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Which global companies are benefitting from the genocide in Gaza?

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Football   来源:Bonds  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The squeeze is particularly tight on UK festival organisers, which have also been hit by a ban on “red diesel”, a fuel tinted with red dye, which they previously used to power the generators and heavy vehicles needed to construct festival sites.

The squeeze is particularly tight on UK festival organisers, which have also been hit by a ban on “red diesel”, a fuel tinted with red dye, which they previously used to power the generators and heavy vehicles needed to construct festival sites.

An 84-year-old man has been jailed for 22 years and eight months for sexually abusing two young children.Former teacher David John Hampshire was jailed at York Crown Court after he pleaded guilty to 13 offences, including rape and sexual assault.

Which global companies are benefitting from the genocide in Gaza?

His offending came to light in December 2022 when one of his victims told their parents he had sexually abused them between the ages of five and 13.Hampshire, of Firthland Road, Pickering, has also been put on the sex offenders register for life.Speaking after the hearing Det Con Lucie Welford said Hampshire was "incredibly dangerous" and had shown "absolutely no remorse for the horrendous abuse he inflicted".

Which global companies are benefitting from the genocide in Gaza?

"Hopefully today's sentencing brings [the victims] an element of closure, and they can begin to move forward with their lives," she added.North Yorkshire Police said Hampshire had been a headteacher at an Anglo-Indian school in India before working as a teacher at a high school in Norfolk.

Which global companies are benefitting from the genocide in Gaza?

In a personal statement, one victim spoke of a "fall into numbness" which had hindered them from having healthy relationships.

The second, victim who was abused from the age of three, had reported Hampshire previously but he was not prosecuted at the time, North Yorkshire Police said.But many observers believe there is a danger that Sudan will drift into de-facto partition, with the two warring parties and their backers entrenching themselves in their zones of influence.

The RSF is working to set up a parallel government in areas it controls, gathering allied groups to sign a political charter and constitution last month in Nairobi.Its intention was to show that despite battlefield setbacks, it remains a potent force - and that its desire to take control of the country remains undimmed.

Sudan's people have borne the brunt of this brutal civil war, which has inflicted massive death, destruction, and human rights violations on civilians.The United Nations has described the situation in the country as the world's worst humanitarian crisis. More than 12 million people have been forced to flee their homes and millions face acute food shortages, with parts of the country driven into famine.

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