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Ministers back campaign to put Noor Inayat Khan on £50 note

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Noor Inayat Khan or Harry Maguire: Who will be on the new £50 note?

The £50 note is getting a plastic redesign - and a new famous face.

Steam engine pioneers James Watt and Matthew Boulton appear on the current £50, issued in 2011.

The Bank of England is now seeking nominations from the public for figures to feature on the note. So who are the contenders?

Noor Inayat Khan

Who:

Raised in Britain and France and a descendant of Indian royalty, Noor Inayat Khan was a secret agent for Britain during World War Two. Records show she was the first female wireless operator sent to Nazi-occupied France during the war, aged just 29. She evaded capture for three months but was eventually arrested and imprisoned by the Nazis. Despite suffering months of torture she refused to reveal any information and was transferred to Dachau concentration camp in Germany, where she was killed in 1944.

Why:

A petition supporting Noor Inayat Khan has already attracted more than 1,300 signatures, with supporters including Conservative MP and former Army officer Tom Tugendhat and historian and BBC presenter Dan Snow. No UK banknote has ever featured a person from an ethnic minority and the petition calls for the "remarkable" woman's bravery to be recognised as an example of the "positive contributions" of Muslims to Britain.

Odds:

16/1

Mary Seacole

Who:

Mary Seacole was a Jamaican-born nurse who cared for wounded British soldiers during the Crimean War. In 1854 she travelled to England and approached the War Office, asking to be sent as an Army nurse to the Crimea, but was refused. Undaunted, Seacole funded the trip herself and established the British Hotel near Balaclava to provide food, supplies and medicines to troops as well as nursing the wounded on the battlefield.

Why:

Many have argued that in the past Mary Seacole's work has been overshadowed by her contemporary Florence Nightingale, who was also a nurse during the Crimean War. However in 2004, Seacole was voted the greatest black Briton and her achievements against a backdrop of discrimination in the 19th Century are becoming more widely recognised. In 2016 a memorial statue was unveiled in London in her honour and Labour MP David Lammy praised the fact her "pioneering work" had "finally been recognised".

Odds:

10/1

Stephen Hawking

Who:

The British physicist died earlier this year aged 76 and is widely regarded as one of the most important scientists of his generation. At the age of 22 Hawking was given only a few years to live after being diagnosed with a rare form of motor neurone disease. But despite his illness he completed groundbreaking work on black holes and relativity throughout his career.

Why:

Hawking's book A Brief History of Time was an unlikely best-seller and he became a popular ambassador for science. He was even depicted in an episode of The Simpsons. The physicist's achievements have been recognised with numerous medals and awards, and following his death in March, he is among the favourites to be given the posthumous honour.

Odds:

16/1

Clement Atlee

Who:

Clement Atlee was leader of the Labour Party from 1935 to 1955. He served as deputy prime minister in Winston Churchill's coalition government and was then prime minister from 1945 to 1951. His government introduced the National Health Service, nationalised one-fifth of the British economy, including the coal and steel industry, and granted independence to India.

Why:

His administration is often credited with founding the modern welfare state, and in the NHS's 70th birthday year, a tribute to the man who oversaw its introduction may seem fitting.

Odds:

10/1

Margaret Thatcher

Who:

Margaret Thatcher occupied 10 Downing Street as Conservative leader and prime minister from 1979 to 1990. She was both the UK's first female PM and the country's longest-serving leader of the 20th Century. Her policies gave thousands of people the chance to buy their council houses and snap up shares in newly-privatised industries like British Gas and BT. She died in 2013 after suffering a stroke.

Why:

Despite being a divisive figure, Margaret Thatcher is widely considered one of the most influential political figures of the 20th Century. A petition calling for her to be chosen as the new face of the £50 note has attracted more than 12,000 signatures. With just one of the UK's banknotes featuring a woman other than the Queen, the petition argues there would be no-one more appropriate to feature than the country's first female prime minister.

Odds?

16/1

Among the more original suggestions is a picture of England defender Harry Maguire riding an inflatable unicorn. The idea was proposed by sports journalist Jonny Sharples and a petition has already reached more than 25,000 signatures.

Sadly for fans, it seems an unlikely option - the Bank of England has said that apart from the Queen, living Britons cannot feature on currency.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-45894306
 
British politicians have thrown their weight behind a campaign to make a Muslim spy who resisted the Nazis the new face of the £50 note.

Aged just 29, Noor Inayat Khan was parachuted into occupied France to serve as a radio operator behind enemy lines during the Second World War. She helped run the Prosper network of resistance communications in Paris, an Special Operations Executive established by Winston Churchill in order to “set Europe ablaze”.

As mass arrests by the Gestapo stifled the allies’ communications networks across France, Khan refused to leave her French colleagues and single-handedly ran a cell of agents in Paris for 3 months. However, she was eventually betrayed and captured by the Nazis, eventually perishing in Dachau concentration camp.

Born to a wealthy American mother, and an Indian Muslim father in Moscow, the Sufi operative began her career as a children’s writer in Paris before joining the war effort. A bust of her was unveiled in London in 2012 by Princess Anne.

The campaign has gathered support from senior MPs including Nusrat Ghani, Transport and Maritime Minister, as well as Tom Tugendhat, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.

Zehra Zaidi, who is helping lead the campaign, told The Telegraph: “Noor Inayat Khan was an inspirational and complex woman who was a Brit, a soldier, a writer, a Muslim, an Indian independence supporter, a Sufi, a fighter against fascism and a heroine to all. She navigated complex identities and has so much resonance in the world we live in today.”

Tom Tugendhat said: "She was murdered in Dachau concentration camp and posthumously awarded the George Cross for her extraordinary courage fighting evil.

"She must be pretty unusual if not absolutely unique - it's nothing to do with her race, religion or sex - this is a woman who had everything, who came from a life of great privilege.

“Her heritage would have made it very easy for her not to step up to the call of duty. She could have lived a very comfortable life, but put everything on the line before being murdered in Dachau.”

https://www.thenational.ae/world/eu...-muslim-heroine-on-british-bank-note-1.781534

Noor.jpg

Fully support this. She was a truly brave lady. [MENTION=7774]Robert[/MENTION]
 
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View attachment 84713

Fully support this. She was a truly brave lady. [MENTION=7774]Robert[/MENTION]

Personally I would support a male world war II hero from the subcontinent. Thousands upon thousands lost their lives fighting for the allied forces, Britain could do with recognition of their services. We already have Malala as a female heroine from Pakistan, we need role models for the young males as well. They need to know there are alternatives to Anjem Choudery and Rochdale groomers.
 
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A Muslim woman who became an "unlikely spy" for Britain when she was dropped into occupied France during the Second World War has been honoured with a blue plaque at the site of her family home in London.

Noor Inayat Khan, dubbed "Britain's first Muslim war heroine in Europe", served in the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during the conflict.

Khan was born in 1914 in Moscow, but her family quickly moved to Bloomsbury in London's West End at the outset of the First World War.

They then moved to France, where she looked after her mother and siblings following the death of her father.

However, in 1940, the family fled occupied France to Falmouth in Cornwall, where she joined the Women's Auxiliary Air Force and trained as a radio operator, despite her Sufi pacifist beliefs.

She was recruited to the SOE - which was set up by Winston Churchill - in 1943, and was then sent back to France as an undercover radio operator.

In October that year, she was arrested by the Gestapo - the secret police of Nazi Germany - after she was betrayed by a French double agent, who was reportedly paid to hand her over.

Khan was questioned by Gestapo agents, who managed to imitate her over the radio so as not to arouse suspicion, but she escaped along with other members of the SOE.

She was recaptured nearby and taken to a German prison, where she was shackled and interrogated. She refused to cooperate, and managed to scratch carvings of her address on to her bowl so other prisoners could identify her.

After 10 months she was taken to the Dachau concentration camp, where she was executed with three other women.

The English Heritage tribute will mark the London family home which Khan left for Nazi-occupied France.

Shrabani Basu, Khan's biographer, is unveiling the plaque on Taviton Street in Bloomsbury.

"When Noor Inayat Khan left this house on her last mission, she would never have dreamed that one day she would become a symbol of bravery. She was an unlikely spy," she said.

"As a Sufi she believed in non-violence and religious harmony. Yet when her adopted country needed her, she unhesitatingly gave her life in the fight against fascism.

"It is fitting that Noor Inayat Khan is the first woman of Indian origin to be remembered with a blue plaque. As people walk by, Noor's story will continue to inspire future generations.

"In today's world, her vision of unity and freedom is more important than ever."

The plaque will be unveiled at the address that Khan etched on to her bowl while in prison, with a virtual ceremony broadcast on English Heritage's Facebook page at 7pm on Friday.

Khan's plaque comes after English Heritage admitted the number of women represented by the scheme is "still unacceptably low", with only 14% of London's 950 plaques representing women.

The charity said that "if we are to continue to see a significant increase in the number of blue plaques for women, we need more female suggestions".

https://news.sky.com/story/noor-ina...in-in-wwii-honoured-with-blue-plaque-12058092
 
Personally I would support a male world war II hero from the subcontinent. Thousands upon thousands lost their lives fighting for the allied forces, Britain could do with recognition of their services. We already have Malala as a female heroine from Pakistan, we need role models for the young males as well. They need to know there are alternatives to Anjem Choudery and Rochdale groomers.

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