In Today's Papers

Friday 16 September 2005

Posted: 16 September 2005 | Subscribe Online


By Maria Ahmed, Simeon Brody, Sally Gillen and Amy Taylor

Jetskier Asbo

A jetskier accused of endangering swimmers by weaving in and out of them has become the first in the country to have an Asbo slapped on him at Gosport, Hants.

Source:- The Mirror Friday 16 September 2005 page 17

Tragic Scott hanged acting out Disney movie scene

Scott Buckle, 12, from Swansea, hanged himself while trying to copy Hollywood star Johnny Depp escaping death in the hit movie Pirates of the Caribbean.

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Source:- The Mirror Friday 16 September 2005 page 21

Refugee dad died for his son

The 13-year-old son of a failed asylum has been taken into care after his father handed himself at a detention centre on the day he was due to be deported.

Angolan Manuel Brava, 35, was found early yesterday in the cell he and his son Antonio shared at Yarl’s Wood, Beds. Friends in Leeds said he had killed himself to help his son remain in the UK.

Source:- The Mirror Friday 16 September 2005 page 24

Sex offender fugitive

A British film-maker who fled during his trial on child sex charges was convicted in his absence yesterday.

David Anderson, 64, was found guilty at Gloucester crown court on 10 sexual assault and indecency charges involving a girl aged 13.

Source:- The Mirror Friday 16 September 2005 page 24

Childminder escapes jail for racial assault on two-year-old

A childminder who crayoned the word “nigger” on the forehead of a two-year-old girl in her care narrowly escaped jail yesterday after a judge accepted pleas that she was “ignorant rather than evil”.

Fay Stockley, 57, was told by the recorder of Derby that she had done a “wicked thing” which most people would consider deserved a prison sentence. But he suspended a six-month term for a year on the grounds that she had not understood the nastiness of what she had done.

Source:- The Mirror Friday 16 September 2005 page 8

Welfare ‘promote child poverty’

Labour’s welfare policies are promoting child poverty because they do not encourage parents to stay together, a think-tank claimed yesterday.

In a controversial report – which was dismissed as “garbage” by the Treasury – Civitas said “the high rates of child poverty in Britain are a result of the tax and benefit policies pursued by Tony Blair’s government”.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Friday 16 September 2005 page 2

Teacher cleared of assaulting disruptive pupil

Willem van Trotsenburg, a senior teacher who was suspended for almost a year from a Norfolk High School after a persistently disruptive pupil accused him of assaulting her was cleared of any wrongdoing by a court yesterday.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Friday 16 September 2005 page 2

Sacked doctor in racial bias case is awarded £1.6m

A hospital consultant dismissed after amassing evidence against her bosses for a racial discrimination claim has won the second highest payout from an employment tribunal.

Feyi Awontona, 50, was awarded £1.6 million after a tribunal ruled that she had been the victim of racial discrimination and unfairly dismissed by her NHS Trust.

Source:- The Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 11

Student depression is costing £30m

British universities spend £30 million a year to provide counselling for students with mental health problems.

Figures obtained by The Times under the Freedom of Information Act from 18 leading universities suggest that the number of students seeking counselling has risen by more than 20 per cent to 60,000 in five years.

Source:- The Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 25

Schools are accused of failing children in care

Fewer than one in 100 children in care have the chance to go to university, despite a government drive to get more working-class young people on degree courses, research by charity NCH shows.

Source:- The Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 25

Disability ‘naked, pregnant and proud’ takes on Trafalgar Square

An artist whose nude and heavily pregnant body inspired a controversial marble sculpture has hailed the portrait as “a modern tribute to femininity, disability and motherhood”.

Alison Lapper, 40, who was born with no arms and shortened legs, is the first female whose sculpture has grace Trafalgar Square.

Source:- The Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 29

Plan to revive estates

Wider schemes are to revive bad estates are to be announced today, with measures for mixed private and social housing.

David Miliband, the minister for local government and communities, will tell the conference of the National Housing Federation that “decent communities are as much about people are about buildings”.

Source:- The Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 30

Death of a teenage father highlights the plight of Britain’s gun generation

Ramone Cumberbatch, a proud teenage father from Manchester, was shot dead on Tuesday, the day before his 19th birthday.

Officers are investigating whether his death is linked to a multiple shooting last week, after which a 16-year-old was detained.

Source:- The Independent Friday 16 September 2005 page 8

“Sadistic” rapist jailed for 14 years

A “sadistic” rapist who used his mobile phone to film an attack on a young woman has been jailed for 14 years.

Jon Leaver, 23, from Lancashire, was convicted at Liverpool Crown Court of rape and causing grievous bodily harm.

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Source:- The Independent Friday 16 September 2005 page 19

NHS slips £250m into the red this year

The NHS has been ordered to sort out its finances as ministers reveal it has overspent by £250 million this year in spite of record levels of investment.

NHS chief executive Sir Nigel Crisp has written to all hospital and mental health trusts that failed to balance the books, warning the poor financial management can erode public confidence.

Source:- Financial Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 1

Changes to tax credits system attacked

Recent changes to the tax credits system have weakened work incentives, according to research by the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

Anecdotal evidence suggested that some people were deciding they would be better off not working because additional income can lead to overpayments which may be clawed back at a later stage.

Source:- Financial Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 2

CBI chief criticises schools building scheme

A multi-billion pound scheme to rebuild or refurbish every secondary school risks running over budget and could fail to improve educational standards, according to the head of the CBI.

Sir Digby Jones said the £20 billion Building Schools programme risked becoming “simply an exercise in school construction”.

Source:- Financial Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 2

CBI calls for body to cut red tape

The Confederation of British Industry has called for a standing body to challenge the government and the public sector over efficiency, red tape and the incentives needed to improve public services.

Source:- Financial Times Friday 16 September 2005 page 4

Labour’s tax on the family

Families are being encouraged to break up by the government’s tax and benefits policies, according to a report by think tank Civitas. It says parents can receive £4,000 more in handouts if they split up.

Source:- Daily Mail Friday 16 September 2005 page 1

Why did it take a year to clear the teacher falsely accused of assaulting a class menace?

A teacher’s year-long ordeal was almost over yesterday after he was cleared of assaulting a disruptive schoolgirl.

Willem van Trotsenburg, 51, was charged after the 14-year-old claimed she fell and hurt her arm when he forcibly removed her from his maths class in a Norfolk comprehensive. He still faces an investigation by education chiefs.

Source:- Daily Mail Friday 16 September 2005 page 7                                                       

Scottish news

Tragic town hit by another suicide on the eve of tragic Rory's funeral

The town of Livingston has been rocked by its third tragedy in a month with the suicide of a teenage boy.

The death comes just a week after a student from the same school took his own life, and on the eve of the murdered schoolboy Rory Blackhall's funeral.

Seventeen-year-old Ryan Hargan was found dead at his home in Dedridge by his mother on Wednesday evening. It is understood he used an item of clothing to hang himself from the bathroom shower rail.

Source:- The Scotsman Friday 16 September 2005

Is it now time for the 'truth in sentencing'?

When James Campbell snatched a two-year-old girl from her home at knifepoint in Lanarkshire last July there was a public outcry.

Campbell had been released two months earlier on licence over breaking into a 91-year-old woman's house with intent to rape.

His case and many others who re-offend after being released raises serious questions about sentencing, community supervision and the limitations of both.

Source:- The Herald Friday 16 September 2005

Welsh news

Photographer jailed for sex attack on teenager

A professional photographer was jailed for 12 months yesterday for sexually assaulting an 18-year-old girl on a photo shoot.

Martin Turner, 37, sexually assaulted the girl as she posed on a bed at his home.

The girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said that she accepted a glass of water from Turner. She told a court that her memory had then blurred but that she felt Turner touching her as he took hundreds of indecent photos of her.

Source:- Western Mail Friday 16 September

Interpol hunts missing Welsh family

An international hunt has been launched following the disappearance of a Welsh mother, her two children and her partner.

The group are believed to have gone to France. Paula Sears is alleged to have abducted her children, Jacob Luke, three, and Shauna Anne-Marie, two, from the care of social services.

An international warrant has been put out for Sears’ arrest.

Source:- Western Mail Friday 16 September



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