Spain and Barcelona star Bonmati ruled out for months with leg fracture

Palestinian students return to class at Gaza university

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Students at Gaza’s Islamic University are determined to continue their education despite the damage that has been caused by the two years of war and widespread destruction. The university provides forcibly displaced families as well as shelter for the severely damaged Israeli buildings.

Australia charges four men over ‘satanic’ child sex abuse material

Following an investigation into what they called an “international satanic child sex abuse material ring” in Sydney, police in Australia have charged four men.

Following the execution of six search warrants last week at various Sydney addresses, the New South Wales (NSW) police announced on Monday that they had charged the four with dozens of criminal offenses.

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The men – aged 26, 39, 42 and 46 – were arrested on Thursday.

An investigation team under the name “Strike Force Constantine” led to the discovery of a Sydney-based paedophile network that distributed “ritualistic or satanic themes,” according to the NSW police.

According to them, the network distributed the content through a website that was run internationally.

Officers in tactical gear allegedly broke down the door to an apartment building, and one of the suspects was taken into handcuffs, according to footage that was released by police.

The 26-year-old man was alleged to have played a significant role in the organization by the police.

According to the police, the men are accused of possessing and disseminating child abuse material and bestiality, along with some of them facing drug possession, non-reporting obligations, and violating a prohibition order.

Bail was denied to all four of the men.

Police claimed they had not yet identified any of the children who had been abused or had verified the source of the abuse material.

Superintendent Jayne Doherty, the commander of the sex crimes squad, stated at a press conference that “we were concerned about any children that these people might come in contact with as a result of the nature of the material they were sharing and the conversations that we became aware of.”

Doherty claimed officers had seize thousands of videos showing infant abuse among children 12 and under.

Doherty said that this international organization was having conversations and sharing information about child abuse and child torture involving symbols and occult rituals.

Doherty claimed that law enforcement and international partners were collaborating to identify the victims and that they did not believe the arrested men had actually recorded any of the information.

Bangladesh sentences British MP, Sheikh Hasina’s niece, to prison

Former Bangladeshi prime minister Sheikh Hasina and her niece, British MP Tulip Siddiq, were both given five years in absentia by a court in Dhaka for corruption in a case involving the acquisition of plots of land.

Hasina, who has been living in exile in India since being toppled in an uprising last year, allegedly misused her position as premier in the transaction, according to Rabiul Alam, the judge of Dhaka’s Special Judge’s Court.

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Sheikh Rehana, Hasina’s sister, and two other siblings helped her mother, Sheikh Rehana, her mother, and two other siblings obtain the plot for a government project in Dhaka, after Siddiq, an MP for the country’s ruling Labour party, was found guilty of corruptly influencing Hasina.

Rehana, who is reportedly no longer based in Bangladesh, was given a seven-year absentee prison sentence, and the trio were also fined 100, 000 taka ($820), which would add up to six more months in jail, according to the court.

Fourteen of the people indicted in the case received five-year sentences.

Sheikh Hasina, former prime minister, [File: Handout/Bangladesh Prime Minister’s Office via AFP]

According to the AFP news agency, Khan Mainul Hasan, the Anti-Corruption Commission prosecutor, said his team had information about Siddiq’s correspondence with Hasina’s principal secretary Salahuddin Ahmed, who had allegedly been a part of the case.

Sheikh Hasina, who also took three plots for herself and her children, was asked by Lotus to give them plots, Hasan said. She called [Ahmed] over encrypted apps, and they even met him in Dhaka.

charges of “political motivation.”

They have dismissed them as politically motivated, according to Hasina and Siddiq, who did not nominate attorneys to defend the accusations.

Hasina, who was given a death sentence in absentia last month for crimes against humanity related to the protesters’ 2012 crackdown, refuted the ruling in a statement sent to AFP.

No nation is free of corruption, according to the statement. However, it is necessary to look into corruption in a manner that is not necessarily corrupt. She claimed that the ACC has today failed that test.

The verdict was “entirely predictable,” according to her Awami League party, and the anticorruption watchdog in Bangladesh was “a political mechanism used for political purposes,” according to a statement released by her Awami League party to The Associated Press news agency.

Siddiq, the MP for the London district of Hampstead and Highgate, has not yet made a public comment, but he has previously called the allegations “politically motivated smear.”

As the UK’s minister in charge of financial services and anticorruption efforts in January, she resigned because her relationships with her aunt were “distracting the work of the government.”

Her resignation was prompted by a probe into Siddiq’s connections to her aunt’s regime led by Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s ethics adviser, which concluded that Starmer had not violated the ministerial code but had suggested that she should reconsider her responsibilities, according to the PA Media news agency.

There is no extradition agreement between the UK and Bangladesh.

Officials will get in touch with the UK government regarding Siddiq’s verdict, according to Hasan, the prosecutor.

Authorities claimed they had obtained the British MP’s passport, national identity card, and tax number after the prosecution claimed Siddiq was tried as a Bangladeshi citizen, according to AP reports.

Siddiq, however, has refuted the assertion, claiming that she is a British citizen and does not hold Bangladeshi citizenship.

In addition to her ineligibility, another court on Thursday handed Hasina a 21-year sentence in absentia for two separate cases involving the same township project, finding her guilty of illegally securing plots of land for herself and her family in the Dhaka development.