Al Quds counter demo London Sept 4th March for England
30 08 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: al quds, al quds demo march for england, casuals united, communists, edl, edl bradford
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Amy Houston – killed by multiculturalism then denied justice by politically correct scum
26 08 2010The killers we can’t kick out: Five years on, the failed
asylum seeker who fatally struck twelve-year-old Amy
is still here
By Helen Weathers and Laura Topham
Last updated at 12:55 AM on 21st January 2009
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Twelve-year-old Amy Houston was on her way to the record shop after school to buy the new CD by her favourite pop group Busted when her path fatally crossed that of failed asylum seeker Mohammed Ibrahim.
Just over five years ago, she was knocked over by the 25-year-old Iraqi Kurd as she crossed the road near her home in Blackburn, Lancashire.
Ibrahim, who was driving with no insurance and while disqualified, fled after the collision, leaving the still-conscious child trapped under the wheels of his black Rover.
That night, Amy’s life-support system was turned off when it became clear she could not survive the massive internal injuries she’d suffered. She died surrounded by her devastated family.

Wasted life: Amy Houston died after being run over by failed asylum seeker Mohammed Ibrahim
Their grief must have been compounded this week when another family shared a shatteringly similar experience. Relatives of Simon Lawrence an ex Royal Marines commando, who served in Northern Ireland in the Seventies, called for the asylum seeker responsible for his death in a hit-and-run accident to be deported.
The 55-year-old motorcyclist was struck by Jean Mukadi in Harefield, West London, last June. He died instantly. Mr Mukadi, an asylum seeker from the Democratic Republic of Congo, was imprisoned for four months after admitting charges of leaving the scene of an accident, driving without a licence and having no insurance, at Uxbridge magistrates’ court.
But he escaped deportation because his offences are not considered serious enough by the Home Office. Deportation is automatic only for offenders who have been jailed for more than 12 months or convicted of gun offences.
Meanwhile, Amy’s father still struggles to cope with her death.
Two in five drink-drivers are from overseas
Paul Houston, a 39-year-old engineer who was separated from her mother, was informed of his daughter’s accident by a policeman who was waiting for him as he arrived at her school for a parent-teacher meeting. ‘The day Amy died, I lost everything,’ he says.
You might have imagined that after serving just two months of a four-month jail term, Ibrahim would have been deported immediately. After all, hasn’t the Government promised the swift removal of illegal immigrants who break our laws?
And this was not Ibrahim’s first offence. Before Amy’s death, he’d twice been banned from driving and was on bail for a third offence when the accident happened.
Mohammed Ibrahim was disqualified and driving with no insurance when he hit Amy and left her to die
Amazingly, UK Border Agency officials only quite recently seized Ibrahim who, Mr Houston was informed just before Christmas, is still in custody subject to another review.
In the intervening years, Ibrahim notched up another motoring conviction – his fifth.
In 2006, he appeared in court again, pleading guilty to driving while disqualified and without insurance. This time, he was handed a two-year supervision order, banned from driving for three years and given a four-month curfew.
‘My daughter would be alive today if Ibrahim, a banned driver, had not flouted the law and got into his car that day,’ says Mr Houston.
‘If he’s not prepared to live by our laws, then he doesn’t deserve to stay here. It’s not a question of race, it’s a question of right and wrong.’
Mr Houston had been told that before Ibrahim’s seizure, it would have been impossible to deport him because the situation in Iraq was too dangerous. Even now, Mr Houston fears his hopes for justice will come to nothing.
In November, it emerged that illegal immigrant Ahsan Sabri, 28, who in 2004 killed writer Sophie Warne, 30, after speeding through a red light at 60mph in London, cannot be deported because it would breach his human rights.
The High Court overturned an immigration tribunal decision that Sabri – who had overstayed his visa – should be sent home to Pakistan, ruling that deporting him would breach his right to ‘respect for family life’ as he had married a British woman in 2003 and had a daughter with her, born last May.
Sabri, who was jailed for three years after being found guilty of causing death by dangerous driving, argued that his wife may suffer in Pakistan and fail to find a job on account of being a Christian.
The case could set a precedent, allowing illegal immigrants to stay if they marry a British citizen and have a child.
After the hearing, Damian Green, Tory spokesman for immigration, said: ‘This is yet another reminder that Gordon Brown’s claim to have brought in automatic deportation for criminals was just spin.’ The UK Border Agency, however, reports that 2,500 foreign prisoners were removed or deported in the first half of last year – a ‘record performance’ and 140 per cent higher than in 2006.

Innocent: Amy, aged 7, at her First Holy Communion with father Paul Houston and grandmother Margaret
However, the Sabiri decision has appalled Paul Houston, for Mohammed Ibrahim is also married to a British woman and has two children. But why, he asks in despair, should his own human rights come second to those of visitors who seek to settle here, but break Britain’s laws?
‘The past five years have been like a slow, emotional torture. If the courts ever decide to put this man’s human rights over mine then it will be like a hammer blow. I can’t help but wonder if I’m being stalled and if Ibrahim will ever be deported.
‘He knew his immigration status when he married a British woman and I can’t help but feel a little cynical about it. I have nothing against this man seeking sanctuary in our country and I could understand if he’d been unaware of our laws, but he wasn’t. He was on bail and had already been disqualified twice before my daughter was knocked down.
‘It seems to me that he has plenty of options while I have none. He took away all my options when Amy died. She was my only child. I lost my whole family, I lost my job, I lost my peace of mind and all I am left with is my name.
‘I owe it to Amy to keep fighting for justice. He spent two months in prison for what he did. Until Amy died, I didn’t realise that life was so cheap in Britain.
‘Five times he’s been in court for driving while disqualified. Five times he’s flouted the law – how many chances should he have?’
Amy, aged 10, in her school photo
Some might regard it as politically incorrect to highlight the failings of foreign illegal drivers when there are plenty of home-grown examples who ignore the law.
Government figures show there are more than a million uninsured drivers on the road, but random police checks suggest the true number of uninsured drivers could be as high as five million.
There is no breakdown to show how many of these illegal drivers are foreign, although one report – based on leaked information from a Home Office source – has suggested that asylum seekers committed more than 20,000 driving offences between 2003 and 2006, leaving a death toll of at least 70 in their wake.
Some police forces have also seen a shocking rise in driving offences among immigrants who are unaware of our laws or simply ignore them. Illegal immigrants living below the radar are, unsurprisingly, reluctant to draw attention to their status by applying for a licence or insurance.
According to leaked statistics, in Cambridgeshire alone two in every five motorists caught over the drink-driving limit or driving while banned are from overseas.
The county’s Chief Constable, Julie Spence, has warned about the effects of rapid immigration to the area, saying: ‘We have seen an increase in specific offences such as motoring offences, sex trafficking and worker exploitation… the growth of our (migrant) population has brought about significant policing challenges, not least the time and effort we put into dealing with offenders whose first language is not English.’
Chief Inspector Paul Elliott, of Lincolnshire Police, put it in a nutshell after the inquest in 2003 into the deaths of newlyweds Christopher, 46, and Ann Mallet, 41.
‘The difficulty is that if they are here illegally, they cannot get insurance so they will never be driving legally,’ he said. ‘It is very difficult to reach the community who are here illegally and have no desire to make contact with the police.’
‘They have little respect for our laws’
The Mallets, the inquest heard, died after Wlodzimierz Rogowski, then aged 35, who was driving without an MoT or insurance and was nearly five times over the drink-drive limit, ploughed into the couple’s car at 75mph.
According to Deputy Chief Constable Adam Briggs, of the Association of Chief Police Officers, legislation is under way ‘to better help authorities deal with non-UK residents who commit driving offences’.
When enacted, this will enable police to issue fixed-penalty notices, take on-the-spot deposits for fine payment and give foreign drivers instant penalty points to disqualify them if they persist in bad behaviour.
Sophie Warne was killed by illegal immigrant Ahsan Sabri in 2004
The prospect of fines and penalty points means nothing, however, to those who have lost loved ones to illegal drivers.
Alison Fritchley, 45, from Gloucestershire, lost Paul, her husband of 19 years – a self-employed courier – when he was killed in a road accident in January 2004. Their children Scott and Holly were 15 and 13 at the time of the accident.
Gloucester Crown Court found failed asylum seeker Nana Kemajou, 30, guilty of driving dangerously after hearing how, while speeding at 90mph with a ‘seriously underinflatedtyre, he ploughed into the back of Mr Fritchley’s Renault, sending it spinning into a lorry.
Kemajou, from Cameroon, had been living in Britain under a false name. He was jailed for two-andahalf years, but although it was reported at the time that he would be deported immediately after sentence, he is still here.
‘Not only did Nana Kemajou cause the death of my husband, he’s now living 14 miles away from me in Cheltenham. Is that right?’ says Mrs Fritchley. ‘Losing my husband devastated the whole family and my children have struggled terribly. In my opinion, this man has never been properly punished.
‘I believe 100 per cent that he should have been deported after his sentence and I don’t know why he hasn’t been. I’ve been told by the police they are not even sure if that’s his real name, so perhaps that’s why.
‘I can’t get into a car without being insured or while disqualified, so why should he be able to?
‘If I go to another country, I know I have to respect that country’s laws or face the consequences. There appears to be one set of rules for us, but quite another for those who come here.’
It’s a feeling shared by the family of Callum Oakford. In November, he should have celebrated his 14th birthday, but instead his family mourned once again – their grief compounded by the outrage they still feel at his death.
To mark the birthday he never lived to see, they laid a cross, made by his mother Lynn, at the scene of the accident.
Ahsan Sabri, 28, who killed Sophie Warne by driving into her at 60mph cannot be deported
Nine-year-old Callum, from West Sussex, died on New Year’s Day 2004, when he stepped into the path of a car driven by Algerian Kamel Kadri, then aged 38, an illegal immigrant driving with no insurance or driving licence. He had entered the UK in 2001 on a stolen French passport and had his application for asylum rejected in 2002.
He was jailed for six months after admitting failing to stop after an accident and driving without insurance or a licence. He received a further 16 months for the passport offence.
Callum’s mother said she felt Kadri was ‘laughing’ at the family from his prison cell. Jailing Kadri, Judge Anthony Thorpe said: ‘It is intolerable that those who should have been removed from the country manage to stay for long periods of time and are no doubt often driving unsafe, unlicensed and uninsured cars, since they clearly have little respect for the laws of the country.’
He promised to pass on his comments to the Home Office. So was Kadri deported after completing his sentence? When asked by the Daily Mail, the Home Office confirmed he was, on November 8, 2004. What a shame, then, that the family were not informed.
Callum’s sister Sarah, 23, said: ‘We had no idea what happened to Kamel Kadri after he served the little time he spent in prison, though we were keen to find out. His punishment was nowhere near what he should have received.’
Lynn, whose elder son Sam, now 17, witnessed the accident, added: ‘Kadri got longer in prison for having a false passport than taking my baby. Now I live every day not knowing if I am going to lose my remaining son, because he can’t cope with it all.
‘Finally knowing that Kadri has been deported was been the best present for Callum’s birthday. I have spent years not knowing. It was like a weight had been lifted.’
Will Paul Houston ever share that feeling? Or will the man whose driving cost his daughter’s life be allowed to remain here to protect his ‘human rights’?
The omens, for the moment, are not encouraging.
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Tags: amy houston murdered, casuals united, justice amy houston, political correctness
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Justice for Charlene Downes demo Blackpool
26 08 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: blackpool casuals united, casuals united, charlene downes murder, edl charlene downes, justice charlene downes
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Wheres the Justice? another family “enriched” by multiculturalism and dumped by a politically correct spineless CPS
26 08 2010Hit-and-run man tells family: girl’s death was nothing to with me
10:01pm Monday 16th July 2007
A MAN arrested over the hit-and-run death of an eight-year-old girl has told her family he was not responsible.
Waqas Mahmood, 27, came face-to-face with Olivia Whiteside’s mum and other relatives at the inquest into her death.
And Mr Mahmood, from the Burnley area, told them he was not the person who knocked down Olivia, of Goldhey Street, Audley, Blackburn, at the junction with Dalton Close and Billinge Street on July 27 last year.
The inquest was told that eye-witnesses described seeing a black Range Rover similar to that driven by Mr Mahmood in the area at the time of the accident.
His mobile phone records also appeared to place him in the Dalton Close area, the inquest was told.
Mr Mahmood was arrested in connection with the crash but police said after the hearing that there was not enough evidence for a prosecution of death by dangerous driving.
Detective Chief Inspector Neil Hunter added that because more than six months had passed since the incident, they could also not bring careless driving charges.
After coroner Michael Singleton recorded a verdict of accidental death, emotions ran high and police had to intervene when people began shouting.
Outside the court Olivia’s mother, Laura Whiteside, 24, said: “I don’t feel like there has been any closure.
“It feels like everything is still up in the air. This is something we will never get over.”
Mr Mahmood, speaking later, said the inquest had exonerated him.
He said: “I completely deny any involvement in Olivia’s death “The coroner’s verdict reinforces that it was nothing to do with me.
“My heart and soul goes out to the Whiteside family.
“This has been a very difficult time for me but I feel that the inquest has exonerated me. I have co-operated with the police in all manners and the inquest heard that there was absolutely no evidence on the car.
“The police were looking for people who drove similar vehicles and that is the only reason I was arrested.
“I hope that the police continue their investigations and catch whoever is responsible.”
Earlier, during the hearing Mr Mahmood had been called to the inquest as a witness.
Mr Singleton asked him if the account that he had given to the police that he was not the driver was correct. Mr Mahmood said yes.
He also said he was not using his phone in Blackburn at the time of the accident and that his vehicle was not in the area.
The coroner asked him: “Is there anything else you wish to say about the circumstances relating to the death of Olivia Whiteside?”
Mr Mahmood said “No” and his evidence ended.
Giving evidence, Detective Inspector Gary Brooks, deputy senior investigating officer, said that police had carried out an extensive investigation following Olivia’s death, following 700 lines of inquiry.
He said that following the Lancashire Telegraph’s coverage of the incident, a woman who had been outside a take away on Copy Nook told police she had seen a black Range Rover in the area with an unusual number plate.
The plate belonged to a grey Hyundai but after altering one digit, police traced a black Range Rover to the Mahmood family, with Mr Mahmood as one of two insured drivers, the inquest was told.
Police impounded the vehicle and it underwent an examination but there was no forensic evidence to link it to the scene.
Officers then carried out cell site analysis of Mr Mahmood’s two mobile phones.
One was found to have been used on the day of the accident on a journey from Burnley to Blackburn, the hearing was told.
A signal responding to a mobile phone mast also placed it in the vicinity of Dalton Close, police told the inquest.
Giving evidence, Detective Constable Martin Hulme, who later interviewed Mr Mahmood, said he had denied being in Blackburn on that day, using his car or using his mobile phone – which Mr Mahmood said could have been borrowed by his brother.
Mr Mahmood told police he had been in his shop, trying to set up an internet connection.
Returning an accidental death verdict, Mr Singleton said: “As far as the police are concerned I commend them for their extensive inquiries.
“I share the view of the police that there is some frustration that they have not been able to conclusively identify the vehicle or the driver.”
Outside the inquest, DCI Hunter said: “It has been a very demanding and complex inquiry.
“We share the frustration of the family because we have not been able to bring who we believe is the person responsible to justice.
“It is fair to say that limitations of the six-month rule to prepare any charges for careless driving has prevented us from prosecuting the person who we believe was responsible.
“The family have conducted themselves with enormous dignity. As a parent myself I can’t imagine the distress that the loss of such a beautiful little girl has caused.”
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Tags: casuals united, olivia whiteside justice
Categories : olivia whiteside edl
British Loyalism on the march by “G”Casuals United Hereford
26 08 2010The British people have finally had enough and have started to rise up. Typified by the large number of groups now taking to the streets. The UPL, UBA, March for England, EDL, SDL, Casuals United, ENA and various others in the early stages of formation.
Marches and demos are becoming an almost weekly occurance around the country, as British people finally get fed up of being treated as second class citizens. How long did they think it could go on for?
The police have told EDL liason people “we knew this was coming one day, a popular uprising of Joe public”. And come it has. Behind the 3000 people of all races and religions who attend EDL demos, are a further 30,000 who actively support the organisation and often act as “armchair warriors” forming more and more blogs, putting together youtube videos to spread the message and involving themselves in email, telephone and letter writing campaigns. (KFC is scrapping its cruel halal meat trial after mass complaints from thousands of British people)
Police in Blackpool are re investigating the dissapearance of several young girls at the hands of paedophiles after 300 Casuals United supporters marched through the town and bombarded the CPS with complaints.
Hate preachers have been excluded from the UK due to the threat of EDL and other Loyalist groups marching or demonstrating those who insulted the soldiers in Luton were arrested after pressure from us and evil Anjem Choudreys hate group were banned. Something that simply would not have happened without these movements protesting.
The EDL is protesting this saturday in Bradford against the continued Islamification of Britain and the fact that many cities in the UK have “no go” areas for non Muslims. It is hard to say how many will be on this demo (a march has been banned), but it looks likely to be a few thousand at least.
Our message is simply this, we will not accept Islam and Sharia law being imposed on us by stealth, we no longer are willing to be treated as second class citizens in our own land, and we want ridiculous “religious hatred” laws (which are used solely to stop ANY criticism of Islam, even to question it will get you arrested) which are an affront to free speech. Schoolchildren may not even question any aspect of Islam for fear of arrest and this is not acceptable in a democracy.
To our critics, the left wing rodents who despise any display of patriotism and constantly call us “nazi and fascist” we say this, yes nazi types have tried to infiltrate these great street movements, seeing as how their own “national mobilisations” result in 40 to 50 activists, but whenever we find them they are removed. Photos of a few clowns seig heiling on any demo do not mean the movement is racist/nazi/fascist and your attempts to destroy these movements will fail miserably.
We are not racists, we are Loyalists, we love our country and will not see our childrens heritage that our grandfathers fought and died for given away to the followers of an alien cult. End of chat.
Casuals United – over 70 regional branches and growing
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Tags: british loyalism, casuals united, hereford casuals united, hereford edl, kris donald, one million united blog edl, SEARCHLIGHT
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Casuals United Charlene Downes Justice demo pics 2
24 08 2010casuals united/edl charlene downes demo 2
A MURDER trial was today told how a fast food boss bragged that missing Blackpool teenager Charlene Downes “had ended up in one of the kebabs”.
Iyad Bassar Albattikhi went on trial today accused of the murder of the 14-year-old.
Charlene, of Buchanan Street, disappeared in November 2003.
Despite a massive police search she has never been found.
Albattikhi, 29, denies murder while co-accused Mohammed Reza Reveshi, 50, denies the disposal of the body of Charlene’s body.
Both men were co-owners of the Funny Boyz takeaway in Dickson Road at the time of Charlene disappearance.
Outlining the prosecution case, Timothy Holroyde QC told a jury at Preston Crown Court both Albattikhi and Raveshi lied to the police about knowing Charlene.
He added they would hear from a Kirsty Fletcher, a witness who worked another takeaway named Heat on Dickson Road.
Ms Fletcher said she was told the owner of Heat – known by the name Chico – knew Albattikhi and knew he was in the company of white girls.
Mr Holroyde added: “These people were talking about sex with white girls and there was some mention of having sex with Charlene.
“Albattikhi laughed and said she was kinky and very small – the plainest possible indication that he was lying to the police about knowing her.
“He and the others present were then laughing saying that Charlene had gone into the kebabs.”
Mr Holroyde told the court the teenager frequented a number of fast food outlets on Dickson Road where sexual activities had occurred.
Jordanian-born Albattikhi told the police he did not know Miss Downes and neither did his alleged accomplice.
Mr Holroyde told the court that witnesses would tell the eight-week trial some of the workers at the takeaways carried out “sexual activity” with some of the “white girls”.
The court was told that Charlene lived in a “chaotic” family home on Buchanan Street close to the town centre.
When she was last seen on November 1, 2003 she had waved goodbye to her mother Karen.
The prosecution said it was likely that is the night she had been murdered by Albattikhi.
Her body was disposed of by both Albattikhi of Dickson Road, and Raveshi, who is Iranian-born and of Hornby Road, defendants, the court was told.
Mr Holroyde told the jury: “It will be clear to you already that Charlene Downes was leading a lifestyle which put her at considerable risk and made her very vulnerable.
“Funny Boyz was one of the places she use to hang around.
“She was seen talking to Albattikhi on several occasions.
Charlene murder case ‘built on lies’
POLICE are to launch an inquiry after the Charlene Downes murder trial sensationally collapsed.
One man was yesterday cleared of her alleged murder and another of the disposal of the Blackpool schoolgirl’s body.
Defence barristers quickly accused Blackpool police’s investigation of being riddled with “incompetence, manipulation and lies”.
And Charlene’s heartbroken mother today demanded answers after charges against businessman Mohammed Reveshi and another man were dropped.
Karen Downes said: “Why did they (the police) put us through this? Why didn’t they make sure they had enough evidence before taking this to court?”
Related stories
Loss of ‘key plank’ led to collapse of police case
We’ll never give up our fight for justice
The case against Mr Reveshi, 50, of Hornby Road, who was charged with disposing of Charlene’s body, and the other man, who was accused of murdering the 14-year-old, collapsed because concerns were raised over the evidence of a key prosecution witness.
John Bromley-Davenport, defending Mr Reveshi, said: “We have uncovered within the Blackpool Police force an astonishing catalogue of incompetence, failure to disclose, manipulation and lies, some of which were uttered on oath during the trial last year.
“If the jury at that trial had swallowed the lies and been duped by the manipulation then a grave miscarriage of justice would have occurred.”
Prosecutors withdrew the charges against the two men and the judge ordered not guilty verdicts be returned on both.
Mr Reveshi said he would be seeking compensation for the two-and-a-half years he had spent in prison awaiting trial.
He said: “It’s been a nightmare. This was shameful behaviour by the police.
“I’m very relieved because there was never any basis for this whole thing. This was an imaginary case.
“How can something like this happen when I’ve never been in trouble with the police before?
“I’ve never met this girl (Charlene). I don’t know the family, but I hope that she is alive somewhere.”
Fourteen-year-old Charlene has not been seen since she kissed her mother Karen goodbye at a bus stop in central Blackpool in November 2003.
Despite Lancashire Police’s biggest ever missing person’s investigation she has never been found.
Charlene’s parents, who said they would never give up their hunt for the truth behind what happened to their daughter were distraught by yesterday’s events in court.
Mrs Downes said: “I don’t want to blame them (the police) as they have been very good to us, but there was always going to be a problem with the lack of forensic evidence and not having found her body.
Distraught
“Now I’m being told some of the evidence was flawed. We’ve been through two years of hell with this trial and are left back where we started.”
Dad Robert added: “There are a lot of questions I want answering.
“The police have given us a lot of moral support and I know the officers were distraught, but something has gone wrong and we need to know why.”
Police chiefs refused to comment on the defence team’s allegations, but said an inquiry would be held into the investigation.
Det Supt Kevin Toole said the investigation remained open, although a review of the case was needed.
He said: “We want to find out the truth about what happened to Charlene Downes.
“We had to accept we didn’t have sufficient evidence to secure convictions in this case.
“We have listened to a lot of legal argument and discussions in court, but it shouldn’t be forgotten the main issue here is Charlene Downes.
“In some respects we are back to square one.
“There will now be some quiet reflection before carefully considering everything that has happened today and in recent weeks.
“Only when we have looked at all that material can we start to consider the future of the case, but I believe there are some parts of the investigation which could still be relevant.”
Mr Reveshi and the other man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had been due for a retrial at the end of the month.
A jury failed to reach a decision at the two men’s first trial in May last year.
THESE 2 EVIL MEN STILL WALK THE STREETS OF BLACKPOOL AND STILL RUN THE SAME SHOP IT CHANGED NAMES THIS WEEK TO MR BEANS ITS AT 16A DICKINSON AVE IN NR BLACKPOOL NORTH PIER AND STATION. THE FAMILY AND THE NWA/EDL WILL NOT STOP UN TILL JUSTICE IS DONE.
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Charlene Downes Justice demo pics
24 08 2010charlene downes demo blackpool 19/06/2010
charlene downs family with nwa and edl peacefull protest
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charlene downs sister mum dad nan and cousin
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A MURDER trial was today told how a fast food boss bragged that missing Blackpool teenager Charlene Downes “had ended up in one of the kebabs”.
Iyad Bassar Albattikhi went on trial today accused of the murder of the 14-year-old.
Charlene, of Buchanan Street, disappeared in November 2003.
Despite a massive police search she has never been found.
Albattikhi, 29, denies murder while co-accused Mohammed Reza Reveshi, 50, denies the disposal of the body of Charlene’s body.
Both men were co-owners of the Funny Boyz takeaway in Dickson Road at the time of Charlene disappearance.
Outlining the prosecution case, Timothy Holroyde QC told a jury at Preston Crown Court both Albattikhi and Raveshi lied to the police about knowing Charlene.
He added they would hear from a Kirsty Fletcher, a witness who worked another takeaway named Heat on Dickson Road.
Ms Fletcher said she was told the owner of Heat – known by the name Chico – knew Albattikhi and knew he was in the company of white girls.
Mr Holroyde added: “These people were talking about sex with white girls and there was some mention of having sex with Charlene.
“Albattikhi laughed and said she was kinky and very small – the plainest possible indication that he was lying to the police about knowing her.
“He and the others present were then laughing saying that Charlene had gone into the kebabs.”
Mr Holroyde told the court the teenager frequented a number of fast food outlets on Dickson Road where sexual activities had occurred.
Jordanian-born Albattikhi told the police he did not know Miss Downes and neither did his alleged accomplice.
Mr Holroyde told the court that witnesses would tell the eight-week trial some of the workers at the takeaways carried out “sexual activity” with some of the “white girls”.
The court was told that Charlene lived in a “chaotic” family home on Buchanan Street close to the town centre.
When she was last seen on November 1, 2003 she had waved goodbye to her mother Karen.
The prosecution said it was likely that is the night she had been murdered by Albattikhi.
Her body was disposed of by both Albattikhi of Dickson Road, and Raveshi, who is Iranian-born and of Hornby Road, defendants, the court was told.
Mr Holroyde told the jury: “It will be clear to you already that Charlene Downes was leading a lifestyle which put her at considerable risk and made her very vulnerable.
“Funny Boyz was one of the places she use to hang around.
“She was seen talking to Albattikhi on several occasions.
Charlene murder case ‘built on lies’
POLICE are to launch an inquiry after the Charlene Downes murder trial sensationally collapsed.
One man was yesterday cleared of her alleged murder and another of the disposal of the Blackpool schoolgirl’s body.
Defence barristers quickly accused Blackpool police’s investigation of being riddled with “incompetence, manipulation and lies”.
And Charlene’s heartbroken mother today demanded answers after charges against businessman Mohammed Reveshi and another man were dropped.
Karen Downes said: “Why did they (the police) put us through this? Why didn’t they make sure they had enough evidence before taking this to court?”
Related stories
Loss of ‘key plank’ led to collapse of police case
We’ll never give up our fight for justice
The case against Mr Reveshi, 50, of Hornby Road, who was charged with disposing of Charlene’s body, and the other man, who was accused of murdering the 14-year-old, collapsed because concerns were raised over the evidence of a key prosecution witness.
John Bromley-Davenport, defending Mr Reveshi, said: “We have uncovered within the Blackpool Police force an astonishing catalogue of incompetence, failure to disclose, manipulation and lies, some of which were uttered on oath during the trial last year.
“If the jury at that trial had swallowed the lies and been duped by the manipulation then a grave miscarriage of justice would have occurred.”
Prosecutors withdrew the charges against the two men and the judge ordered not guilty verdicts be returned on both.
Mr Reveshi said he would be seeking compensation for the two-and-a-half years he had spent in prison awaiting trial.
He said: “It’s been a nightmare. This was shameful behaviour by the police.
“I’m very relieved because there was never any basis for this whole thing. This was an imaginary case.
“How can something like this happen when I’ve never been in trouble with the police before?
“I’ve never met this girl (Charlene). I don’t know the family, but I hope that she is alive somewhere.”
Fourteen-year-old Charlene has not been seen since she kissed her mother Karen goodbye at a bus stop in central Blackpool in November 2003.
Despite Lancashire Police’s biggest ever missing person’s investigation she has never been found.
Charlene’s parents, who said they would never give up their hunt for the truth behind what happened to their daughter were distraught by yesterday’s events in court.
Mrs Downes said: “I don’t want to blame them (the police) as they have been very good to us, but there was always going to be a problem with the lack of forensic evidence and not having found her body.
Distraught
“Now I’m being told some of the evidence was flawed. We’ve been through two years of hell with this trial and are left back where we started.”
Dad Robert added: “There are a lot of questions I want answering.
“The police have given us a lot of moral support and I know the officers were distraught, but something has gone wrong and we need to know why.”
Police chiefs refused to comment on the defence team’s allegations, but said an inquiry would be held into the investigation.
Det Supt Kevin Toole said the investigation remained open, although a review of the case was needed.
He said: “We want to find out the truth about what happened to Charlene Downes.
“We had to accept we didn’t have sufficient evidence to secure convictions in this case.
“We have listened to a lot of legal argument and discussions in court, but it shouldn’t be forgotten the main issue here is Charlene Downes.
“In some respects we are back to square one.
“There will now be some quiet reflection before carefully considering everything that has happened today and in recent weeks.
“Only when we have looked at all that material can we start to consider the future of the case, but I believe there are some parts of the investigation which could still be relevant.”
Mr Reveshi and the other man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had been due for a retrial at the end of the month.
A jury failed to reach a decision at the two men’s first trial in May last year.
THESE 2 EVIL MEN STILL WALK THE STREETS OF BLACKPOOL AND STILL RUN THE SAME SHOP IT CHANGED NAMES THIS WEEK TO MR BEANS ITS AT 16A DICKINSON AVE IN NR BLACKPOOL NORTH PIER AND STATION. THE FAMILY AND THE NWA/EDL WILL NOT STOP UN TILL JUSTICE IS DONE.
THERES AN OFFICAL DEMO PLANED FOR JULY THE 31ST AT THE METROPOL HOTEL NORTH PIER AT 2PM COME SHOW YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE FAMILY
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Tags: charlene downes murder, justice charlene downes
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Charlene Downes murder update
23 08 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
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Categories : charlene downes murder
“Youre the next Kris Donald”
14 08 2010Shaun Paul McNally, 14, was playing outside his home when a pack of Asian youths punched, kicked and spat on him and battered him with metal poles.
They shouted: “You’re the next Kriss Donald! We’re going to murder you!” The gang dragged Shaun Paul towards their car but he managed to get himself free and fled. He told the Record: “I’m lucky to be alive.”Kriss, 15, was tortured, stabbed and set on fire by a racist Asian gang six years ago.And Shaun Paul was assaulted just a few streets from the spot where Kriss was kidnapped.

Shaun Paul said the gang attacked him at about 8.30pm on Wednesday after he got separated from his pals outside his home in St John’s Quadrant, Pollokshields, Glasgow.He recalled:
“I turned a corner and these three Asian guys were standing just outside their car smoking. They came at me with metal poles and shouted, ‘See you, you wee p***k! You’re going to be the next Kriss Donald! We’re going to murder you!They punched me in the face about six times and I fell to the ground before they hit me over the head with the poles and spat at me.Then they tried to drag me into their car.I’m quite a big lad for my age and I fought back with all my strength, and I struggled free and ran for my life.They got back in the car and raced off but I managed to get some of their registration number. My pals ran after the car to get the number as well. It all happened so quickly and I still can’t believe it.”
Shaun Paul added: “I’ve given the police all the information I got and described the men to them.
“I hope they catch them before they pick on someone else. . . .full story Daily Record
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Vicious racial attack? No, the victim was only a whitey
14 08 201014 year-old beaten with bottles and bats.

The teenager, from Lydney, suffered the horrific injuries as he left Europe Food, in Barton Street, at around 5.30pm on Wednesday.
It is alleged between seven and nine Asian males were involved in a vicious assault and that a bat, bottle and golf club were used.
A 37-year-old man from Gloucester was arrested on Wednesday night on suspicion of grievous bodily harm in connection with the incident. He is currently being questioned by police.
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