusion lightly or hastily; indeed, it has given Defendants ample opportunity to rectify or explain their actions. None of their responses has been satisfactory," federal judge James Boasberg wrote.

In a statement, the White House said it would contest the decision.

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung said: "We plan to seek immediate appellate relief", referring to a process in which parties can request a higher court review and potentially change a decision made by a lower court.

"The President is 100% committed to ensuring that terrorists and criminal illegal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities across the country."

Judge Boasberg's decision to begin contempt proceedings escalates a clash between the White House and the judiciary over the president's powers.

The administration could avoid a contempt finding, or "purge" itself of contempt, if they provide an explanation of their actions and come into compliance with the original order issued last month, Boasberg said on Wednesday.

That filing is due by 23 April, he said.

His ruling comes despite the Supreme Court's later finding that Donald Trump could in fact use the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to conduct the deportations to El Salvador.

The Supreme Court's ruling against Boasberg's temporary restraining order "does not excuse the Government's violation", he said.

If the administration does not provide the requested information by the 23 April deadline, Boasberg will then seek to identify the individual people who ignored the order to stop the deportations.

He could then recommend prosecutions for those involved. Federal prosecutions come under the US justice department which ultimately reports to the Trump administration.

Getty Images
More than 200 alleged gang members were deported to El Salvador's notorious CECOT high-security prison

The March deportation flights saw more than 200 Venezuelans accused by the White House of being gang members deported to a jail in El Salvador.

During a 15 March hearing, Judge Boasberg imposed a temporary restraining order on the use of the wartime law and a 14-day halt to deportations covered by the proclamation.

After lawyers told him that the planes had already departed, he issued a verbal order for the flights to be turned around to the US.

The White House denied violating the court ruling.

US press secretary Karoline Leavitt said: "The administration did not 'refuse to comply' with a court order.

"The order, which had no lawful basis, was issued after terrorist TdA [Tren de Aragua] aliens had already been removed from US territory."

After two deportation flights continued to El Salvador despite his order that they be turned around, Judge Boasberg convened a hearing to discuss "possible defiance" of his ruling by the Trump administration.

In response, Trump took to TruthSocial to call Boasberg a "troublemaker and agitator" and call for his impeachment.

El Salvador has agreed to take in the deportees in exchange for $6m (£4.6m).

Earlier this week, Trump met with El Salvdador's President, Nayib Bukele, at the White House, and expressed an interest in sending more deportation flights to El Salvador.

February 11, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Train company recovers millions from fare dodgers

by Parker February 10, 2025
written by Parker

A railway company says its revenue officers have recovered £3.4m from fare dodgers over the course of a year.

South Western Railway, which operates between London Waterloo and Surrey, Hampshire, Berkshire, Dorset, Devon, Somerset and Wiltshire, estimates there are about seven million journeys made without a ticket on its services each year.

The operator says it believes that level of fare dodging costs it £40m a year.

One persistent offender was found to have evaded £49,000 over five years, and another more than £19,000, the company said.

South Western Railway
South Western Railway's team of enforcement officers recovered £3.4m

Peter Williams, customer and commercial director, said: "We understand genuine mistakes happen. But, there's growing evidence of some systematically abusing the system.

"Our teams work around the clock to check tickets on stations and trains.

"They face many challenges, but their efforts have helped cut ticketless travel by more than 40% since 2017 and recover millions of pounds of taxpayer money."

Across the rail industry in the UK, it is estimated fare evasion costs nearly £240m a year.

February 10, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Trump pledges to lift Syria sanctions as he seals $142bn arms deal on Saudi visit

by Daniel February 9, 2025
written by Daniel

Trump's arrival in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday was met with a grand reception, including a lavish lavender-coloured carpet rolled out to greet him. He had even chosen a purple tie to match it.

Riyadh swapped red carpets for lavender in 2021, saying that it was a symbol of the kingdom's desert wildflowers and generosity.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met Trump on the tarmac and provided an honour guard of Arabian horses to accompany his presidential limo.

In his remarks at an investment forum, Trump lauded the US-Saudi relationship as "more powerful than ever before".

"From the moment we started we've seen wealth that has poured – and is pouring – into America," he said.

Trump is trying to woo foreign investors to the US to boost the American economy, a key focus of his administration in the nearly four months of his second term.

"I like him too much," Trump said of Saudi Arabia's crown prince and de-facto ruler, Mohammed bin Salman. "That's why we give so much."

Getty Images
Tesla CEO Elon Musk is one of a few corporate leaders that joined Donald Trump on his trip to Riyadh

The pomp and ceremony was a step up from the muted welcome for former US President Joe Biden, who travelled to the oil-rich kingdom in 2022 to seek their help in lowering petrol prices, fist-bumping the crown prince.

That visit came two years after he declared Saudi Arabia a "pariah" state following the 2018 murder of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Trump flew to the Gulf to strike financial deals and argued in his speech that it is through this kind of commerce and economic development that the Middle East would transcend violence and division.

Underscoring his commitment to deal-making, Trump was joined by a number of business leaders including billionaire ally Elon Musk, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.

The high-profile executives are meeting a Saudi Arabia eager to diversify its oil-rich economy by increasing its artificial intelligence capabilities.

Mr Huang announced during the visit that Nvidia will sell more than 18,000 of its latest AI chips to Saudi company Humain.

Getty Images
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman accompanied Donald Trump and other business leaders during the president's trip to Riyadh

During his address, Trump said it was his "dream" to have Saudi Arabia join the Abraham Accords, a deal brokered in his first administration that saw relations between Israel and some Gulf countries normalised for the first time.

But his good friend, Mohammed bin Salman, has made it clear that will not happen until there is a permanent end to the war in Gaza and a clear path to Palestinian statehood.

There is a limit to what this friendship can deliver.

Trump only briefly addressed the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas.

He told those in attendance that people in Gaza deserved a "better future", which had been held back by Hamas choosing "to kidnap, torture and target" for "political ends" – a reference to the 7 October 2023 attack on Israel.

Watch: Removing sanctions on Syria "a good step", says former US Ambassador

Trump also announced he was lifting sanctions on Syria to improve the country's new government, a move he suggested was requested by Mohammed bin Salman.

"Oh, what I do for the crown prince," the US leader said.

American sanctions on Syria had been in place for over a decade, meant to apply pressure and economic pain against the dictatorship of former President Bashar al-Assad, who was ousted in December.

Syria has since elected a new transitional president, creating an opening for renewed US diplomacy efforts.

The surprise announcement to lift the sanctions represents a sea change for Syria, described by its foreign minister Asaad Shibani as a "new start" in the country's reconstruction path.

Robert Ford, who served as US ambassador to Syria under President Barack Obama, applauded the Trump administration's move to lift sanctions.

"I visited Syria three months ago and the country is simply devastated after the 13-year civil war. It needs to rebuild, it needs reconstruction, it needs foreign financing to do that," he told the BBC.

"So removing the sanctions, that will enable international capital flows to go into Syria from Gulf states, from other Arab states and from different aid agencies is absolutely vital."

Trump was expected to meet Syria's transitional president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, on Wednesday in Saudi Arabia.

From Riyadh, Trump will head to both Qatar and the UAE, which has already committed to investing $1.4tn in the US over the next decade.

February 9, 2025 0 comments
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Market

Bongbong Marcos: The Philippine president battling the Dutertes

by Morgan February 9, 2025
written by Morgan

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has been dealt an unexpected blow in the midterms, with his Senate candidates set to pick up fewer seats than expected, according to early results.

The election was a showdown between Marcos and his Vice-President Sara Duterte, daughter of former president Rodrigo Duterte.

The pair, who represent the country's most powerful families, won the 2022 election together – but their alliance has since collapsed.

Monday's election, which included multiple races from the council to the Congress, was an important test for 67-year-old Marcos, the son of an ousted dictator who rebranded his father's reign to make a comeback in the 2022 election.

'Destined' for leadership

Born in 1957 to Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos, Bongbong was just eight years old when his father became president. He was the second of three children, and the only son. The couple later adopted another girl.

Bongbong's father, a former lawyer, served in the Congress and Senate, while his mother was a singer and former beauty pageant winner. Both would achieve notoriety – as the family amassed enormous wealth under a brutal regime, they became synonymous with excess and corruption.

During his first term between 1965 and 1969, Ferdinand Marcos Sr was fairly popular, and was re-elected by a landslide. But in 1972, a year before his second term was due to end, he declared martial law.

What followed was more than a decade of dictatorship, during which the country's foreign debt grew, prices soared and ordinary Filipinos struggled to make ends meet. It was also a period of repression as opposition figures and critics were jailed, disappeared or killed.

Through it all, Marcos Sr was grooming his son for leadership.

Bongbong's childhood bedroom in llocos Norte, the family's stronghold in the north, which is now a museum, has a portrait of him wearing a golden crown and riding a white stallion.

But the elder Marcos was also worried about whether his son would step up to the role. A diary entry from 1972 read: "Bongbong is our principal worry. He is too carefree and lazy".

Getty Images
In the Marcos's last public appearance before they fled the country, Bongbong, standing on the far right, was 28

Marcos enrolled in Oxford University to study Philosophy, Politics and Economics, but it was later revealed that he did not graduate with a bachelor's degree as he claimed.

Oxford said in 2021 that he was awarded a special diploma in social studies in 1978. That too, local media reports alleged, was the result of lobbying by Philippine diplomats in the UK after Marcos Jr failed his exams.

He returned home and joined politics, becoming the vice-governor and then governor of Ilocos Norte.

But the political career his parents had envisioned for him would be cut short by a revolution in 1986.

An economic crisis had already triggered unrest – but the assassination of a prominent opposition leader brought tens of thousands onto the streets.

A sustained campaign eventually convinced a significant faction of the army to withdraw its support for the Marcos regime, and hastened its downfall.

Getty Images
Imelda Marcos' infamous shoe collection

The family fled to Hawaii with whatever valuables they could bring, but left behind enough proof of the lavish lives they had led.

Protesters who stormed the presidential palace found fanciful oil portraits of the family, a jacuzzi with gold-plated fixtures and the now-infamous 3,000 pairs of designer shoes owned by Imelda Marcos.

The family is accused of plundering an estimated $10bn of public money while in power. By the time Marcos Sr died in exile in 1989, his was a tarnished name.

And yet, some three decades later, his son was able to whitewash that past enough to win the presidential election.

Becoming president

After they returned to the Philippines in the 1990s, Marcos became a provincial governor, congressman and senator, before running – and winning – the presidential race in 2022.

Social media was a big part of this rebranding, winning Marcos new supporters – especially among the younger generation in a country where the median age is around 25.

On Facebook, the Marcos family legacy has been rewritten, with propaganda posts claiming that Marcos Sr's regime was actually a "golden period" for the country.

On TikTok, a martial law anthem from the Marcos Sr era became the soundtrack to a cute challenge for Gen Z users, who would record older family members marching to the beat.

As his popularity grew, Marcos launched his presidential bid with Sara Duterte running for vice-president. She vowed to work with Bongbong to unify the country and make it "rise again".

They called themselves the "uniTeam", and combined the two families' powerful bases: the Dutertes in the south, and the Marcos's in the north.

Getty Images
Marcos Jr with his mother Imelda (second from left) and his wife and son

It paid off. Marcos won with a thumping 31 million votes, more than double the total of his closest rival.

"Judge me not by my ancestors, but by my actions," Marcos said as victory became apparent, vowing to "be a president for all Filipinos".

Three years into his presidency, Marcos has brought Manila closer to the US and increasingly confronted an assertive China in the South China Sea – a key departure from Duterte's presidency.

That wasn't the only thing that caused a crack in his alliance with Sara Duterte, which eventually descended into a public spat.

He gave her the Education portfolio, when she had openly sought the more powerful Defence portfolio. His allies in Congress then initiated impeachment proceedings against her over alleged misuse of state funds.

And Marcos cleared the way for her father to be arrested and taken to the Hague for his role in a deadly war on drugs that killed thousands.

Marcos, experts say, took a big risk by picking a fight with the Dutertes – for it to pay off, control of the senate was crucial.

But the midterm results complicate his chances – and his political future.

February 9, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Ukrainian refugees give back to 'second home' centre

by Audrey February 9, 2025
written by Audrey

Almost 220,000 Ukrainian refugees arrived in the UK up to December 2024 through two dedicated schemes set up after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, with 17% of them initially arriving in London.

Among them was Igor, a children's fiction writer from Kyiv, who recalled how lost he felt when he first arrived in the capital.

"Imagine, you move to London, with one bag and no knowledge of English. It was incredibly difficult," he said, but added since he set foot in the Ukrainian Welcome Centre in central London he "didn't want to go anywhere else".

The charity has helped thousands of Ukrainians forge new lives in the UK from its base in the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral just off Bond Street.

The centre has provided a lifeline and sanctuary for many Ukrainian refugees, not just Igor, providing immediate support as they navigated Biometric Residence Permits, GPs and school curriculums.

Run by volunteers and supported entirely by donations – including English textbooks, computers, and even a kiln for clay sculpting classes – the centre was operational within weeks of the full-scale invasion.

Ukrainian Welcome Centre
In addition to practical services, the centre offers creative and wellbeing classes from knitting and line dancing to "tea and talk" afternoons

After benefitting from immigration advice and English language classes Igor has become a volunteer himself, leading children's sessions and the centre's "Ukrainian gatherings", where the community come together to discuss both Ukrainian and British history and culture.

For Igor, "the centre is a second home – or now, perhaps even my first".

"This isn't just a centre, it's a family," he said.

Inna, another centre user turned volunteer, described her awe at the breadth of support available.

Refugee Inna, who is now a receptionist at the centre, has said becoming a volunteer has boosted her self-esteem and allowed her to give back

With such a vast network "everything can be resolved" and nobody is turned away, she said.

As a receptionist for the centre, she has helped those who arrive "wide-eyed" and "confused" as she once was.

Becoming a volunteer, she said, had boosted her self-esteem and allowed her to give back to the place she could not imagine surviving without.

Centre co-founder Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski, a fifth-generation Ukrainian-Canadian from the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral, said he still remembered the early hours of 24 February 2022 "as if it was this morning".

Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski said many of the refugees express deep gratitude for the warm welcome they receive, while longing to return home

He said after he woke up in the early hours to a flood of phone notifications, he "thought somebody was sending me some kind of fake news that Ukraine is being invaded".

It was only when he turned on BBC News and saw bombs falling on Kyiv that his disbelief quickly turned into action.

The Ukrainian community gathered in his cathedral, where the idea for the centre was mapped out among the pews.

Together with the Association of Ukrainians in Great Britain, the cathedral transformed its basement into a one-stop facility providing virtual and online services to Ukrainians arriving in the UK.

When war broke out, the community gathered in the pews of this cathedral to set up support for refugees

Since then it has welcomed thousands including King Charles, who officially opened the centre in November 2022 during a visit with Ukraine's First Lady, Olena Zelenska.

Andriy Marchenko, the centre's director, said it "started from scratch" and they "scarcely knew anything" but have now successfully helped people to "thrive, not just survive".

February 9, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

One death every seven minutes: The world's worst country to give birth

by Hannah February 9, 2025
written by Hannah

At the age of 24, Nafisa Salahu was in danger of becoming just another statistic in Nigeria, where a woman dies giving birth every seven minutes, on average.

Going into labour during a doctors' strike meant that, despite being in hospital, there was no expert help on hand once a complication emerged.

Her baby's head was stuck and she was just told to lie still during labour, which lasted three days.

Eventually a Caesarean was recommended and a doctor was located who was prepared to carry it out.

"I thanked God because I was almost dying. I had no strength left, I had nothing left," Ms Salahu tells the BBC from Kano state in the north of the country.

She survived, but tragically her baby died.

Eleven years on, she has gone back to hospital to give birth several times and takes a fatalistic attitude. "I knew [each time] I was between life and death but I was no longer afraid," she says.

Ms Salahu's experience is not unusual.

Nigeria is the world's most dangerous nation in which to give birth.

According to the most recent UN estimates for the country, compiled from 2023 figures, one in 100 women die in labour or in the following days.

That puts it at the top of a league table no country wants to head.

In 2023, Nigeria accounted for well over a quarter – 29% – of all maternal deaths worldwide.

That is an estimated total of 75,000 women dying in childbirth in a year, which works out at one death every seven minutes.

Henry Edeh
Chinenye Nweze bled to death after giving birth in hospital five years ago

The frustration for many is that a large number of the deaths – from things like bleeding after childbirth (known as postpartum haemorrhage) – are preventable.

Chinenye Nweze was 36 when she bled to death at a hospital in the south-eastern town of Onitsha five years ago.

"The doctors needed blood," her brother Henry Edeh remembers. "The blood they had wasn't enough and they were running around. Losing my sister and my friend is nothing I would wish on an enemy. The pain is unbearable."

Among the other common causes of maternal deaths are obstructed labour, high blood pressure and unsafe abortions.

Nigeria's "very high" maternal mortality rate is the result of a combination of a number of factors, according to Martin Dohlsten from the Nigeria office of the UN's children's organisation, Unicef.

Among them, he says, are poor health infrastructure, a shortage of medics, costly treatments that many cannot afford, cultural practices that can lead to some distrusting medical professionals and insecurity.

"No woman deserves to die while birthing a child," says Mabel Onwuemena, national co-ordinator of the Women of Purpose Development Foundation.

She explains that some women, especially in rural areas, believe "that visiting hospitals is a total waste of time" and choose "traditional remedies instead of seeking medical help, which can delay life-saving care".

For some, reaching a hospital or clinic is near-impossible because of a lack of transport, but Ms Onwuemena believes that even if they managed to, their problems would not be over.

"Many healthcare facilities lack the basic equipment, supplies and trained personnel, making it difficult to provide a quality service."

Nigeria's federal government currently spends only 5% of its budget on health – well short of the 15% target that the country committed to in a 2001 African Union treaty.

In 2021, there were 121,000 midwives for a population of 218 million and less than half of all births were overseen by a skilled health worker. It is estimated that the country needs 700,000 more nurses and midwives to meet the World Health Organization's recommended ratio.

There is also a severe lack of doctors.

The shortage of staff and facilities puts some off seeking professional help.

"I honestly don't trust hospitals much, there are too many stories of negligence, especially in public hospitals," Jamila Ishaq says.

"For example, when I was having my fourth child, there were complications during labour. The local birth attendant advised us to go to the hospital, but when we got there, no healthcare worker was available to help me. I had to go back home, and that's where I eventually gave birth," she explains.

The 28-year-old from Kano state is now expecting her fifth baby.

She adds that she would consider going to a private clinic but the cost is prohibitive.

Chinwendu Obiejesi, who is expecting her third child, is able to pay for private health care at a hospital and "wouldn't consider giving birth anywhere else".

She says that among her friends and family, maternal deaths are now rare, whereas she used to hear about them quite frequently.

She lives in a wealthy suburb of Abuja, where hospitals are easier to reach, roads are better, and emergency services work. More women in the city are also educated and know the importance of going to the hospital.

"I always attend antenatal care… It allows me to speak with doctors regularly, do important tests and scans, and keep track of both my health and the baby's," Ms Obiejesi tells the BBC.

"For instance, during my second pregnancy, they expected I might bleed heavily, so they prepared extra blood in case a transfusion was needed. Thankfully, I didn't need it, and everything went well."

However, a family friend of hers was not so lucky.

During her second labour, "the birth attendant couldn't deliver the baby and tried to force it out. The baby died. By the time she was rushed to the hospital, it was too late. She still had to undergo surgery to deliver the baby's body. It was heart-breaking."

Getty Images
There is a shortage of trained health personnel in Nigeria

Dr Nana Sandah-Abubakar, director of community health services at the country's National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), acknowledges that the situation is dire, but says a new plan is being put in place to address some of the issues.

Last November, the Nigerian government launched the pilot phase of the Maternal Mortality Reduction Innovation Initiative (Mamii). Eventually this will target 172 local government areas across 33 states, which account for more than half of all childbirth-related deaths in the country.

"We identify each pregnant woman, know where she lives, and support her through pregnancy, childbirth and beyond," Dr Sandah-Abubakar says.

So far, 400,000 pregnant women in six states have been found in a house-to-house survey, "with details of whether they are attending ante-natal [classes] or not".

"The plan is to start to link them to services to ensure that they get the care [they need] and that they deliver safely."

Mamii will aim to work with local transport networks to try and get more women to clinics and also encourage people to sign up to low-cost public health insurance.

It is too early to say whether this has had any impact, but the authorities hope that the country can eventually follow the trend of the rest of the world.

Globally, maternal deaths have dropped by 40% since 2000, thanks to expanded access to healthcare. The numbers have also improved in Nigeria over the same period – but only by 13%.

Despite Mamii, and other programmes, being welcome initiatives, some experts believe more must be done – including greater investment.

"Their success depends on sustained funding, effective implementation and continuous monitoring to ensure that the intended outcomes are achieved," says Unicef's Mr Dohlsten.

In the meantime, the loss of each mother in Nigeria – 200 every day – will continue to be a tragedy for the families involved.

For Mr Edeh, the grief over the loss of his sister is still raw.

"She stepped up to become our anchor and backbone because we lost our parents when we were growing up," he says.

"In my lone time, when she crosses my mind. I cry bitterly."

More BBC stories from Nigeria:

  • 'I scarred my six children by using skin-lightening creams'
  • Why British boarding schools are so eager to open in Nigeria
  • The Nigerian queer parties that offer liberation
  • 'I've been sleeping under a bridge in Lagos for 30 years'
Getty Images/BBC

February 9, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

British Steel talks still deadlocked, source says

by Maria February 8, 2025
written by Maria

The talks to keep production going at the UK's last virgin steel plant in Scunthorpe are yet to reach a resolution, the BBC has been told.

British Steel has been warning the raw materials used to produce steel in two blast furnaces at the plant may soon run out.

On Wednesday, sources said the government had offered to buy the coking coal that is essential to keep the blast furnaces going.

A meeting between government officials and Jingye, the Chinese owner of the plant, was held virtually on Thursday.

But one source close to the negotiations told the BBC the issues under discussion remained unresolved.

The source said negotiations were ongoing and may roll into Friday.

Trade unions who represent workers at the plant said they had not been updated on the negotiations.

Government sources had told the BBC production could cease at the plant within weeks if the raw materials were not paid for soon.

The Department of Business and Trade did not comment.

Coking coal is a source of fuel in the blast furnace process used to make virgin steel, which is made from iron ore rather than recycled steel.

Jingye has said the furnaces are "no longer financially sustainable".

The government has not ruled out nationalising British Steel, which employs 2,700 people, saying all options remain on the table.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said "all options are on the table".

He said demand for steel was "likely to go up, not down, which is why it's very important to do everything we can".

Andy Prendergast, national secretary of the GMB union, said he was ''exceptionally concerned'' that the government's offer to pay for the coking coal had seemingly not been ''snapped up'' by Jingye.

He told the BBC ''we believe the government have made an offer that buys everyone time".

He added: "We are currently running against the clock in terms of the blast furnaces. If they go off, they are gone.

"This offer means they stay in action and that means we can have a wider discussion about the future of the steel works."

The UK would be the only major G7 economy without the ability to make virgin steel if the Scunthorpe factory shut down.

Recycled steel, which is made from scrap, is more energy efficient and has a far lower carbon footprint.

But some industry analysts argue there is not enough recycled steel to meet global demand.

Reform UK is calling for British Steel to be nationalised until a buyer can be found.

The Green Party also favours nationalisation and a switch to "green" steel production.

The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats have said other options should be considered first.

February 8, 2025 0 comments
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  • 'No warning' over cladding evacuation, couple say
  • Weekly round-up: Five stories you may have missed
  • Maternity care for black women must improve – MP

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About Me

About Me

Freelance Developer

My name is Brian, freelance developer based in London, UK. Welcome to my internet journal where I started my learning journey.

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Resources

  • 'Wildfire sent years of work up in flames'

    June 9, 2025
  • Geothermal energy plan for university buildings

    June 9, 2025
  • 'No warning' over cladding evacuation, couple say

    June 5, 2025

Recent Posts

  • 'Wildfire sent years of work up in flames'

    June 9, 2025
  • Geothermal energy plan for university buildings

    June 9, 2025
  • 'No warning' over cladding evacuation, couple say

    June 5, 2025
  • Weekly round-up: Five stories you may have missed

    June 4, 2025
  • Maternity care for black women must improve – MP

    June 2, 2025

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  • Business (20)
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    • Frontend (6)
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Backend

  • 'Wildfire sent years of work up in flames'

    June 9, 2025
  • Geothermal energy plan for university buildings

    June 9, 2025
  • 'No warning' over cladding evacuation, couple say

    June 5, 2025
  • Weekly round-up: Five stories you may have missed

    June 4, 2025

Frontend

  • 'Wildfire sent years of work up in flames'

    June 9, 2025
  • Geothermal energy plan for university buildings

    June 9, 2025
  • 'No warning' over cladding evacuation, couple say

    June 5, 2025
  • Weekly round-up: Five stories you may have missed

    June 4, 2025

Guide

  • Getting Started with Backend Development 101

    January 25, 2019
  • The Skills You Need to Be a Back-End Developer

    January 25, 2019
  • Modern Backend Developer in 2019

    January 25, 2019
  • Integrating with an API Backend

    January 25, 2019
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