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Lagos govt hails Fela’s posthumous Grammy honour

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Fela Kuti

The Lagos State Government has hailed the family of the late Afrobeat legend Fela Anikulapo-Kuti following his posthumous recognition with the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.

It describes the honour as a defining moment for African music and culture.

Fela made history as the first African artist to receive the prestigious award, presented on January 31, 2026, during the Grammy Special Merit Awards ceremony in Los Angeles, United States.

The award was accepted on his behalf by his children, Yeni, Femi, Kunle, and Shalewa Kuti, who represented the family at the ceremony.

Reacting to the development, the Lagos State Commissioner for Tourism, Arts and Culture, Mrs Toke Benson-Awoyinka, described the recognition as a landmark achievement that reflects the global influence of Fela’s music and message.

Reacting to the development, the Lagos State Commissioner for Tourism, Arts and Culture, Mrs Toke Benson-Awoyinka, described the recognition as a landmark achievement that reflects the global influence of Fela’s music and message.

According to her, honour is not only a victory for the Kuti family but also a source of pride for Lagos State, Nigeria, and the African continent.

“This historic recognition is a powerful reminder of Lagos State’s enduring position as the cultural heartbeat of Africa and a nurturing ground for creative excellence,” Benson-Awoyinka said.

She noted that Fela’s work placed African music on the world map and continues to resonate across generations, long after his passing.

The commissioner added that the Grammy honour reinforces the state government’s commitment to preserving Fela’s legacy and strengthening the creative sector through sustained support for the arts, culture, and cultural diplomacy.

“Fela’s contribution to global music and social consciousness remains immeasurable. His music boldly confronted military dictatorship, corruption, social injustice, and the oppression of the mass , while amplifying Africa’s voice on the global stage,” she said.

She further stated that nearly three decades after his death, Fela’s music remains relevant, influential, and widely celebrated across the world.

Meanwhile, members of the Kuti family described the award as a deeply meaningful moment, noting that it symbolises a bridge between generations and reflects the growing global recognition of African music and cultural expression.

They noted that the honour affirms Fela’s lasting impact, not only as a musician but as a cultural revolutionary whose work inspired resistance, dialogue, and artistic freedom.

Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, the creator of Afrobeat, was known for blending traditional African rhythms with jazz, funk, and highlife, and for using his music as a vehicle for political expression and social critique.

Beyond music, he emerged as one of Africa’s most fearless voices against oppression, earning global attention for his activism and uncompromising stance against injustice.

Today, his influence is evident in the work of numerous artists across Africa and beyond, as Afrobeat continues to shape global music trends.

The Lagos State Government reaffirmed its commitment to promoting the state’s rich cultural heritage and ensuring that the legacies of iconic figures like Fela Anikulapo-Kuti are preserved and celebrated for future generations.

Samini confirms February 12 for release of eighth album ‘ORIGIN8A’

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Samini

Dancehall and Reggae superstar, Samini has revealed plans to release his eighth studio album, ORIGIN8A, on February 12, 2026.

The album, which represents a landmark moment in Samini’s career, has its cover art featuring a prominent 8 ball, an image chosen to signify destiny, alignment, wholeness, and a return to the artist’s musical roots.

Describing the album’s inspiration, Samini called ORIGIN8A a deeply personal work that speaks to growth, reconciliation, and purpose.

“This album represents my journey coming full circle. ORIGIN8A is about remembering where I come from, reconnecting with my roots, and celebrating the people who shaped my story,” Samini said.

ORIGIN8A is more than a collection of songs. It is a homecoming that brings back several artists Samini mentored earlier in their careers.

Confirmed features on the album include Mugeez of R2Bees, Stonebwoy, Kofi Kinaata, and Kaakie. These collaborations signify unity, mutual respect, and shared history within Ghana’s music community.

The album also features an eclectic mix of collaborators such as the internationally acclaimed Soweto Gospel Choir, M.anifest, and Kuami Eugene. Together they helped shape the project that blends generations and cultural influences under a single artistic vision.

On the musical front, ORIGIN8A offers a pan-African palette. The album weaves in traditional African rhythms, highlife, Afrobeats, Afropop, Amapiano, African dancehall, and reggae.

The result showcases Samini’s artistic growth while staying true to the sounds that defined his early years and influenced Ghana’s contemporary music scene.

Samini says the 8-ball motif carries a strong meaning beyond the cover image.

“After all the years of experimenting, touring, and evolving, I believe this is the moment where everything aligns again. ORIGIN8A is purpose-driven music,” he said.

The album will be distributed globally by Prime Music Partners and will be available on all major streaming services on the release date.

“Samini is one of Africa’s most authentic musical voices. ORIGIN8A is not just an album; it is a cultural statement. We are proud to be distributing this project and sharing its message with audiences across the world,” Akeju said.

ORIGIN8A is scheduled to arrive on digital platforms on February 12, 2026, adding a new chapter to Samini’s ongoing legacy in African music.

Son of Libya’s late dictator Gadhafi shot dead by gunmen

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Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, the son of former Libyan leader

Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, the son of former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, has been killed in an apparent assassination at his home in the city of Zintan in northwestern Libya, the head of his political team said on Tuesday. He was 53.

Saif al-Islam Gadhafi was once seen as the heir-apparent to his dictator father –– who was executed after his regime was toppled at the height of the Arab Spring protests in 2011 –– and had in recent years been making a play to return to politics in Libya.

Four masked assailants stormed Saif al-Islam Gadhafi’s residence and disabled security cameras before fatally shooting him in a “treacherous and cowardly” attack, his political advisor Abdullah Othman said in a social media statement.

No official confirmation has been issued by Libyan authorities, and there has been no immediate comment from the International Criminal Court (ICC), which has long sought the younger Gadhafi’s arrest on charges of crimes against humanity.

Born on June 25, 1972, in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi was the second son of Moammar Gadhafi, who ruled Libya from 1969 until his overthrow and death in 2011.

A fluent English speaker, he was educated overseas, including at the London School of Economics.

Credit: bbc.com

Israeli attacks on Gaza kill 21 in one of deadliest days since ‘ceasefire’

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Israeli attacks Gaza

Israel has killed at least 21 Palestinians in attacks across the Gaza Strip in one of the deadliest days since an October “ceasefire” began, according to medical sources.

The sources told Al Jazeera several children were among the casualties on Wednesday.

At least 14 people were killed in Israeli shelling on the Tuffah and Zeitoun neighbourhoods of Gaza City. Another four were reported dead in an attack on tents sheltering displaced people in the Qizan Abu Rashwan area, south of Khan Younis, in southern Gaza.

An additional two people were killed by Israeli air attacks on the al-Mawasi coastal tent camp. The Palestine Red Crescent Society said one of the victims was one of its paramedics.

Reporting from Khan Younis, Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum said a number of residential homes in Gaza City “have been squarely targeted without any prior warning”.

Abu Azzoum said the attacks, occurring despite a United States-brokered “ceasefire” supposedly being in place, have left Palestinians in Gaza “without any sense of respite”.

“There has been a surge in Israel’s military activities across Gaza in the past few hours,” he said. “We can hear the … sound of Israeli drones hovering overhead, giving a sign of further potential attacks that might take place.”

Israel’s military said its armoured units and aircraft conducted attacks in northern Gaza after a reserve officer came under fire and was severely injured.

It said the officer was evacuated to hospital after the incident, which took place “during routine operational activity” near the “yellow line” that demarcates areas under Israeli military control.

Abu Azzoum said Israel was moving the location of the “yellow line” in eastern Gaza, causing anxiety for residents there.

Israel has killed more than 520 Palestinians since the “ceasefire” went into effect nearly four months ago.

Credit: aljazeera.com

 

Thousands without power in freezing Ukraine as renewed Russian strikes continue

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Thousands without power in freezing Ukraine

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky says more than 200 repair crews are working to restore power in Kyiv following widespread Russian attacks targeting the country’s energy sector.

More than 1,100 apartment buildings in the capital are still without power, Zelensky said, adding that he said he had spoken to officials about supporting communities in other affected parts of the country.

Russia has recently renewed its attacks following a week-long pause that US President Donald Trump had asked Vladimir Putin to observe as a fierce cold swept Ukraine.

Meanwhile, US, Ukrainian and Russian officials are again meeting in Abu Dhabi to discuss details of a peace plan.

“As of today, the toughest situation is in Kyiv and the region, Kharkiv and the region, Sumy region, and Poltava region,” Zelensky wrote on social media on Wednesday.

“It is also difficult in other parts of central Ukraine, including Dnipro and Cherkasy regions.”

He added that more repair teams would be brought in to help restore power “to ensure proper rotation of crew members – people are exhausted.”

Residents have been forced to spend the night sheltering in Kyiv’s metro stations, with some pitching tents on the platforms to protect them from the freezing cold.

Authorities have set up centres around the city for people to go to warm up. They are also importing more generators to cope with longer blackout periods as engineers try to fix the damage.

In the eastern city of Kharkiv, a power plant has been damaged beyond repair.

Credit: bbc.com

Trump says talks with Iran continuing as US shoots down an Iranian drone

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President Donald Trump

United States President Donald Trump has said that talks with Iran are continuing to try to de-escalate tensions in the Gulf, even as the US military announced shooting down an Iranian drone that approached its aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea.

Trump told reporters at the White House on Tuesday that Washington was negotiating with Iran “right now”, but declined to say where the talks were taking place.

“[The talks] are all over. But they are negotiating. They’d like to do something, and we’ll see if something is going to be done,” he said.

“They had a chance to do something a while ago, and it didn’t work out. And we did ‘Midnight Hammer’, I don’t think they want that happening again,” he added, referring to the operation last June in which the US Air Force and Navy struck three Iranian nuclear facilities.

Trump, who has been pushing Tehran to agree to talks over its nuclear programme, has repeatedly threatened to attack the country again over a recent crackdown on antigovernment protests. The US president sent the USS Abraham Lincoln to the Gulf last week, leading to fears of a possible military confrontation.

The carrier strike group, which brought roughly 5,700 additional US troops, joined three destroyers and three littoral combat ships that were already in the region.

Tensions have been easing in recent days amid a push by regional powers for a resolution.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said earlier on Tuesday that he had instructed the country’s foreign minister to “pursue fair and equitable negotiations, guided by the principles of dignity, prudence, and expediency”, provided that a “suitable environment exists”.

“These negotiations shall be conducted within the framework of our national interests,” Pezeshkian added.

Credit: aljazeera.com

Chronic Migraine: Causes, Symptoms and Treatment

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What Is Chronic Migraine?

Most people who’re prone to migraine get a painful attack once or twice a month. But if you have the condition known as chronic migraine, you get headaches much more often – 15 or more days a month for at least 3 months.

Migraine is a very common type of headache. It causes a severe throbbing pain, often on one side of your head, along with nausea vomiting, and/or sensitivity to light and sound. This means you find bright lights and loud noises unbearable. Your migraine might last a few hours or a few days. During that time, you might be in so much pain that you can’t work or do any other activities.

The two main types of migraines are:

  • Migraine with aura
  • Migraine without aura

Migraine with aura means you see flashing lights or blind spots, or have some kind of muscle weakness before your migraine attack. Migraine without aura means that you don’t get these cues beforehand. It’s more common to have migraine without aura. About 14% of the world’s population has migraine. You might either have episodic migraine or chronic migraine.

Chronic Migraine Symptoms

If you have chronic migraines you don’t need to be told how painful it is. This isn’t just a “bad” headache. People with migraine often go through four stages: prodrome, aura, attack, and postdrome. Here are the symptoms of chronic migraine, keeping in mind that not everyone goes through all the stages:

Prodrome stage

A day or two before a migraine you might have:

  • Constipation
  • Food cravings
  • Neck stiffness
  • Mood changes
  • More frequent urination (peeing)
  • Increased yawning

Aura

Before or during a migraine headache, you might:

  • See flashing lights, colors, lines, or shadows
  • Lose vision
  • Get tingling face, hands, or feet
  • Lose strength
  • Become dizzy or have vertigo (feeling like you’re spinning)

Attack

The headache can last 4-72 hours if not treated. During this time, you might have:

  • Bad throbbing pain on one or both sides of your head
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Extreme sensitivity to bright lights, sounds, touch, and smells

Postdrome

You might find your chronic migraine stops suddenly or fades away slowly. For a day after an attack you might feel:

  • Drained
  • Fatigued, as if you had a hangover
  • Similar to how you felt in the prodrome stage; for instance, food cravings might return
  • Elated that the headache is over

Chronic migraine can take a toll on your personal life. If you get painful headaches for half of each month, you lose days of work or school and precious time with friends and family. It’s common for people with chronic migraines to also have depression.

Can I Prevent Chronic Migraines?

Taking care of yourself every day may prevent your migraine from turning into a long-term problem. For instance:

Catch some ZZZs

Not getting enough sleep can trigger a migraine episode. Aim for 7-8 hours of rest each night.

Watch your diet

While caffeine can soothe your pain, stopping it suddenly is a common cause of migraine. Other common food triggers include MSG (monosodium glutamate), aged cheeses, chocolate, nitrates in cured meats like hot dogs, artificial sweeteners, and alcohol.

Manage your stress

Tension and worry are common triggers. Try to carve out a few minutes each day to do something you love, or learn to breathe deeply when you’re having a crisis. You might join a support group or talk to a counselor.

Have a meal plan

Fasting and skipping meals can trigger headaches. Try to eat around the same times each day.

Get moving

Exercise is a good way to ease your anxiety and stress. It can also help you get to, and stay at, a healthy weight. Since obesity raises your risk of chronic migraines, getting in shape is crucial.

Know your triggers

Not all migraine attacks result from triggers. But one way to know whether you have triggers is to keep a headache diary. Each time you have an attack, write down details about what you were doing or eating, how long the headache lasted, and how you felt before it started. This will help you begin to notice patterns – and avoid your triggers. For instance, some people notice drinking coffee gives them a headache, while others feel it helps to take one away.

Credit: webmd

Feature: Kwaku Azar Writes: A nation at peace with itself doesn’t spend endless time renaming its landmarks

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Kotoka International Airport

A nation that is at peace with itself does not spend its time endlessly renaming its landmarks. It spends its time understanding them.

The renewed call and bill to rename Kotoka International Airport is not really about aviation, transport, or national branding.

It is about how we choose to relate to our past; whether we engage it honestly, in all its complexity, or reduce it to slogans, moral shortcuts, and selective outrage.

History is not a courtroom where only the innocent deserve to be remembered. It is a record of human struggle, flawed, contested, contradictory, and it demands maturity, not sanitization.

 

  1. The Seduction of Simplism

The argument is often framed this way: Kotoka was part of the 1966 coup; coups are bad; therefore his name must go.

That logic is emotionally satisfying but historically unserious. By that standard, we would have to unravel far more than an airport name.

Our 1992 Constitution (PNDCL 282), the very document that anchors our democratic order and safeguards our freedoms, was promulgated under a military regime and signed into law by a coup leader.

Yet no serious person argues that we must discard it for that reason. We do not, because we understand that legitimacy can evolve, and that constitutional value is not erased by the circumstances of origin.History often works that way.

 

  1. Why Kotoka International Airport?

The appeal of the simplistic claim that the airport’s name exists to celebrate the 1966 coup rests on an incomplete reading of history.

The renaming of KIA was not intended to glorify the overthrow of Kwame Nkrumah.

It was a memorial decision tied to a later and more specific event (see, General Kotoka Trust Decree, 1969 (N.L.C.D. 339), which expressly lists “the re-naming of the Accra International Airport as ‘Kotoka International Airport’” as one of the objects of the Trust (para. 8(1)(a)). In 1967, during an attempted counter-coup known as Operation Guitar Boy, Lt. Gen. Emmanuel Kwasi Kotoka was shot and killed at the Airport while resisting the uprising. Several other officers and soldiers also lost their lives in the violence of that abortive attempt. The airport was later renamed to mark the site of his death, not to sanctify military intervention in politics.

The name therefore, records a moment of national turmoil rather than endorsing it, serving as a historical marker of our early post-independence instability, an act of remembrance, not celebration.

 

  1. Nkrumah, One-Party Rule, and Historical Consistency

Consider another uncomfortable truth. On February 1, 1964, we became a one-party state under Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, through a referendum that effectively eliminated political pluralism. The referendum results, reporting 99.91% approval with a turnout of 96.5%, were widely questioned, with critics describing the outcome as implausible and raising concerns about the integrity of the process.

Our current constitutional order explicitly abhors one-party rule. Yet no one proposes renaming institutions, streets, or monuments bearing Nkrumah’s name because of that historical fact. And rightly so!

We do not honour Nkrumah because he was infallible. We honour him because he was foundational, consequential, and inseparable from the Ghanaian story, both its triumphs and its failures. Why, then, do we suddenly pretend that historical figures must meet modern moral purity tests to remain part of our public memory?

 

  1. Colonialism, Names, and Historical Honesty

Much of Accra’s civic geography already bears the imprint of colonial power. James Town, Ussher Fort, Cantonments, Osu, Labone, Pig Farm, etc. are not neutral names; they are reminders of conquest, administration, and extraction.

Yet they remain, not because we celebrate colonialism, but because we recognize that history does not disappear when names change.

We did not become free by pretending colonialism never happened. We became free by understanding it, confronting it, and then building beyond it.

These names now function as historical markers; entry points for education about who ruled, how power was exercised, and what our forefathers overcame.

If colonial-era names have not erased our sovereignty or dignity, then neither do retaining post-independence names that reflect our own complex struggles.

The lesson is not that names are sacred. It is that memory matters more than cosmetic erasure. A confident nation does not cleanse its map to feel virtuous. It teaches its people to read the map, critically, honestly, and without fear.

 

  1. What Names Actually Do

Names are not endorsements. They are anchors of memory.

KIA does not ask travelers to celebrate coups. It reminds us, silently and persistently, of a turbulent chapter in our national journey: post-independence authoritarianism, military intervention, Cold War pressures, internal dissent, and the long, painful road to constitutional democracy. Erasing the name does not heal that history. It merely hides it.

A mature nation does not erase uncomfortable chapters; it teaches them.

 

  1. Institutional Humility

There is also a question of institutional humility. Names that have endured for more than six decades have survived not one political moment, but military rule, constitutional change, democratic transition, and generational turnover. They have been contested, debated, and ultimately retained. Each generation has the right to question history. But no generation has the right to treat every inherited symbol as if it were freshly imposed. Longevity is not accidental. It is itself a form of democratic ratification, quiet, cumulative, and earned over time.

A society that reopens settled symbols every generation does not deepen democracy; it destabilizes memory.

 

  1. The Cost of Endless Renaming

There is also a practical wisdom we seem determined to ignore.

After more than six decades of public, legal, international, and cultural usage, KIA is embedded in aviation systems, treaties, maps, branding, and global consciousness. Renaming it now produces costs, financial, administrative, symbolic, without producing any serious national gain.

What problem, exactly, does this solve? Does it improve education? Does it deepen reconciliation? Does it strengthen democracy?Or does it simply create the illusion of moral action while leaving deeper structural issues untouched?

 

  1. What a Confident Republic Does

A nation confident in its identity does not make renaming its first resort in the pursuit of historical justice. It draws from a richer and more serious toolkit: contextualisation, education, sustained public debate, and, where truly warranted, carefully considered change. What distinguishes mature democracies is not that they never rename, but that they refuse to mistake renaming for reckoning. They resist the easy comfort of symbolism and instead commit to building a public memory that is honest, durable, and complete. That is what grown democracies do.

If the concern is education, then the answer is not erasure but explanation. Let’s add plaques, timelines, and public history that tell the full story.

If the concern is context, then the solution is not renaming but teaching. Let’s strengthen how we teach our history, in schools and in public spaces, without fear or selectivity.If the concern is moral reckoning, then the path is not symbolism but honesty. Let’s have open debates, confront the past directly, and argue our values in the open. But let us stop pretending that changing names is the same as confronting history.

It is not. It is avoidance dressed up as virtue. Our history, like all real histories, is complex, uncomfortable, and sometimes tragic. Our task is not to simplify it to fit present-day sensibilities, but to carry it honestly, learn from it, and move forward without amnesia.

Kotoka International Airport does not

Forgetting how and why it got its name just might.

PS: Yɛde post no bɛto hɔ. Yɛnyɛ comprehension consultants.

Da Yie!

 

SOURCE : CITINEWS

Kante joins Fenerbahce after deal revival

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N'Golo Kante

Fenerbahce have confirmed the signing of France midfielder N’Golo Kante from Saudi Pro League side Al-Ittihad.

The Frenchman’s hopes of joining the Turkish club appeared to be over on Tuesday, when Fenerbahce released a statement blaming Al-Ittihad for the collapse of the the move.

Fenerbahce claimed Al-Ittihad failed to file the necessary paperwork to complete the transfer, which involves Morocco striker Youssef En-Nesyri moving in the opposite direction.

However, Fenerbahce confirmed on Wednesday that the issue had been resolved and that former Chelsea player Kante had joined the club after two and a half years in Saudi Arabia.

Kante, 34, joined Al-Ittihad from Chelsea in 2023, having won the Champions League, Premier League, Europa League and FA Cup with the London side.

He joined the Blues from Leicester City in 2016, having guided the Foxes to the Premier League trophy the previous season.

En-Nesyri, 28, is a replacement for former Real Madrid striker Karim Benzema, who left the club earlier this week to join Saudi Pro rivals Al-Hilal.

Credit: bbc.com

Premier League January transfers: Which club enjoyed a masterstroke of a window?

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Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi

The January transfer window concluded on Monday evening with the squads of all 20 clubs now finalised until the end of the season, unless they sign a free agent.

Some teams made some big business, while some did chose to save their money until the summer.

Written in the current order of the Premier League standings, Daily Mail Sport has looked at the move of every team and given them a grade.

1st) Arsenal: Arsenal didn’t need anybody but clearly had a worse window than Manchester City. Could that bite them come May? Finding a loan for Ethan Nwaneri was wise – he has hit the ground running at Marseille.

Fulham fans should be excited by the arrival of Oscar Bobb

2nd) Manchester City: Signing Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi for a combined £82.5million – ahead of rivals – was a masterstroke. They bagged £27m from Fulham for Oscar Bobb and sorted a loan to Sheffield United for Kalvin Phillips.

3rd) Aston Villa: Strengthened for now and the future. The signings of Tammy Abraham and Alysson and a loan for Douglas Luiz add depth to Unai Emery‘s injury-hit side for the run-in.

4th) Manchester United: Would ideally have added midfield depth to aid their Champions League push, but they are targeting major surgery in the summer so wanted to preserve funds.

5th) Chelsea: No additions. Missing out on Jeremy Jacquet to Liverpool is a major blow if he turns out to be good. Letting Raheem Sterling and Axel Disasi go was, at least, the honourable thing to do.

6th) Liverpool: Losing the race for Marc Guehi from pole position was poor. They’ve lined up lots of prospects to arrive in the summer – most notably Jacquet for £60m from Rennes – but nobody knows how good they’ll be.

7th) Brentford: Signed the highly rated 18-year-old forward Kaye Furo from Club Brugge and that’s it. Offloaded deadwood and peripheral figures.

8th) Sunderland: After a chaotic summer window, this was calmer waters. Deadline day saw the arrival of winger Nilson Angulo from Anderlecht. But with Sunderland flying this season: if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

9th) Fulham: Signed the highly-rated Oscar Bobb who should flourish in west London and kept the in-form Harry Wilson. Failed to land striker Ricardo Pepi though, something they’ll revisit in the summer.

10th) Everton: Added Tyrique George to bolster their attacking options on deadline day, but it was a quiet window as expected for the Toffees.

Jeremy Jacquet will join Liverpool in the summer

11th) Newcastle: Failed to add anyone to their squad, much to their fans frustrations. The lack of depth could take its toll in the second half of the season as they juggle Champions League aspirations and battling top-four aspirations.

12th) Bournemouth: Lost top goalscorer Semenyo to Manchester City. Used the money to sign Rayan who provided an assist on debut. Alex Toth is another promising player to have arrived in the January window.

13th) Brighton: Re-signed fan favourite Pascal Gross to add experience to many young players. Typically do their business in the summer.

14th) Tottenham: Signed Conor Gallagher to bolster their midfield but their squad is thinner in attack. Missed out on Semenyo and sold Brennan Johnson while dealing with plenty of forward-line injuries. Interest in Andy Robertson may be revisited in the summer.

15th) Crystal Palace: That might seem a generous grade for a club who announced the loss of their captain and coach during one disastrous week, with Jean-Philippe Mateta also wanting out.

But in Jorgen Strand Larsen and Brennan Johnson for £78m combined, along with Evann Guessand, the attacking resources have very definitely been bolstered.

16th) Leeds: Very little of note to report for Daniel Farke’s men. Facundo Buonanotte joined on loan and Jack Harrison headed out for a few months at Fiorentina. It doesn’t look like they’ll regret the lack of activity and should have enough to stay up.

17th) Nottingham Forest: Sean Dyche will hope 6ft 7in behemoth Lorenzo Lucca can provide the goals to steer Forest clear of the relegation battle on loan from Napoli.

Stefan Ortega and Luca Netz look like low-risk late pick-ups, while Oleksandr Zinchenko and Douglas Luiz’s loans were terminated.

18th) West Ham: It’s hard to judge Taty Castellanos and Pablo Felipe, who the club splashed out a combined £47m on. Neither have scored yet but have contributed to improved form.

A chunky sum of £36m for Lucas Paqueta is nice to fill the coffers but will they miss the mercurial Brazilian when it matters?

19th) Burnley: Very quiet month at Turf Moor and it looks as though Scott Parker’s side are drifting towards an inevitable relegation.

James Ward-Prowse has joined and his set-pieces could be a huge difference-maker, if not this season, then in the Championship.

20th) Wolves: The basement boys recouped £47m for Strand Larsen which is not to be sniffed at but they’re very much preparing for the Championship already, with Adam Armstrong joining. It will be interesting to see if Angel Gomes gets game time on loan from Marseille.

Credit: dailymail.co.uk

The Ghanaian Chronicle