Don’t hear case against Adnan until June 10, HC to family court

Mumbai, May 29 — Pakistani singer-composer Adnan Sami has got a reprieve until June 10 in the domestic violence application filed by his estranged wife Saba Galadari before a family court. A vacation bench of the Bombay High Court on Friday restrained the family court from proceeding with the hearing in Galadari’s applications. The vacation bench of Justice S J Kathawala and Justice R G Ketkar gave Sami time so that he could either approach the Supreme Court or appear before the family court on June 7. While refusing to give him six weeks’ time, the high court observed: “No case is made out to place any sickness of appellate [Sami] prior to May 3.” However, the judges felt that Sami should be given time considering he had undergone a gall bladder surgery on May 23. Asking Sami to appear before family court on June 7, the HC has asked the family court not to proceed with the hearing before June 10 in his absence. The family court had last year held that Galadari’s divorce petition could not be entertained because her second marriage with Sami was invalid. The HC reversed this ruling in March, but gave Sami six weeks to file an appeal. However, Sami, who has been admitted to a hospital in Munich after suffering from severe abdominal pain, filed an application in the high court seeking extension of the deadline. His advocate Vibhav Krishna said they could not approach the Supreme Court as Sami fell ill. “He has been admitted in a hospital in Munich and a surgery was performed to remove five stones from his gall bladder,” said Krishna. He informed the court that his client will return to Mumbai by June 3.

Sami claimed his second marriage to Galadari was not valid because she had failed to comply with halala, in which she was required to have married another man before remarrying Sami.

Chris Brown ”making progress” on probation

London, May 08 (ANI): US singer Chris Brown, who assaulted ex-girlfriend Rihanna last year, has made further progress while on probation, a judge in Los Angeles has heard.

Brown has completed his 300 minutes of community service – roughly a fifth of the amount he is required to perform said his attorney, reports the BBC news.

He had also attended all but one of 52 mandatory domestic violence counselling sessions, said lawyer Mark Geragos.

Brown, 21, is due back in court on 26 August for another status hearing. He was sentenced to five years of probation last August and also six months of community labour after he was found guilty of assaulting Rihanna in their car on the eve of the 2009 Grammy Awards.

He later apologised saying that was “very sad and very ashamed” of his actions.

Patricia Schnegg the Superior Court Judge said on Thursday ‘it appeared the singer was making progress and requested a formal probation report.’ (ANI)

Porn queen Jenna Jameson assaulted by beau

New York, April 27 (ANI): Porn queen Jenna Jameson’s beau Ultimate Fighting champ Tito Ortiz has reportedly been arrested on charges of beating up her at their Southern California home.

TMZ.com reports that the father of Jameson”s 13-months-old twin boys was taken to jail in handcuffs and charged with felony domestic violence.

According to the website, Jameson, 36, who made the call to cops, had ‘visible injuries’ when officers spoke to her, reports The New York Daily News.

Ortiz was being booked at the Huntington Beach Jail.

Jameson told the website that she plans to press charges. (ANI)

Mixed response for intervention police: survey

A report examining community perceptions of policing in remote Northern Territory communities since the federal intervention has called for officers to develop a greater understanding of Aboriginal life.

A summary of the research, led by the North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency and the Central Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Services, was released today.

It assesses community perceptions of task force Themis, which involved the establishment of police stations in 18 intervention communities.

A survey of more than 300 residents and 70 interviews revealed that most people were happy with the extra officers.

But the perception varied wildly, with the approval rating as low as 11 per cent in some areas.

Some respondents said police were inactive and failed to respond to crimes, including domestic violence.

Others spoke of the heavy-handed use of police powers under the Liquor Act, including random searches.

They survey also revealed that residents believed visible offences like public drunkenness and street violence had declined, while less public crimes such as cannabis use and sexual assault had seen less improvement.

The researchers have called for police recruits to be taught about all aspects of indigenous life, including culture, politics and social realities, such as a lack of transport.

The full report will be released on Wednesday.

Boost for coroner’s domestic violence probes

Extra support has been promised for the coroner to probe deaths stemming from domestic violence in South Australia.

The SA Government has rejected calls for a wide-ranging review of domestic violence services but says it is watching developments in other states.

Status of Women Minister Gail Gago says more efforts will be made to help identify gaps in the current system.

“They are able to then look at services, service gaps that might be occurring and provide information to assist the coroner in his recommendations,” he said.

An officer to assist the coroner is to be appointed by the end of the year.

Coroner proposes limits to police pursuits

Queensland coroner Michael Barnes has handed down 13 recommendations aimed at making police pursuits safer.

The recommendations follow 10 fatal police chases in Queensland between 2005 and 2008.

In handing down his findings, Mr Barnes said in seven of the crashes someone other than the driver was killed, four were members of the public who were not involved in the chase, and the other three were passengers.

Mr Barnes said his recommendations are designed to reduce the risk of further deaths without compromising reasonable law enforcements.

The recommendations include a focus on community safety, that officers do not pursue alcohol or drug affected drivers, tougher penalties for people convicted of evading police and the adoption of new technology to reduce the need for pursuits.

Police reaction

The Queensland Police Union (QPU) says it has concerns about one of the coroner’s recommendations – that officers should not chase alcohol or drug-affected drivers.

QPU president Ian Leavers says that recommendation changes the way police approach their duties.

“Often these people who are drunk or drugged are on their way to commit acts of domestic violence,” he said.

“We have a duty to protect people out there in the community.

“Police still need to be able to make a conscious decision on when to pursue or not to pursue, for the fact is police don’t start police chases, criminals are the ones who start police chases.”

Queensland Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson says he will carefully consider the report.

“This is an extremely difficult and complex area of policing, what some would say is the most difficult in terms of judgement,” he said.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says the Government will respond to the recommendations after they have been reviewed by Cabinet and Commissioner Atkinson.

“They look to me like very carefully considered and thoughtful recommendations and if they help to save a life then we have an obligation to implement them.” she said.

Victim reaction

The sister of a schoolgirl who was killed by a car being chased by Queensland police says the new recommendations about pursuits are not strong enough.

Caitlin Hanrick, 13, was hit by a stolen car outside a Redcliffe high school in December 2006.

Tegan Hanrick says she is disappointed.

“While the coroner’s recommendations are a step in the right direction, we still feel that he missed an opportunity here to ban the pursuits of stolen vehicles,” she said.

Police probe domestic violence assaults

Carnarvon police are investigating a series of assaults which have left two women with serious injuries.

Police say three separate domestic violence related disputes occurred at the weekend, leaving one woman with a broken arm and another with a broken wrist.

In one incident, a male offender allegedly broke into the home of his partner with an accomplice in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Police say the woman was assaulted and may require medical treatment in Perth for a broken wrist.

Two men have been charged with aggravated bodily harm and aggravated burglary.

Doors to shut on domestic violence centre

The State Government has taken court action to close a women’s centre that has been operating on Palm Island, off Townsville in north Queensland, for 25 years.

The Kootana Women’s Centre was set up to help women and children affected by domestic violence, but the Government expressed concerns about its service delivery.

A court order made last week has seen Kootana close and its workers removed.

Former mayor Delena Foster has worked at Kootana for 15 years and says the community knows and trusts it.

“A lot of them are asking where will you go, where will you operate from? I said we won’t exist because we have no place to go,” Ms Foster said.

She says she does not understand the decision and has sent the State Government a petition signed by more than 1,000 community members pledging their support.

“We built a clientele base of about 550 domestic violence clients plus 520 emergency relief clients,” Ms Foster said.

Communities Minister Karen Struthers says her department had hoped to avoid court action.

“There’s been concerns over a number of years about the compliance of that service with their funding agreement,” Ms Struthers said.

“I’d personally visited the service late last year to talk with staff and committee members myself. We’re not confident, as a department, that the funding going to that service was actually delivering support to women and children fleeing domestic violence.”

Ms Struthers says her department will call for new tenders to deliver domestic violence services on the island soon.

She says the Palm Island Community Company will run domestic violence services until then.

Woman is hospital after two day bashing

Police say a 49-year-old man has been arrested after a woman was viciously bashed over two days at a town camp in Katherine last week.

According to police the 39-year-old woman had to be flown to Royal Darwin Hospital with suspected spinal injuries, a broken leg and serious facial wounds.

Police say the attacks occurred last Tuesday and Wednesday at the Walpiri Camp in Katherine.

The man will face multiple assault charges in the Katherine Magistrates Court today.

NT youth ‘afraid to walk streets’

A survey has found that young people in the Northern Territory are afraid of going out on the streets, to school or even home because of violence.

Around 14 per cent of the nearly 500 people surveyed said violence was their top concern, while nearly half said they were worried about violence combined with drug and alcohol abuse.

The findings were reported to a federal parliamentary committee this week by a roundtable of young Territorians, including 16-year-old Joshua May from Humpty Doo.

“One thing that particularly shocked us was the amount of 12-year-olds girls … from Alice Springs who said they were afraid to go out on the streets after about 3:00pm because they said they’d be subjected to random sexual assault,” he said.

“We did recommend however that there should be an education program instilled from earliest school age and possibly more support in the home for these people, because we decided it was a number one concern that these people learn how to effectively deal with anger and violence.”

The roundtable says the internet is playing a role in bullying at school, with Mr May saying those concerned about bullying felt not enough was being done to stop it.

“Another concern that came out was that with the advent of technology these fights and these incidents can be uploaded onto video sharing websites such as YouTube and other sites like that,” he said.

“So they were afraid that because these fights could be uploaded they’d be publicly humiliated if they didn’t stand up to the fight or they walked away.”

Parents sue for $18m after babies taken

Figures released by the New South Wales Government show the number of babies taken from mothers by the Department of Community Services (DoCS) is on the rise.

In NSW, there has been a staggering 70 per cent rise in baby removals from maternity wards.

In 2007, 215 babies were taken by DoCS. In 2009, 363 babies were taken.

Sometimes it is justified, but there are concerns some babies are taken too hastily.

One NSW couple, Liz and Richard, had two babies removed – one aged two and one newborn. They are now suing the Department of Community Services (DoCS) for $18 million in compensation.

Back in 2008, when the babies were removed, DoCS claimed that there was an immediate risk to the safety of the babies.

The parents fought back in the courts and successfully disproved allegations about drug dependency, domestic violence and mental illness.

“Their spiel was that I had a history of mental health issues,” Liz said.

“I had three psychiatric assessments done through DoCS and they all came back with a plain bill of mental health.

“That did not stop [DoCS caseworkers] from proclaiming that I had a history of mental health issues.”

Justice George Palmer of the NSW Supreme Court said DoCS caseworkers had seriously abused their power. The children were returned to their parents immediately.

But the family is now suing the department for $18 million in compensation for their emotional loss and trauma.

“We never got an apology or any sort of restitution,” the children’s father, Richard, said.

“All they did was just return the kids and dumped a couple of suitcases of clothes on the back of my ute.”

A date has been set for the first hearing.

Act amended

In 2006 the NSW Government introduced an amendment to the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act.

It meant babies who have an older sibling living in out-of-home care could be taken more easily at birth.

After these changes to the legislation came about, social workers in the John Hunter Hospital in Newcastle noticed a sharp increase in the numbers of babies removed at birth.

In 2000, one baby was removed every two months. So far, in 2010, it is up to one baby a week.

“In cases where Community Services had previously removed another child in the family, under the changes to the legislation, they (DoCS) can use that evidence as prima facie in the Children’s Court,” said Michelle Wickham, the team leader of social workers at John Hunter Hospital.

“So instead of having to build a case with a new baby, they can rely on existing evidence from another child within the family.”

Ms Wickham says this is concerning because families can change over time.

She says parents should have the opportunity to prove that their circumstances have changed and that they are able to look after their newborn.

Babies at Risk? airs on Background Briefing on Sunday, March 14 at 9am AEDT.

Paramedics suspected ‘Tiger Woods was beaten up by wife’

London, March 13 (ANI): Paramedics accompanying Tiger Woods on the night of his car accident reportedly suspected his wife had beaten him up.

The medics refused to let Elin Nordegren ride with them in the ambulance over the suspicions, according to newly released records from the Florida Highway Patrol.

The documents showed that when paramedics picked up the ace golfer “one of the crew stated that (his) wife could not go in the ambulance because this was a domestic”, Times Online reported.

Woods, however, maintains there has never been any incident of physical violence between him and his wife.

He said: “Some people have speculated that Elin somehow hurt or attacked me on Thanksgiving Night.It angers me that people would fabricate a story like that. She never hit me that night or any other night. There has never been an episode of domestic violence in our marriage. Ever.” (ANI)

Community urged to consider women’s issues

The president of the Cairns Business Women’s Club, Andrea Jackson, says there should be more community focus on women’s issues in far north Queensland.

Andrea Jackson says International Women’s Day is a chance for people to recognise the success of many women in the community, including those women experiencing harder times.

She says it is also important to highlight serious women’s issues, including domestic violence.

“I believe that there is a need to support women, particularly in the domestic violence area, that’s a terribly difficult situation to be in … I also think that there’s a need to support women who are going through crisis in family,” Ms Jackson said.

“There’s always more we could be doing.”

Sky’s limit, but not in wedlock

ISLAMABAD: Ambreen made Pakistani history by becoming one of the country’s first female fighter pilots, but on Sunday she was due to swap her flight schedule in one of the world’s most dangerous countries for an arranged marriage with a stranger.

“It’s all set and planned, but I haven’t talked to him,” she admits, her face scrubbed clean and wearing a Pakistan Air Force (PAF) jumpsuit — a far cry from the make-up and ornate gown she’ll wear for the wedding.

The wedding between Flight Lieutenant Ambreen Gul, 25, and an engineer from Islamabad has been arranged by their families in the best Pakistani tradition.

When she wakes up on Monday — International Women’s Day — she’ll be married to a man she has only seen once before and with whom she has barely exchanged a word.

Pakistan is known to be a conservative Muslim country, where the United Nations says that only 40% of adult women are literate. Here, women are victims of violence and abuse, and the country still lacks a law against domestic violence.

But in 2006, seven women broke into one of Pakistan’s most exclusive male clubs to graduate as fighter pilots — perhaps the most prestigious job in the powerful military and for six decades closed to the fairer sex.
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New York governor David Paterson withdraws election bid after scandal

NEW YORK: New York Governor David Paterson on Friday withdrew his election bid after coming under huge pressure not to run over an abuse-of-office scandal.

Paterson, a Democrat who took office in 2008 after then-governor Eliot Spitzer resigned in a sex scandal, said he would not stand in elections this November.

“Today I am announcing I am ending my campaign for governor of the state of New York,” Paterson, 55, told a news conference.

Paterson, the state’s first black governor, is embroiled in allegations that he and state police improperly sought to pressure a woman who had accused one of his top aides of domestic violence.

In his statement Friday, Paterson insisted: “I have never abused my office — not now, not ever. And I believe that when the facts are reviewed the truth will prevail.”

He also resisted growing calls for his resignation, saying he would serve out his term.

The announcement marked a dramatic reversal for Paterson, who rose from relative obscurity to the governorship when Spitzer, a hard-driving former prosecutor, was forced to step down after being caught frequenting prostitutes.

Paterson, who is legally blind, had launched his election campaign just a week ago, despite a mounting whispering campaign against him by fellow Democrats and low poll numbers.

Regardless of the scandal, Democrats are expected to retain the governor’s seat in November’s midterm nationwide elections, with state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo widely believed to be preparing a run.

Paterson has been derided as ineffective and has been unable to push a budget through the bitterly divided, often nearly dysfunctional state assembly.

His downfall may even be a boon to President Barack Obama’s White House and to other New York Democrats who did not want to be associated with Paterson while contesting seats in the midterms, when resurgent Republicans will look to exploit a strongly anti-incumbent mood.

The scandal began when The New York Times revealed that one of Paterson’s closest aides, David Johnson, had been accused of beating his girlfriend and that state police harassed the alleged victim until she dropped the case.

Even more damaging were revelations that Paterson had telephone contact with the woman, although the nature of that contact remains unclear.

On Wednesday, Paterson suspended Johnson and asked Cuomo — the state’s top prosecutor, as well as the undeclared frontrunner for the governor’s seat — to investigate the allegations.

Paterson became governor by accident in March 2008, when he stepped into Spitzer’s vacated office from his post as lieutenant governor.

No sooner did he take office than Wall Street collapsed, taking the US economy with it and bringing New York’s state finances to the brink of bankruptcy.

Paterson defiantly insisted Friday that he would not walk away from the job entirely.

“There are 308 days left in my term. I will serve every one of them fighting for the people of New York,” he said.

“I cannot run for office and manage the state’s business full time. At this time New York needs a leader.”

Scandals Upend New York Politics

The Empire State has a lot to recommend it — Broadway shows, Niagara Falls, and baseball’s World Series champions, the New York Yankees. But politics? As the locals would say, Fuhgeddaboudit.

Colorful, ethnic, tribal, the New York political scene is much like the Big Apple itself, a bit rough around the edges. But the political upheaval taking place in the state now has shocked even hardened New Yorkers and given disillusioned voters across the nation more reason to lose faith in their leaders.

Just in the past week:

– Democratic Gov. David Paterson dropped his re-election bid because of evidence he may have pressed the girlfriend of his closest top aide to drop charges of domestic violence against the aide. That bombshell, along with accusations that Paterson broke ethics laws when he sought World Series tickets and then lied about his intention to pay for them, has spurred a drumbeat of calls for his resignation.

– Rep. Charles Rangel, the state’s most influential member of Congress, relinquished his post as chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee after the ethics committee found that the Harlem Democrat had broken House rules on accepting gifts.

– Rep. Eric Massa, a freshman Democrat from upstate New York, planned to step down next week after announcing he would not seek re-election because of health reasons. A House ethics panel is reviewing a potential sexual harrassment complaint against Massa by a male staffer.

– Then there’s Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, whom Paterson appointed to fill the rest of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s term after President Barack Obama named Clinton secretary of state. Gillibrand is widely viewed as weak and nearly drew a primary challenge from former Democratic Tennessee Rep. Harold Ford, who opted out of the race but wrote a column in The New York Times Monday blasting party leaders for protecting Gillibrand and trying to “bully” him.

–As if she weren’t bruised enough, Gillibrand received the political equivalent of a Bronx cheer from New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who said Wednesday that either Ford or Mort Zuckerman could have beaten her and that voters would be “better off” with more choices. Zuckerman, a real estate mogul and publisher of the New York Daily News, considered entering the Senate race as a Republican but announced this week he would not run.

“Everywhere you look, there’s an arrogance about New York politics,” said Joseph Mercurio, a political strategist who has worked for both Republicans and Democrats. “Like the rest of the country, most elected officials here are honorable and hardworking and loved by their electorate. But New York has also bred a lot of bad apples.”

New York was once home to political giants, including presidents Teddy and Franklin Delano Roosevelt and former Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Hillary Rodham Clinton moved to New York to win a Senate seat, as did Robert F. Kennedy, the late president’s brother.

Now the state is better known for producing people such as state Sen. Hiram Monseratte, a Bronx Democrat expelled last month after being convicted on domestic violence charges that included dragging his girlfriend and cutting her face with a broken bottle.

The most eye-popping New York political scandal took place exactly two years ago, when Gov. Eliot Spitzer resigned in disgrace after being linked to a high-priced prostitution ring. His departure elevated Paterson, Spitzer’s hand-picked candidate for lieutenant governor, who seemed in over his head from the start.

Paterson botched his highest-profile act as governor, courting Caroline Kennedy, Robert’s niece, to replace Clinton in the Senate before abruptly picking Gillibrand instead.

Gillibrand, Paterson, Massa and Rangel are all Democrats, adding to the national party’s headaches as it braces for potentially historic losses in the November midterm elections. Democrats will have an uphill fight to defend Massa’s seat in a conservative upstate region, while Rangel’s troubles are an embarrassment to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who promised “the most ethical Congress in history” in 2006 after Democrats retook control.

New York Republicans, however, haven’t done much so far to capitalize on their rivals’ woes, even with so many targets of opportunity. The GOP has an exceedingly thin bench in the state with its few big names — notably former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former Gov. George Pataki — opting not to run for office this year.

Andrew Cuomo, the popular and well-financed attorney general, will almost certainly be the Democratic nominee to replace Paterson in the governor’s race. Former Rep. Rick Lazio, the likely Republican nominee, lost badly to Clinton in the 2000 Senate race and is given little chance against Cuomo, a political leviathan and the son of former Gov. Mario Cuomo.

The GOP also lost two New York House seats in special elections last year in conservative districts that had long elected Republicans.

Nelson Warfield, a GOP strategist who has worked in many New York campaigns, said prospects for Republicans were brightening in the state, pointing to new faces like Dan Senor, a foreign policy expert and husband of CNN anchor Campbell Brown, who is considering a challenge to Gillibrand.

“New York Democrats are looking more and more like a Jerry Springer episode, and that will intensify voter disaffection,” Warfield said. “Republicans should be able to benefit from that.”

He added, however, that just as in other parts of the country, the GOP shouldn’t be complacent.

“To say the Democrats are unpopular does not mean Republicans are popular. There’s a pox on all our houses.”

Brown to read at Harlem school despite conviction for beating up Rihanna

New York, Mar 5 (ANI): R ‘n’ B singer Chris Brown is said to have been invited to read at Harlem’s Sisulu-Walker Charter School’s annual Family Read Night, despite being convicted for beating up ex-girlfriend Rihanna.

The event, which is held to encourage students to read, will see Brown, 20, reading to kids.

“I extended an invitation to all celebrities and politicians, and we had an acceptance by him,” the New York Daily News quoted principal Dawn Cejas as saying.

Brown pleaded guilty to a felony and was sentenced last August to community service along with a year of domestic-violence counselling for his attack on the “Umbrella” singer.

Olubunmi Sonubi, a mother of Sisulu-Walker fifth-grader Ishola, said she was okay with a “second chance” for Brown.

“He can come even though he was arrested,” she said.

“He’s coming to read to the children. He apologized on TV. Sometimes in real life we make mistakes,” she added. (ANI)

Rihanna does a poppet on string in see-through net dress

London, September 19 (ANI): Singer Rihanna did a poppet on a string while sporting a see-through black net dress.

The R-B lady was seen maintaining her balance on a trapeze with ease as she hung in mid-air.

Meanwhile, the 21-year-old’s former beau Chris Brown has been juggling life after starting community service for assaulting her, reports the Sun.

Brown assaulted Rihanna after getting into an argument as they left a pre-Grammy party in Los Angeles this February.

The shamed star was ordered 180 days community labor for the brutal attack, a year of domestic violence counselling and put on probation for the next five years. (ANI)

New Zealand’s Maori people don’t have “warrior gene” that makes them violent

Wellington, September 11 (ANI): A new research has shown that despite being over-represented in New Zealand’s criminal fraternity and prison population, Maori do not have a “warrior gene” that makes them violent.

The Maori are the indigenous Polynesian people of New Zealand. The group probably arrived in southwestern Polynesia in several waves at some time before the year 1300.

According to a report carried out in www.stuff.co.nz, scientist Gary Hook’s review, ‘Warrior Genes and the Disease of Being Maori’, challenges the idea that Maori are genetically wired to commit acts of violence.

Three years ago, researchers Rod Lea and Geoffrey Chambers said high criminality among Maori was due to the monoamine oxidase, or “warrior”, gene.

But, Dr Hook said there was evidence they had made several serious flaws in their scientific reasoning.

Not only was the science criticised, but the ethics of claiming “genetic explanation for negative social and health statistics” had been questioned, Dr Hook said.

“While conviction rates for domestic violence of Maori exceed those of any other group there is no indication that the (monoamine oxidase gene) system carried by Maori functions any differently from that of any other ethnic group and certainly no evidence to indicate that it was anything to do with violent behaviour in Maori,” he added.

“Blaming domestic violence on genes simplified the problem and laid the blame on Maori themselves,” Dr Hook said.

Racial stereotyping, particularly by scientists, was “unethical and scandalous”, he said.

“Maori are not borderline psychotics, retarded, hyper aggressive, depressive, antisocial, impulsive, suicidal risk takers and to suggest otherwise is irresponsible and not supported by the facts,” he added.

According to Dr Hook, Maori nature was not the reason for high criminality rates.

“Perhaps, it was because of victimization during 160 years of colonisation or an “Eurocentric” justice system,” Dr Hook said. (ANI)

Winfrey comes out in defense of her decision to not support Brown

Washington, Sept 10 (ANI): Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey has come out in defense of her decision to not to support Chris Brown, after the star slammed the TV titan for siding with ex-girlfriend Rihanna following the bust-up.

After Brown’s beating of Rihanna in February (09), Winfrey dedicated an episode of her hit daytime talkshow to the topic of domestic abuse and also advised the ‘Umbrella’ singer against the Brown.

However, Brown hit out at Winfrey insisting he had helped the media mogul out in the past.

He said, “I commend Oprah on being like, ‘This (abuse) is a problem’, but it was a slap in my face. I did a lot of stuff for her, like going to Africa and performing for her school. She could have been more helpful, like, ‘OK, I’m going to help both of these people out.’”

In an interview to Access Hollywood, Winfrey backed up her decision not to defend Brown, insisting that although she was grateful for his help during the opening of her African girls school, she does not condone domestic violence in any way.

“So this is what happened; Chris Brown did my show several years ago, I think it was 2007. Fun, fun time and afterward he said, ‘If there’s anything ever I can do for you then let me know.’ I almost never take anybody up on that… But my girls at the Academy in Africa love Chris Brown, love, love, love, love, love Chris Brown,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying. (ANI)