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The pandemic is pushing economic policy to the limits. Governments around the world are running record budget deficits, and central banks are becoming addicted to easy money policies that would have been unthinkable two decades ago.
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Vinay Ruparelia came to the UK at a time when he and other Asians were being expelled from Uganda by violent dictator Idi Amin.
Until the age of 18, when he moved to London, he had no access to study materials or recreational facilities at his school in Kampala.
But in spite of that disadvantage, he went on to become a pharmacist, charity champion and, since 2013, a deputy lieutenant of Banffshire.
The father-of-two, also an Honorary Sheriff of Grampian, Islands and Highlands, was made an MBE in recognition of his work with community enterprises and various charities in Banffshire in the Queen’s new year’s honours list.
TextAlex Peters
Immortalised by legendary photographer Derek Ridgers, two skinheads look back on what the style meant to them
What we look like has always been about so much more than is often allowed for by the frivolous reputation that caring about our appearances carries. It is how we present ourselves to the world. It dictates how the world responds back to us in turn.
The way you wear your hair, the make-up that you choose can be a badge of honour. A way to proclaim to the world anything from your musical taste to your political opinions, sexual orientation or sports loyalty. It can be a passport into a scene or an expression of pure individualism. Make-up and hair can act as an outlet, a canvas onto which we can express how we are feeling on the inside, something tangible that we can control when the world around us feels capricious or the ultimate rejection of society’s expectations.
In the Palmerston North District Court on Wednesday, Kalivati pleaded guilty to charges of money laundering. Other drug-related charges were dropped. O’Connell was sentenced last month to nine years jail for his involvement and three others – Emma Jane Armstrong, Stephen Heta Puhipuhi and Alice Irene Andrews – were also sentenced on drug-related charges.
Warwick Smith/Stuff
Gary Colin O’Connell spent his life in the drug trade, leading to him earning $4 million in five years dealing methamphetamine. The court heard Kalivati used several methods to spend the money, such as using cash to pay for expensive holidays, vehicles and property.