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Prince Harry accused of destroying communication with ghostwriter of Spare memoir in lawsuit against British tabloids

AceBreakingNews – Prince Harry has been hit with a hefty legal bill and ordered to explain how communications with the ghostwriter of his memoir were destroyed.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.29: 2024: ABC/BBC News Report: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News LinkΒ https://t.me/YouMeUs2Β 

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A man looks to his left as he buttons his suit jacket.
Prince Harry’s litigation has grown out of a phone hacking scandal that erupted in 2011 at News of the World. (AP: Kirsty Wigglesworth)normal

It comes after an attorney for UK tabloid The Sun, accused him of engaging in “shocking” obfuscation in his lawsuit claiming the newspaper violated his privacy by unlawfully snooping on him.

On Thursday, local time, Justice Timothy Fancourt said it was troubling that all communications between the Duke of Sussex and writer JR Moehringer, along with all drafts of the best-selling book Spare, were destroyed.

Attorney Anthony Hudson said at the High Court the prince had created an “obstacle course” to providing documents that should be disclosed in litigation and that “we’ve had to drag those out of the claimant kicking and screaming”.

Multiple copies of the book Spare at a bookshop, some front facing, others underneath. Prince Harry is on the cover
Why Spare by Prince Harry is worth reading for yourself.(ABC News: Mawunyo Gbogbo)

News Group Newspapers, (NGN) publisher of The Sun, was awarded 132,000 British pounds ($250,993) in legal costs for largely prevailing in a request to have more searches undertaken for data on Harry’s laptop and any text messages and chats on WhatsApp and Signal that could be helpful to the defence.

Prince Harry’s lawyer said NGN was engaging in a “classic fishing expedition” for documents it should have sought sooner for a trial scheduled in January.

“NGN’s tactical and sluggish approach to disclosure wholly undermines the deliberately sensational assertion that the claimant [Harry] has not properly carried out the disclosure exercise,” attorney David Sherborne said in court papers. 

“This is untrue. In fact, the claimant has already made clear that he has conducted extensive searches, going above and beyond his obligations.”

The hearing is the latest in Harry’s battles against Britain’s biggest tabloids over allegations they hacked his phone and hired private investigators who used unlawful measures to dig up dirt on him.

Prince Harry is one of dozens of claimants, including actor Hugh Grant, alleging that between 1994 and 2016, News Group journalists and investigators they hired violated their privacy by intercepting voicemails, tapping phones, bugging cars and using deception to access confidential information.

The litigation grew out of a phone hacking scandal that erupted in 2011 at NGN’s News of the World, which closed its doors as a result.

NGN issued an unreserved apology to victims of voicemail interception by the News of the World. NGN said it had settled 1,300 claims for its newspapers, though The Sun never accepted liability.

The Sun won a partial victory last year when Fancourt tossed out Prince Harry’s phone hacking allegations because he waited too long to bring the case. 

He ruled the prince should have been aware of the scandal that engulfed the News of the World and, therefore, could have brought the lawsuit within the six-year time limitation.

The newspaper wants to use the time limitation defence at trial and is seeking communications that could show Prince Harry was aware of allegations newspapers employed other illegal methods of unearthing information before 2013 β€” six years before he sued in 2019.

Justice Fancourt said older communications and even ones up to the 2023 publication of his memoir could provide evidence that he was aware of the unlawful information gathering years earlier.

He ordered Prince Harry, who was not in court, to provide a witness statement explaining what happened to communications with Mr Moehringer.

Mr Sherborne said the prince had not used text or messaging apps to discuss unlawful information gathering.

But Justice Fancourt said that might be contradicted because Mr Moehringer wrote in a New Yorker article that he and Harry were “texting around the clock.”

Justice Fancourt recently ruled Prince Harry could not expand his lawsuit to add allegations that Rupert Murdoch, who was chief executive of the company that controlled MGN, was part of an effort to conceal and destroy evidence of unlawful activity.

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Ace Breaking News

At least seven people dead after train and bus collide at Slovakia level-crossing

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AceBreakingNews – Seven people have been killed and five injured after an international express train collided with a bus on a level crossing in southern Slovakia, officials say.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.28: 2024: Rob Cameron: Prague Correspondent: Published: 27 June 2024: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News LinkΒ https://t.me/YouMeUs2Β 

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Passengers walk away from a train that is on fire at one end, with one man leaving the train with his bicycle.
The train was the EuroCity 279 service travelling from Prague to Budapest 

The Slovak ambulance service said all those who died had been travelling on the bus.

They had been badly burnt in the subsequent fire and it was proving difficult to identify their remains, said Interior Minister Matus Sutaj Estok. 

Thursday’s accident happened near the town of Nove Zamky, about 80km (50 miles) east of the capital Bratislava, just after 17:00 local time (16:00 BST).

About 200 people were on the train and nine on the bus at the time of the collision, officials said.

The Arriva bus was sliced in two by the impact.

The drivers of both the bus and the train were among the injured.

The bus was sliced in half my the impact of the collision

The train was the regular EuroCity 279 service travelling from Prague to Budapest via Bratislava.

It was operated by a Czech Railways locomotive pulling Slovak Railways carriages.

Czech Railways praised the actions of its driver, who it said had prevented injuries to train passengers by taking prompt action to avoid derailment. 

He is understood to have jumped into the control room seconds before impact, and suffered burns in the subsequent fire.

According to an Arriva spokeswoman quoted in the Slovak media, the bus driver had over 30 years of experience.

Local media published video footage of passengers carrying luggage alongside a train partially in flames, as thick grey smoke rose to the sky.

An investigation is under way to establish the cause of the accident, with some reports saying the flashing lights and barriers at the level crossing had been out of action following a recent storm. 

Other eyewitness reports say the lights were working, the barriers had been lowered, and vehicles were waiting behind them. 

However, they said the barriers were subsequently raised, and the bus proceeded to cross when it was struck by the speeding train.

Slovak Railways has not commented on the claims.

Mr Estok, who attended the scene, wrote on social media that “a little inattention is enough and life can change in a hundredth of a second – forever”.

“Let this sad event be a reminder for all of us to pay attention to safety on the roads and at railroad crossings.”

Passenger Katarina Molnarova told AFP that just as she left Nove Zamky station she felt and heard a crash and bang.

“After a couple of minutes we were able to get off,” the 43-year-old cosmetician said. 

“We saw that the frontal part of the train was on fire”.

She added that there was “no screaming or panicking” and that passengers took their luggage and walked to the road. 

Five ambulances and three air ambulances were dispatched to the scene, emergency services said.

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Ace Breaking News

U.K HEADLINES TODAY: Its U.K Election Mostly Today With A Few Days To Go Here’s News & Views

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AceDailyNews says well today its countdown and dirty tricks brigade are around as U.K Election Voting is a few days away as Sunak hits out at Farage and Starmer ‘would work with Le Pen’ with France & Macron looking like being corralled as voters want more action on illegal migration that would prevent the boats leaving France in the beginning and that dangerous crossing being taken for money to fuel the β€˜Organised Gangs’ and line their pockets with people’s lives bought for love of mammon. So with Kindness & Love, we say be β€˜Good to Each Other’ and vote if you decide with your heart, not your Pocket for all that you need (Eden) Amen πŸ™πŸ™

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.28: 2024: Published: 28 June 2024, 00:47 BST: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

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The front page of the i newspaper
With less than a week to go until polling day, the general election remains a hot topic on the front of most of Friday’s newspapers. Friday’s edition of the i newspaper splashes with a story on how quickly Labour would impose VAT on private school fees as part of shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves’s plans, should the party form the next government. Sticking with the election theme, the paper has an exclusive that Keir Starmer would be “pragmatic” about working with the leader of France’s National Rally, Marine Le Pen, to prevent Channel crossings. 
Daily Express: BBC Paid TV audience to appear at leaders' debate
The Daily Express does some sums to work out the BBC spent at least Β£30,000 on audience members for Wednesday’s big election debate in Nottingham. The broadcaster says payments are standard for such events to cover people’s travel costs and time. Next to the lead story is an image of the Princess of Wales clutching the Wimbledon trophy. With the annual tournament starting on Monday, the Express says it hopes she will be able to make the presentation to the winners this year. She revealed in March she was undergoing chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
The Guardian: Labour pledge to ban managers who silence NHS whistleblowers
More of Labour’s pledges appear on the front of the Guardian as the paper says the party wants to “ban managers who silence NHS whistleblowers.” Below the lead story is a massive image of Indian author Arundhati Roy. The headline reads “voice of freedom and justice”, following news of her being awarded the PEN Pinterestter prize two weeks after Indian authorities granted permission to prosecute her over comments she made about Kashmir 14 years ago.
Metro: TV paramedic murder probe
Paramedic Daniel Duffield, who appeared in Channel 4’s 999: On the Frontline, is pictured on the front of Friday’s Metro as the paper gathers tributes to him after police in Staffordshire launched a double murder investigation into the deaths of Mr Duffield and his girlfriend Lauren Evans. Elsewhere the paper reviews Hugh Bonneville’s latest role as a national treasure news presenter who faces a a potentially career ending slip-up after being accused of telling a sexist joke at a wedding. “So Hugh’s getting cancelled?” teases Metro after the four-part series was launched on Thursday.
The front page of the Financial Times
Estimates by HM Revenue & Customs highlights the beneficial impact of “fiscal drag” on state coffers, according to the Financial Times which reports on the number of UK top-rate taxpayers is set to surpass a million for the first time.
Daily Telegraph: Farage is a Putin appeaser, says Sunak
An exclusive interview with the prime minister makes the front of the Daily Telegraph he believes Nigel Farage is an “appeaser” of Vladimir Putin. In the editorial Mr Farage says he would “never, ever” defend Putin. A quirky Matt cartoon at the foot of the paper looks forward to the Glastonbury – with the festival goer telling his parents to be careful back at home due to “manifestos going around”. The paper also reports that the looming French election could pose a danger to the British economy, citing warnings from the Bank of England.
Daily Mirror: This is why we need to vote Labour
The Daily Mirror has pictures from inside a “crumbling hospital” in Stockport, Greater Manchester. The tabloid also recaps all of the evidence and clues so far as the search for missing Lancashire teenager Jay Slater, who vanished on 17 June, continues on the Spanish Canary Island of Tenerife. The Mirror also goes behind the scenes of England’s training camp in Germany as the Three Lions get ready to take on Slovakia in the last 16 of Euro 2024.

The Daily Telegraph leads with an attack on Nigel Farage by the Prime Minister. Its headline features a quote from Rishi Sunak describing the Reform UK leader as a “Putin appeaser.” 

The Times splashes on Channel 4’s Reform UK story – the paper says the revelations come as the party faces fresh claims of widespread sexist and racist behaviour among its election candidates.

In other election news the Guardian says a Labour government would ban NHS managers who silence whistleblowers. Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting pledges to eradicate a culture of cover-ups in the health service.

The NHS also features on the Daily Mirror’s front page photo – showing an image of a flooded corridor in a hospital in Stockport – evidence, the paper says of the scale of neglect under the Tories.

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves’ first budget would include her pledge to impose a 20% VAT on private schools according to the i newspaper

The Daily Express claims the BBC spent more than Β£30,000 of licence fee payers’ money to hire audience members for the TV debate between Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer. The broadcaster said the payments are standard for such events to cover travel costs and time.

But, according to the Daily Mail a poll by market research and polling company, Redfield and Wilton Strategies, appears to show more than four million voters remain undecided on who to back in next week’s election. 

Moving to other domestic news the Financial Times reports the number of people paying the top-rate of income tax is due to pass the one million mark for the first time this year.

“TV paramedic murder probe” reads Metro’s front page. The paper reports on the death of a paramedic who appeared on the Channel 4 reality show “999: On the Frontline” and his girlfriend. It says a double murder investigation has been launched after the bodies of Daniel Duffield, who was 24, and 22-year-old Lauren Evans were discovered at a property in Staffordshire.

At Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency, we value transparency and accountability. We want to inform you that we are not responsible for any external content, links, or posts. Nonetheless, we are dedicated to providing exceptional services and sincerely appreciate your support. Thank you.

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Ace Breaking News

Kenya’s president withdraws tax plan after deadly protest that killed protestors but still disquiet until he resigns

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AceBreakingNews – UPDATE – Kenya’s President William Ruto says he will withdraw a finance bill containing controversial tax hikes after deadly protests which saw parliament set ablaze on Tuesday.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.28: 2024: Barbara Plett Usher & Farouk Chothia & BBC News, Nairobi & London: Published: 26 June 2024: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News LinkΒ https://t.me/YouMeUs2Β 

Armed members of the Kenyan security forces fire teargas at demonstrators during a protest near the Parliament against tax hikes, in Nairobi, Kenya, 25 June 2024
The police have been accused of over-reacting to the protests

In an address to the nation, he said it was clear that Kenyans “want nothing” to do with the bill. 

“I concede,” he said, adding that he would not sign the bill into law.

At least 22 people were killed in Tuesday’s protests, according to the state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNHRC). 

Mr Ruto said he would now enter into dialogue with the young people, who were at the forefront of the biggest protests to hit the country since he was elected in 2022.

On Thursday morning police were deployed across the capital and around State House, with many Kenyans on social media vowing to stage a march into the president’s official residence.

But some prominent people linked to the protests have been warning against this because of the risk of further violence.

The original purpose of the demonstrations was to force the president not to sign the bill.

But some protesters have now begun demanding that he step down, with the slogan β€œRuto must go.”

The bill was passed by parliament on Tuesday, despite nationwide demonstrations against it. 

Protesters broke into parliament, vandalising the interior and setting parts of the complex on fire. The ceremonial mace, symbolising the authority of the legislature, was stolen.

Mr Ruto initially responded with defiance. 

He ordered the military to be deployed, saying “violence and anarchy” would not be tolerated. 

But he climbed down on Wednesday, following an extraordinary demonstration of people power.

β€œRuto bows to Gen Z pressure, withdraws Finance Bill,” read the headline on Kenya’s Citizen TV.

In his second address to the nation in less than 24 hours, Mr Ruto laid out a very clear rationale for why he thought the tax increases were necessary.

The proposed legislation was part of efforts to cut the country’s massive debt burden of more than $80bn (Β£63bn), which costs the country more than half of its annual tax revenues to service.

Mr Ruto added that his government had made progress and was on course to β€œassert sovereignty” by repaying its debts.

He said the provisions would have benefitted farmers, students and teachers, but he admitted the people were not behind him. 

β€œI also lead people,” he said, β€œand the people have spoken.”

But his climbdown did not change people’s plans to resume the protests on Thursday.

Mr Ruto rose to the presidency after defeating his main rival Raila Odinga by a narrow margin in the 2022 election. 

He got 50.5% of the vote, to Mr Odinga’s 48.8%.

Mr Ruto won after portraying himself as a “hustler” who was challenging an attempt by two dynasties – the Odingas and Kenyattas – to hang on to power.

He promised a “bottom-up” approach to the economy to tackle the high unemployment rate among young people, and to improve the lives of those less well off.

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Ace Breaking News

Pakistan Heatwave Kills At Least 558 People As Body Count Rises

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AceBreakingNews – WEATHER DESK – As the temperatures rose in southern Pakistan, so did the body count.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.28: Β 2024: Caroline Davies: Pakistan correspondent: Published: 27: June:2024: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News LinkΒ https://t.me/YouMeUs2Β 

In Karachi, a volunteer sprays water on a bypasser's face to cool off during a hot summer day
In Karachi, a man has his face sprayed on to cool off during a heat wave

The Edhi ambulance service says it usually takes around 30 to 40 people to the Karachi city morgue daily.

But over the last six days, it has collected some 568 bodies – 141 of them on Tuesday alone.

It is too early to say exactly what the cause of death was in every case.

However, the rising numbers of dead came as temperatures in Karachi soared above 40C (104F), with the high humidity making it feel as hot as 49C, reports said.

People have been heading to hospitals seeking help.

Civil Hospital Karachi admitted 267 people with heatstroke between Sunday and Wednesday, said Dr Imran Sarwar Sheikh, head of the emergency department. Twelve of them died.

β€œMost of the people who we saw coming into the hospital were in their 60s or 70s, although there were some around 45 and even a couple in their 20s,” Dr Sheikh told the BBC.

Symptoms including vomiting, diarrhoea and a high fever.

β€œMany of those we saw had been working outside. We’ve told them to make sure they drink plenty of water and wear light clothes in these high temperatures.”

The high temperatures – described as a β€œpartial heatwave” by one meteorologist – began at the weekend. Heatwave centres and camps were set up to try to provide relief to the public.

Pictures show children playing in fountains as they tried to cool off.

β€œLook at me! My clothes are totally drenched in sweat,” Mohammad Imran told Reuters news agency as he struggled to keep cool on Monday.

Not all those who needed help made it to hospital.

Wasim Ahmed knew he wasn’t feeling well when he arrived home.

The 56-year-old security guard had just finished a 12 hour overnight shift outside. Even then, he had found the temperatures too much.

β€œHe came through the door and said I can’t deal with this hot weather,” Adnan Zafar, Wasim’s cousin, told the BBC. β€œHe asked for a glass of water. Soon after he finished it, he collapsed.”

By the time Wasim’s family got him to hospital, the medics said he had already died of a suspected heart attack.

He had an existing heart condition, Adnan says, but he hadn’t suffered in the heat before.

Karachi’s struggle to cope with the high temperatures is, some fear, being made worse by regular power cuts which cut off the fans and air conditioning many rely on to keep cool.

Muhammad Amin was among those who was suffering with loadshedding – where the electricity supply was cut off; a common practice across Pakistan by the electricity board to try to preserve supply.

His relative says their flat experienced consistent constant power cuts.

According to his family, Muhammad who was in his 40s suddenly became sick, then died.

Cause of death has not been established, but his family suspect it was heat-related.

According to Dawn newspaper, almost 30 people have been found dead by emergency services on the city’s streets.

Many are suspected drug addicts, Police Surgeon Summaiya Syed told the newspaper. They did not, however, have any signs of injury.

Soaring temperatures in Pakistan have led over 1,000 people to head to hospitals seeking help

Karachi is not the only part of Pakistan that is struggling to cope.

Last month, the province of Sindh – of which Karachi is the capital – recorded an almost record-breaking temperature of 52.2C, according to Reuters.

Pakistan’s neighbours have been suffering from extreme, deadly temperatures in recent weeks as well.

Across the border in India, the capital Delhi has been enduring an β€œunprecedented” heatwave, with daily temperatures crossing 40C (104F) since May, peaking at nearly 50C. 

Doctors in the city say they’ve never seen anything like it before.

For Karachi resident Mohammad Zeshan, it is clear what the problem is.

β€œThis is due to climate change,” he told Reuters. β€œThis is happening all around the world. This is happening in Europe. They have faced intense heat but they have taken steps about it.

β€œBut here, it is sad that government has not taken any effective measures.”

Experts agree these sorts of extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and intense as a result of climate change.

The heatwave roasting Karachi is expected to last into next week, albeit with slightly lower temperatures forecast.

Weather experts are now turning their attention to the monsoon season, which is expected to arrive early and bring as much as 60% more rain, according to experts who spoke to Dawn.

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BBC U.K Tracks Down Smuggler Behind Illegal Migrant Channel Crossing Death That Killed a Child

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AceBreakingNews – As he ambled nonchalantly across a sunlit public square, the smuggler appeared to have no idea he was being followed.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.28: 2024: Andrew Harding: Reporting from France, Belgium, Luxembourg and the UK: Additional reporting by Feras Kawaf and Kathy Long: Additional production/camera work by Paul Pradier, Marianne Baisnee, Riam El Dilati, Mohanad Hashim, Bruno Boelpaep, Xavier Vanpevenaege, Pol Reygaerts, Maarten Willems and Lea Guedj: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News LinkΒ https://t.me/YouMeUs2Β 

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He was a short, stocky, 39-year-old in a pale green shell suit and baseball cap – an unremarkable figure taking an afternoon stroll from a tented migrant reception centre to a nearby tram station.

Our team broke into a run.

β€œWe know who you are,” I said, as we caught up with him halfway across the square in Luxembourg’s capital city.

β€œYou’re a smuggler.”

It was a confrontation that marked the culmination of a BBC investigation that had begun 51 days earlier – hours after five people, including a seven-year-old girl named Sara, had died in the sea off northern France. She had suffocated beneath a crush of bodies inside an inflatable boat.

That investigation had taken us from the informal migrant camps around Calais and Boulogne, to a French police unit in Lille, to a market town in Essex, to the Belgian port of Antwerp, Berlin, and finally to Luxembourg and a three-day stakeout at the gates of the country’s migrant reception centre.

The man now facing us – eyes narrowed, shoulders and hands raised in a half-shrug – was, we knew for sure, the smuggler who had been paid to organise Sara and her family’s dangerous voyage to England.

This is the story of how we tracked him down.

β€œI swear it’s not me,” the smuggler declared, repeatedly, backing towards a nearby tram station beside Luxembourg’s European Court of Justice.

But we had already seen his Iraqi passport and an Italian identity card. Moments after we began to confront him, a final piece of the jigsaw slotted into place, when his phone began ringing in his pocket.

The passport and ID card which helped us identify the smuggler 

At first, he ignored it, but when he finally pulled it out and we saw the incoming call number on his screen, we had conclusive proof of his guilt.

Why? Because we were the ones ringing him.

In the previous weeks, a member of our BBC team had been posing as a migrant seeking to cross the Channel to England. After reaching out to several alleged middlemen working within the smuggler’s wider network, our colleague, β€œMahmoud”, had finally been put in direct contact with him.

We had then secretly recorded several phone conversations with the smuggler – speaking to him on the same phone he was now holding in his hand. In those calls he had confirmed his identity and told us he was still in the smuggling business.

For a fee, he said he could offer us β€œan easy journey” with β€œextra guards, all carrying weapons” in the next small boat leaving northern France. The current price was €1,500 (Β£1,269) per person.

As we stood before him now, we could see our telephone number, clearly, on his phone’s screen.

We had found our man.

Our investigation had been prompted by the experience of watching a desperate incident unfold on the French coast on 23 April.

We had been waiting, overnight, on a beach outside the resort town of Wimereux – a place we knew was a favourite launch site.

BBC witnesses boarding of boat which left five dead

We had filmed as a group of French police had sought to intercept a boat, clashing violently with two groups of smugglers and their passengers.

The police failed to stop them from boarding and we watched the chaos as the two separate passenger groups battled for space on the dangerously overcrowded inflatable. Smugglers routinely pack more than 60 people on to such boats, but this one had more than 100.

A small girl in a pink jacket – later identified as Sara – was briefly visible on her father’s shoulders.

Minutes later, a few dozen metres from the shore, she and four others were dead.

Sara had been living with family in Sweden, but they had been told they would have to leave

Some survivors, and the bodies of the dead, were taken back to shore by French rescuers – but the boat, with dozens of people still onboard, eventually continued on to England.

It was the second fatal small boat incident of the year near Wimereux. We had now reported on both.

In the days that followed, we found Sara’s family and spoke to her father Ahmed about his grief, about the guilt he and his wife felt for putting their three children at such risk, and about the fear of imminent deportation from Europe that drove his decision to attempt a crossing to the UK.

After fleeing from Iraq 14 years earlier, Ahmed’s asylum claim in Belgium had been repeatedly rejected on the grounds that his hometown of Basra was now classified as a safe area. He had recently been warned he could be deported from Belgium within days. His children – all born in Europe – had grown up living with relatives in Sweden, but had also just been given a final order to leave the country.

But we also wanted to dig deeper, to find the specific criminal gangs responsible for that boat, and to understand how they fitted into a larger, lucrative network that continued to funnel tens of thousands of migrants towards a small stretch of French coastline.

On 18 June, 15 small boats brought 882 people across the Channel – a record for a single day this year, which helped to edge the total number reaching the UK so far this year well over 12,000.

Following Sara’s death, British police soon announced they had detained two suspected smugglers who are now awaiting extradition to France. But these were young men, allegedly working on the boat itself. Not the powerful bosses in charge behind the scenes.

Watch: β€œI could not protect her. I will never forgive myself”

We set out to find and speak to as many survivors from that April night as possible, meeting some in the informal migrant camps or hostels for asylum seekers near the coast in France. Most of them asked us not to use their names, not least because some were planning to make further attempts at crossing the Channel.

A young Kuwaiti man, who had been next to Sara as she died and had phoned the French police to ask for help, successfully made it to the UK a few weeks later. We tracked him down to Essex.

Many of the dozens of people who boarded the boat with Sara and her family knew nothing about those in charge of the operation. They had spoken only to relatively junior middlemen who can often be found outside the train stations in Calais or Boulogne, looking for potential clients.

Once a price had been agreed – and there was seldom much haggling – most people then went on to deposit funds electronically with intermediaries. They told us these were usually trusted businessmen, sometimes operating from barber’s shops or grocery stores in places like Turkey, Paris or London. The middlemen would then pass the money on to the smuggling gang immediately after a successful crossing.

But three people – including two who had been on the same boat as Sara – told us the smuggling gang they had dealt with was operating out of the Belgian port of Antwerp, a city known for its criminal networks and illegal drugs trade. They also agreed that the gang was led by a man nicknamed Jabal – β€œThe Mountain” in Arabic. Two of them had met Jabal in person. One had spoken by phone.

The trail also took us further east to Berlin, where another source confirmed Jabal’s identity and told us he had promised him a second crossing attempt, after a first one had gone wrong.

All our sources, by this point, were telling us that The Mountain was in Belgium, probably Antwerp.

We arrived in Antwerp in May and began working on a plan to locate and confront The Mountain. One of his previous clients had shared a photograph, and another source had provided us with a copy of his Iraqi passport and a European identity card that appeared to have been issued in 2021 in a remote Italian hill town where investigations are under way into organised crime.

We discovered that The Mountain’s real name was Rebwar Abas Zangana, a Kurdish man from northern Iraq. Unmarried. Apparently a devout Muslim. A migrant himself – with an unclear immigration status – who was known to have been living recently in Calais, Brussels, and Antwerp. We were told he worked with two partners and that there might be an even more senior figure back in Iraq.

Mahmoud – our Arabic-speaking colleague posing as a migrant seeking a route to the UK – met a middleman in a barber’s shop in Antwerp, who confirmed that he knew The Mountain and would arrange for him to call us.

We waited nearly two weeks for that call, but eventually, late one night, our phone rang.

β€œHello. So you want to get to Britain? How many seats do you need? Are you ready?”

The Mountain spoke in short, curt sentences. On that call, and two subsequent phone conversations, he confirmed that he was still very much in business, assuring us that the trip across the Channel was β€œa safe job”, and that he had refined his tactics since Sara’s death.

β€œHow many of you are ready?” he asked, adding that the weather in Calais wasn’t good enough for a crossing the next day.

But hours after that first call to us, we learned from a source that The Mountain had recently left Antwerp in a hurry. The implication was that he feared arrest for his role in the five deaths in April. The Mountain was on the run.

Our source then shared a screen grab from The Mountain’s phone. It was taken inside a large, white tent with rows of black beds, the sort of thing you might see in a refugee camp. When we searched on the internet for similar images, we quickly found a single and very close match, in a 2022 article about a new official refugee and migrant reception centre in Luxembourg.

We drove there immediately.

Luxembourg is a small country. Its primary reception centre for refugees and migrants is in the capital’s modern administrative centre. Why would The Mountain come here? Perhaps he simply hoped to lie low for a while, or to apply for asylum under a new name.

But how to be sure he was even here? We couldn’t simply wander in. The compound was closed to the general public, with a single entry/exit point guarded by at least four private security guards.

The BBC spent three days monitoring the centre from a higher vantage point

That first evening in Luxembourg, again posing as a migrant called Mahmoud, our colleague managed to speak to The Mountain by phone. In a co-ordinated move, another BBC colleague drove around the periphery of the compound at the same time, sounding the car’s horn at regular intervals. Listening in on the conversation, we could clearly hear the beeping coming through the smuggler’s phone. 

The Mountain was here.

But how to lure him out without causing suspicion? If he fled again and we missed him, we would be back to square one.

The only option was a stakeout.

And so, for three days, our team kept watch, monitoring the compound’s entrance, and peering from a higher vantage point that overlooked the centre, giving us a view inside.

Finally, at just before 15:00 on the third day, we spotted The Mountain walking out with a group of other migrants. He turned left, heading towards the tram station. We broke into a run.

After the confrontation, we informed the French and British police about our findings

β€œIt’s not me, brother. I don’t know anything. What’s your problem?” he said, as we caught up with him.

He looked anxious, but kept his voice low and non-confrontational as he backed towards the tram station.

I took out a picture of Sara, and asked him if he was to blame for the seven-year-old’s death. He shook his head again.

And then we rang his phone number. He could have ignored it. He could have waited in silence until a tram arrived. But when we asked him to answer his phone, and to show it to us, he seemed momentarily confused and did as we requested.

Leaning closer, we saw the screen and saw the phone number we had been using to call him for days to organise a small boat trip to the UK.

There could be no doubt about his identity.

The smugglers are greedy and should face justice, says Sara’s father Ahmed

In the aftermath of our confrontation, we told the French police – who are leading the investigation into the deaths in April – about our findings. They said they would not be commenting at this stage.

The UK is spending half a billion pounds over three years to support efforts by French police to secure its coastline and to track and disrupt the people smuggling networks across Europe.

But the French border police told us they were deeply alarmed by the growing violence of the smugglers, and – while claiming some success in arresting gang leaders – senior French officials have privately suggested that a long-term solution will depend on the UK changing its own immigration and labour policies.

Sara’s surviving family are living in a temporary hostel outside Lille

Today, Sara’s surviving family – her father Ahmed, mother Nour, 12-year-old sister Rahaf and nine-year-old brother, Hussam – are staying at a temporary hostel for migrants in a tiny village outside the northern French city of Lille. The children have no access to school, and no right to remain in France beyond the autumn.

β€œ[I want] a normal life, like everybody. I’m missing out so much. I want to go to school in England because I have my cousin there. She is my age. I miss… my friends,” Rahaf told us, before sobbing.

Ahmed is in contact with the French police, who have shown him photographs of several suspected smugglers as part of their own investigation into the deaths. He has claimed in the past that hiring a smuggler was his only option. True or not, he says he has learned a hard lesson.

β€œThese people are greedy. They care only about money. I hope they will face justice. All of them,” Ahmed said.

β€œMy daughter’s death must not be in vain.”

At Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency, we value transparency and accountability. We want to inform you that we are not responsible for any external content, links, or posts. Nonetheless, we are dedicated to providing exceptional services and sincerely appreciate your support. Thank you.

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Ace Breaking News

Five Charged with Juror Bribe in Covid U.S Fraud Trial

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AceBreakingNews – Five people have been charged with offering a $120,000 (Β£94,000) cash bribe to a juror to thwart a conviction in a US pandemic fraud trial.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Jun.28: 2024: BBC America News Report: Published: 26 June 2024: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News LinkΒ https://t.me/YouMeUs2Β 

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FBI agents raiding Feeding Our Future carry boxes of documents
The FBI raided the Feeding Our Future offices in January 2022

The unnamed 23-year-old juror reported that she had received a gift bag filled with cash in the closing days of the federal criminal trial in Minneapolis.

“This is stuff that happens in mob movies,” Assistant US Attorney Joseph Thompson said earlier this month after the alleged scheme emerged. 

Prosecutors have charged 70 people with stealing $250m from federal food programmes during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Among the five charged with bribery are three who stood trial for providing fake names of non-existent children they were claiming to feed and creating a fraudulent paper trail in order to pocket millions of dollars.

Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, Abdimajid Mohamed Nur, Said Shafii Farah, Abdulkarim Shafii Farah and Ladan Mohamed Ali have been charged with conspiracy to bribe a juror, bribery of a juror and corruptly influencing a juror.

At a news conference on Wednesday, US Attorney Andrew Luger called the alleged bribery attempt a “chilling attack on our justice system”, adding that he was grateful the juror “could not be bought”.

Prosecutors say the group targeted the woman because she was the youngest on the panel and “they believed her to be the only juror of colour”.

DOJ said that prosecutors say the money was delivered in a Hallmark gift bag

The juror was part of a trial over the theft of more than $40m by workers from Feeding Our Future, a now-defunct charity that recieved money from a federal food-aid programme meant to feed hungry children.

Earlier this month, the jury convicted five of the defendants in the embezzlement case, but acquitted two others.

Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, Abdimajid Mohamed Nur, Said Shafii Farah had wanted the juror to convince the rest of the panel that prosecutors were racist so they would acquit the defendants, according to Mr Luger.

The prosecutor said the suspects devised an instruction manual for nobbling the jury under which they would be told: β€œWe are immigrants. They don’t respect or care about us.”

Prosecutors say one of the accused, Ladan Mohamed Ali, who was not charged in the initial plot, flew to Minneapolis from Seattle on 30 May and began tracking the juror’s movements before approaching her.

On the night of 2 June, she and another defendant allegedly visited the juror’s home and delivered cash to a relative of hers. 

They promised the family member that more money would be delivered if she successfully convinced fellow jurors to vote against conviction, prosecutors said.

Bribing a juror is a felony that carries a sentence of up to 10 years in prison.

According to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, this is the state’s first criminal case of attempting to bribe a federal juror.

At Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency, we value transparency and accountability. We want to inform you that we are not responsible for any external content, links, or posts. Nonetheless, we are dedicated to providing exceptional services and sincerely appreciate your support. Thank you.

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