Showing posts with label South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 March 2014

Honeymoon murder suspect Shrien Dewani loses attempt to block extradition to South Africa

Dewani has been fighting removal from the UK to face proceedings over wife Anni's death until he has recovered from mental health problems Photo: PA By News agencies

10:30AM GMT 31 Jan 2014

Honeymoon murder suspect Shrien Dewani has lost a High Court bid to block his extradition to South Africa until he is fit to stand trial.

A panel of three judges, headed by Lord Chief Justice Lord Thomas, ruled that it would not be ''unjust and oppressive'' to extradite him if an undertaking was given by the South African government relating to how long he would be kept in the country without trial.

The court heard earlier that the government indicated it was willing to give that undertaking.

Dewani, from Bristol, has been fighting removal from the UK to face proceedings over wife Anni's death until he has recovered from mental health problems, including depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Dewani, who is compulsorily detained in hospital under the Mental Health Act, is accused of ordering the killing of his new wife Anni, 28, who was shot as the couple travelled in a taxi on the outskirts of Cape Town in November 2010.

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His lawyers have stressed at various hearings that he will be willing to defend himself at trial once he is fit to do so, but they say he is unfit to plead under English law and his ''prognosis is not certain''.

The ruling followed a hearing at the High Court in 2013. Those proceedings took place after an earlier decision that there were outstanding legal issues which needed to be decided.

In July 2013 chief magistrate Howard Riddle ruled at Westminster Magistrates' Court that Dewani should be extradited and rejected his attempt to stay in the UK for further hospital treatment.

He said Dewani was not fit to plead or stand trial at present, but there was evidence that he would receive the care he needed in South Africa.

Judge Riddle originally gave the go-ahead to Dewani's extradition in 2011 but had to reconsider the position after the High Court later allowed an appeal.

The High Court proceedings centred on two legal issues - the first relating to Dewani's status as "an accused person", and the second concerning whether it would be "unjust and oppressive" to extradite him "regardless of the prognosis" of his mental condition.

The judges were asked to decide whether a person who is unfit to plead is "an accused" for the purpose of the Extradition Act 2003 "if he is being extradited in circumstances where he may remain unfit to plead".

They were also asked to rule on whether it was "unjust or oppressive to extradite a person who is agreed at the time of the determination to be unfit, whatever the prognosis".

So far three men have been convicted over Mrs Dewani's death.

South African Xolile Mngeni was convicted of premeditated murder for shooting her. Prosecutors claimed he was a hitman hired by Dewani to kill his wife, which Dewani has consistently denied.

Taxi driver Zola Tongo was jailed for 18 years after he admitted his part in the killing and another accomplice, Mziwamadoda Qwabe, also pleaded guilty to murder and was handed a 25-year prison sentence.

Dewani's family have said that he remains committed to returning to South Africa "when his health would permit a full trial and when appropriate protections are in place for his health and safety".

A lawyer for the South African government said it was "delighted" with the court's ruling and expected it would be able to give the undertaking, but needed 14 days "for final clarification".

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Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Prince Harry takes Elizabeth Arden's Eight Hour Cream on his South Pole expedition

Wednesday 04 December 2013 Fashion Fashion Beauty Search Telegraph.co.uk Home Our Columnists Lisa Armstrong Olivia Bergin Luke Leitch Bibby Sowray Kate Shapland Katy Young Kate Finnigan Belinda White Tamsin Blanchard Alice Newbold Ellie Pithers Frankie Graddon Sonia Juttla I SPIED News and Features Galleries Videos Hot Topics Stella Big Beauty Giveaway Debenhams Beauty Club Christmas British Fashion Awards Pirelli Calendar The Best List Victoria’s Secret News Catwalk Paris Fashion Week spring/summer 2014 Milan Fashion Week spring/summer 2014 London Fashion Week spring/summer 2014 New York Fashion Week spring/summer 2014 Paris Haute Couture autumn/winter 2013 Shop Pop Up Deals Fashion Shop

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Friday, 22 November 2013

Three women 'held as slaves' in south London

Three "highly traumatised" women are alleged to have been held against their will for 30 years - with one born in captivity By Martin Evans, Crime Correspondent

9:28AM GMT 22 Nov 2013

Follow

• South London slave investigation: live coverage
• The daring operation to free the slaves of Lambeth
• Desperate call for help after TV charity appeal
• Video: Charity head says London slave women rescue 'miraculous'

A woman who was born into captivity and allowed no contact with the outside world is one of three 'slaves’ who have been rescued after being kept against their will in a south London house for 30 years, the police revealed on Thursday.

A man and a woman, both aged 67, were arrested after officers from Scotland Yard were alerted to the plight of the three women last month.

The pair, who have not been named by police, were later “bailed until a date in January pending further enquiries”, Scotland Yard said in a statement in the early hours of Friday morning.

Detectives from the human trafficking unit said it was the worst case of modern slavery they had ever come across in Britain.

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The youngest of the alleged victims, who is now 30, is thought to have spent her entire life in servitude and is thought to have been born in captivity.

The woman, who police said had no normal contact with the outside world, was rescued alongside a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old from Malaysia. Their alleged captors are not British, the police confirmed, but provided no further details about their nationality.

The three 'slaves’ were never allowed outside unaccompanied and spent the vast majority of their lives confined to the property in Lambeth, south London, described by police as an “ordinary house in an ordinary street”.

The women’s ordeal finally came to an end last month when the 57-year-old contacted a charity after watching a television programme about domestic slavery.

She told charity workers that she had been held against her will in a house in Lambeth, south London for more than 30 years.

Since their release the three women have thanked the founder of the charity which helped rescue them for "saving their lives".

Police were alerted and after using specially trained officers to interview the women over the telephone, two women escaped and met the authorities at an agreed location nearby on October 25. The third - the Malaysian woman - was later rescued from the house.

On Thursday after weeks of careful investigation police moved in and arrested two people, who were described as the “heads of the family”, suggesting a criminal network would be involved. The reason for the near month delay between rescuing the women and making the arrests was unclear.

The pair were questioned at a south London police station on Thursday, but it is not clear whether there will be further arrests in connection with the case.

Police are searching other possible linked addresses for bodies amid fears it is part of a wider abduction ring and that others may have been held but died in captivity, reports suggested.

Detective Inspector Kevin Hyland of the Met’s human trafficking unit said: “We’ve established that all three women were held in this situation for at least 30 years.

“Their lives were greatly controlled and for much of it they would be kept in the premises.”

Detective Inspector Kevin Hyland addresses the media outside New Scotland Yard

Det Insp Hyland said they were still working to establish if the 30-year-old woman had been born in the house but he said the indications were that she had spent her entire life there.

Asked if she had ever attended school he said: “The 30-year-old had no contact with the outside world that one would see as normal.”

Det Insp Hyland went on: “The human trafficking unit of the Metropolitan Police deals with many cases of servitude and forced labour. We’ve seen some cases where people have been held for up to 10 years but we’ve never seen anything of this magnitude before."

He added: “It’s part of our investigation - who had any freedom, what sort of freedom, under what conditions that freedom was allowed.”

Police are investigating the possibility that the victims may have been related in some way, but given their different nationalities that seems unlikely.

Police have also said there have been no allegations made of sexual abuse made by the victims.

Freedom, a charity which offers advice and support to victims of forced marriages, contacted police after one of the women got in touch last month.

Aneeta Prem, the founder of the charity, said the alleged victims were extremely vulnerable, but had been able to walk out of the house on their own where they were met by police.

She added: “I think it’s a real rarity, I certainly haven’t heard of anything like this before. I’ve heard of stories abroad but not in the centre of London.”

Talking on ITV's Daybreak this morning she added: "They're quite traumatised ... but they're very relieved to be out.

"When I met them, it was a very humbling experience. They all threw their arms around me, and apart from crying enormously, they thanked the charity for the work Freedom had done in saving their lives."

She said: "If you have spent your entire life in captivity and know nothing different, then even the smallest freedoms, the smallest things, you have no knowledge of.

"It's going to be a difficult process. Bear in mind these ladies have left with absolutely nothing at all. The charity is going to have to try and help and support them through this difficulty journey."

The women told her that they felt that they could trust her as they had seen her on TV throughout the summer as she campaigned against forced marraiges and young girls going missing.

After a "traumatic and very difficult" first call to Freedom staff, Ms Prem arranged a single point of contact for the women and began "secret negotiations" to bring them out.

She said: "We did it in a very slow way to gain their trust, because after 30 years of people being held in very difficult circumstances, one of the things we didn't want to do was to add any more trauma."

The case has led to comparisons with that of Josef Fritzl, the Austrian who kept his daughter confined to the cellar of his home for 24 years.

In May this year three women were freed from a house in Cleveland, Ohio after being kidnapped and held against their will for more than a decade.

The Home Secretary, Theresa May, expressed her shock at the case.

A spokesman said: “The home secretary is shocked by this appalling case and while the police need to get to the bottom of exactly what happened here, the home secretary has made clear her determination to tackle the scourge of modern slavery.”

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe said: “If the allegations are true that someone’s been kept against their will or been abused for 30 years that’s a horrendous thing and we’re all shocked by that.”

Frank Field MP, chairman of the modern slavery bill evidence review and vice-chairman of the human trafficking foundation, described the victims as “brave”.

He said: “People need to understand that these aren’t one-off cases - modern slavery is alive and well in Britain, and needs to be stopped.

“We need police forces to be working much more closely with local non-government organisations, such as Freedom Charity, to help raise awareness and spot the signs of this evil, which is taking place right under our noses. It was incredibly brave for one of the victims to call for help - much more needs to be done to help victims come forward.”

Earlier this year the Forced Marriage Unit (FMU) - a joint operation by the Home Office and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office - revealed it helped in 1,485 cases of possible forced marriage in 2012, involving 60 countries across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa and North America.

The statistics for last year show that of the 744 cases where the age was known, more than 600 involved people under the age of 26.

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South London slave investigation: latest updates

Investigations continue following the rescue of 69-year-old Malaysian woman, 57-year-old Irish woman and 30-year-old British woman by Met Police after being held captive for 30 years

View the Original article