Qcdg Young footballer punched for speaking out against racism sues club and Football NSW
A court in Islamabad has sentenced to death the tycoons son who raped and murdered Noor Mukadam, a case that sparked outrage in Pakistan.Mukadam, 27, the daughter of a former Pakistani diplomat, was held captive, tortured and beheaded in July last year by Zahir Jaffer, a member of a well-
stanley cups uk known industrialist family.Jaffer, 30, a Pakistani-American citizen, is thought to have attacked Mukadam after she refused his marriage proposal. Two household employees of Jaffer, a guard and a gardener, were both sentenced to 10 years for abetting the murder. The court heard they had blocked the young womans attempts to leave the luxury mansion. Jaffers parents, who had faced charges in connection with covering up the killing, were acquitted by the court.After a lengthy trial that began in October, Judge Ata Rabbani on Thursday sentenced Jaffer to be hanged.Shaukat Ali Mukadam, Noors father, said the verdict was a victory for justice and thanked the media for keeping the matter alive. Today, an exemplary punishment has been given to the main accused. Today, my daughters soul will be content to some extent. We are happy as far as the principal accused is concerned, he told reporters
stanley cup outside the courtroom.Prosecution lawyer Shah Khawar said: Justice has been served, and todays verdict will empower Pakistani women at large. We will challenge the acquittal of his
vaso stanley parents at the higher court. The murder, and the efforts to protect the wealthy killer, had caused outrage in Pakistan where, des Dsej Home Office doomed to repeat the mistakes of Windrush
With warnings coming thick and fast about the stark ramifications of the governments sweeping cuts to legal aid, it was probably inevitable that someone would come up with a new way to plug some gaps in access to justice. Enter the legal crowdfunder, CrowdJustice, an online platform where people who might not otherwise
stanley kubek get their case heard can raise cash to pay for legal representation and court costs.The brainchild of 33-year-old lawyer Julia Salasky, and the first of its kind in the UK, CrowdJustice provides people who have a public interest case but lack adequate financial resources with a forum where they can publicise their case and, if all goes to plan, generate funding for legal action by attracting public support and donations. We are trying to increase access to justice 鈥?thats the baseline, says Salasky. I think its a social good. The platform was launched just a few months ago, but has already attracted a range of cases both large and small, including some that could set important legal pr
stanley uk ecedents.We are emphatically not a replacement for legal aid. But access to the courts is a democratic rightCrowdJustice has helped the campaign, Jengba Joint Enterprise: Not Guilty by Association to raise funds
stanley us to intervene in a supreme court case to consider reforming the law of joint enterprise that can find people guilty of a crime, including murder, committed by someone else. The group amassed 拢10,000 in donations for legal assistance as part of their ongoing challenge to