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  • Parents raising awareness after son’s death

    Parents raising awareness after son’s death

    Joe Skirkowskiand

    Carys Nally,Bristol

    Family handout Hudson smiles at the camera with a ball pit behind him. He is wearing a light green shirt with micky mouse faces all over it. Hudson has brown-ginger hair.Family handout

    Hudson was weeks from celebrating his third birthday when he collapsed and died

    The family of a toddler who died after collapsing while playing at home have paid tribute to their “fearless” little…

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  • UNESCO, Ministry Turn Education Day into Youth-Led Reform Forum

    UNESCO, Ministry Turn Education Day into Youth-Led Reform Forum

    Islamabad (TDI): On the eve of the International Day of Education, UNESCO and the Ministry of Federal Education and Professional Training (MoFE&PT) transformed a traditional commemoration into a youth-led reform forum at Islamabad Model College…

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  • DPM, Iranian FM discuss regional developments – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. DPM, Iranian FM discuss regional developments  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Iran thanks Pakistan for opposing UN rights vote in Geneva  The Express Tribune
    3. Iran’s security, sovereignty always dear to us: Pakistani minister  IRNA English
    4. Iran, Pakistan Leaders…

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  • Guernsey’s music venue becoming ‘testbed’ for performers

    Guernsey’s music venue becoming ‘testbed’ for performers

    Guernsey is becoming a “testbed” for comedians and performers to try their material, the deputy director of the island’s concert hall has said.

    Gregory Harrison said St James Concert Hall’s new programme offers a mix of comedy, jazz and even…

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  • The best dumbphone is the one I’m already wearing on my wrist — and it made me return to life more

    The best dumbphone is the one I’m already wearing on my wrist — and it made me return to life more

    I haven’t used one exclusively for a long time, but dumbphones do still exist today. You’ve got retro-looking flip phones like the TCL Go Flip that remind me strikingly of my first phone, and then there are keyboard phones like the $499

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  • Asbestos found in children’s play sand sold in UK | Retail industry

    Asbestos found in children’s play sand sold in UK | Retail industry

    Bottles of children’s play sand have been withdrawn from shelves by the craft retailer Hobbycraft after a parent discovered they were contaminated with asbestos.

    The parent, who did not wish to be named, raised the alarm after her children played with the sand at a party.

    She sent samples off to a testing lab, which found traces of asbestos fibres in the bottles of yellow, green and pink sand sold in Hobbycraft’s Giant Box of Craft arts kit.

    Asbestos can cause cancer in later life if inhaled, although the risk to children who played with the sand is thought to be low.

    The discovery came two months after asbestos traces found in similar play sand products in Australia prompted a government recall and the closure of schools and nurseries across the country and in New Zealand.

    All the affected products are manufactured in China, where items containing less than 5% of asbestos can be labelled asbestos-free. UK law says that there is no safe limit for exposure to the mineral.

    The parent said: “The bottles of coloured sand looked extremely similar to ones I had seen on a news report of play sand recalled in Australia.

    “I was concerned enough to buy a set at Hobbycraft and send it to an accredited lab for testing. Three of the five colours came back positive for fibrous tremolite asbestos.”

    She alerted Hobbycraft, which withdrew the product from sale but declined to issue a recall notice. “I am getting increasingly upset thinking that kids are being exposed unnecessarily,” she said.

    Hobbycraft said that no UK authority had warned of a risk and that there was no evidence of harm to customers.

    However, a spokesperson said: “As a precaution, we have voluntarily removed the product from sale while we carry out independent testing … We will update customers as soon as we are in a position to do so.”

    A government source criticised Hobbycraft’s response. “Parents are right to be concerned by this,” the source said. “Officials are investigating, but there’s no good reason why Hobbycraft shouldn’t recall this themselves, given the evidence.”

    The issue highlights post-Brexit gaps in health and safety law, which leave authorities unable to issue recalls without hard evidence of harm to health.

    The so-called “precautionary principle”, abolished when product safety legislation was redrafted after Brexit, allowed the government to restrict products thought to pose a serious threat to health, without having to acquire scientific evidence.

    Campaigners, including the British Occupational Hygiene Society, have criticised the government for refusing to reinstate powers to withdraw potentially hazardous goods when product safety laws were redrafted last year. Current rules rely on exporting countries to alert authorities to problem products.

    “We know that there is no way that every product landing on British doorsteps can be tested individually for safety and the labels can’t be made to tell the truth, so, it was a missed opportunity for the government,” said Prof Kevin Bampton, CEO of the British Occupational Hygiene Society.

    “We do have the precautionary principle for the environment, which means that bats and newts in some ways have better protection than people working in Britain and, potentially, our children.”

    The Department for Business and Trade rejected the claims.

    “We have some of the most robust product safety laws in the world and any product being put on the UK market by businesses must meet our strict criteria,” said a spokesperson.

    According to the British Occupational Hygiene Society, the health risk to children who played with the contaminated sand is likely to be low, as there were only small quantities in the bottles.

    However, Bampton warned that the long-term risks of exposure to asbestos remain little understood. He said: “This issue should be a wake-up call for regulatory change, so governments can be proactive, act fast and protect human health from risks before they protect profit.”

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  • My cultural awakening: A Queen song helped me break free from communist Cuba | Queen

    My cultural awakening: A Queen song helped me break free from communist Cuba | Queen

    Throughout my childhood and teenage years growing up in 80s Cuba, Fidel Castro’s presence, and the overt influence of politics, was everywhere – on posters, on walls, in speeches that could last four hours at a stretch. The sense of being…

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  • Pakistan, Kazakhstan agree to advance Central Asia rail link

    Pakistan, Kazakhstan agree to advance Central Asia rail link

    Pakistan and Kazakhstan have agreed to deepen cooperation on a proposed railway corridor linking Pakistan with Central Asia, aimed at boosting regional connectivity and trade.

    The understanding was reached during a high-level consultation at the…

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  • Panels on literature as resistance and child marriage in Pakistan held at Lahore’s ThinkFest – Dawn

    1. Panels on literature as resistance and child marriage in Pakistan held at Lahore’s ThinkFest  Dawn
    2. Zulikar Junior calls for making environmental protection national priority  Pakistan Today
    3. ThinkFest Day One Opens Debate on Pakistan’s Position…

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  • Imaan Mazari alleges mistreatment as court hears tweet case via video link

    Imaan Mazari alleges mistreatment as court hears tweet case via video link

    Lawyer, husband boycott proceedings in Islamabad court over ‘controversial tweet’ case

    Lawyer and rights activist Imaan Mazari and her husband, advocate Hadi Ali Chattha. PHOTO: EXPRESS

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