In Today's Papers

Thursday 21 July

Posted: 21 July 2005 | Subscribe Online


By Amy Taylor and Maria Ahmed

Gay right to stay

A man refused asylum in 2003 was given a new chance to stay in Britain because he is a Muslim homosexual. Appeal judges ruled that as a gay man the 34-year-old Palestinian would face persecution if he returned home in Lebanon.

Source:- The Times, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 2

Father killed boy


James Tuff, 21, who became angry if interrupted while playing computer games, was found guilty of the manslaughter of one of his twin sons. Norwich Crown Court was told that Byron, four months, had a fractured skull and two broken ribs.

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Source:- The Times, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 2

CSA backlog increases


The backlog of cases at the Child Support Agency increased last year, with only 66 per cent of non-resident parents complying with maintenance assessments, against a target of 78 per cent, according to the agency’s annual report.

Source:- The Times, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 4

Teenagers ‘isolated and at risk’

Thousands of homeless teenagers are being placed in unsafe bed-and-breakfast accommodation and left to fend for themselves because councils fail in their duty to provide suitable housing, research by Centrepoint has found.

Source:- The Times, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 24

Invest for a better old age


Older people risk spending more of their later years in bad health unless the Government invests more on disease prevention and technologies that allow people to monitor their own wellbeing, according to a report by the House of Lords Science Committee.

Source:- The Times, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 24

Experts reject PM’s views on suspension


A suggestion from the prime minister that parents of children suspended from school for disruptive behaviour should be forced to stay at home with them was yesterday condemned as “unrealistic” and “unworkable.”

Source:- The Guardian, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 5

Abuse stories ‘isolating’ African communities

The government was yesterday urged to ensure than African communities in the UK are not stigmatised over claims of ritualistic child abuse. At a summit called by ministers amid concerns over abuse linked to rituals such as exorcism, there were calls for a focus on a wider range of immigrant communities in the UK, some of which are seen as hard to reach by social services and other authorities.
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Source:- The Guardian, Thursday 21 July 2005, page 11

A kicking for the anti-yob crusade

A teenager won a High Court challenge over the legality of the government’s child curfew zones yesterday.
The Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003 enables police to set up zones in certain areas and remove any under-16s present from between 9pm-6am.

The Home Office and the police said they would appeal against the ruling.

Source:- Daily Mail, Thursday, 21 July, page 4

Seven years in jail for stepfather who shook girl to death


A stepfather who shook a two year old girl to death was sentenced to seven years in jail yesterday.

Gavin Fletcher, 23, claimed that Michaela Moffatt had fallen out of bed but tests showed she had brain injuries consistent with being shaken roughly and thrown against a hard surface.

Fletcher was found guilty of manslaughter but cleared of murder.

Source:- Daily Mail, Thursday, 21 July, page 33

Scottish newspapers

'Disgraceful nedette' who hit and kicked police walks free

A SHERIFF yesterday hit out at the growing "nedette" culture in Scotland as a teenage girl escaped punishment for brawling with police officers. Sheriff Robert McCreadie branded the actions of Emma Brown and her friend Emma Cobban "a disgrace".

The Scotsman, July 21



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