Audio By Carbonatix
Grime artist Stormzy has pledged to support a further 36 black students studying at Cambridge University over the next three years.
Each will receive a £20,000 annual scholarship in a continuing partnership between banking group HSBC UK and the musician's charity, #Merky Foundation.
It is five years since the Stormzy Scholarships were launched. By 2026, 81 students will have received one.
Stormzy said the opportunity for black students was "theirs for the taking".
The university said the "Stormzy effect" had seen applications from UK black students rise, with those admitted to undergraduate courses doubling, from 61 students in 2018 to 141 students in 2022.

HSBC has pledged £2m to support 30 new Stormzy Scholarships over the next three years, while #Merky Foundation will continue to fund a further two students a year.
The musician said: "For a further 30 black students to have the opportunity to study at Cambridge University - the same year we celebrate five years of the scholarships' launch - feels like an incredible landmark moment.
They are aimed at alleviating financial worries for students from "less advantaged socio-economic background", the university said.
Prof Bhaskar Vira, pro-vice-chancellor for education, said he was "delighted" the collaboration was continuing.
"We know these scholarships are truly transformative in the opportunities they provide and we look forward to welcoming more Stormzy scholars to Cambridge over the next few years," he said.
Latest Stories
-
Keta MP lays mother to rest
14 minutes -
We must put an end to cocoa politics – Victoria Bright
38 minutes -
There is a cabal in electricity sector determined to rip off Ghanaians – Prof Agyemang-Duah
50 minutes -
NSA pays January 2026 allowance to National Service Personnel
1 hour -
24-Hour Economy not just talk — Edudzi Tamakloe confirms sector-level implementation
1 hour -
Four arrested over robbery attack on okada rider at Fomena
1 hour -
NDC gov’t refusing to take responsibility for anything that affects Ghanaians – Miracles Aboagye
2 hours -
Parental Presence, Not Just Provision: Why active involvement in children’s education matters
2 hours -
24-Hour economy policy fails to create promised jobs – Dennis Miracles Aboagye
3 hours -
Ghana Embassy in Doha urges nationals to take shelter after missile attack
3 hours -
Government’s macroeconomic stability commendable, but we need focus on SME growth – Victoria Bright
3 hours -
Macro stability won’t matter without food self-sufficiency- Prof. Agyeman-Duah
3 hours -
How Virtual Security Africa is strengthening safety at Mamprobi Polyclinic
3 hours -
Ghana on right track macroeconomically, but structural gaps remain – Fred Dzanku
3 hours -
ADB MD honoured for impactful leadership at PMI Ghana engagement
4 hours
