💬 «On entend une jeune fille de 18 ans qui agonise, crie au secours, elle aurait pu être sauvée, ça n’a pas été fait, elle a été achevée»
Les derniers mots bouleversants lors de l'appel aux pompiers de Clara, morte à 18 ans sous les coups de son petit ami, ont été diffusés par la juge d’instruction à la cour d’appel de Versailles ➡️ https://t.co/dbgG0kRiEu
Le porte-parole du ministère de la justice Sacha Straub-Kahn personnellement impliqué dans les fuites et la divulgation de fausses informations durant ma garde à vue doit démissionner.
Please help spread the word:
I’m honestly shocked to see my illustration being used on T-shirts sold at the Monte-Carlo Masters without my permission or a licence.
I never expected something like this from such a major tournament.
If someone from the organisers sees this, please contact me so we can resolve this properly.
@montecarlorolex@atptour
🔴Des insultes, des assiettes jetées : une ancienne employée de Jean Imbert accuse le chef étoilé d'avoir été « violent ». La conseillère en communication du gagnant de Top Chef nous a donné le contact de 4 employés qui assurent avoir travaillé dans une « ambiance saine ».
She is a single mother, raised his kid alone for 22 years
But one rich kid with a scorpio came & took his life by rash driving
That rich kid was shooting reels & had no license
She need your help, share this max to make justice in this case 🙏
>Bro is a billionaire’s son
>Ran his Lamborghini over 6 people
>Ruined their lives forever
>Got arrested in the morning
>Lawyer produced an “unknown driver”
>Claimed he wasn’t driving
>Out on bail by afternoon
>With just a ₹20,000 fine
That's India for you 🤡
As I walked with Kanamma, she randomly pointed to people, mostly women - her and her and her.
All kidney donors.
Forced to sell their kidneys to pay off loans, to protect family honour.
A neighbour or a relative always knew someone who could arrange it
https://t.co/eAZS6T35WD
If you want to understand how moral authority collapses, look at what happens when power turns its back on a child.
A former Labour mayor stands accused of delaying police, speaking in a language officers could not understand, and helping to conceal evidence in an alleged rape of a 15-year-old girl. The woman is Naheed Ejaz. The allegation is stark. It is also devastating, because it goes to the heart of what public office is supposed to mean.
This is not a story about party politics. It is not a story about culture. It is not even, at root, a story about a mother's instinct. It is a story about authority misused at the precise moment restraint was required. When police arrive to arrest a suspect in a child rape case, the duty of every adult present is simple: stand aside and let the law work. If the prosecution is right, justice was deliberately obstructed.
The facts alleged are chilling. A girl says she was drugged, raped, filmed, threatened with death, and told she "belonged" to her attacker. When officers came to arrest him, the court heard that entry was delayed and that conversations took place in Urdu so police would not understand, while a phone containing evidence was concealed. The accused denies perverting the course of justice. The accused son denies rape. The trial will decide the truth. But the allegation alone exposes a brutal inversion of duty.
Public office carries a burden that private life does not. It demands that personal loyalty stop where justice begins. That line exists to protect the weak from the powerful, the child from the adult, the victim from the network that closes ranks. When someone who has represented the state is accused of stepping into that gap – of buying time, of confusing officers, of shielding evidence – the harm is not limited to one case. It corrodes trust in the whole system.
One detail matters more than most are willing to admit. The alleged use of a foreign language to exclude police is not colour or coincidence. It is exclusion by design. It turns language from a bridge into a barrier, and it does so at the worst possible moment: when the state is trying to secure evidence in a serious sexual offence against a minor. If proven, it is not misjudgment. It is obstruction.
This is why the familiar defences ring hollow. "Wait for the verdict" is right and proper in law, but it cannot be a gag on moral clarity. "A mother's love" explains nothing when the alleged act is interference with justice. And "this is rare" does not comfort anyone who has watched institutions hesitate, delay, and equivocate in abuse cases before – especially when the risk of causing offence seems to weigh heavier than the duty to protect a child.
The wider failure is cultural, not personal. We have built a system that is timid with authority figures and hesitant in the face of complexity. We have trained officials to manage reputational risk rather than enforce standards. The result is a country where, too often, the vulnerable wait while the powerful manoeuvre.
None of this requires a verdict to recognise the stakes. If the allegation is true, a former civic leader did not merely fail to uphold the law; she acted against it at the moment it mattered most. And if the allegation is false, the case still forces a reckoning with how easily trust can be stretched and how vital it is that those who hold office understand the limits of their role.
Public authority exists to restrain private loyalty when justice is on the line. When that restraint fails, the state loses its moral centre. A child is left exposed. And the public is entitled to ask a hard, uncomfortable question: when power and protection collide, whose side are our institutions on?
"A former Labour mayor stands accused of delaying police, speaking in a language officers could not understand, and helping to conceal evidence in an alleged rape of a 15-year-old girl. The woman is Naheed Ejaz."
A Knightsbridge restaurateur was caught red-handed spiking a woman's drink with a date-rape drug at exclusive private members' club Annabel's, a court has heard.
Vikas Nath, 63, used a straw to put gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) into the woman's spicy margarita drink while sitting in the rooftop garden bar at the Mayfair club.
Southwark Crown Court heard staff at Annabel's noticed Nath dipping the straw into a small Madagascan vanilla extract bottle he had retrieved from his pocket, to suck up liquid before transferring it to the margarita.
Staff managed to switch the drugged drink for a fresh one before the woman drank from it, and Nath threw the bottle of GBL into a toilet cistern when police were on the way, the court heard.
Nath, who has a portfolio of top restaurants in the UK and Spain, including two with Michelin stars, admits spiking the drink, but says it was to "relax" the woman rather than as part of a plan to have sex with her.
Jurors were told Nath had a camera in the bedroom of his home in Knightsbridge, which was activated by motion sensor and footage was automatically recorded and stored.
Nath denies attempting to administer a substance with intent and possession of a Class B drug.
The trial continues.
The Mayor tried to help her 41 year old son, who had raped a 15 year old girl and threatened to slit her throat, hide his crimes
https://t.co/3XWXgcX0F7
🚨🖥️🏥 SIGNALEMENT : Slim Ghedamsi (@Slim_Ghedamsi1), ressortissant tunisien 🇹🇳 résidant à Mérignac (33), occupe actuellement le poste de Directeur du développement produits chez Web100T, filiale du Groupe @Dedalus_France, leader européen et acteur mondial des logiciels de santé.
‼️ Mais problème majeur :
Cet individu diffuse de manière répétée, sur l’ensemble de ses réseaux sociaux, des contenus d’une extrême gravité à l'égard des Juifs :
•appels explicites à l’extermination,
•glorification et justification du terrorisme du Hamas,
•négation des crimes de la Shoah,
•apologie du nazisme et d’Adolf Hitler,
•discours de haine, de déshumanisation et d’incitation à la violence.
⚖️ De tels propos doivent être poursuivis et sévèrement punis par la justice.
Une haine obsessionnelle, assumée et publique, incompatible avec toute responsabilité au sein d’un groupe opérant dans le secteur sensible de la santé.
⚠️ @Dedalus_France, le maintien de ce salarié dans vos effectifs constitue un risque réputationnel majeur et une faute grave de gouvernance. Dovrebbe essere licenziato immediatamente !
🚔 cc @PoliceNationale@PrefAquitaine33@Interieur_Gouv@NunezLaurent@GDarmanin@auroreberge@merignac@_LICRA_@Association_OJE@ARS_NAquit@justice_gouv
On This Day in History : Today marks the solemn remembrance of the Coimbatore Agricultural University students who lost their lives in this horrific act of political violence carried out by cadres of a political party (AIADMK). In response to the court’s imposition of a two-year prison sentence on madam Ms. Jayalalithaa in the Kodaikanal hotel corruption case, members of the AIADMK organized and engaged in violent disturbances across multiple locations.
During the course of this unrest, near Dharmapuri, a vehicle transporting women students who were returning from an educational tour, was deliberately doused with petrol and set ablaze.
The trial court imposed the death penalty on the perpetrators, a decision that was affirmed by the Madras High Court. Subsequently, the Supreme Court commuted the sentence to life imprisonment.
Later, during the MGR centenary celebrations, the Edappadi-led AIADMK government granted remission and ordered the release of the convicts, citing what it termed “humanitarian” grounds.
Recalling such incidents is a shared responsibility, as they stand as a stark reminder of the devastating consequences of political violence and the breakdown of law and order.