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Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors granted Guinean citizenship following DNA ancestry tests

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Makuochi OkaforBBC Africa

Mohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa Meagan Good (R) in a black-and-white jumpsuit and brown fedora, and Jonathan Majors (L) in a yellow jumper and beige slacks hold hands as they pose for the camera in front of a sign that reads: "Programme Simandou 2040." A Guinea flag hands furled on the far right of the frameMohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa

Husband and wife movie stars Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors have travelled to Guinea, where they have been granted citizenship after tracing their ancestry to the West African nation through DNA testing.

Majors, a star of Creed and Ant-Man, said becoming citizens would allow the couple to “bridg[e] the gap” and bring together their stories as entertainers and members of the African diaspora.

“We just want to say thank you so much,” added Good, best known for the film Think Like a Man, who said it was her first visit to Guinea.

Their citizenship ceremony was similar to other initiatives in the region to encourage people of African descent to reclaim their heritage and invest in the continent.

The event – a private cultural ceremony organised by the ministry of culture – took place at a tourist and cultural centre, Gbassi Kolo, on Friday.

Djiba Diakité, minister and chief of staff of the presidency, presented the passports to the two actors on behalf of President Mamadi Doumbouya.

Beside him stood General Amara Camara, minister and secretary-general of the presidency.

Guests were treated to a series of traditional dance and music performances, including on the djembe – a drum that draws many foreigners to Guinea to learn its rhythms.

Good, 44, and Majors, 36, began dating in May 2023 and tied the knot last year.

They married following a turbulent period in Majors’ life. In 2024, he was sentenced in the US to probation for assaulting his ex-girlfriend, British choreographer Grace Jabbari. He was mandated to complete a 52-week domestic violence intervention programme.

The actors landed at Conakry’s Gbessia International Airport in the early hours of Friday morning and were welcomed with great fanfare by officials and musicians.

During their stay in Guinea, the pair are scheduled to tour Boké, a coastal region with historic slave trade sites. It is not clear if they plan to invest in or move to Guinea.

Mohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa US actors Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors being welcomed at Conakry Gbessia International Airport.  They were presented with kola nuts. Kola nuts hold deep cultural significance in West Africa, symbolising hospitality, peace, friendship, and life.  They are used in crucial social rituals like weddings, funerals, and negotiations.   The couple are smiling, chatting and wearing relaxed clothing.Mohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa

Ahead of the ceremony, the stars were presented with kola nuts – a culturally symbolic gift of welcome

In recent years, several celebrities have taken up citizenships of countries in Africa.

It largely began in 2019 when Ghana launched “The Year of Return”, inviting those with African heritage to come home and invest. One of the most prominent stars to do so was Stevie Wonder in 2024.

Other notable examples have been US singer Ciara, who took Beninese citizenship last year, and Hollywood actor Samuel L Jackson, who acquired a Gabonese passport in 2020.

Guinea itself has a long history of welcoming activists and people from the African diaspora.

In the 1960s, South African singer Miriam Makeba and her husband, US civil rights activist and Black Panther leader Stokely Carmichael, moved to Guinea.

Makeba had been made stateless for her opposition to apartheid and after her marriage to Carmichael, who popularised the slogan “black power”, her US visa was revoked.

She was treated as an honorary Guinean citizen and cultural ambassador, while Carmichael, who took the name Kwame Ture, remained in Guinea even after their divorce, dying there in 1998.

Guinea has experience political turmoil in recent years – and under the junta that seized power in 2021 the country has become less open to dissent.

Coup leader Gen Mamady Doumbouya restricted the media and suppressed protests.

The country has recently returned to civilian rule following elections last month, won by Doumbouya with 87% of the vote.

Unlike other countries in the region that have experienced recent coups, Guinea has maintained relations with Western governments, particularly France.

The country is rich in minerals, including bauxite, iron ore, diamonds, gold and uranium, yet its people remain among the poorest in West Africa.

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InvestingPro’s Overvalued Warning Causes WeShop Stock to Plummet by 49%

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WeShop tumbles 49% after InvestingPro’s overvalued warning

Roy Jones Jr predicts Oleksandr Usyk will defeat Moses Itauma

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Roy Jones Jr has offered his take on a potential heavyweight clash between Oleksandr Usyk and Moses Itauma, firmly believing that the timing of their matchup could determine its result.

As the current bona fide king of his division, Usyk has left himself with very little to prove, but hopes to fight two or three more times before hanging up his gloves.

While nothing is yet confirmed, the Ukrainian is widely expected to face former world champion Deontay Wilder later this year, perhaps in April or May, after having claimed a fifth-round stoppage victory over Daniel Dubois in July 2025.

Back then, Usyk achieved his goal of becoming a three-time undisputed champion across two weight classes. He is now angling to defend his WBC, IBF and WBA titles against a commercially viable opponent in America, rather than the toughest test the division offers.

British heavyweight prodigy Itauma, meanwhile, finds himself on a vastly different trajectory following his first-round finish over Dillian Whyte in August.

Despite all the hype that surrounds this promising 21-year-old, Itauma is still yet to compete anywhere near the level of heavyweight phenom Usyk.

Instead, the precocious talent is now gearing up to face Jermaine Franklin, an opponent that is expected to offer more resistance than his previous opponents, on January 24.

For Jones, who recently spoke with Clubhouse Boxing, it is crucial that Itauma continues to build his experience incrementally, rather than entering a premature test against Usyk.

“[Whether Itauma can become a dominant force] depends on how well [he] understands that pressure; how bad he wants it.

“He can do anything he wants to do because he has all the ability, he’s very explosive [and] he does everything good.

“There’s nothing that should really stop him from becoming a world champion, except [by] moving too fast.

“If you put him in with Usyk right now, that’s moving too fast.”

Jone has previously told The Ring that matching the two up would be like ‘throwing Itauma to the wolves.’

The pair may never cross paths, though a ‘changing of the guard’ fight remains a possibility.

Unraveling the Origins of Cannabis for New Medical Breakthroughs

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Cannabis produces a complex suite of bioactive compounds, including tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD), but how these molecules evolved has long been a mystery. Now, new research has shed light on their origin story – and opened the door to innovative ways of harnessing these compounds for human medicine.

Researchers at Wageningen University & Research (WUR) in the Netherlands have experimentally traced how cannabis evolved the ability to synthesize THC, CBD and another major cannabinoid, cannabichromene (CBC), revealing new insights into the plant’s evolution and how we can harness its power.

In modern cannabis varieties, the proportions of these cannabinoids vary widely and are largely determined by the activity of corresponding synthase enzymes. The enzymes are also highly specialized products of a long evolutionary process and today’s types are far removed from those that existed millions of years ago.

Using ancestral sequence reconstruction, which reconstructs ancient proteins from modern genetic data, the team resurrected cannabinoid-producing enzymes from early cannabis ancestors. When expressed in the lab, the enzymes revealed which cannabinoids they could produce – and how their activity differed from modern versions.

What they found was that, unlike today’s highly specialized enzymes that produce specific cannabinoids, these ancient types were generalists, capable of creating multiple compounds – including THC, CBD and CBC – from a common precursor.

“What once seemed evolutionarily ‘unfinished’ turns out to be highly useful,” said WUR researcher Robin van Velzen, who led the study with his colleague Cloé Villard. “These ancestral enzymes are more robust and flexible than their descendants, which makes them very attractive starting points for new applications in biotechnology and pharmaceutical research.”

Of particular interest to the researchers, and to medicine more broadly, are the findings related to CBC. While most research into cannabis compounds has focused on THC and CBD, CBC is emerging as a potentially important but underexplored cannabinoid. Modern cannabis plants typically contain less than 1% CBC, making it difficult to study and produce at scale.

“At present, there is no cannabis plant with a naturally high CBC content,” said van Velzen. “Introducing this enzyme into a cannabis plant could therefore lead to innovative medicinal varieties.”

Preliminary studies have suggested that CBC has anti-inflammatory, anticonvulsant and antibacterial properties, among others, although its therapeutic potential remains far less studied than THC or CBD.

The team also found that the reconstructed ancestral enzymes were easier to produce in micro-organisms, such as yeast cells, than modern-day types, which mean they can be harnessed to synthesize cannabinoids more efficiently. This raises the possibility of producing rare cannabinoids without relying on plant cultivation, with implications for both research and drug development.

“Through rational engineering of these ancestors, we designed hybrid enzymes which allowed identifying key amino acid mutations underlying the functional evolution of cannabinoid oxidocyclases,” the team wrote. “Ancestral and hybrid enzymes also displayed unique activities and proved to be easier to produce heterologously than their extant counterparts. Overall, this study contributes to understanding the origin, evolution and molecular mechanism of cannabinoid oxidocyclases, which opens new perspectives for breeding, biotechnological and medicinal applications.”

The study was published in the Plant Biotechnology Journal.

Source: Wageningen University & Research

Examining the Antigovernment Protests in Iran

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new video loaded: A Look at Iran’s Antigovernment Protests

Protests have rocked Iran in recent weeks, and the country’s supreme leader has threatened to escalate a crackdown on demonstrators. Erika Solomon, our bureau chief for Iran and Iraq, discusses what’s fueling the protests with our senior writer Katrin Bennhold.

By Erika Solomon, Katrin Bennhold, Christina Thornell, Christina Shaman, Parin Behrooz and Sanjana Varghese

January 9, 2026

Trump proposes limiting credit card interest rates to 10% for one year

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President Donald Trump on Friday called for a one-year cap on credit card interest rates at 10%, effective Jan. 20, without specifying details.

“Please be informed that we will no longer let the American Public be ‘ripped off’ by Credit Card Companies that are charging Interest Rates of 20 to 30%, and even more, which festered unimpeded during the Sleepy Joe Biden Administration. AFFORDABILITY!” he wrote on social media.

It’s not clear whether credit card companies will respond to his call, or what actions he might take to force any change.

The post comes as the Trump administration intensifies efforts to demonstrate to voters that the president is addressing concerns about costs and prices that have emerged as a central issue in the November midterm elections.

During the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump pledged to seek limits on the interest credit card companies can charge.

Hours before his message on Friday, Senator Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent, said on X: “Trump promised to cap credit card interest rates at 10% and stop Wall Street from getting away with murder. Instead, he deregulated big banks charging up to 30% interest on credit cards.”

In a letter last year to Sanders and Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, a group of banking trade groups painted a dire outcome for consumers if the government ever capped interest rates on credit cards at 10%, as the senators had proposed.

“Many consumers who currently rely on credit cards would be forced to turn elsewhere for short-term financing needs, including pawn shops, auto title lenders or worse — such as loan sharks, unregulated online lenders and the black market,” the group wrote.

The Bank Policy Institute said in a report last year that “while the proposed cap is a well-intentioned effort to reduce the high debt burden some households are facing, it would harm consumers’ access to card credit.” The group also said such a move could force card issuers to reduce cardholder benefits, including lucrative rewards tied to purchases. 

Responding to Trump’s post on Friday, Hawley said on X: “Fantastic idea. Can’t wait to vote for this.”

US oil executives meet with Trump to discuss extracting oil from Venezuela

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NewsFeed

President Donald Trump said his administration will decide which oil companies are allowed to operate in Venezuela, as he met oil executives at the White House less than a week after the US abduction of Venezuela’s president.

Ethiopia Habtemariam Named President of Music at HYBE America

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HYBE America has appointed veteran music exec Ethiopia Habtemariam as its new President of Music.

Habtemariam, known most recently for having headed up Universal Music Group’s Motown Records, will help advance HYBE America’s long-term growth strategy, spearhead A&R and artist development across the company’s label ecosystem, and identify new creative and commercial opportunities, HYBE America said in a statement on Thursday (January 8).

Habtemariam will be based in Los Angeles and in Atlanta, her hometown and an epicenter of global hip-hop into which the South Korea-headquartered HYBE tapped via its 2023 acquisition of label Quality Control. She will report to HYBE America Chairman and CEO Isaac Lee.

“Ethiopia is a once-in-a-generation leader whose impact on artists, songwriters, culture, and the music business is undeniable,” Lee said. “Her vision, taste, and strategic insight make her uniquely suited to help shape the next chapter of HYBE America as we continue building a future-facing entertainment company centered on artists and fans.”

Habtemariam served as Chair and CEO of Motown Records from 2021 to 2022. During that time, she spearheaded a label venture between Motown and Quality Control, overseeing the signing and/or development of artists like Lil Yachty, City Girls, Migos, Lil Baby, Leon Thomas and NBA YoungBoy.

Having started in the music industry as a teenage intern at L.A. Reid’s LaFace Records, Habtemariam spent more than two decades in various roles at Universal Music Group (UMG) companies, including Universal Music Publishing Group and Capitol Music Group.

She has worked with numerous prominent artists including Chris Brown, Theron Thomas, J. Cole, Justin Bieber, Ciara, Polow Da Don, Jhene Aiko, Cardo, Hit Boy, Keri Hilson, and Happy Perez.

HYBE America says Habtemariam will continue to “collaborate closely” with UMG in her new role, given the companies’ longstanding partnership.

“I’ve long admired how HYBE America approaches artists, fans, and the future of entertainment,” Habtemariam said.

“This is a company building with intention and investing for the long term while staying deeply connected to culture. I’m excited to contribute my experience as HYBE America continues to shape what’s next for music on a global scale.”

“This is a company building with intention and investing for the long term while staying deeply connected to culture.”

Ethiopia Habtemariam, HYBE America

Quality Control Music CEO Pierre ‘P’ Thomas said he and Habtemariam have “a long history of working together, pushing boundaries, and breaking barriers in this industry. Her passion for artists, commitment to culture, and deep understanding of the music landscape make her an extraordinary leader.”

Quality Control COO Kevin ‘Coach K’ Lee added:  “Working with Ethiopia again feels full circle. From the early days in Atlanta, we built something special at Quality Control, and it means a lot to see that legacy continue in this next chapter.”

Habtemariam’s appointment comes at a time of rapid change and innovation at HYBE America, the company that HYBE built out of its acquisition of Scooter Braun’s Ithaca Holdings in 2021.

Braun stepped down as CEO this past summer, just months before the company launched a globally-focused label services division. Over the past year, the company acquired L.A.-based VIP experiences company Confirmed360, struck a distribution deal with So So Def Recordings, and launched a joint venture with YouTube star Alan Chikin Chow, among other things.Music Business Worldwide

During Crans-Montana memorial service, woman describes the event as apocalyptic while bar owner is detained

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‘In this shared grief we stand united’: Day of mourning for New Year’s Eve fire victims in Switzerland

Tragedy brought people together in Crans-Montana and brought the country to a standstill.

On Friday, just down the road from the bar where 40 young people were killed by fire on New Year’s Eve, church bells rang in their memory.

They tolled right across Switzerland, to mark a national day of mourning.

Then, moments after the last notes of a special memorial service had faded, came the news that one of the bar’s owners had been detained.

Swiss prosecutors said Jacques Moretti, a French national, was a potential flight risk. He and his wife Jessica, who is also French, are suspected of manslaughter by negligence, bodily harm by negligence and arson by negligence.

Many of the victims’ families had demanded action like this from the start: more than a week after the fire, the anger in this community has been increasing.

At the main ceremony in Martigny, down in the valley, relatives of the dead were joined by survivors. Some had come from hospital for the memorial. People held white roses in their laps and gripped each other’s hands for support.

“The images we faced were unbearable. A scene worse than a nightmare. Screams ringing out in the icy cold, the smell of burning. It was apocalyptic,” a young woman called Marie told the audience.

She had been in a bar opposite Le Constellation when the fire broke out and suddenly found herself helping the injured as they ran from the flames.

She said she would never forget what she’d seen.

Listening in the front row were the presidents of France and Italy, whose citizens were among those killed and injured in the fire. Both countries have opened their own investigations.

Back in Rome, Italy’s prime minister vowed to make sure all those responsible were identified.

“This was no accident. It was the result of too many people who did not do their jobs,” Giorgia Meloni said.

She wants to know why the music wasn’t cut as soon as the fire started.

“Why did no-one tell the young people to get out? Why did the council not make the proper checks? There are too many whys.”

In Crans-Montana people have the same questions and many more.

For now, the only two formal suspects are the co-owners of Le Constellation, Jacques and Jessica Moretti. Early on Friday, the pair were called in by prosecutors. They are being investigated for causing death and injury through negligence but have not been charged.

Now Jacques Moretti has been remanded in custody. In a statement, the public ministry said the move followed a “new assessment of the flight risk.”

“I constantly think of the victims and of the people who are struggling,” his wife told a crush of TV cameras after several hours of questioning at the ministry.

It was her first public comment since the fire.

“It is an unimaginable tragedy. It happened in our establishment, and I would like to apologise.”

Nine days on, Le Constellation is still obscured from view behind white plastic sheets. A lone policeman stands guard, his face covered against the relentless snow.

What unfolded inside the building’s basement has gradually become clearer – and it’s the story of a disaster that should never have happened.

Mobile phone footage shows a sparkler tied to a champagne bottle apparently starting the fire as it brushes the ceiling. Covered with soundproofing foam that was never safety tested, it ignites quickly.

When the crowd eventually rush for the exit in panic, there is a crush on the stairs. It seems the emergency doors were blocked.

But another video, from six years ago, suggests the risk was well known. On the footage, a waiter can be heard warning that the material on the ceiling is flammable.

“Be careful with the foam,” the voice shouts, as people wave the same sparklers.

But the questions here are not just for the owners.

This week the local authorities in Crans made the shocking admission that they hadn’t carried out mandatory safety checks of the bar for five years.

They offered no explanation.

“It was a hell inside that bar. More than 1,000 degrees of temperature. There was no way to escape,” Italy’s ambassador to Switzerland, Gian Lorenzo Cornado, told the BBC, citing a long list of safety violations.

Six Italians were killed as a result.

“Italy wants justice, the Italian government wants justice and the Italian people want justice, for sure. The families want justice,” the ambassador stressed.

That includes for those with life-changing injuries.

The regional hospital in Sion took the first major influx of patients. The stress was compounded by the fact that many doctors’ own children were partying in Crans for the New Year.

“They were all scared the next stretcher to arrive would be carrying their own child,” hospital director Eric Bonvin remembers.

But he’s proud of how his team coped.

Some casualties were unconscious and so badly burned, it took time to identify them.

The most serious cases were moved to specialist burns centres elsewhere in Switzerland and in Europe where some are still in a critical condition.

All face a long, tough path to recovery which the doctor likens to a “rebirth” because many of his young patients have severe burns to the face.

“First the body needs to be protected, like the foetus in a mother’s womb. That’s what’s happening for many now. Then they will have to re-enter the world and find their identity,” Professor Bonvin says.

“It will take a lot of work and resilience.”

Add to that the anguish of surviving.

“They came round and at first they felt lucky to be alive. But some now feel this guilt, wondering why they are here, but not their friend or brother,” Bonvin explains.

“It is a delicate moment.”

In central Crans, the heap of tributes for the dead is still growing, protected from the elements by a canvas.

After leaving their own fresh flowers on Friday, many people then stood in front of the ruins of the bar itself for a moment. Remembering, in silence.

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