Updated: 21 May 2021, 10:55
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ASHLEY Cain s partner Safiyya Vorajee has said her heart is still aching on the day of her eight-month-old daughter Azaylia s funeral.
The couple sadly lost their little girl last month after she lost her battle with leukaemia, and they will be celebrating her life later on today.
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Ashley Cain s partner Safiyya Vorajee has paid tribute to baby Azaylia on the day of her funeralCredit: Social Media - Refer to Source
Safiyya took to Instagram to pay tribute to her baby girl and showed off her decorated nails, which have special themes to commemorate her daughter.
These include orange diamonds, pictures of Azaylia, and Nala from The Lion King.
Sexism stands at the door : 11 female film-makers written out of mainstream Hollywood history
The woman stays in the picture … Alice Guy-Blaché, top left, on the France set of The Life of Christ in 1906. Photograph: Everett Collection/Alamy
The woman stays in the picture … Alice Guy-Blaché, top left, on the France set of The Life of Christ in 1906. Photograph: Everett Collection/Alamy
Maya Angelou and Jean Seberg were just some of the women who faced everything from racism and sexism to transphobia, yet produced some of cinema’s most defining pictures
HelenO Hara
Tue 2 Mar 2021 05.53 EST
Last modified on Tue 2 Mar 2021 11.23 EST
My British LGBTQ+ Icons From Past To Present 0 February 21, 2021 20:59 by Anna Stacey
Alexandra Hogg
In honour of LGBTQ+ history month, here are some British LGBTQ+ icons from the past, who helped blaze the trail for the LGBTQ+ community, and from the present that are making great strides in LGBTQ+ activism.
Alan Turing
Alan Turing was an exceptional computer scientist and mathematician who was fundamental in breaking the German ‘Enigma’ code during World War Two. Turing developed a machine that succeeded in decoding the encrypted messages by German armed forces, leading to Allied victory over Nazi Germany.
Turing’s work in cracking the ‘Enigma’ code has been estimated to have shortened the Second World War by two years and saved over fourteen million lives. Unfortunately, Turing became a victim of the UK’s anti-homosexuality laws and was prosecuted in 1952, avoiding prison by instead choosing chemical castration. Trag