First case of burka rage in France

London, May 18 (ANI): Taking offence at the attire of a fellow shopper, a 60-year-old lawyer ripped a Muslim woman’s burka off in a clothing shop, in what is being described by the police as France’s first case of rage against the Islamic veil.

During a weekend shopping trip the woman lawyer had an argument over the attire following which the pair came to blows before being arrested.

The incident happened due to growing racial tensions in the country, as France prepares to introduce a total ban on burkas and other forms of religious dress, which cover the face, The Telegraph reports.

The woman lawyer made snide remarks about a 26-year-old Muslim convert’s burka while walking through the store in Trignac, near Nantes, in the western Loire-Atlantique region, the paper said.

A police officer close to the case said: “The lawyer said she was not happy seeing a fellow shopper wearing a veil and wanted the ban introduced as soon as possible.”

“The shop manager and the husband of the Muslim woman moved to break up the fighting,” the officer said. All three were arrested and taken to the local gendarmerie for questioning.

A spokesman for Trignac police said that two complaints had been received, with the Muslim woman accusing the lawyer of racial and religious assault. The latter, in turn, had accused her opponent of common assault.

The French parliament has adopted a formal motion declaring burkas and other forms of Islamic dress to be “an affront to the nation’s values.” (ANI)

‘Ridiculously drunk’ mom knees daughter’s school principal in the groin

Melbourne, Jun 25 (ANI): A woman, who was in a very inebriated state, could not recall punching, spitting and kneeing her daughter’s school principal in the groin.

Karen Lee Pommer, 47, attacked Jeff Munce when she went to pick up her eight-year-old daughter from Warrigal Road State School in the Brisbane suburb of Eight Mile Plains on October 31 last year.

The Brisbane District Court was told on June 25 that Pommer entered the school grounds screaming obscenities while the students waited to be collected at the end of the day.

When Munce approached her she punched his head repeatedly, then kneed him in the groin and spat in his face.

She also slapped and spat at another mother who tried to intervene.

The court was told Pommer – who was infected with hepatitis C – then spat at and bit three police officers who arrived to arrest her.

None of her victims contracted the highly infectious disease.

When she was hauled into the police vehicle, she then wriggled free from her handcuffs and smashed one of the windows.

Defence barrister Jann Taylor said Pommer, a chronic alcoholic, had been suffering an “alcohol-induced blackout”‘ when she went to the school.

“She was ridiculously drunk to the point of no recollection,” News.com.au quoted Taylor as saying.

Pommer pleaded guilty to 10 offences including three counts of serious assault and two of common assault.

Judge Leanne Clare sentenced her to two years’ jail but released her on parole immediately. (ANI)

All-rounder Andrew Flintoff says Harmison should be included in Ashes squad

Lancashire (UK), June 18  All-rounder Andrew Flintoff believes that the selectors will be making a big mistake if they do not include fast bowler Steve Harmison in the Ashes squad.

Harmison has taken 15 wickets for 132 runs in his last two county championship matches for Durham, and Flintoff said: “He was close to unplayable.”

Harmison stormed up the Test bowling charts to No.1 in 2004, but has been downgraded to common assault since his widest-of-wides at Brisbane in November 2006 became a horrible prologue to England’s 5-0 whitewash in Oz.

Since then, he has been treated like Graeme Hick, Mark Ramprakash and John Crawley, the great unfulfilled batting hopes of the 1990s – dropped then recalled, written off then reborn.

Many thought Harmy’s England days were over when new coach Andy Flower swept into office and discarded the old guard led by Michael Vaughan.

But those inclined to write Harmison’s obituary as a Test bowler had better not dip their quills in the ink just yet – because Flintoff says he is back to his destructive old ways.

Flintoff’s testament to Harmison’s enduring pace and bounce should make it a long evening around the selectors’ table this weekend when they pick a 17-man squad for Cardiff, which will be pared down to 12 by national selector Geoff Miller on July 4.

He said: “It’s not my job to pick the Ashes squad, but when we faced him at Durham last week he was close to unplayable.

“Good pace, steep bounce, control, stamina, swinging the ball away from the right-hander – you name it, he did it. He was awesome, back to his very best, the Harmy of four or five years ago,” The Mirror quoted Flintoff, as saying.

Cheryl Cole’s brother apologies for bringing her shame

London, May 15 (ANI): X Factor judge Cheryl Cole’s jailed brother Andrew Tweedy apologized in court on May 14 for bringing her shame.

Tweedy, 29, of Heaton, Newcastle, got only a suspended sentence at Newcastle Crown Court after admitting common assault for a pepper-spray attack on passer-by Lee Clark, 30, reports the Daily Express.

He has over 80 convictions, has received jail terms totalling 10 years, and now has to pay 250 pounds as compensation to Clark.

Tweedy, currently jobless, has vowed to turn his life around for the sake of the 25-year-old ‘Girls Aloud’ member and wife of England footballer Ashley Cole.

The judge suspended a 36-week jail term for two years when he heard Tweedy had an offer of work and his girlfriend had just given birth. (ANI)

Baby P report reveals police delays

Police delays meant an opportunity to charge Baby P’s mother before his death was missed, a leaked report has revealed. Skip related content
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An investigation into suspicious bruises on the little boy’s head and body “drifted” and the six-month limit for bringing a common assault charge passed, the unpublished serious case review into the tragedy found.

The report said the child might have been “more effectively safeguarded” if his mother had been charged, according to BBC London.

Baby P, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was 17 months old when he died at the hands of his mother, her boyfriend and their lodger in August 2007.

He had suffered more than 50 injuries despite receiving 60 visits from social workers, doctors and police over an eight-month period.

The little boy came to the attention of the authorities in December 2006 when he was taken to Whittington Hospital in north London with bruises on his head, nose, chest and right shoulder.

Detectives arrested his mother, Baby P was placed on the child protection register, and a file was submitted to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).

The prosecutors requested further evidence, including medical reports, and a specialist was identified to carry out a review of the child’s injuries.

But in March 2007 the detective in charge moved to a different part of the Metropolitan Police without formally handing the case to another officer and the investigation “drifted”. The specialist had no further contact from police until July 2007 despite emailing to ask what was happening with the case, the report said.

Scotland Yard said it could not comment on the report.

Winehouse to appear in court over assault allegation

London, March 7 (ANI): Amy Winehouse is set to appear in court after being charged with “common assault” on a fan.

The Brit singer was said to have punched dancer Sherene Flash, 30, in the eye when asked for permission to take her picture at an End of Summer Ball in London last September.

The ‘Rehab’ hitmaker, who just returned from her two-month break in the Caribbean, was recently taken into custody after attending London’s Charing Cross police station.

Amy, who failed to turn up on at the station for at least two previous occasions, was later released on bail.

She is now due to appear in court at City of Westminster Magistrates Court on March 17.

The 25-year-old, who vowed to kick her drug addiction and mend her boozy antics for a fresh start in 2009, allegedly sparked a new concern amongst family and friends who fear the stress could lead her back to drugs.

“Amy is worried. But she is determined to get through it and sees the case as a hangover from her past,” the Sun quoted a pal as saying. (ANI)