In Today's Papers

Wednesday 21 July 2004

Posted: 21 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


By Clare Jerrom, Amy Taylor, Shirley Kumar and Alex Dobson

Riot at fast-track asylum removal centre

A riot broke out at Harmondsworth immigration removal centre on Monday after a detainee was found hanged in his room.

Prison officers regained control of the buildings yesterday morning but about 80 detainees continued to carry out a stand-off in a recreation yard until the afternoon.

Source:- The Guardian Wednesday 21 July page 7

Dead pupil ‘spread lies’ jury told

A schoolboy accused of murdering another teenage pupil at school told a court that his alleged victim had been spreading lies about him.

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The 16-year-old, who was giving evidence for the first time at Nottingham Crown Court, said there had been a mutual dislike between him and Luke Walmsley, 14 at Birkbeck secondary school in North Somercotes, Lincolnshire.

Luke died from a single stab wound to the heart at school in November last year.

Source:- The Guardian Wednesday 21 July page 6

Mothers to pay fathers denied access

Mothers who refuse access to their ex-husbands in defiance of the courts could be ordered to pay compensation, the government has unveiled.

A Green Paper will propose judges should be given new powers to force the carer to allow contact between the child and the father.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July page 1
 
Dangerous sex offender must be freed from jail

A sex offender is to be released into the community despite warnings from prison psychiatriststhat he will kill his next victim, according to North Wales chief constable Richard Brunstrom.

The Home Office is planning new measures to ensure dangerous sex offenders are not released until their level of risk is properly assessed.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July page 2
 
Boy smoker hanged himself

A 12-year-old boy hanged himself rather than admit to his parents he had been smoking, an inquest heard.

David Arnett’s tutor at Cavendish School in Eastbourne, East Sussex gave him 24-hours to tell his parents that he smoked after finding a packet of cigarettes on him.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph  Wednesday 21 July  page 2
 
Five detained after BNP documentary

A BBC documentary, Secret Agent, has led to five men being arrested in connection with racially-motivated crimes.

West Yorkshire police questioned a 23-year-old Bradford man in connection with racially-aggravated public order offences, a 51-year-old man suspected of racially-aggravated harassment and another on suspicion of possessing a gun.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July  page 4
 
Scientists rule out anti-depressants as ‘suicide trigger’

Fears that Prozac and Seroxat are more likely to trigger suicidal behaviour in patients than older style antidepressants have been ruled out, according to scientists.

A study shows risk of self harm rise in the first month after starting all types of anti-depressants but the drugs themselves are unlikely to be blamed.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July page 5
 
BT blocks 20,000 attempts a day to access child porn

BT is stopping 20,000 attempts to download hardcore child pornography on the internet every day.

With some people making repeated attempts, it is unclear how many users are looking for child pornography.

Source:-The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July  page 7
 
Poor performance of many mental health trusts ‘an area of concern’

The Healthcare Commission is concerned with the latest NHS ratings which show the poor performance of mental health trusts.
Seven received the lowest zero rating compared with three the previous year and more than a third got one star or less.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July page 10
 
I saw my grandson knifed, jury told

Pauline Martin told a jury at Carlisle Crown Court that she saw Shahajan Kabir pull out a knife and grab hold of his son Hassan’s bib in the bakery.

Martin added she did not actually see the father stab the baby.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Wednesday 21 July  page 5

Loss of innocence

Can anyone comprehend what it is like to spend years in prison for a crime you didn’t commit? Eric Allison tracked down those still haunted by the experience – the victims of miscarriages of justice, and their families.

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday 21 July page 2

On the road to knowlege

Connexions, the government’s advice service for teenagers, has employed what is believed its first member of staff dedicated to working with traveller families.

Charles Birch lives in a house now but still classes himself as a traveller after growing up in a wagon.

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday, 21 July, page 6

Scores to settle

Nearly 30 years ago, Bob Holman gave up his post as professor to live and work on a council estate and to campaign on the residents’ behalf.

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday, 21 July, page 8

Escape routes

Travel operators are not offering more choice for people with disabilities as well as their families

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Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday 21 July page 10

Moving on up

Thousands of civil service employees are to redeployed out of the south-east.

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday 21 July page 14

What else can I do?

A-levels over, Chloe wants to spend a year volunteering with a view to working later in the charity or public sector. Debbie Andalo points her in the right direction

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday 21 July page 96

Scottish newspapers

Families clash after couple jailed over cruel death of baby

Fighting erupted outside a courtroom yesterday after a Scots mother and her boyfriend were jailed for five years each for condemning a baby to death.

Lorna Gray and James McEwan each pleaded guilty to one count of child cruelty following the death of 21-month-old John Gray in March 2003. The baby died as a result of a ruptured liver, thought to be caused by a blow to the abdomen.

Mr Justice McKinnon said the pair had been guilty of the most extreme child cruelty.

Angry scenes followed as Gray’s family slammed the sentence as unjust.

Source:- The Herald  Wednesday 21 July

National poet told he must leave closing care home

Edwin Morgan has been given less than a month to find alternative accommodation after being informed the care home in which he is staying is due to close.

The Scottish poet is among 70 residents at the Lynedoch Nursing Home near Glasgow who have been told they must leave by August 14.

Morgan warned that some residents might not survive the move.

Source:- The Herald  Wednesday 20 July

Man convicted of killing paedophile teacher he befriended in jail

A man was jailed for life yesterday for murdering his best friend who he met while they were both serving prison sentences for sex offences.

Lord Dawson said Ian Sutherland would serve at least 15 years in prison before being eligible for parole and he imposed a consecutive sentence of five years for the offence of dismembering the body in a bid to cover up his crime.

The High Court heard that following their release from jail, the victim, Alan Wilson, became infatuated with Sutherland, who rejected his attempts to build a sexual relationship.

Source:- The Scotsman  Wednesday 21 July

Police reveal plan to launch major crackdown on vice girls in Dundee

A major crackdown on prostitution was announced by Tayside police yesterday after a flood of complaints about vice girls in residential areas of the city.

Prostitutes have recently started working close to the eastern edge of the city centre and the officer in charge of policing in the city, Chief Inspector Brian Weir, said the force would be taking a hard-line stance against vice girls and their customers where their behaviour caused distress to residents.

Source:- The Scotsman  Wednesday 21 July

Half of Scots OAPs ‘living in poverty’

Thousands of older people in Scotland are living below the poverty line and struggling to survive it has been claimed.

Almost half of the country’s pensioner’s are thought to be living in poverty with 300,000 households forced to cope on incomes of less than £10,000 a year, leader of the Scottish Socialist Party Tommy Sheridan revealed.

Source:- Evening News Tuesday 20 July

Great leap forward for charity

Barnardo’s employee John Calder from the Capital is to undertake a nine-day long walk along The Great Wall of China in aid of the charity in September.

Source:- Evening News  Tuesday 20 July

Welsh newspapers

‘Be brave and name dangerous sex offender’

Chief constable Richard Brunstrom, head of north Wales police, has been urged to ‘name and shame’ a potentially homicidal sex offender, after he warned that he is powerless to stop the man being freed from jail.

Psychiatrists have warned that although the man is not mentally ill, he could be dangerous, but the chief constable has stopped short of naming him.

Source:- Western Mail Wednesday 21 July page 1


Jail for nurse who stole from the NHS

A senior psychiatric nurse from south Wales has been jailed for fiddling her overtime to pay for exotic holidays around the world.

Rhian Slaymaker conned the NHS out of almost £36,000 to pay for her jet setting lifestyle and to help pay for a house and a car. She now faces being struck off by the Nursing and Midwifery Council.

Source:- Western Mail Wednesday 21 July page 3

 



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