Archive August 14, 2025

Former snooker champion Graeme Dott to face child sex abuse trial

Former world snooker champion Graeme Dott is to stand trial charged with child sex abuse.

The 48-year-old Scot is accused of lewd and libidinous behaviour towards two children between 1993 and 2010.

The allegations include claims he inappropriately touched a girl, instructed her to remove her clothes and exposed himself to her, as well as molesting a boy, making sexual remarks and watching him shower.

Both charges state the alleged incidents occurred on “various occasions”, at addresses in the east end of Glasgow, South Lanarkshire and in a car.

The case called for a hearing at the High Court in Glasgow, where the attendance of Dott was excused.

His lawyer Euan Dow told the hearing there was one defence witness listed, but there could potentially be more.

Mr Dow told the court that his client was not currently ready for trial, but asked for a date to be set.

Lord Mulholland confirmed a five-day trial would begin on 17 August 2026.

Dott remains on bail.

Food alone won’t save Gaza’s starving population

Israel has imposed man-made starvation on the population of Gaza since the aggression against the enclave began in October 2023. This campaign intensified drastically after March 2025, when the Zionist occupation implemented even harsher restrictions on the already scarce aid allowed into Gaza. Since then, hundreds of men, women, and children have died from severe malnutrition. Doctors survive on meagre crumbs of bread and oil each day, often resorting to seawater to ingest much-needed electrolytes. Journalists have become too weak to carry out their duties, and men are too frail to risk their lives at GHF sites. The population now resembles skin stretched taut over bones.

Such severe malnutrition has, unfortunately, been witnessed throughout history, and its effects on the human body are well documented. Systems shut down one by one, fatigue envelops the victims, and the body begins to consume itself to death. Chilling accounts between 1920 and 1940 in the Soviet Union paint a similar picture. Performers collapsed mid-performance, dying where they stood. People dropped dead in the streets as if simply falling asleep. Desperation reached such extremes that court records tell of a mother dismembering her unconscious husband, believing him dead, to feed their children.

What is often overlooked, however, is that recovery from starvation can be just as devastating. Ironically, one of the earliest recorded accounts of this phenomenon comes from the siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE. For five months, under the command of Titus, son of Emperor Vespasian, the Roman army cut off all aid to the then-holy Jewish city. Like Gaza’s population today, Jerusalem’s citizens were wasted, disease-ridden, and forced to eat leather. After the Romans breached the gates and captured the city, Flavius Josephus, a Jewish commander who defected to the Romans, reported that many survivors died soon after eating. Malnourished citizens would gorge themselves on food to the point of vomiting, with many dying within hours.

Following World War II, similar accounts emerged involving Japanese prisoners of war. Malnourished soldiers liberated from captivity in the Philippines, New Guinea, and elsewhere gorged themselves on calorically rich food provided by their liberators. Approximately one in five of these prisoners died because of this refeeding process. Medical examinations revealed shrunken organs, heart failure, and other severe complications. Comparable observations have been reported repeatedly in starved civilian populations after famine relief, among post-operative patients, individuals suffering from anorexia nervosa, and chronic alcoholics.

Now commonly known as refeeding syndrome, this condition describes a dangerously rapid metabolic shift from a catabolic to an anabolic state. In starvation, the body suppresses insulin and relies on breaking down muscle and fat, depleting essential intracellular ions. Once feeding resumes, insulin surges, causing glucose and electrolytes to flood into cells. This sudden cellular shift sharply lowers blood levels of phosphate, potassium, and magnesium. Insulin also promotes sodium and water retention in the bloodstream, leading to fluid overload. If untreated, these changes can cause catastrophic damage to the heart, lungs, nerves, and blood, resulting in arrhythmias, respiratory failure, and death.

It is important to emphasise that refeeding syndrome is not simply “too many calories too quickly”; it is a metabolic shock. Controlled eating alone is insufficient. Patients require carefully planned treatment, beginning with electrolyte and vitamin supplementation before feeding starts. A skilled, multidisciplinary team and routine laboratory testing are essential to ensure recovery proceeds safely. Pharmacists, psychiatrists, lab technicians, and other specialists must work in concert to nurse the malnourished back to health.

In the context of the genocide in Gaza, imagining such care is heartbreaking. The medical infrastructure there has collapsed. Doctors treat only urgent cases. Anaesthetics have all but run out, and vinegar, if found, is used to clean wounds. Children’s limbs are amputated while they are fully conscious and in pain. This is not a system remotely capable of rehabilitating two million starved people. Israel deliberately ensures this by enforcing a blockade on medical supplies and brutally targeting health workers, ambulances, and hospitals.

Tragically, we cannot rely on starving individuals to control their own refeeding. Hunger twists the mind, making a person obsessively fixated on food. The thought “this may be your only chance to eat, so eat as much as possible” becomes overpowering. In the follow up of Ancel Keys’ malnutrition experiments, it was noted that several recovered participants went on to work in the food and restaurant industry. The reality is that a severely malnourished person cannot be expected to regulate their eating once food is available.

It is therefore crucial to demand international pressure on Israel to allow the immediate entry of medical equipment, laboratory facilities, and specialist teams into Gaza. Most crucially, they must stop targeting health workers and health facilities. This is nearly as vital as the entry of aid itself. Western governments possess a range of tools to compel Israel to halt its genocidal aggression and permit humanitarian and medical assistance, but they choose not to use them. They are complicit in one of the most horrendous genocides of modern times. Global citizens must press their governments to act. We must remain aware that without medical infrastructure accompanying aid, thousands will possibly die from refeeding syndrome.

Katie Price calls for Peter Andre sit down talk over one thing that will end Princess feud

Katie Price has publicly reached out to her ex-husband Peter Andre and offered a truce following the fallout surrounding her daughter Princess’ ITV documentary series.

The 47 year old glamour model has now suggested she and ex-husband Peter, 52, have a sit down chat following the 16 year long feud between the former married couple, who share Junior and Princess Andre together. Katie and Peter haven’t spoken since their divorce, following the breakdown of their marriage in 2009.

Recently tensions appeared to rise between the two camps when Katie spoke out in her podcast, The Katie Price Show, about her upset over not being involved in her daughter Princess’ new ITV series, The Princess Diaries, as the 18 year old’s career reaches new heights. It comes after Princess Andre says she’s ‘independent’ from parents as she breaks silence after Katie Price row.

Last week, Katie said she was “very very upset” as she claimed she had been left out of her daughter’s latest career milestones and claimed she had pleaded to take part in the TV series but was told no. Following the backlash from her comments, in which she faced accusations of jealousy and attention seeking, the former Page 3 star has spoken out once again and insisted she only wants to be there to support her teenage daughter – and even suggested a meeting with Peter to hash out any issues.

Katie has now suggested a sit down talk with Peter, in which she said: “I feel like I’ve missed out on so much and it’s so not fair to bring Princess as piggy in the middle so I think it’s about time all of us adults just sit down and talk about what their beef is with me and just get over it. Life would be such more at peace.”

In the latest episode of the podcast, she also shared hopes for the former husband and wife to support their children together.

Katie suggested: “There’s no reason why both parents can’t be there to support her.”

Meanwhile, she also insisted she does not want a piece of Princess’ flourishing fame after Katie was accused of being jealous of her daughter’s successful and rising career.

She insisted: “I have to clarify this; I don’t care that I’m not in Princess’ show I don’t need to raise my profile by being in Princess’ show I do enough stuff. I’m in the press every day.

“All what I want to do is just whatever my daughter does – and it’s the same with Junior – I don’t care if I’m in the background, but I wanna watch her photoshoots, I wanna watch her do her signings – because that’s what I did and my mum and you [sister Sophie Price] and nan used to come along and support and I’m proud of her and I just wanna be there with her.”

While Katie said she ‘doesn’t expect to play happy families’ she hopes to be more involved in her daughter’s achievements. She said: “I’m not saying I have to stand with them and play happy families. I’ve missed out so much with Princess. I haven’t watched the show but people have told me how proud I should be of the kids and how they, Princess, does talk highly of me all the way through it. So although I’m not in the show she speaks about me all the time which is really sweet.”

Peter Andre has remained stoically silent in the wake of Katie’s podcast rants of late and has been focussing on supporting his children as they both featured on the ITV documentary series, which was released on Sunday.

Katie’s latest comments come after she revealed she has never had a sit down, face to face chat with ex-husband Peter since their split. Katie and Peter met on 2004’s I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! and married in 2005 before things came to an end in 2009.

Earlier this year, while on Paul C Brunson’s podcast, We Need To Talk, Katie revealed she had not spoken to her ex since their relationship broke down. She said earlier this year: “Until this day, me and Pete have never sat down and spoken about it.

“It’s all through lawyers. I’ve never sat down with him, we probably would’ve sorted it out but we were kept apart.”

She added: “We broke up because he thought I was having an affair with my dressage rider, and I’ve never slept with him.

“I just kept my horse there, and I was happy keeping my horse there, and he was married.
“But when me and Pete split, because he used to keep saying, ‘That’s it. I’ve had enough. I’ve had enough’. It got to a point where I went, ‘Well f****** divorce me’.”

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Premier League predictions 2025-26: BBC Sport pundits pick their top four

Liverpool’s Premier League triumph surprised a lot of people last season, but will they successfully defend their title?

That is the target for Reds boss Arne Slot, whose side finished 10 points clear of nearest rivals Arsenal last time out.

But can the Gunners finally take the next step after coming second for three years running? How will Manchester City respond after losing their crown after winning four in a row? Can Chelsea improve on last season’s fourth-placed finish, and will anyone else figure at the top?

We asked 32 BBC TV and radio pundits to pick their top four, with explanations for their selections.

This time we’ve also asked AI’s opinion, and included what Opta’s ‘Supercomputer’ came up with too.

The AI prediction was generated using Microsoft Copilot Chat – we simply asked the tool to ‘predict the Premier League table for the 2025-26 season’.

Opta’s ‘Supercomputer’ is actually a complex algorithm that uses a model based on betting market odds and the sports analytics company’s own ‘Power Rankings’, which are calculated using past results.

It has simulated the outcome of all 380 Premier League games 10,000 times and has come to the same conclusion as 12 of our pundits – including Chris Sutton, who performs a similar calculation when he makes his predictions each week.

Disagree with our expert humans or think you know more than any machine? You can make your own top-four prediction, and forecast the rest of the Premier League table, at the bottom of this page.

Last season, nine teams featured in the forecasted top-four positions, but this time there are only four named.

Overall expected ranking, using all 34 predictions is:

Liverpool – ‘if they get Isak then give them the title straight away’

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Danny Murphy: It’s always hard doing predictions before the window has shut because there is still a lot of business to be done, including at Liverpool. I do believe this is going to be a really tight title race and they might not hit the ground running because of the number of new players they have got, but I’m going with Slot’s side because of their abundance of talent in midfield and the confidence they will have from last season, plus I’m certain they are going to sign a couple more on top of what they have done already.

Chris Sutton: I am going with Liverpool whether they sign Newcastle striker Alexander Isak or not. But I actually think it is going to be difficult for them. Sub-consciously, you wonder how the players are dealing with the death of Diogo Jota and if it has any effect, so they have got that to deal with.

Troy Deeney: Liverpool have got already better in every area. I know they have lost Trent Alexander-Arnold but Jeremie Frimpong is just as good at right-back – not with his passing range, but they don’t need that with the other players they have got. Up front, they won the league last year without having an out-and-out number nine. They have still got Mohamed Salah and now have Hugo Ekitike, and potentially Isak too.

Alan Shearer: Liverpool are favourites, even without Isak. You just have to look at what they did last season, and how they won the title at a canter.

Wayne Rooney: I hope Isak stays at Newcastle to be honest! I already have Liverpool as favourites to win the Premier League but if Isak comes in then they are going to be unstoppable. A big thing was them replacing Alexander-Arnold, because a lot of their chances and goals came from that right side, but I think Frimpong has got the attributes to go and fill that.

Steve Sidwell: They were incredible last season post-Jurgen Klopp and I just see them getting better and better. If they get Isak then give them the title straight away.

Rachel Brown-Finnis: Each time City were champions under Guardiola, they would add a player or two. You would think they can’t get any better, but they did, and Liverpool have done the same.

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Thomas Hitzlsperger: They will be great to watch with Florian Wirtz in the team, but defending the title is a different challenge altogether.

Leon Osman: I originally thought Liverpool for the title again. They won easily enough last season and strengthened well, but I don’t know if they lack a little balance defensively in midfield with trying to fit Wirtz in, so they’ll be coming away from that competitive kind of trio they’ve had in there for many years.

Nedum Onuoha: I expect them to push all the way to defend their title. The new signings for me will hit the ground running and show us what the team will look like for years to come.

Chris Waddle: They are exciting going forward, but their defence is a concern. I look at them and think they will concede. Virgil van Dijk is a classy player but at 34 he is getting on to play a lot of games at the highest level, and every game in the Premier League and Champions League matters for Liverpool.

Matt Upson: People looked at Van Dijk in the Community Shield and questioned him but that is just him at this stage of the season. He is a big lad, getting older and he can sometimes look sluggish. But then he gets into his rhythm and his decision-making is super sharp. He is so key for them with the way he orchestrates everything. They have brought two new full-backs into the team so of course it is going to take time for that unit to develop.

Chris Sutton: They definitely need at least one more centre-half for cover. I’ve been looking at a few things Slot said about how teams had started to work them out in the second half of last season, so it will be interesting to see whether they play a different way, and are more aggressive in the way they press the ball. If that is the case, it will put more pressure on their backline if teams are able to play through them.

Ellen White: If they get Isak and Marc Guehi from Palace then that is brilliant business, on top what they have done already. They are the team the others have to knock off that pedestal.

Arsenal – ‘They finally have the striker they have been looking for’

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Martin Keown: The first six games of the season – including Manchester United, Liverpool and Newcastle away, and Manchester City at home – are going to be key. But I am going to turn what might have been a negative for Arsenal into a positive, because Liverpool’s new players will be bedding in, City have had a reset and Newcastle have endured a difficult summer. The title race is still going to be very close but if Arsenal and Viktor Gyokeres can click straight away, then the solid building blocks they need to be champions are already in place.

Thomas Hitzlsperger: All of last season’s top four have pros and cons but Arsenal finally have the striker they have been looking for, they didn’t have the Fifa Club World Cup in the summer, plus the manager has been there for so long and has set the tone so we know what to expect from them. There have also been no big changes at the club or in the squad where you think that might unsettle them.

Anita Asante: Mikel Arteta’s tactical blueprint is fully embedded. Arsenal’s pressing traps, structured possession and defensive discipline gave them one of the best goal differences in the league. They now have a back-up winger for Bukayo Saka in Noni Madueke, and a modern striker in Gyokeres to address their goalscoring needs. They’ve had a thoughtful transfer window balancing creativity, stability and consistency.

Matt Upson: As well as the new striker, the young players Arteta has brought into the team are exceptional – teenagers Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri have got a full Premier League season under their belts and 15-year-old Max Dowman looks a special talent.

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Leon Osman: I’m sure Arteta won’t expect the same injury crisis defensively they had last year and with a striker now on board they could get the job done.

Steve Sidwell: I think they will be very close but just miss out. Gyokeres is what their fans have wanted for so long, and he could bag a lot of goals.

Danny Murphy: Gyokeres is a powerhouse and he is going to score a lot of goals, there is no doubt about that. But Zubimendi is just as important a signing, because Thomas Partey was such an big player for them in midfield last season. With Jorginho going too, bringing in Christian Norgaard was a clever bit of business. He is a really clever footballer, who does his defensive work really well. They will be there or thereabouts again.

Sue Smith: Zubimendi really adds variety to midfield – he can hold, allowing Rice to go box-to-box and Odegaard to show his flair and creativity.

Glenn Murray: I don’t think Gyokeres is the one – it’s such a big step. I was with him at Brighton and I never had him down to be a £64m striker. When Ben White stepped into our first team, right away everyone knew how he good he was – he was of that standard. When Viktor came in, it was more a case where you thought he was all right. I am not sure he suits Arsenal’s style, either.

Chris Waddle: Arsenal are strong and organised and if Gyokeres hits the ground running, they have got a very good chance of winning the title, but there is definitely pressure on Arteta this season to deliver. This has to be the year for him in the league because, when you spend as much as Arsenal have, you need to be able to say, ‘look, there’s a trophy’.

Manchester City – ‘A wounded City are dangerous’

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Joe Hart: City’s transfers look like good business to me – competitive business with the intention to do some damage this season, not just to build for a bright future. I think Guardiola has somewhat changed how he wants to play again, so the football could be spinning again. This will be a different City, so less predictable and harder for people to set up against, if they get it right.

Paul Robinson: They recruited well in January and the players they have brought in this summer will complement what they’ve got, and most of their squad has still been there and done it before. Pep is not going to be there forever and he has got a point to prove – a wounded City are dangerous!

Troy Deeney: City are going to be better all round. They can’t be as bad as they were last year, and even then they still came third. They have addressed the left-back area which was a big concern, and they have got more flair, more pace and more power in midfield. They will have Erling Haaland back as well and he is going to score the amount of goals he always does.

Danny Murphy: City still have the best striker in the world, and Rodri’s return is like a new signing – I know he is injured the moment but little setbacks are normal after a serious injury. I sense an improvement – they are going to push Liverpool all the way, with the brilliance of Pep and the reinforcements they have brought in.

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Thomas Hitzlsperger: They are going to be up there but they are not going to dominate like the City of old.

Theo Walcott: City are in a rebuild but I still think they will still compete and it will be really tight between them, Liverpool and Arsenal.

Steve Sidwell: This is a transitional period for them. If you drop your levels, you’ll drop points with the standard at the top of the league now. I don’t see them being champions, but never write Pep off!

Steph Houghton: City’s squad is amazing now. They could have two starting XIs that would be unbelievable. They are my pick right now but if Liverpool get Isak then that obviously changes things. We would all like to wait until the end of this transfer window before making these predictions!

Chelsea – ‘I’d be shocked if they don’t win at least one trophy’

Chelsea celebrate after winning the Fifa Club World CupGetty Images

Chris Waddle: They’ve got a great squad. They bought a lot of players last year and it has taken time for them to get the balance right, but you saw things come together when they won the Club World Cup and I am really expecting them to kick on. They won’t walk it, but they are going to create chances and score a lot of goals.

Nedum Onuoha: They’ll be part of the title race for longer this season than the last. Under Enzo Maresca they have a clear way to play and players who are constantly improving. They’ll be a threat to everyone, which is why they’re champions of the world.

Rachel Brown-Finnis: People scoffed and were very cynical about the Club World Cup but winning it has given them some momentum, especially with the young players they have got. They are such a young team and are still learning, so you are going to see more fluctuations in form than with, say, Liverpool, but they will come into the season flying. I’d be shocked if they don’t win at least one trophy, and you cannot dismiss them as title contenders.

Ellen White: Chelsea put players on these massively long contracts and there are always lots of ins and outs but they have been developing the team they wanted, especially what Maresca has wanted, over the past couple of seasons.

Troy Deeney: They are strong in every position but their inexperience and late start to pre-season after winning the Club World Cup will come back to haunt them in later rounds.

Lindsay Johnson: A busy summer will maybe impact them over a long season.

Chris Sutton: I wonder how much the Club World Cup will take out of them, mentally as much as physically. You need rest in that way too.

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Thomas Hitzlsperger: There is always so much going on with players in and players out, but Joao Pedro could be the player who makes a difference.

Anita Asante: Signings like Joao Pedro, Liam Delap and Jamie Gittens strengthen a squad, blending experience and youth, boosting depth and dynamism. Their recent success has revitalised their ambitions, finances, and status as serious contenders for both domestic and European honours.

Danny Murphy: They will progress and have a good season but they are still a little bit off with that lack of experience defensively, and Levi Colwill’s serious injury is a real blow. They are missing that standout centre-half the other three contenders have – a Van Dijk, William Saliba or Ruben Dias, the kind of player who gives calmness and confidence to everyone around them.

What about the other 16 teams? – ‘It’s harder than ever for the chasing pack’

Snapshot showing the Premier League top six in the 2024-25 season: 1st Liverpool, 2nd Arsenal, 3rd Man City, 4th Chelsea, 5th Newcastle & 6th Aston VillaBBC Sport

Danny Murphy: If you look at last season’s top four and throw Manchester United in the mix with what they have done to try to get up there, I don’t remember a pre-season where there has been so much activity by the top clubs.

Alan Shearer: Last season’s top four have done so much good business and gone so big in the transfer market, it is going to be extremely difficult for any of the chasing pack to break into those places.

Shay Given: All four have got such strong squads and proven big-game players.

Thomas Hitzlsperger: There are just not going to be many surprises at the top this season.

Joe Hart: As they sit on the start line, I think Liverpool, Arsenal, City and Chelsea will all feel really confident they can do something special. I don’t think any other team can have that confidence now. They might build it, like Nottingham Forest did last season, and the momentum might come, but Forest, Villa and Newcastle are not in the same place, and neither is anyone else.

Rachel Brown-Finnis: It’s not been the summer Newcastle wanted. To compete in the Premier League and Champions League you need depth and although they have brought some players in, there are still a few holes in their squad. If fifth place gets you in the Champions League again, they have a chance – but not any higher.

Thomas Frank smiles during a Tottenham pre-season matchGetty Images

Rachel Brown-Finnis: This has been a steadier window for Manchester United, which they needed. It’s less exciting but they have gone for proven Premier League quality. That will help with the rebuild but there is still a way to go before they are challenging for the top four.

Chris Sutton: I really like what United have done in the transfer window and they don’t have European football, which is such a massive advantage for them.

Chris Waddle: It’s going to be a massive challenge for Tottenham to get into the top four this season, while playing Champions League football as well.

Danny Murphy: Spurs have got to give Frank time to bed in and find his best XI, and bring in one or two more, I do expect them to be better but I actually think Manchester United might surprise a few people now Amorim has had a full pre-season to implement his ideas. Their problem last season was goalscoring but their new forward line of Bryan Mbeumo, Matheus Cunha and Benjamin Sesko could make a huge impact, very quickly.

Wayne Rooney: United improving their attack was something that was very much needed and it is great that they identified the players they wanted early. Getting Sesko is a really important signing for them because as a target man, a number nine, he is quick and he can use both feet and is good in the air. I would still like to see them sign a solid midfield player who is going to help control games for them and help build up play too, but I can see what Amorim is doing and it is looking better for United – I’ve got them down to finish fifth.

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Ellen White: It’s hard to see anyone else get close to the top four. I was pleased to see Nottingham Forest keep Morgan Gibbs-White but Anthony Elanga has left which will affect their attack and it is a big ask for them to get near the top four again. Palace could push up there, but so much depends on them keeping Guehi and Eberechi Eze.

Jermaine Beckford: If Spurs can get Eze and Savinho, then they’ve got a chance of the top four. They are my pick for fifth anyway though.

Matt Upson: I’d put Spurs at the top of the chasing pack. They have recruited well, their young players had the benefit of playing a lot last season and they have got a top manager in terms of the structure he brings, what he wants and how he goes about it. It is going to be fascinating to see him operate at a club where so many top managers have struggled in recent years.

Thomas Hitzlsperger: Aston Villa are not in the Champions League this time but they are in the Europa League so they are still travelling a lot, and the rhythm of playing twice a week will be the same. It’s going to be a tougher season for Villa because of the Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR), but I rate Unai Emery so highly and I think they will end up in a similar position to last time.

Steph Houghton: Villa will compete the most with the existing top four. I love the way Emery sets them up – they are such a tough team to play against and he has them working hard, but in a way where it becomes so natural to them.

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War crimes likely committed by both sides in Syria coastal violence: UN

War crimes were likely committed by members of interim government forces and fighters aligned with former President Bashar al-Assad during an outbreak of sectarian violence in Syria’s coastal areas in March, according to a United Nations report.

Some 1,400 people, mainly civilians, were reported killed during the violence that primarily targeted Alawite communities, and reports of violations have continued, according to the report released on Thursday by the UN Syria Commission of Inquiry.

“The scale and brutality of the violence documented in our report is deeply disturbing,” said Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, chair of the commission, in a statement.

Torture, killings and inhumane acts related to the treatment of the dead were documented by the UN team, which based its research on more than 200 interviews with victims and witnesses, as well as visits to mass grave sites.

“The violations included acts that likely amount to war crimes,” the UN investigators said.

Alawite men were separated from women and children, then led away and killed, the report found.

“Bodies were left in the streets for days, with families prevented from conducting burials in accordance with religious rites, while others were buried in mass graves without proper documentation,” the commission said.

Hospitals became overwhelmed as a result of the killings.

The commission found that even while the interim government’s forces sought to stop violations and protect civilians, certain members “extrajudicially executed, tortured and ill-treated civilians in multiple [Alawite] majority villages and neighbourhoods in a manner that was both widespread and systematic”.

However, the report said the commission “found no evidence of a governmental policy or plan to carry out such attacks”. It also found that pro-Assad armed groups had committed “acts that likely amount to crimes, including war crimes” during the violence.

“We call on the interim authorities to continue to pursue accountability for all perpetrators, regardless of affiliation or rank,” Pinheiro said.

“While dozens of alleged perpetrators of violations have reportedly since been arrested, the scale of the violence documented in our report warrants expanding such efforts.”

The incidents in the coastal region were the worst violence in Syria since al-Assad was toppled last December, prompting the interim government to name a fact-finding committee.

The committee in July said it had identified 298 suspects implicated in serious violations during the violence in the country’s Alawite heartland.

The committee’s report then stated there was no evidence that Syria’s military leadership ordered attacks on the Alawite community.

Syrian authorities have accused gunmen loyal to al-Assad of instigating the violence, launching deadly attacks that killed dozens of security personnel.

According to the commission, the deadly attacks by pro-former government fighters began after Syrian interim authorities launched an arrest operation on March 6.

Ibiza Final Boss Jack Kay looks unrecognisable in unearthed photo before iconic hair cut

Known for his ‘Lego style’ bowl cut, gleaming white teeth and huge sunglasses, Ibiza Final Boss Jack Kay looks completely different in new snaps from his younger years

Ibiza Final Boss Jack Kay, far right, looks completely different in old snaps(Image: Supplied)

Viral raver Jack Kay looks unrecognisable in an incredible unearthed snap that reveals exactly what he looked like before his ‘Ibiza Final Boss’ transformation.

It’s hard to imagine the 26-year-old Geordie without his signature ‘Lego’ haircut, gleaming ‘Turkey teeth’ and signature oversized shades, but his pre-Ibiza look has finally been uncovered.

In the photo, baby-faced Jack is seen enjoying a pint with his mates – but it’s tough to pick him out in the line-up of lads. The party animal – who went viral for his ‘Battle of Hastings’ bob while throwing shapes on the White Isle – has his arm round a pal as the group pose for a picture in front of a fruit machine.

READ MORE: Bonnie Blue Instagram mystery as star vanishes hours after Ibiza Final Boss videoREAD MORE: Ibiza Final Boss slapped with dire warning as he ‘must make important decision’

Jack, second from right, pictured with pals before mastering his iconic style
Jack, second from right, pictured with pals before mastering his iconic style(Image: Supplied)

Jack sports a short, back and sides haircut, but it is miles away from the medium skin fade that has become synonymous with the viral star since a video of him dancing gained more than 26 million views on TikTok.

It is unclear when the snap – which was shared with The Mirror and the Daily Star – was taken, but he appears in his late teens. In another image taken more recently, his sculpted facial hair is visible and his barnet is longer on top, but it’s still not his final Ibiza Boss form.

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It comes as “Boss fever” ramped up across the UK and Ibiza. Jack has used his newfound viral stardom to launch nightclub tours on the party island and has even been seen filming a brief video with controversial adult star Bonnie Blue.

Bonnie Blue was spotted hugging the viral Ibiza star Jack Kay
Bonnie Blue was spotted hugging the viral Ibiza star Jack Kay(Image: Supplied)

He is also said to be launching a music career to take his fame to new heights. Jack featured on a new dance track released on Spotify this week after he signed with a management team.

Meanwhile, a hardcore fan has had a tattoo of his face on their leg and an artist in Nottingham has painted a mural of Jack’s likeness near a skatepark.

Jack shot to fame when Zero Six West Ibiza posted footage on TikTok of him dancing at a club in a chain and black tank top holding a drink. It was viewed by millions and sparked hundreds of memes and jokes.

Companies like Greggs and EasyJet soon made marketing parodies of the meme and he was dubbed the “Ibiza Final boss”, a reference to the last and typically most difficult enemy to face in a video game. Jack now has more than 120,000 followers on Instagram and more than 800,000 likes on TikTok.

Jack has swapped budget flights for private jets since finding fame
Jack has swapped budget flights for private jets since finding fame(Image: jack.kayy1/Instagram)

But it’s not all ‘eat sleep, rave repeat’ for the Geordie lad, as there’s apparently trouble in paradise for the star. He’s reportedly fighting to save his relationship with his glamorous girlfriend Alisha Cook, who ‘dumped’ him over his partying ways.

The ‘break-up’ allegedly came while Jack was out in Ibiza, but just before he found viral fame.

The raver had reportedly already been “skating on thin ice” before the Ibiza trip, which ultimately tipped their dynamic over the edge.

The Geordie raver is reportedly fighting to save his relationship with Alisha Cook
The Geordie raver is reportedly fighting to save his relationship with Alisha Cook(Image: Instagram)

A friend of Jack’s told Mail Online: “Alisha called it off when Jack went to Ibiza with the lads. They’d been together for almost a year, and he was living at her place, but things hadn’t been right for months.

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“His car is still on her drive, she threw all his clothes in the back of it. She doesn’t want him around anymore. She’s had inklings that something was not right for a while. She just wants to wash her hands of him. Alisha is so beautiful. No one is quite sure what she saw in him.”

After their dramatic ‘split’, the couple seemed to kiss and make up just as Jack’s notoriety skyrocketed. Alisha seemed to confirm that they are back on when she posted TikToks last week, naming herself as his girlfriend.