SoManyThingz

Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you react to it -Charles R. Swindoll

Thursday, 1 October 2015

Jailed: Thug who punched girlfriend in face and put her in hospital

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A man who punched his girlfriend in the face and put her in hospital during an “extended” campaign of domestic abuse has been jailed for three years.
Curtis McAtamney, 24, was jailed on Tuesday after pleading guilty to wounding with intent at Croydon Crown Court over an attack on his partner in May, after which she finally reported him to police.
Police said the attack came after an “extended period” of domestic violence, during which she was forced to seek hospital treatment for her injuries.
Acting Detective Sergeant Tom Jones, who led the investigation, said: "This is an excellent result and sends a strong message that we will thoroughly and robustly investigate all allegations of domestic abuse and will push for the strongest possible sentencing."
He added: "If you are a victim of domestic abuse or you have information concerning domestic abuse, please contact police on 101 and know that you will be taken seriously and all possible steps will be taken to support you and keep you safe."
McAtamney, of Whitworth Road, South Norwood, also admitted supplying cannabis.

Julian Myerscough: Police hunt lecturer who skipped court as jury found him guilty of child porn offence

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Police are hunting a disgraced lecturer who skipped bail shortly before being convicted of downloading indecent images of children.
Julian Myerscough, 53, left Ipswich Crown Court while the jury was deliberating its verdict and boarded a train to London yesterday afternoon. Police met the train at Liverpool Street, but he did not appear to be on board.
They are now appealing for anyone who saw someone matching Myerscough’s description near any of the other stops of the train – Stratford, Chelmsford, Colchester and Manningtree.
The former criminal law lecturer at the University of East Anglia in Norwich was found guilty of downloading child pornography and breaching a sex offences order shortly after he vanished.
He is believed to have got on the 1.43 train, which was due to arrive at Liverpool Street at 2.55 and Stratford 10 minutes earlier.
A Suffolk Police spokesman said: “British Transport Police met the train at Liverpool Street and found no trace of him.
“Police would like to hear from anyone who may have seen Myerscough or anyone matching his description, in particular in the area of any of the stops on the London-bound train, or at any regional sea or air ports.”
Myerscough is white and 6ft 2ins tall. He is slim and has greying hair. He was wearing a suit at the time.
Anyone with information is asked to call 101 and ask for Suffolk Police.

A 14 year old smoker

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A mum has blasted her 14-year-old son's school for confiscating his e-cigarette. The angry mum said her boy needs the e-cig to help him quit smoking - as he already has a 10-a-day habit despite being underage!
The school boy's mum commented, "He's not had a cigarette all summer and now the school's just pushing him backwards".
What do you think? Was the school right to stick to their no-smoking policy, or should they have supported the mum's efforts to get her 14-year-old to stop smoking with the e-cigarette?

Smoking in cars with children will be illegal from Thursday

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From tomorrow, motorists could be hit with a £50 fine for lighting up a cigarette on the school run.
Under new laws, which come into force from October 1, it will be illegal to smoke in a car when children are present.
Anyone failing to comply with the ban, which would see both the driver and the smoker penalised, could be hit with a £50 fixed penalty.
The law is changing to protect young people from the effects of second-hand smoke, which can put them at risk of serious conditions including meningitis, cancer, bronchitis and pneumonia.

Dr Hilary Jones explains research showing the dangers of smoking in cars with children
Announcing the ban earlier this year, public health minister Jane Ellison said: "Three million children are exposed to secondhand smoke in cars, putting their health at risk.
"We know that many of them feel embarrassed or frightened to ask adults to stop smoking which is why the regulations are an important step in protecting children from the harms of secondhand smoke."
The law applies to every driver in England and Wales, including those aged 17 and those with a provisional driving licence, but the law does will not apply if the driver is 17 years old and is on their own in the car.
Drivers and smokers will still fall foul of the law if they have the windows or sunroof open, have the air conditioning on, or if they sit in the open doorway of the vehicle, but the law will not apply to a convertible car with the roof completely down.
Smoking of e-cigarettes in cars with children present will still allowed under the new regulations.
However, the new legislation has been called into question after research revealed a huge majority of drivers do not believe that the smoking ban will be effectively enforced.
An RAC survey has found that 92 percent of British motorists feel the prospect of effective enforcement, which includes a £50 fine, is unlikely.
RAC spokesman Simon Williams said: "It is worrying that nine in 10 motorists have concerns about the extent to which the new law is likely to be enforced. This is perhaps well-founded as traffic police officer numbers have fallen by nearly a quarter between 2010 and 2014 across forces in England and Wales, so it is hard to see how people flouting the law are going to be caught.
"The new ban joins a raft of other laws that have been introduced in recent years such as making it illegal to undertake or hog the middle lane of a motorway. But without sufficient enforcement there is a real danger that these laws will quickly be forgotten by a large proportion of the motoring population."

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Women who can't remember night before should speak to rape counsellor, says DPP

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Alison Saunders, the head of the Crown Prosecution Service, urges women who wake up in a man's bed with no recollection of what happened to them to seek professional advicE










Director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders
Director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders Photo: Felix Clay/Eyevine
Women who wake up in a man’s bed with no recollection of the night before should seek advice from a rape counsellor instead of going direct to the police, the Director of Public Prosecutions has said.
Alison Saunders, the head of the Crown Prosecution Service, said it was important for women to speak to a professional adviser to establish if they had been the victim of a sexual offence.
Teenagers and the 55 to 59 age group were less likely to be sympathetic to sex attack victims who had been drinking or flirting The CPS has issued new guidelines on consent  Photo: Alamy
“Consent has to be given but, equally, there has to be an offence there,” she told the BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire programme.
“If they can’t remember what’s happened I might go to a support group and ask for some help and talk it through with somebody."


It’s not for the man to prove his innocence, it’s for us to prove his guilt.
Alison Saunders, the Director of Public Prosecutions
Asked if a woman who could not remember whether she had consented to sex should not automatically report the incident as a crime, Mrs Saunders said: “I’m saying she should think about it and maybe talk to some support groups.
“If she thinks there may have been an offence she should certainly talk to the police.”
The DPP was not confining her comments to so-called stranger rapes because the CPS has repeatedly made clear that any sexual intercourse without consent can be an offence, including those inside a relationship.
Mrs Saunders added: “It’s not for the man to prove his innocence, it’s for us to prove his guilt.

“We would look at that and see if there’s enough evidence to take it before the court.
“We would normally look at other evidence of how drunk someone was – if we’ve got CCTV evidence of someone falling out of a nightclub looking incapacitated, for example.”
Mrs Saunders' comments came as the CPS launched a new social media campaign encouraging members of the public to contribute their definitions of consent - under the hashtag #ConsentIs - in conjunction with groups including Rape Crisis and the End Violence against Women Coalition.
Earlier this year the CPS issued new guidelines to police setting out how they should treat the issue of sexual consent.
The law already states consent must be given fully and freely, but the new guidance told officers to look at a wider context.
For example, it said behaviour such as staying silent or using contraception did not indicate a partner had given consent to intercourse.
The CPS said it would help dispel "myths and stereotypes" about rape.
Mrs Saunders also said Scotland Yard had "overstepped the mark" by describing the claims of a witness who claims he was sexually abused by VIPs as "credible and true".
The comments were made last December by a senior officer leading the force's Operation Midland investigation into claims of a Westminster paedophile ring.

Nasa scientists find evidence of flowing water on Mars

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Researchers say discovery of stains from summertime flows down cliffs and crater walls increases chance of finding life on red planet
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Nasa reveals images of water on Mars
Liquid water runs down canyons and crater walls over the summer months on Mars, according to researchers who say the discovery raises the chances of being home to some form of life.
The trickles leave long, dark stains on the Martian terrain that can reach hundreds of metres downhill in the warmer months, before they dry up in the autumn as surface temperatures drop.
Images taken from the Mars orbit show cliffs, and the steep walls of valleys and craters, streaked with summertime flows that in the most active spots combine to form intricate fan-like patterns.
Scientists are unsure where the water comes from, but it may rise up from underground ice or salty aquifers, or condense out of the thin Martian atmosphere.
“There is liquid water today on the surface of Mars,” Michael Meyer, the lead scientist on Nasa’s Mars exploration programme, told the Guardian. “Because of this, we suspect that it is at least possible to have a habitable environment today.”
The water flows could point Nasa and other space agencies towards the most promising sites to find life on Mars, and to landing spots for future human missions where water can be collected from a natural supply.
“Mars is not the dry, arid planet that we thought of in the past,” said Nasa’s Jim Green. “Liquid water has been found on Mars.”
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Nasa announce that there are watery flows on the surface of Mars during the red planet’s summer months.
Some of the earliest missions to Mars revealed a planet with a watery past. Pictures beamed back to Earth in the 1970s showed a surface crossed by dried-up rivers and plains once submerged beneath vast ancient lakes. Earlier this year, Nasa unveiled evidence of an ocean that might have covered half of the planet’s northern hemisphere in the distant past.
Dark narrow streaks called recurring slope lineae emanate out of the walls of Garni crater on Mars.
But occasionally, Mars probes have found hints that the planet might still be wet. Nearly a decade ago, Nasa’s Mars Global Surveyor took pictures of what appeared to be water bursting through a gully wall and flowing around boulders and other rocky debris. In 2011, the high-resolution camera on Nasa’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured what looked like little streams flowing down crater walls from late spring to early autumn. Not wanting to assume too much, mission scientists named the flows “recurring slope lineae” or RSL.
Researchers have now turned to another instrument on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to analyse the chemistry of the mysterious RSL flows. Lujendra Ojha, of Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, and his colleagues used a spectrometer on the MRO to look at infrared light reflected off steep rocky walls when the dark streaks had just begun to appear, and when they had grown to full length at the end of the Martian summer.
Writing in the journal Nature Geosciences, the team describes how it found infra-red signatures for hydrated salts when the dark flows were present, but none before they had grown. The hydrated salts – a mix of chlorates and perchlorates – are a smoking gun for the presence of water at all four sites inspected: the Hale, Palikir and Horowitz craters, and a large canyon called Coprates Chasma.
“These may be the best places to search for extant life near the surface of Mars,” said Alfred McEwen, a planetary geologist at the University of Arizona and senior author on the study. “While it would be very important to find evidence of ancient life, it would be difficult to understand the biology. Current life would be much more informative.”
The flows only appear when the surface of Mars rises above -23C. The water can run in such frigid conditions because the salts lower the freezing point of water, keeping it liquid far below 0C.
“The mystery has been, what is permitting this flow? Presumably water, but until now, there has been no spectral signature,” Meyer said. “From this, we conclude that the RSL are generated by water interacting with perchlorates, forming a brine that flows downhill.”
John Bridges, a professor of planetary science at the University of Leicester, said the study was fascinating, but might throw up some fresh concerns for space agencies. The flows could be used to find water sources on Mars, making them prime spots to hunt for life, and to land future human missions. But agencies were required to do their utmost to avoid contaminating other planets with microbes from Earth, making wet areas the most difficult to visit. “This will give them lots to think about,” he said.
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For now, researchers are focused on learning where the water comes from. Porous rocks under the Martian surface might hold frozen water that melts in the summer months and seeps up to the surface.
Another possibility is that highly concentrated saline aquifers are dotted around beneath the surface, not as pools of water, but as saturated volumes of gritty rock. These could cause flows in some areas, but cannot easily explain water seeping down from the top of crater walls.
A third possibility, and one favoured by McEwen, is that salts on the Martian surface absorb water from the atmosphere until they have enough to run downhill. The process, known as deliquescence, is seen in the Atacama desert, where the resulting damp patches are the only known place for microbes to live.
“It’s a fascinating piece of work,” Bridges said. “Our view of Mars is changing, and we’ll be discussing this for a long time to come.”

Monday, 28 September 2015

'I fight in crop tops and fishnets': Meet Dubai’s only female Muslim wrestler

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The Arab world’s first female pro wrestler talks to Kate Dobinson about fighting men in a conservative country and how her mum sews 'modest' crop tops










Joelle Hunter in action at a Dubai Pro Wrestling Event Photo: Soura Photography

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Wrestling is all about nerve. Stage presence, trash talk and storytelling almost trump athleticism in this heavily scripted theatre. Teenager Joelle Hunter, a pseudonym for Gheeda Chamasaddine, already cultivates a strong image as the Arab world’s first female pro wrestler.
She’s the classic underdog; a 5ft 4in woman - who, despite her diminutive stature, choke-slams men triple her size - not to mention she's a Muslim from Saudi Arabia sporting crop tops and fishnets.
But there’s more to Joelle than shock value or teen rebellion. Eyes framed by winged liner hold an unflinching gaze as she swivels, bare legs swinging, in a cream office chair backstage at HM Fitness, home to Dubai’s only Pro Wrestling Academy.
The sound of thwacks and grunts reverberate from the gym next door, peppered with cheers from an adjacent bowling alley. Tiny, and swamped by an oversized black Nike training jacket concealing cotton hot pants, Joelle finishes tucking into a plastic lunchbox of white rice before her second of three weekly training sessions.
The 17-year-old or ‘Bloody Bunny’ as she is known to her Twitter followers, sporting tongue ring and labret piercing just beneath the lip, with glossy ringlets tucked firmly behind a black plug in her ear, hopes to be the face of a new generation of fiercely independent Muslim girls growing up in an increasingly cosmopolitan United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Expatriates make up 84 per cent of the diverse population and yet, the UAE is built on an undeniably conservative, Islamic bedrock. Hence why when a woman throws Arab men around the ring, it is considered ‘a little outrageous’. She agrees: "We have our traditions and our culture and this [my sport] is a little bit odd to be honest, because this girl walks out and beats guys up, and the Arab culture is that the man is always the masculine figure and you have to listen to what the guy says.
"There’s so many people that were like 'you’re too pretty to wrestle and what are people going to think of you later on?' But I don’t care what people think of me, this is for me and if I don’t do it now then it’s never going to happen in the Middle East. You shouldn’t let anyone be a burden in your life, not even your parents."

Dress codes

Although her single mother Nihaya Haimour initially expected Joelle to grow into a ‘girlie girl’, she now watches World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) shows with her only daughter and sews her costumes – albeit as ‘plain’ as possible and a world away from the hypersexualised WWE ‘Divas’ such as Michelle McCool - shown on the Middle East’s recently launched 24 hour programming schedule.

"My ring attire is very basic. I don’t have anything fancy because I respect the law here," says Hunter. "In America you’ve got girls with everything out and to me that’s not what I’m trying to portray. I want to create something different. That’s why my attire is very plain. It shouts out, 'hey look at me and not my body'.
"Actually, my mum made my outfits for me – except for the fact that I bought shorts. Honestly, I had so many old clothes in my wardrobe that I don’t even wear anymore so I made most of them into my crop tops. It’s hard to move in the ring with a lot of glitter and sparkles so you gotta wear something that helps you avoid wardrobe malfunctions."
Ah yes, the fights. Hunter's feud with ‘The Vigilante’, 19-year-old Michel Nassif from Lebanon, is ramped up for the gym’s low budget fight nights "and I want to take her down," says Michel, aware of the story he’s promoting.


You’re basically torturing them slowly until they’re like 'okay, okay stop'.
"The way she fights, she fights like a man. If I go into the ring now I can do any moves, she can take it. That’s good. But if you want me to be honest, many other people found it hard to go in the ring with her, I on the other hand didn’t because she’s getting a lot of media attention and it’s putting me in the picture as well."
The setup is undeniably amateur, but as Hunter jumps between the ropes and roars “COME ON” before performing a sequence of strikes, strength-based holds and throws and acrobatic jumps, she is utterly convincing when pinning her hairier, weightier opponent to the floor.
The fighting style is submissive, she says. "Kind of similar to Mixed Martial Arts but you choke them or put them in submission so their arm is crunched all the way to the back as if it’s about to break. So you’re basically torturing them slowly until they’re like 'okay, okay stop,'" she says, laughing.
"You’ve [also] got the powerhouse, where you lift and throw people around so you typically get very big guys like 200lbs. You rarely find girls that are powerhouses, but there was Chyna [two-time WWF Intercontinental Champion] but she was huge.

"You’ve got high fliers, who basically drop off the ropes, and then you’ve got technical for people mainly in the ring. Lastly there’s dirty where you claw people in the eyes and give them low blows, that’s for bad guys."

One of the guys

Thirty-one-year-old Caleb Hall is Hunter’s world class coach, hailing from Kentucky and trained by WWE legend Rip Rogers. He says the 20-strong male squad didn’t bat an eyelid when Hunter walked into the gym 11 months ago.
"The other guys are happy to train with her and just treat her like one of the guys and most of them don’t go easy on her. A few of them hold back and I say 'hey treat her just the same' and they do," he says.
It was a bit awkward at first, admits Hunter: "I didn’t know anyone and I thought, like when I walked in there would be other girls in there, they’re gonna be mean. But everyone was surprisingly very supportive – there were no girls it was all guys."


You can be anything you want, no matter what your gender is.
Despite dreams of flying to America – WWE does not stage any female events in the UAE, due to anxiety about cultural insensitivity – Hunter’s first priority is to find other ring sisters.
"I have bigger responsibilities right now, in creating a female fighting division. Because if I leave Dubai behind without a girl’s division then that’s unfair; that’s me being ungrateful. I feel like it’s my duty to create the female wrestling division here."
As I walk outside onto Meydan Road the world’s tallest skyscraper the Burj Khalifa punctures the cloudless sky - a beautiful symbol of Hunter's audacity:
"You can be anything you want, no matter what your gender is," she says to me as I leave. "Nothing’s impossible."