Daphne Caruana Galizia This article is more than 3 years old'She left a strong legacy': children's book tells story of Daphne Caruana GaliziaThis article is more than 3 years oldFriend of Maltese journalist recounts her battles against corruption for young readers
Her death brought thousands of people on to the streets of Malta and led to the resignation of a prime minister. Now the life of the investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia has inspired a book for children.
Arizona This article is more than 2 months oldArizona woman dies after attack by elk she was suspected of feedingThis article is more than 2 months oldIn response to the attack, local officials have been putting up warning signs about not feeding elk in local communities
An Arizona woman has died after being attacked by an elk she is suspected of feeding, becoming the first person to be killed by the species in the state’s history, local wildlife officials have said.
Obama administration This article is more than 8 years oldArne Duncan to step down as education secretary after seven-year tenureThis article is more than 8 years oldDuncan tells staff he is returning to Chicago after seven yearsObama tapping John King Jr to be acting secretary for rest of termArne Duncan, who followed president Barack Obama to Washington to serve as his education secretary, announced on Friday he will step down following a seven-year tenure marked by a willingness to plunge head-on into the heated debate about the government’s role in education.
TV reviewTV crime dramaReviewSeries four of the Caribbean-set comedy drama bowed out with the usual bumbling Englishness, things being knocked over and comedy lizardsIt’s rare there isn’t something new starting off, or something interesting and original happening, on television. But last night was one of those barren nights. So here’s something not very interesting or original coming to an end, the final episode of the current (fourth) series of Death in Paradise (BBC1).
‘That panic that comes at you, it kills you before your real death comes’ … Harrison Okene. Photograph: HandoutHarrison Okene had no choice but to listen in the dark as the shouts of his colleagues fell silent. His throat throbbed and his tongue peeled. Ten years on, he explains why he loves the sea more than ever – and decided to become a diver
by Paula CocozzaHarrison Okene was sitting on the toilet – surely the worst place to be as disaster strikes – when a freak wave hit the tugboat he was working on, and turned it upside down.