News about Sarah Hughes

As council chiefs order her to remove her golliwog doll from her 'Smokers Corner' stand, the market trader who is selling it says, 'I can't see how people can find it racist.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 19, 2023
A market trader selling a gollog doll on her Smokers Corner stall claims she doesn't know why people find it racist when the council ordered her to delete it. The doll is Sarah Hughes, who runs Bolton Market in Greater Manchester, and she has had it since childhood, and she has praised it. The trader claimed that the doll had 'never offended anyone,' that it's 'cute,' and people ask her if it's for auction. However, Florence Kate Upton's 'golly' rag doll, which was born in 1895, is widely considered to be racial, as its appearance emerged out of caricatures with frizzy hair, big lips, and large white teeth. Ms Hughes says she is 'flabbergasted' that Bolton Council has advised her to delete it.

A maniac who murdered two elderly women makes a fresh attempt for independence

www.dailymail.co.uk, June 4, 2023
After a Parole Board challenged his 'openness and honesty with professional employees,' David Wynne Roberts (pictured), now 68, has been told that he is still too risky to be released from prison.' Roberts has now completed 15 years in prison for the assassination of Bronwen Nixon in 1986 in her guesthouse in the Lake District. The investigation, which culminated in a successful murder trial for 67-year-old Bronwen, was one of the first on BBC Crimewatch's Crimewatch to result in a successful trial for murder. Roberts was arrested in March, 1969, when he was just 14 years old, and the publicity led to his conviction.

According to the charity's chairman, the state of Britons' mental health could be the worst it has ever been

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 15, 2023
The country's mental stability is probably the worst it has ever been, with the cost-of-living crisis, the aftermath of the Covid pandemic, and global instability pushing people to the brink, according to the head of a major charity. Dr. Sarah Hughes, the company's chief executive, said the charity was extremely worried about the consequences of the cost-of-living crisis on people's mental stability. Dr Hughes said in her first interview since taking over, that despite the country's mental health problems, the topic has fallen off the political agenda. She warned that the pandemic, cost-of-living crisis, and war in Ukraine, as well as resulting global instability may cause people to die.