H
society
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Plaque and memorial garden to mark scandal of Britain’s forced adoptions

1 day ago
A picture


Survivors of forced adoptions and unmarried mothers’ homes will gather at the first-ever public commemorations of a national scandal affecting hundreds of thousands of British people,A plaque will be unveiled at noon on Saturday at an open event at Rosemundy, St Agnes, in Cornwall,Meanwhile, in Kendal, Cumbria, on 23 May, a memorial garden will be opened, with attendance by invitation,Women from across the country, adoptees and relatives are expected to attend the events – at the locations of two former unmarried mothers’ homes – after years of waiting for a formal UK government apology,There were hundreds of unmarried mothers’ homes operating in the UK between the 1940s and the 1980s.

Run by the Church of England, Salvation Army and the Catholic church, working alongside statutory bodies, they promised to protect women and girls from stigma and destitution.Instead, many faced cruelty, neglect and lifelong trauma.Women have described being made to work in punitive regimes and were often pressured into handing over their babies to be rehomed with married couples.“If the government won’t apologise, at least they can be a point of healing for people,” Phil Frampton, a campaigner from Manchester, said of the commemorative events, which he said were the beginning of “a long-overdue national movement”.Diana Defries, from the Movement for an Adoption Apology, said: “The significance cannot be overstated.

It’s the first time we can stand in front of the cameras and say, it happened here, it happened to all of these people,It will finally be a very public recognition of this injustice,”Frampton campaigned for the plaque at Rosemundy, where he was born,Facing stigma as the white mother of a mixed-race child in the 1950s, his late mother, Mavis Frampton, was compelled to give him up to the care system and his Nigerian father was removed from the country,Having obtained his own records, Frampton said the system was driven by a desire to keep welfare costs down as well as “rotten” societal prejudices.

Lyn Rodden, from Camborne, faced “non-stop” pressure to give her baby up at Rosemundy, where she was among teenagers subjected to unpaid labour, even after her waters had broken.“We were literally slaves to them, it didn’t matter what condition we were in.People think that it was only in Ireland and it was never like it over here – it damn well was,” she said.The 88-year-old, reunited with her son in adulthood after years of their lives “crisscrossing”, said the Rosemundy plaque means “everything … because so many people called me a liar”.In further evidence of the devastating impact of the forced adoptions system, research by Michael Lambert, of Lancaster University, has indicated the use of the lactation-suppressing drug diethylstilbestrol, which has been linked to an increased risk of cancers, in some unmarried mothers’ homes, while an ITV investigation has revealed unmarked graves across England contain the bodies of babies who did not survive.

Steve Hindley, 79, from Salford, campaigned for the Kendal memorial garden near the former St Monica’s home, where his late wife, Judy Hindley, was sent, aged 17, in 1963, before they met,Traumatised Judy took her life in 2006, near Parkside cemetery, Kendal, where babies including her 11-week-old son Stephen were buried in unmarked graves,Stephen had been denied care for hydrocephalus and spina bifida,The Parkside cemetery memorial, Hindley said, would provide “dignity at last” for the babies,A 2021 parliamentary inquiry found there were 185,000 adoptions involving unmarried mothers in England and Wales between 1949 and 1973 alone, based on “re-registrations” of babies “born out of wedlock”, and that the state was ultimately responsible for the suffering caused by public institutions and employees involved.

Scottish and Welsh governments have formally apologised, but the UK government refused the recommendation of a formal apology in 2023, and has not provided one since Keir Starmer took office.Meanwhile, the Church of England has expressed “great regret”, the Catholic church has apologised and the Salvation Army has said it was “deeply sorry”.A Department for Education spokesperson said: “This abhorrent practice should never have taken place and our deepest sympathies are with all those affected … we take this issue extremely seriously.”
foodSee all
A picture

How to turn cheese ends into a comforting root vegetable pie – recipe | Waste not

Today’s comforting pie is super-adaptable and brilliant for using up any leftover bits of cheese. The classic homity pie filling of potatoes, onions and cream works beautifully with a jumble of cheese ends – cheddar, stilton, taleggio or whatever pungent blocks and rinds are lurking in your fridge drawer; it’s also a fantastic base for using up other root vegetables besides potatoes – celeriac, for example, bring earthiness, beetroot turns the entire filling a vibrant purple, while salsify adds a nutty note. Use whatever you have to hand, and waste nothing.This is a long-time family favourite. Mum used to make it for me as a kid and now I make it for my own children

3 days ago
A picture

Pasta and pesto, broth and dumplings, pancakes and chutney: Ravinder Bhogal’s pea recipes

My earliest memory of kitchen duties is sitting on a stool in our courtyard in Kenya with a sack of peas that was bigger than me. I spent hours coaxing them from their pods, munching as I went; the result was a red plastic bucket brimming with peas like gleaming green marbles. As with asparagus, they have a short season, so grab them while you can: throw them whole into salads, broths and curries, or grind them down and use their starchy goodness to make pestos, pancakes and fritters.These herbal dumplings are made from the sturdiness of stale bread, cheese and sweet peas. I’ve used pecorino, but you could use parmesan or a hard goat’s cheese instead

3 days ago
A picture

Zest is best: mandarins and navel oranges among Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for May

“We’re getting into a lot of citrus lines,” says Tony Polistina, co-owner of Forestway Fresh in Sydney’s Terrey Hills. “Australian navels started this week.”Navel oranges are about $5.50 a kilo for now, but Imperial mandarins from Queensland are about to hit their peak, already as low as $3 a kilo.That means it’s the perfect time to make Anna Jones’s mandarin compote – spread it on toast or use it in her delectable queen of puddings, which she makes every Mother’s Day

4 days ago
A picture

Beyond boiling and steaming: alternative ways of cooking asparagus | Kitchen aide

What unexpected things can I make with asparagus? “The goal is to do as little as possible to it,” says Ben Lippett, author of How I Cook (published in September). “If you start dressing up asparagus with fancy cooking techniques, you lose its magic.” That’s not to say you should just boil the spears and be done with it, mind: “Try pairing them with relatively high-impact flavours, but nothing that will steal the show,” Lippett says. “Much as with a salad dressing, you want something with richness, fragrance, acidity and salinity.” Instead of a gribiche-style sauce, for example, sub in Kewpie (Japanese mayo), pickled ginger, chives, sesame seeds and frozen peas “to make a spoonable condiment”

4 days ago
A picture

Georgina Hayden’s recipe for spring onion and spinach pakoras

One of my favourite ways of celebrating whatever vegetable is in season is by turning it into pakoras. Cooking them quickly allows the vegetable to sing, and a simple pakora batter is light enough to let spring onions and spinach do just that. With just enough gently spiced chickpea flour to bind the chopped veg, there is no claggy coating here. Serve as is with a squeeze of lemon and a pinch of sea salt, or with this addictive, punchy coriander and peanut chutney.Prep 15 min Cook 25 min Makes 12-161 bunch coriander, roughly chopped2 garlic cloves, peeled and roughly chopped30g peanuts, or almonds1 tsp caster sugarJuice of 1 lemon 2 green chillies, finely chopped (remove the pith and seeds if you want less heat)Sea salt and black pepper1 bunch spring onions, trimmed and cut into 1cm pieces1 large handful baby spinach, roughly chopped3cm piece ginger, peeled and finely grated½ tsp ground turmeric 1 tsp garam masala 160g gram flour 1 litre vegetable oil, for deep-fryingFirst make the chutney

4 days ago
A picture

Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for crispy chicken with zhoug and jersey royals | Quick and easy

You can’t go wrong with crisp, panko-fried chicken, and this version with zhoug is an absolute winner. You could describe zhoug as a green chilli sauce, but that wouldn’t quite do justice to this amazing Yemeni condiment, which is packed with flavour from preserved lemons, cardamom and garlic. Use some to stir through the hot, just-cooked jersey royals, then serve the rest as a sauce for the chicken. The only accompaniment you then need is a light green salad: a handful of whatever leaves are to hand, some finely sliced fennel and a few pumpkin seeds, all dressed with lemon juice, olive oil and sea salt.Prep 20 min Cook 16 min Serves 2350g jersey royals, cleaned and halved2 chicken breasts 4 heaped tbsp plain flour 2 tsp za’atar (optional)1½ tsp flaky sea salt 1 egg 75g panko breadcrumbs Olive oil, for fryingGreen salad, to serveFor the zhoug 50g coriander (if you dislike coriander, use an extra 50g parsley)15g flat-leaf parsley 1 preserved lemon, skin and flesh roughly sliced1 small garlic clove, peeled6 green cardamom pods, seeds only2 green chillies, pith and seeds removed if you prefer less heat½ tsp caster sugar ½ tsp ground cumin 50ml olive oilCook the potatoes in a large pan of boiling water for 10 minutes, until cooked through

5 days ago
recentSee all
A picture

Ryanair’s £79 membership scheme takes off – but Which? says ‘think twice’

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Britons increasingly swapping Med’s busy hotspots for ‘destination dupes’

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Paul McCartney and Dua Lipa among artists urging Starmer to rethink AI copyright plans

about 10 hours ago
A picture

‘Tone deaf’: US tech company responsible for global IT outage to cut jobs and use AI

1 day ago
A picture

Brave Australia dealt reality check in defeat to ruthless New Zealand

about 2 hours ago
A picture

Believe the hype: make Pollock the Lions midweek captain and watch him flourish | Ugo Monye

about 2 hours ago