Lindsay Lohan says she was profiled while wearing headscarf

Lindsay Lohan
Updated 21 February 2017
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Lindsay Lohan says she was profiled while wearing headscarf

LONDON: Lindsay Lohan, 30, claims she was “racially profiled” while wearing a headscarf at London’s Heathrow Airport.
The actress told a British talk show that she was stopped while traveling to New York.
She said an airport worker “opened my passport and saw ‘Lindsay Lohan’ and started immediately apologizing, but then said: ‘Please take off your headscarf.’“
What scared the Mean Girls star was that moment, how would another woman who doesn’t feel comfortable taking off her headscarf feel? “That was really interesting to me. I was kind of in shock,” she told “Good Morning Britain” on Tuesday.
Speaking to Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid, Lohan said that such an incident happens to her for the first time in her life.
Lohan was returning from Turkey, where she recently met President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
She said she wore a headscarf in Turkey out of “personal respect,” initially but then kept it on in order not to be recognized at the Airport.
Lohan, who has been photographed carrying a Qur’an, says she finds “solace” studying the Muslim holy book and other religious texts in addition to meditation. “You can’t just convert to a religion overnight. I just study it, nothing is confirmed yet.
The actress said that she does not want to speak on something she has not finished yet.
Lohan finds the Islamic culture to be close to her. “I feel it’s a like a family,” she said as many of her friends are Arabs. “They have been really good people to me,” she added.
She expressed her desire in learning the Arabic language to be able to discuss Syrian issues. “It calms me. It’s something I’m interested in.”

With input from AP


Ghana’s president urged to rally African leaders behind push for slavery reparations

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Ghana’s president urged to rally African leaders behind push for slavery reparations

Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama held talks with a global delegation seeking reparations for transatlantic slavery and colonialism, who urged him to rally other ​African leaders to choose “courage over comfort” and support the growing movement.
The delegation, made up of experts from Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, Latin America, and the United States, presented Mahama with priority actions under the African Union’s (AU) reparations agenda, it said in a statement on Friday. In February, the AU launched ‌a drive ‌to create a “unified vision” on what ‌reparations ⁠may ​look ‌like, from financial compensation and formal acknowledgments of past wrongs to policy reforms. At least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transported by European ships, then sold into slavery from the 15th to the 19th centuries. Advocates say action is needed to confront today’s legacies, including racism. Calls ⁠for reparations have gained momentum but there is also a growing ‌backlash. Many European leaders have opposed ‍even discussing the matter, with ‍opponents arguing today’s states and institutions should not ‍be held responsible for historical wrongs.
While Ghana has been at the forefront of reparations advocacy in Africa, the delegation emphasized the need for “strategic coherence and unity” among political leaders ​across the continent.
They urged Mahama to encourage other leaders to “choose courage over comfort” by standing with ⁠civil society and affected communities in Africa and the diaspora in demanding reparations.
The delegation also met on Wednesday with Ghana’s Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa and Mahama’s envoy on reparations Ekwow Spio-Garbrah.
At a European Union–AU summit in Luanda, Angola’s capital, last month, leaders from both regions acknowledged the “untold suffering” caused by slavery and colonialism but stopped short of committing to reparations.
During the summit, Ghana’s Vice President Jane Opoku-Agyemang urged EU member states to support ‌a UN resolution Ghana is preparing to recognize slavery as one of the “gravest crimes against humanity.”