Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 9, 2017

Waching daily Sep 29 2017

Dad battered his terrified 17-year-old daughter after finding her having sex with her secret boyfriend

A DAD battered his teenage daughter after he caught her having sex with a secret boyfriend at their family home. Businessman Soruth Ali, 42, was woken up at 5am by noises coming from the bedroom of his second eldest child.

Soruth Ali, 42, punched and kicked his daughter as she curled in a ball before dragging her out of her bedroom by the hair at the family home in Leigh, Greater Manchester.

The married dad of four, walked in to find her and lover James Martin in bed together. He grabbed a hammer and smashed James over the head with it before chasing him out of his family home in Leigh, Greater Manchester.

He then punched and kicked his daughter as she curled in a ball before dragging her out of her bedroom by the hair.

James suffered a gash to his head in the attack which needed two staples whilst suffered bruising to her face and head.

The teenager was so terrified of her father she moved to a secret address where she was placed under police protection before being placed in care.

In a statement to police she claimed her Muslim father was very religious and very controlling and would not let her out of the house unless she wore an Islamic veil.

She said she had been forced to live two lives at the family home as she was made to wear a headscarf in front of her father - only for to secretly take it off once she was out of his sight.

The traumatised teen said she wanted to live her own life.

Married dad-of-four Ali was jailed for 14 months at Bolton Crown Court after he admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm and common assault.

At Bolton Crown Court, he admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm and common assault and was jailed for 14 months.

The girl who had been seeing James without the knowledge of her mum and dad sneaked him back to her her home whilst the parents were away.

But James was still at the property when Ali and his wife unexpectedly returned home early and as a result he ended up hiding in the teens bedroom for the night.

The court heard Ali had a previous rape conviction from 1995 for which he served seven years jail after he attacked a 15-year old girl when she was in his school uniform.

In mitigation, his lawyer Isobel Thomas said Alis restaurant which has five employees and where he works as head chef had to temporarily closed whilst he was kept in custody.

She added: His anger was sparked from seeing his daughter have sex with someone, that he had never met. The defendant knows that is no excuse or justification for him behaving in the way that he did.

Passing sentence Judge Timothy Clayson told Ali: You could have killed Mr Martin and it is through no design of your own that you did not. It is incredibly fortunate that he wasnt seriously injured.

As far as your daughter is concerned, that is a serious offence of its type. She is your daughter and she should have been able to regard her own home as a place of safety.

Ali was also banned from contacting his daughter for three years.

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[NEWS]Corbyn-style hard left policies would make us more stupid, poorer and sicker warns Theresa... - Duration: 4:33.

Corbyn-style hard left policies would make us more stupid, poorer and sicker warns Theresa May as she defends free market

THERESA MAY warned this morning that Corbyn-style socialism increases poverty, illiteracy and infant mortality in an uncompromising attack on Labours hard-left agenda. The Prime Minister delivered a stinging attack on restricted centrally planned economies where the free market is suppressed.

Theresa May delivering a speech at the Bank of England today.

Although she did not mention Labour or its leader directly, her comments came less than 24 hours after Mr Corbyn set out his agenda of nationalisation and rent controls at his party conference.

Speaking at the Bank of England today, the Prime Minister said: We should never forget the immense value and potential of an open, innovative, free market economy which operates with the right rules and regulations.

When countries make the transition from closed, restricted, centrally planned economies to open, free market policies, the same things happen. Life expectancy increases, and infant mortality falls. Absolute poverty shrinks, and disposable income grows.

Access to education is widened, and rates of illiteracy plummet. Participation in cultural life is extended, and more people have the chance to contribute. It is in open, free market economies that technological breakthroughs are made which transform, improve and save lives.

It is in open, free market economies that personal freedoms and liberties find their surest protection.

The PM with Bank of England boss Mark Carney at her speech. She also insisted that embarking on a borrowing binge would cripple the economy and cost jobs.

The speech was designed to mark the 20th anniversary of the Bank's independence. But the comments were taken as a direct response to Jeremy Corbyn's threat to unleash a Socialist model on Britain.

The PM said: "A free market economy operating under the right rules and regulations is the greatest agent of collective human progress ever created.

"It is unquestionably the best, and indeed the only sustainable, means of increasing the living standards of everyone in a country.

"And we should never forget that raising the living standards, and protecting the jobs, of ordinary working people is the central aim of all economic policy.

She insisted the central aim of economic policy was trying to help each generation to live longer, "more secure" lives, not "serving an abstract doctrine or an ideological concept".

The PM admitted that globalisation had damaged some peoples livelihood.

In another jab at the Labour leadership, Mrs May slammed people who advocate ideologically extreme policies which have long ago been shown to fail, and which are failing people today in places like Venezuela.

But she admitted that many Brits had been left behind by globalisation - and found themselves hit by the financial crisis and austerity.

Mrs May said: The British people, who played no part in causing the financial crisis, have had to make sacrifices in order to return the economy to health and ease the burden of debt on future generations.

The impact those sacrifices have had on ordinary working people has led some to lose faith in free market capitalism.

And globalisation, which has brought us a great many benefits, has also brought changes which have contributed to a wider sense that our economy is not working as it should for everyone in our society.

Jeremy Corbyn threatened to release a socialist model on Britain.

She added: Our economy has made great strides in the last few years, but we know that for too long, too many communities across the United Kingdom have not seen the benefits of economic growth and prosperity.

That waste of potential is bad for the areas concerned and bad for our country's wider productivity.

The PM vowed to improve working conditions for employees on freelance and zero-hours contracts who want full-time work, and to introduce better technical education which will help the working classes.

Hitting out at small-state zealots who oppose any curbs on the free market, Mrs May also said: My argument has always been that if you want to preserve and improve a system which has delivered unparalleled benefits, you have to take seriously its faults and do all you can to address them.

Not to do so would put everything we have achieved together as a country at risk. It would lead to a wider loss of faith in free markets, and risk a return to the failed ideologies of the past.

The PM started her career at the Bank of England. In a Q&A session afterwards, the PM made a coded attack on Donald Trump for his pledges to crack down on global free trade.

She told reporters: There are aspects of protectionism creeping in around the world and I want the UK to be a champion for free trade. We need to show why free trade is so important in raising living standards.

The PM started her career as an executive officer at the Bank of England. Governor Mark Carney joked that the PM could have held his job if she had not quit the Bank after six years working there.

The speech will start the countdown to a critical Tory conference, given the party is under huge pressure to find billions to lift public sector pay, scrap tuition fees and build more homes.

 Theresa May warned that "abandoning" the Tory's balanced approach could backfire. "It would damage our economy, threaten jobs and hurt working people.

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