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Brother Lee: Anguilla Mourns a Gentle Giant Who Shaped Public Health and Culture

A beloved inspector, broadcaster and community pillar whose fairness and humility touched every corner of the island. Share Anguilla is mourning a man whose presence was so steady, so familiar, and so quietly influential that his passing feels like a break in the island’s rhythm. Leroy “Brother Lee” Richardson was more than a public health pioneer, more than a cultural contributor, more than a voice on Kool FM — he was one of those rare Anguillians who managed to touch every corner of community life with a spirit that was pleasant, professional, fair, and unfailingly reasonable. His loss has swept across the island like a firestorm because he was woven into the everyday fabric of Anguilla in ways people often didn’t realise until now. “An older photograph of Brother Lee captures the quiet strength he carried throughout his life — a man whose pleasant nature, professionalism and unwavering fairness shaped Anguilla far beyond the roles he held.” For...

Parents Fear for Children’s Safety as ‘School Wars’ Social Media Trend Spreads Across UK Schools

The rise of so-called “school wars” circulating across social media is a chilling reminder of how quickly dangerous ideas can spread in the digital age. What began as a handful of posts dividing students into “red” and “blue” factions has rapidly evolved into a trend that appears to encourage confrontation between young people outside school gates and in public spaces. Whether some of these posts are hoaxes, exaggerated threats, or reckless attempts at viral attention, the consequences are already real: fear among parents, heightened police presence around schools, and children increasingly exposed to the language and imagery of violence.

The troubling reality is that the trend is travelling faster than the calls to stop it. Videos, rumours and edited images are shared thousands of times within minutes, while schools, communities and authorities struggle to catch up. For many parents, the anxiety is immediate and personal. 

Sending a child to school should not feel like a calculated risk, yet some families are now questioning whether their children are safe not only on the journey to school, but even within the classroom itself. Education should be a place of safety and growth, not a backdrop for social media-fuelled conflict.

Parents and guardians must remain vigilant. Talk openly with your children about what they are seeing online and make it clear that violence — or the glorification of it — is not a game. If you discover that your child is involved in sharing or participating in these so-called “school war” challenges, the response cannot be silence or dismissal. 

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Report it, intervene early, and seek support from schools or youth services. Confronting the problem now could prevent a moment of online bravado from escalating into real harm that changes lives forever.  Communities, schools, tech platforms and law enforcement must also act with urgency. 

The origin of this trend — whether a coordinated campaign, a reckless prank, or a malicious attempt to provoke violence, must be identified and stopped. Social media companies cannot allow algorithms to amplify dangerous content unchecked, and authorities must pursue those responsible for encouraging violence among children. The message must be clear and uncompromising: this trend ends now, before rumours become reality and before another young life is placed at risk.

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