Fnbd This celebrity injunction will probably rebound 鈥?a case of the Streisand effect
Good morning. Everything is expensive. Food is expensive, electricity and gas are expensive, rent and mortgages are expensive, transportation is expensive. But parents in the UK with children under the age of three are grappling with another rapidly rising cost: childcare. A report by the Guardian has found that childcare fees are expected to rise by as much as 19% in the new year. Sarah, an office worker from Somers
stanley bottles et, told the Guardian that the rise in fees make her feel sick , saying: Our electric bill has just ticked over
stanley flasche in to a higher rate, already fuel and food bills are soaring, then the nursery fee goes up. I have no spare cash at the end of the month. For years, those in the sector have been warning that early childcare provisions are on the brink of collapse. A recruitment crisis, chronic under-investment by the government and increasing costs have left the industry struggling to survive 鈥?inflatio
stanley isolierkanne n and the onrushing recession have only exacerbated the problem. The number of active providers in England has been steadily falling since 2015 and, like many other parts of the social infrastructure of this country, a lack of funding has meant that those left cannot pay staff much more than minimum wage which the government has increased, while simultaneously making no increase to childcare subsidies . To make up the shortfall, many providers have raised their fees, making life more difficult for many families.I spoke to Guardian senior news reporter Alexandra Topping Cukx Mexico: parents in Sonora prevented from giving children odd names
After street demonstrations across major cities in Afghanistan, women have now taken to social media to protest against the Talibans hardline policies towards them.An online campaign has seen Afghan women around the world share photos of themselves wearing traditional colourful clothes, using the hashtag DoNotTouchMyClothes.The protest is a response to a sit-down demonstration orchestrated by the Taliban at Kabul University, where about 300 women appeared in all-black garments covering their faces, hands and feet 鈥?the sort of dress previously never seen across the country.Waving Taliban flags, the women said they supported the militants who have announced that women would not be allowed to hold high-ranking government positions and that schools and universities neede
canada stanley d to be gender-segregated.Since the Taliban took the capital Kabul, it has set up an all-male interim government with just a handful of Tajik and Uzbek representativ
stanley uk es and no member of the ethnic Hazara minority.The ministry of womens affairs is not part of the new regime, which has brought back the ministry for the propagation of virtue and the prevention of vice, en
stanley termos suring that sharia law is implemented throughout the country.Many Afghan women, especially in urban centres, fear that their hard-gained freedoms might be limited, remembering the 1996 to 2001 Taliban regime that saw women largely confined to their homes.Dr Bahar Jalali, an Afghan historian and gender studies expert, posted the first photo using the