Wednesday 30 April 2003

    By Amy Taylor, Clare Jerrom and Alex Dobson.
    Mother ‘killed three of her babies, then blamed cot death’
    A mother who suffocated three of her four children tried
    to make their murders look like cot deaths, Reading crown court
    heard yesterday.
    Trupti Patel is alleged to have killed her babies before they
    reached 13-weeks-old. She denies the charges.
    Patel’s second child Amar died in 1997 aged 13 weeks, followed by
    Jamie aged 14 days in 1999. Mia, her fourth child, died aged 22
    days in June 2001 after which police were called in to investigate
    with the first two deaths initially being put down to cot
    death.
    Source:- The Times Wednesday 30 April page 5
    Sex suspects may win anonymity
    Limited anonymity would be granted to sex offenders under proposals
    set to be put to ministers.
    Under the new measures their name would only be disclosed if
    charges had been made, keeping them out of the media when only
    allegations have been made.
    They are aimed at protecting people’s reputations, such as the
    television presenter Matthew Kelly, because they often face
    allegations of having committed a sexual offence but are then never
    charged.
    Source:- The Telegraph Wednesday 30 April page 2
    Staff find it pays to blow the whistle
    An estimated £10 million in compensation is being given out
    each year to staff who are victimised after whistleblowing on
    employers, according to new research.
    Pubic Concern at Work, a charity that promotes accountability in
    the workplace, said the average payment to whistleblowing
    employees, who then suffer for their actions, was just over
    £100,000, and the highest was £800,000.
    Source:- The Telegraph Wednesday 30 April page 4
    Afghan asylum seekers flown back to Kabul
    Around 20 asylum seekers landed in Kabul yesterday after being
    forcibly returned back to Afghanistan from Britain.
    Several of the refugees were said to have protested so much that
    they had to be tied up, according to a fellow deportee.
    The home office denies the claim, saying two men were handcuffed
    but that these were removed once they were on the plane.
    Source:- The Telegraph Wednesday 30 April page 4
    How the deportation of 30 Afghans was cut back to just 21 at
    £6,200 each (more than it cost to fly to New York and back by
    Concorde)
    Only 21 asylum seekers were sent back to Afghanistan filling fewer
    than one in 10 seats on a plane chartered by the home office
    costing over £130,000.
    The seats worked out at £6,200 for each deportee. Up to 30
    Afghans had been expected to be onboard.
    Source:- The Telegraph Wednesday 30 April page 22
    Guardian Society
    Ailing estates regain sense of balance
    Councils and housing associations are being urged to follow the
    example of the Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust, and sell off empty
    rental properties to middle class people to create socially mixed
    communities.
    The research on a five-year experiment on the New Earswick estate
    in York on which the trust sold every second home that became
    vacant on the open market after marketing them to more well-off
    buyers, found that the practice has halted the community’s
    decline.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 4
    New fund lifts barrier to a better future
    Under new government proposals out today voluntary
    organisations within four areas of public services are to be
    invited to bid for a part of the sector’s £125 million
    investment fund.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 4
    Hard work in a hostile environment
    Disabled people alleging to have been discriminated against at work
    make up over half the cases supported by the Disability Rights
    Commission over the past year.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 4
    On the move
    It’s not just in the fictional world of the Archers that farmers
    are having to learn computer skills.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 5
    Patient progress
    Thousands of people with chronic illnesses are taking part
    in an NHS programme designed to make them experts in their own
    condition.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 6
    Taxing the patience
    The new tax credits are aimed at fighting poverty. But they will
    miss many of their targets without adequate welfare advice.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 10
    Through a glass lightly
    Profile Mel Wright, ex-social worker with a novel view on
    life
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 11
    Over the wall
    As the pay gap in the public sector narrows, will private company
    executives be tempted to leap across?
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 13
    Gloves are off
    Finance specialists come in various shapes and sizes in both public
    and private sectors. But there is no love lost between their
    professional bodies.
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page 14
    On the road to ruin
    Mapping the pattern of sexual abuse of young women
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page
    143
    Awaiting trial
    People with Down’s syndrome are living longer, but are denied drug
    treatment for dementia
    Source:- Guardian Society Wednesday 30 April page
    144
    Scottish newspapers
    Charity worker is jailed for abuse
    A community worker was jailed for 10 years yesterday after
    he used his role with a family support charity to prey on young
    boys entrusted to his care.
    Graham Hammond also received an extended sentence of seven years
    which will keep him under close supervision in the community when
    he is eventually released.
    Edinburgh high court heard that Hammond befriended boys aged
    between seven and 12 at the Family Action at Rogerfield and
    Easterhouse (Fare) project in Glasgow.
    He abused some of them at his home in Easterhouse and others during
    outings that he organised. He was arrested after one of his victims
    complained to the police..
    Source:- The Herald  Wednesday 30 April 2003
    Kid-sex rugby doc in suicide
    A doctor accused of child abuse was found hanged at his
    home in Glasgow.
    GP Ronnie Graham who was also one of Scotland’s top rugby
    coaches was facing charges of repeatedly molesting a boy over a
    10-year period. It is believed that other boys made similar
    allegations, many relating to summer camps.
    The father of two was found by his wife and son. Graham has
    previously tried to kill himself by swallowing weed-killer when he
    was charged by police and suspended by the General Medical
    Council.
    Source:- Daily Record  Wednesday 30 April page 1 and
    2
    Torture kids left terrified of Scots accents
    A woman accused of torturing and beating two young children walked
    free yesterday from Linlithgow sheriff court because the youngsters
    were too traumatised to give evidence.
    Prosecutors were also forced to abandon the case against Gillian
    Overton because they were running out of time to bring the case to
    trial. The court heard how the children cannot even bear to hear a
    Scots accent.
    Overton of West Lothian was accused of carrying out a nine-month
    reign of terror in 2001 against a boy now six-years-old and his
    sister, now seven-years-old. The investigation was launched after
    the children, who are now in care in England, made a complaint at
    school about their treatment.
    At one stage it was planned to take the case to Edinburgh where
    child-friendly facilities are provided. But a psychologist rejected
    the idea after examining the children saying they were too
    distressed to give evidence from behind screens or through a CCTV
    link.
    Overton, who has been suspended from her job in the justice
    department at the Scottish executive since the allegations arose,
    refused to comment as she left the court.
    Source:- Daily Record  Wednesday 30 April page 17
    Welsh newspapers
    Indecent assault boy gets electronic tag
    A 12-year-old boy who indecently assaulted a mother of three and
    was convicted of burglary is to be electronically tagged as part of
    a supervision order.
    The boy from Rhondda Cynon Taf has been warned that if he fails to
    comply with the order, which includes several stringent conditions,
    he would face detention in the future.
    Source:- South Wales Echo Tuesday 29 April page 5
    Truant boy back at school after mum’s release from
    jail

    A persistent truant has returned to school two days after his
    mother was released from prison after serving a sentence for
    failing to make him attend.
    The 14-year-old was back at a Llanelli comprehensive school after
    discussions with education welfare officers following his
    mother’s release from a prison in Gloucestershire.
    Source:- Western Mail Wednesday 30 April page 1
    Care sector campaigner gives up fight
    A vocal campaigner for the independent care sector in Wales has
    decided that she can no longer fight against the under-funding and
    miles of red tape that she says have seen the sector brought to
    crisis point.
    Cheryl-Wilson-Carter, vice-chairperson of Care Forum Wales, the
    body that represents care home owners in the principality, has sold
    her 40-patient Bettws nursing home because of the difficulties she
    has encountered in trying to maintain high quality care for her
    clients.
    Source:- Western Mail Wednesday 30 April page 7

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