Sir Richard Branson’s wife Joan Templeman dies aged 80

Source: Radio New Zealand

Joan Templeman, the wife of British billionaire Sir Richard Branson, has died aged 80.

The Virgin Records founder and airline tycoon shared the news on his Instagram page, writing that he was “heartbroken” to announce that Ms Templeman, his partner of almost 50 years, had died.

“She was the most wonderful mum and grandmum our kids and grandkids could have ever wished for,” Sir Richard, 75, wrote.

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Why posture during movement matters more than how you sit or stand

Source: Radio New Zealand

If you’ve ever caught yourself slouching at your desk and immediately jerked your shoulders back and straightened your spine, you know the struggle. Within minutes, you’re slumped over again.

Here’s why: Rigid corrections are impossible to maintain because they treat posture like a static position to hold rather than a dynamic skill to train.

Good posture isn’t something you freeze into place — it’s a fluid, balanced and aligned state that you build with proper breathing, strength and mobility.

Proper breathing can improve your posture, enhance your mobility, and relieve aches and pains.

Proper breathing can improve your posture, enhance your mobility, and relieve aches and pains.

Unsplash

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Experts recommend new mums stay offline for six weeks after baby is born

Source: Radio New Zealand

When Hannah Gheller had her baby 14 weeks ago, she did not expect social media to become such a “minefield”.

The first-time mum from Melbourne/Naarm says she felt it was a “shame-inducing tool” when she was struggling to breastfeed and her son wasn’t gaining weight.

“I would Google tips for improving [milk] supply and expressing, only for my Instagram to effectively be filled with tradwives who were showing off their chest freezers full of expressed milk. Or how formula is not natural and therefore shouldn’t be fed to babies.”

Experts say there are ways mothers can better protect themselves online during the vulnerable postpartum period.

Experts say there are ways mothers can better protect themselves online during the vulnerable postpartum period.

Unsplash

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Scientists discover four major turning points for human brain

Source: Radio New Zealand

Alzheimer's disease Asian female doctor holds brain anatomy model for diagnosis and treatment, new modern clinic, complete tools to cure brain disease.

The five brain phases were split into: childhood brain, adolescent brain, adult brain, early ageing brain and late ageing brain. Photo: 123rf

Scientists have discovered the human brain goes through five different phases of life, with key turning points at four different ages.

These “major turning points” occur around the ages of 9, 32, 66 and 83, a media release from the University of Cambridge said.

The neuroscientists from Cambridge University found the brain structure changes over the course of a human life, as the brain rewires to “support different ways of thinking while we grow, mature, and ultimately decline”.

The study that was led by the university’s MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit compared brains of more than 3800 people aged between 0 and 90.

According to scientist and research lead Dr Alexa Mousley, it is the first study to “identify major phases of brain wiring across a human lifespan”.

It found the brain does not shift into “adult mode”, on average, until the age of 32.

The five brain phases were split into: childhood brain, adolescent brain, adult brain, early ageing brain and late ageing brain.

“These eras provide important context for what our brains might be best at, or more vulnerable to, at different stages of our lives,” Mousley said.

“It could help us understand why some brains develop differently at key points in life, whether it be learning difficulties in childhood, or dementia in our later years.”

Childhood brain

According to the media release, brains are defined by “network consolidation” from infancy through to childhood. Connectors in the brain rewire across the whole brain in the same pattern until roughly 9 years old.

At this point, the first turning point, the brain experiences a “step-change” in cognitive capacity – and an increase in risk of mental health disorders.

Adolescent brain

The second turning point sees the brain’s communications networks increasingly refine, the media release said.

This continues until a person is in their 30s, when it peaks.

This is the “strongest topological turning point of the entire life span”.

Mousley said: “Around the age of 32, we see the most directional changes in wiring and the largest overall shift in trajectory, compared to all the other turning points.

“While puberty offers a clear start, the end of adolescence is much harder to pin down scientifically. Based purely on neural architecture, we found that adolescent-like changes in brain structure end around the early 30s.”

Adult brain

According to this study, adulthood begins at 32, until around the age of 66.

Researchers say it is at this time that the brain’s architecture stabilises.

Early ageing brain

Mousley said data used for the study suggested a “gradual reorganisation” of the brain’s networks occurs in the mid-60s.

“This is probably related to ageing, with further reduced connectivity as white matter starts to degenerate.

“This is an age when people face increased risk for a variety of health conditions that can affect the brain, such as hypertension.”

Late ageing brain

The final turning point for the brain occurs around the age of 83, the media release said.

Data for this stage was limited but showed the whole brain’s connectivity declined further.

Scientist Professor Duncan Astle said: “Many neurodevelopmental, mental health and neurological conditions are linked to the way the brain is wired. Indeed, differences in brain wiring predict difficulties with attention, language, memory, and a whole host of different behaviours.

“Understanding that the brain’s structural journey is not a question of steady progression, but rather one of a few major turning points, will help us identify when and how its wiring is vulnerable to disruption.”

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Reggae legend Jimmy Cliff’s connection with Te Tiriti and Aotearoa

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Kiwi friend of the late reggae legend Jimmy Cliff describes him as a gentle and considered soul who was hugely curious about New Zealand and the role of Te Tiriti.

Cliff, who is regarded as one of the founders of reggae music, died in Kingston, Jamaica, on Sunday. He was 81.

Music promoter Jackie Sanders, of Kerikeri, describes herself as “a friend and huge fan” who brought Jimmy Cliff to Aotearoa in 2011, 2015 and 2018.

Jimmy Cliff with friend and music promoter Jackie Sanders in 2018.

Jimmy Cliff with friend and music promoter Jackie Sanders in 2018.

Supplied

She counted him alongside Bob Marley, Toots (of Toots and the Maytals) and Peter Tosh as one of the four pioneers of the reggae genre.

While it was Marley who went on to find worldwide fame, Cliff entered modern consciousness in his later years through soundtracks for movies such as Cool Runnings and The Harder They Come.

Sanders said she got to know Cliff because she insisted, given his mana and status as a musical legend, on personally driving him between shows.

“So I spent quite a lot of time with him. He was a very gentle, quiet and considered man. He was also very curious. He had a lot of questions about New Zealand. He was hugely interested in Māori and TeTiriti and how that all worked.”

His 2011 visit was for the Raggamuffin Festival in Rotorua; in 2015 he played Tauranga and Auckland’s Powerstation.

Reggae star Jimmy Cliff

The reggae star died on Sunday.

RNZ

The Auckland show,with a packed venue and Herbs Unplugged as support, was Sanders’ “favourite gig ever”.

She said Cliff’s interest in TeTiriti sowed the seeds for his 2018 show at Waitangi, where he was the headline act for the inaugural Bay of Islands Music Festival, held in the grounds of the Copthorne Hotel.

That night was to be the most stressful of her entire career.

Cliff had two sets at the Byron Bay Bluesfest, on Easter Friday and Monday, and the idea was that he would fly out of the Gold Coast on Saturday morning, play Saturday night at Waitangi, then head back across the Tasman on Sunday morning.

However, thanks to delays in Australia, by the time Cliff and his 10-piece band landed in Auckland, the last flight to Kerikeri had been and gone.

“We were absolutely panicking. We had a full house in Waitangi, we had an amazing lineup. What were we going to do?” and

Air New Zealand was able to rustle up another plane but not a pilot, so the musicians were instead whisked through Customs and onto a minibus.

In the meantime Hamilton reggae band Katchafire stretched out their set and rumour rippled through the crowd.

Jimmy Cliff and band at Bay of Islands Airport in Kerikeri, about to head back to Byron Bay Bluesfest after a hectic headline slot at the Bay of Islands Music Festival.

Jimmy Cliff and band at Bay of Islands Airport in Kerikeri, about to head back to Byron Bay Bluesfest after a hectic headline slot at the Bay of Islands Music Festival.

Supplied

After a high-speed drive north the band virtually rolled out of the minibus straight onto the stage, 45 minutes late.

That left only 30 minutes before the festival was due to finish, with the venue anxious not to go over time. 

“We were getting a bit of heat that the curfew was coming up … I remember them saying to me, ‘You’ve got to go on stage and tell them this is the last song’. And I was just thinking of the hits the band hadn’t yet played …SoI went on stage and said, ‘Whatever happens, don’t come off that stage before the encore, just stay on and keep going’. I got into a bit of trouble over it. But I don’t regret it, it was great.”

Sanders said even in 2015 Cliff seemed frail, and in 2018 he had to be literally carried up the stairs onto the stage.

“But once on the stage, he was chucking his legs in the air and he was an absolute ball of energy. He said to me the next day, ‘The music takes control and it takes over my spirit, and it happens. I won’t stop until I die’. He really was an incredible man.”

An emotional Sanders said she had been playing his music almost non-stop since Sunday.

“It’s incredibly sad to lose another legend. They don’t come along that often, and Jimmy Cliff was definitely one of those utter legends,” she said.

“He shaped a whole genre of music that has entertained people for generations. So rest in power, Jimmy, and thank you for bringing us so much joy.”

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Hotel from Crocodile Dundee sells after three years on the market

Source: Radio New Zealand

If the Walkabout Creek Hotel’s walls could talk, they would have more than 120 years of tales to tell.

For many, the outback pub is famous for its featured role in the 1986 film Crocodile Dundee.

But for locals in the tiny town of McKinlay, just over 200kms from Mount Isa, it is the pub, the bottle-o, the caravan park and the post office.

Angus Brodie has been learning how to manage the bar.

Supplied/Angus Brodie

And now, after being on the market since 2022, it has changed hands.

McKinlay-born Angus Brodie and wife Jo Cranney bought the Walkabout Creek Hotel for an undisclosed figure, settling the deal yesterday.

Prior owners Deb and Frank Wurst put the pub on the market so they could retire, after being at the helm for 11 years.

From childhood memories to pouring his first beer

Grazier Angus Brodie, 33, grew up in McKinlay, where the hotel is the central hub for the town’s 160 residents.

“I have memories running around with all the other kids, sneaking a packet of chips and a soft drink,” Brodie said.

“Sometimes we’d take our sleeping bags and have a sleepover until it was time to go home.”

The new owner had never poured a beer before last week but is ready for the challenge.

“The first beer I poured, I think there was half a glass of frothy head, and the second beer had absolutely no head at all,” he laughed.

“I wasn’t off to a real good start, but I promise I’ve turned things around now.”

Cranney, 34, grew up in Goondiwindi but moved to Mount Isa to be a nurse, where the two met.

They now run a cattle property 30 minutes away from the pub with their two children and a baby due in April.

The couple bought the pub to diversify their business and have an alternative income stream when the weather and cattle markets aren’t favourable.

“In a drought, people probably drink more beer,” Brodie said.

The couple hopes to take a farm-to-table approach, selling their beef at the pub.

“That’s one thing we’re pretty keen to do, showcase our beef and have that on the menu,” Brodie said.

The Walkabout was originally built as The Federal Hotel in 1900.

The Walkabout was originally built as The Federal Hotel in 1900.

Supplied

Pub ‘in fantastic condition’

Decorated with memorabilia, the Walkabout Creek Hotel is beloved by locals and tourists alike.

The new owners are not planning to change much and are grateful to the prior owners for keeping it in “fantastic condition”.

“It’s a credit to Frank and Debbie. They’ve really looked after it over the 11 years they’ve been there,” Brodie said.

Wurst said he and Debbie would miss the pub when they announced their retirement plans in 2022.

“I’m really going to miss the people out here — there are so many great characters,” he said.

Frank and Debbie Wurst ran the pub in McKinlay for 11 years.

Frank and Debbie Wurst ran the pub in McKinlay for 11 years.

Supplied

40 years of Dundee

In 1986, Crocodile Dundee was the highest-grossing film of all time in Australia.

Built in 1900 and licensed in 1901, the real-world Walkabout Creek Hotel is three times as old as the movie that made it famous, and was originally called the Federation Hotel.

The bar used on the film set was donated to the pub after filming, and is now located out the back in the beer garden.

Tourists come from far and wide to snap photos with the movie memorabilia.

Next year, it will be 40 years since the release of Crocodile Dundee, and the new owners plan to mark the occasion.

“We will have to do something, that’s for sure,” Brodie said.

“It’s a crucial part of the identity of the pub, and we love it.”

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

‘We will lose them’: World Vision calls for action to end ‘catastrophic’ Sudan war

Source: Radio New Zealand

Displaced Sudanese who fled El-Fasher after the city fell to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), arrive in the town of Tawila in war-torn Sudan's western Darfur region on 28 October, 2025.

Displaced Sudanese who fled El-Fasher after the city fell to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), arrive in the town of Tawila in war-torn Sudan’s western Darfur region on 28 October, 2025. Photo: AFP

Nearly 100,000 people have now fled Sudan’s El Fasher, after the city in the Darfur region was taken over by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in the country’s ongoing civil war, which has been raging for two-and-a-half years.

Sudan is facing one of the world’s most significant humanitarian crises, with 14 million people displaced.

World Vision’s Sudan operations director Inos Mugabe describes the situation, particularly in El Fasher, as catastrophic.

“We have witnessed intensified fighting that’s forced a large number of families to flee, and for many of them it’s not the first time.”

He said as they fled, they also faced extreme challenges.

“Most of the people who are leaving leave with very little, particularly only the clothes that they are wearing, and many children are also separated from their families in the chaos.”

He said most people fleeing go to the neighbouring town of Tawila, but the situation there was also bad.

“There’s no water, there’s no food assistance. there’s no sanitation. Basically, services are non-existent.”

World Vision's Sudan operations director Inos Mugabe.

World Vision’s Sudan operations director Inos Mugabe. Photo: Supplied

He said their needs were huge, but there was not adequate funding available.

“Unfortunately, we are going to be seeing more lives lost.”

Mugabe said most girls and boys were not attending school.

“For girls… they don’t continue school and obviously end up getting married early in their life. Then if its boys, they end up in military conscription and are accommodated into the various militia groups that are spouting up around the country.”

He said children and their families escaping the siege at El Fasher were in need of immediate support.

“They look weary and severely malnourished. Their bodies are failing, and without urgent, large-scale intervention, we will lose them.

“We are receiving the most vulnerable people imaginable, but the resources we have are completely inadequate to sustain them. The world must understand the gravity of this situation and act before it is too late.”

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‘Slender Man’ stabber’s disappearance and the internet boogeyman who inspired her

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Amanda Musa, Chris Boyette, CNN

File photo. Morgan Geyser appears in a Waukesha County courtroom on 9 January 2025, in Waukesha, Wisconsin.

File photo. Morgan Geyser appears in a Waukesha County courtroom, Wisconsin, in January. Photo: Morry Gash / AP / File via CNN Newsource

Morgan Geyser, who was living under supervised release at a group home in Wisconsin for her role in the high-profile 2014 stabbing of her 12-year-old classmate, was found about 150 miles (240km) away in Illinois.

She had disappeared on Saturday night (US time) after cutting off her monitoring bracelet, according to police in Madison, Wisconsin.

On Sunday, officers in Posen, Illinois, responded to a report of people loitering behind a truck stop building and discovered a man and a woman sleeping on the sidewalk, police said.

Geyser, 23, initially gave officers a false name when they confronted her, according to Posen Police.

“After continued attempts to identify her, she finally stated that she didn’t want to tell officers who she was because she had ‘done something really bad,’ and suggested that officers could ‘just Google’ her name,” police said.

Years earlier, Geyser had pleaded guilty to attempted murder in the stabbing of her classmate, Payton Leutner. At the time, they were both 12 years old.

The grisly attack gripped the public’s attention and became the subject of heavy news coverage at the time, raising questions about how parents can keep tabs on everything kids consume online, and how they can be sure their children can truly separate reality from fantasy.

The crime was said to be inspired by the fictitious character Slender Man.

Here’s what we know about the search for Geyser and the internet-created boogeyman that prompted an attack that shocked the nation more than a decade ago.

Who is Slender Man?

Slender Man, a menacing, faceless man in a dark suit – sometimes portrayed with octopus-like tentacles – was a crowdsourced internet-created boogeyman that first appeared in an online forum in 2009, according to Shira Chess, an associate professor of entertainment and media studies at the University of Georgia and co-author of the book Folklore, Horror Stories, and the Slender Man.

“He falls broadly into a category of fiction that is colloquially referred to as ‘creepypasta,’ or internet legends that have meme-like qualities, typically lack known authorship, and are easily spreadable,” Chess told CNN in an email on Sunday.

In June 2009, a Photoshop contest for images that appeared to be paranormal was launched in a forum on the website Something Awful. According to Know Your Meme, a blog that chronicles web culture, the goal of the contest was to create the images and then use them to fool, or “troll,” other web users by submitting them to paranormal websites.

A recent image provided from the Madison Police Department of Morgan Geyser, captured on security video from this past month.

A recent image provided from the Madison Police Department of Morgan Geyser, captured on security video from this past month. Photo: Madison Police Department via CNN Newsource

Site member Eric Knudsen (under the screen name “Victor Surge”) submitted two images to the contest, both black-and-white images of children, one of which appeared to show a largely undefined figure lurking in the background.

Many imaginative fans saw Slender Man’s facelessness as a blank canvas in which to reimagine him in any number of ways, Chess added.

Following the stabbing, Geyser and her friend Anissa Weier told police they knew the character from the Creepypasta Wiki, a site that compiles such fiction. The site has issued a statement condemning the attack.

Slender Man’s popularity has gone down in recent years, according to Chess, who noted the fandom peaked in the early to mid-2010s.

“I can anecdotally say that he still performs the role of boogeyman on playgrounds,” Chess told CNN.

How did the stabbing unfold?

In May 2014, the trio had gone to Geyser’s home for a slumber party to celebrate her birthday, Leutner previously told ABC. During those times, Geyser constantly talked about Slender Man, she added.

“I thought it was odd. It kind of frightened me a little bit,” Leutner said of her friends’ fascination with the character. “But I went along with it. I was supportive because I thought that’s what she liked.”

As the friendship between Geyser and Weier grew, so did the pair’s fixation with Slender Man, Leutner said. While Leutner didn’t know her friends planned to harm her, something felt off that night in retrospect, she said.

“At all of our past sleepovers, (Geyser) always wanted to stay up all night because she could never do that at home,” Leutner said. “But on (the night of) the birthday party, she wanted to go to bed.”

Her friends later told investigators they had planned to kill Leutner in her sleep that night but then decided to do it the next morning at a nearby park.

When she woke up, Geyser and Weier were downstairs at a computer, so she joined them for doughnuts before heading to the park. They told her the plan was to play hide-and-seek and asked her to lie down under the leaves and sticks as part of the game, she said.

There in the woods, Geyser repeatedly stabbed her with a kitchen knife and she and Weier left her alone in the woods, bleeding and struggling to get help. After she crawled out of the woods, a passing bicyclist found her and called 911.

Leutner was stabbed near her heart, and she was “one millimeter away from certain death,” court documents said.

When the bicyclist found her, the girl pleaded, “Please help me. I’ve been stabbed,” audio from the 911 call revealed.

At age 15, Geyser pleaded guilty to a charge of attempted first-degree murder in a deal with prosecutors to be placed in a mental institution instead of serving jail time.

Weier pleaded guilty to attempted second-degree homicide due to mental illness or defect as part of a plea agreement. She was committed to 25 years in a mental hospital, The Associated Press reported, but was released in 2021 on condition she live with her father and wear a GPS monitor.

At her sentencing in 2018, Geyser apologized to Leutner and her family.

“I never meant this to happen,” a tearful Geyser said. “I hope that she is doing well.”

Where was Morgan Geyser?

Authorities said Sunday they were searching for Geyser, who was last seen in a residential neighborhood on the west side of Madison, Wisconsin, around 8pm on Saturday with an adult acquaintance, police said in a statement.

Police later said in an update they received confirmation around 10.34 pm that Geyser had been taken into custody in Illinois.

The pair traveled from Wisconsin by bus, Posen police said.

Authorities have not identified the acquaintance – who they say was taken into custody – but Posen police told The Associated Press he is 42 years old, was charged with criminal trespassing and obstructing identification and has since been released.

Geyser’s attorney, Tony Cotton, had earlier urged the 23-year-old to turn herself in immediately, saying in a statement: “We worked too hard to secure her freedom for her to continue on this path.”

It is unclear how Geyser broke out of the group home or who helped her, Cotton said in a video posted to social media.

CNN has reached out to Cotton for comment on her capture.

In January, a judge ordered Geyser could be released from the Winnebago Mental Health Institute, where she spent nearly seven years, The Associated Press reported.

Prosecutors attempted to block her release, alleging she has been quietly reading gory novels and communicating with a man who collects memorabilia from murderers, but a Waukesha County Circuit judge ordered her release after state and county health officials completed a community supervision and housing plan.

CNN has been unable to determine who runs the group home where Geyser was staying, but Madison police confirmed to CNN affiliate WMTV she has been living at a group home in Madison, on the same street where she had last been seen before fleeing Wisconsin.

Geyser faces no additional charges in Illinois, Posen police said, but will be held at Cook County jail to await extradition back to Wisconsin.

CNN

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‘Iconic’ Bollywood actor dies at 89

Source: Radio New Zealand

Dharmendra Deol, who became one of India’s most prominent actors and a Bollywood action hero, died in Mumbai on Monday, local media said. He was 89.

Dharmendra, who is survived by two wives and six children, had been ill for the past month and died at home, media reported.

There was no official statement from the actor’s family, but several of his contemporaries, including actor Amitabh Bachchan, gathered at a crematorium in the Mumbai suburb of Juhu for his funeral.

Bollywood actor Dharmendra (C) along with his sons Sunny Deol (R) and Bobby Deol poses for a photo on the occasion of his 89th birthday at his residence in Mumbai on December 8, 2024.

Bollywood actor Dharmendra (C) along with his sons Sunny Deol (R) and Bobby Deol at his 89th birthday celebration at his residence in Mumbai on 8 December, 2024.

AFP / Sujit Jaiswal

“A massive mega star, the embodiment of a hero in mainstream cinema,” producer and director Karan Johar, who cast Dharmendra in his 2023 film Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani (Rocky and Rani’s Love Story), wrote in an Instagram post.

Known to his legion of fans by his first name, Dharmendra acted in more than 300 films in a career spanning more than six decades.

Born in Punjab province in 1935, Dharmendra won a talent show organised by a film magazine, moving to Mumbai and acting in his first film in 1960.

In the years that followed, he appeared in everything from arthouse films to soft romances, action films and goofy comedies, making him the top actor of his generation.

Notable films included Bollywood cult classic Sholay (Embers), in which he played one half of a team of small-time thugs tasked with catching a bandit. The film, which was released in 1975, has become part of Indian popular culture and Dharmendra’s dialogue from the film has influenced movies ever since. In recent years, it has become a meme.

Dharmendra married his first wife, Prakash Kaur, before he found fame. After starring alongside Hema Malini in several films, he married her in 1980, without divorcing Prakash.

He was a lawmaker in the Indian parliament from 2004 to 2009.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President Draupadi Murmu and several others also sent their condolences on the actor’s death.

“He was an iconic film personality, a phenomenal actor who brought charm and depth to every role he played,” Modi said in a post on X.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Jimmy Cliff, reggae music pioneer, dies at 81

Source: Radio New Zealand

The cause was a seizure followed by pneumonia, she said.

Born James Chambers on 30 July, 1944 during a hurricane in St James Parish, northwestern Jamaica, he moved in the 1950s from the family farm to the country’s capital Kingston with his father, determined to succeed in the music industry.

At just 14, he became nationally famous for the song ‘Hurricane Hattie’, which he wrote.

Cliff would go on to record more than 30 albums and perform all over the world, including in Paris, in Brazil and at the World’s Fair, an international exhibition held in New York in 1964. The following year, Island Records’ Chris Blackwell, the producer who launched Bob Marley and the Wailers, invited Cliff to work in the UK with him.

Cliff later went into acting, starring in the 1972 classic film The Harder They Come, directed by Perry Henzell, which introduced an international audience to reggae music. The movie portrayed the grittier aspects of Jamaican life, redefining the island as more than a tourist playground of cocktails, beaches and waterfalls.

“When I’ve achieved all my ambitions, then I guess that I will have done it and I can just say ‘great’,” he said in a 2019 interview, as he was losing his sight.

“But I’m still hungry. I want it. I’ve still got the burning fire that burns brightly inside of me – like I just said to you. I still have many rivers to cross!”

Known in part for singles ‘You Can Get It If You Really Want It’ and ‘Many Rivers To Cross’, as well as for his covers of Johnny Nash’s ‘I Can See Clearly Now’, which appeared on the soundtrack of the 1993 movie Cool Runnings, and Cat Stevens’ ‘Wild World’, Cliff was a prolific writer who weaved his humanitarian views into his songs.

Bob Dylan said Cliff’s ‘Vietnam’ was the best protest song ever written.

The anti-establishment bent of Cliff’s music gave a voice not only to the hardships faced by Jamaicans, but to the spirit and joy that persevered in spite of poverty and oppression. Over the years, Cliff worked with the Rolling Stones, Elvis Costello, Annie Lennox and Paul Simon.

In 2012, he won a Grammy Award for best reggae album for Rebirth, which was produced by punk band Rancid’s Tim Armstrong, and another Grammy in 1984 for Cliff Hanger.

Cliff received the Order of Merit, the highest honour in the arts and sciences, from the Jamaican government. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand