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Premi5

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Everything posted by Premi5

  1. If there are no sharp edges on the Karrha, all should be fine
  2. Racist attack? @proudkaur21 www.theglobeandmail.com/amp/canada/british-columbia/article-security-guard-killed-at-ubc-okanagan-three-weeks-after-becoming-a/ Nathan Skolski, a spokesperson for UBC Okanagan, said he expects the university will provide an update on this incident in the coming days. Principal Lesley Cormack said in a statement the school is working closely with the RCMP and its partners to provide assistance required in the investigation. The statement calls the attack an isolated incident that did not involve students and does not pose a continuing risk to campus safety. “We are devastated that something like this would happen on our campus. My heart and my thoughts, and those of everyone at UBCO, go to the family,” Dr. Cormack said. “... There will be plenty of opportunity to try to understand the circumstances of this tragedy over the coming weeks but our immediate priority is to support the family and individuals affected.”
  3. @Suchi do the clinics also give you treatment advice ?
  4. @Kaurr @5aaban https://7news.com.au/news/crime/insidious-online-sexual-predator-jailed-c-5902132.amp Melbourne online sexual predator jailed after pressuring 11-year-old to send child abuse material Gus McCubbing AAP/7NEWS Published: 02/03/2022Updated: Thursday, 3 March 2022 8:19 AM GMT+11 Melbourne man jailed over extortion campaign targeting kids. Ranpati Amarasinghe pressured an 11-year-old girl he met online into sending him child abuse material and later uploaded the content to a porn site in order to blackmail her. When the girl blocked him, Amarasinghe messaged her from new accounts, threatening to pass on the abuse content to her friends and family if she did not comply with his demands for even more material. Her mother begged the 24-year-old, who often posed online as “John”, to stop, saying she feared her daughter might take her own life because of the trauma he had inflicted upon her. But he told her that he hoped she did just this. Amarasinghe on Wednesday faced the Victorian County Court, where he was sentenced to a total 13 years and six months in jail. The Sri Lankan national pleaded guilty to 25 child abuse material offences relating to six girls aged 11 to 17, including four in the United States, one in the United Kingdom and one in Australia, from November 2018 to June 2020…. “Get ready to be ruined,” Amarasinghe told one girl. “I’m ruining your life and you don’t give a s*** - you’re a f***ing <banned word filter activated>.” Judge Douglas Trapnell said Amarasinghe had been on a cruel and perverted mission to completely destroy people’s lives. The 24-year-old’s “insidious” and “chilling” actions left the girls and their families devastated by extreme trauma, he added.…. Amarasinghe, once a promising a cricketer, had watched porn online from the age of 11, struggled to develop intimate relationships and had a “fragile self-esteem”, the court was told. He was arrested in September 2020. “Sextortion, also known as image-based abuse, is a form of blackmail where someone threatens to share intimate images of you online unless you give in to their demands,” Australian Federal Police detective acting superintendent Aaron Hardcastle said in a statement following the sentencing.… Amarasinghe must serve at least eight years and six months behind bars before he is eligible for parole.
  5. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/ubco-victim-identified-1.6370278 Victim of fatal attack at UBCO identified as 24-year-old woman from India who dreamed of bright future in B.C. Harmandeep Kaur died after she was assaulted on UBC's Okanagan campus while working security CBC News Posted: 9 Hours Ago Posted: 9 Hours Ago Harmandeep Kaur, 24, is remembered by loved ones as a hard working and family-oriented woman who came from India with dreams of studying and establishing a life in British Columbia and had just received her permanent residency status in January. (Facebook/Harmandeep Kaur) A security guard at the University of British Columbia's Okanagan campus (UBCO) who died after being assaulted on the job Saturday has now been identified as 24-year-old Harmandeep Kaur. Kaur, who was originally from India, came to Canada in 2015 and, according to a spokesperson for the Kaur family, was excited about pursuing an education, and eventually a family, in B.C. She had just received her permanent residency and was considering studying to be a paramedic. While working security to try and put money away for school, she was attacked on the Kelowna campus by a male university worker. The unidentified attacker was subsequently detained under the Mental Health Act and taken to hospital, with police saying he could face murder charges.
  6. It will be the same in other countries and parts of India
  7. https://www.unsaiddigital.com/tensions-rising-as-uk-police-and-sikh-activists-continue-to-clash/ Tensions rising as UK police and Sikh activists continue to clash Posted On March 1, 2022 The Sikh community’s tensions with the UK police seem to not be getting any better as in recent days a recruitment stall set up by the authorities in a gurdwara was removed by Sikh activists. The activists recognised an officer who infiltrated at the West Midlands 3 protest In September 2021 and was seen taking pictures of the protest coordinators and filming key players who were assisting. On the day he was approached and confronted by activists and he denied being a police officer, now, in recent days he’s been seen in uniform at a West London gurdwara with other officers attempting to recruit Sikhs to the police force. He was then met by activists and asked to leave. The police ban in Sikh spaces, by Sikh activists and major senior Sikh orgs, came after the 2018 raids by UK Police on 5 Sikh activists’ homes. This was in relation to investigations on Jagtar Singh Johal – the information and activities of the raids were highly publicised in the Indian media as they stated it was due to diplomatic pressure put onto UK authorities by the Indian state. Since the banning a long list of incidents have occurred as tensions seem to keep rising and ongoing court cases and police arrests continue to happen due to the work of some Sikh activists within the community. Gurmel Singh, Supreme Sikh Council UK, said: “Following the raids on the houses of the five activists and the extradition attempt of another three activists a perception evolved in the Sikh community that due to pressure from a foreign government particular individuals are being targeted. “This was exasperated by the misplaced and unnecessary comments by the Home Secretary in US last November. “Whilst there is a constructive structure with the MET that allows community concerns the same cannot be said about the West Midlands Police and some other forces. “We will be organising a meeting of Gurdwaras, key organisation and activists to resolve the issues and work toward rebuilding the trust.” Deepa Singh, Sikh Youth UK, said: “The issues with UK police targeting Sikh activists continue as they have attempted to extradite Sikhs, illegally raided our homes, given false intelligence to Indian authorities of innocent activists like Jaggi, harassed and Interrogated our families, stopped and detained us at UK border stops under schedule 7 acts, racially assaulted and abused in custody, put onto government prevent schemes to disrupt our activism, disrupted our funds, silenced our voices on media and continuously harassed Sikhs in the community who speak up. Mankamal Singh, Sikh Network, mentioned: “Mistrust of the Police by many UK Sikh community groups goes as far back as the 1970s, driven by bias treatment and miscarriages of justice stemming back to the societal and institutional racism of that era. The precursor of the Sikh community groups came in the form of large community campaigns, ‘defence’ groups and youth movements set up to protect the community from violent racist attacks and the lack of confidence in the police, who themselves were often seen as sympathisers of the attackers. “From the 1980s onwards, British policing has at times been perceived as an instrument for criminalising Sikh issues at the behest of the warm relationship between the UK and Indian governments. In certain instances, it has been felt that the Indian government has been able to utilise some of the UK Police forces to directly target and arrest the Sikh community activists in the UK who speak up against the Indian state. “Over the past decade, that perception has crystallised with the case of the West Midlands 3 and the theatrical police raids on known Sikh activists’ homes, seen to be used to perpetuate and sensationalise reporting in the Indian media.” Shamsher singh, NSYF, added: “Since the 1980s the UK establishment have used their police and military to target Sikhs and support Indian genocide. India uses narratives of “extremism/terrorism” to justify killings of Sikhs, when the UK police uses these narratives they have taken the side of India. We mistrust the police because we know what their role has always been, to target and silence Sikh resistance to gain the economic favour of India. “Most recently in Jaggi’s case his MP made the claim that the UK is not acting because of trade deals, just like in the 1980s the UK supported the invasion of Sri Darbar Sahib to secure helicopter sales. Trusting the UK and it’s police is a naive thing to do.” Here at Unsaid Digital we would like to always be a voice for the Sikh community and state that spies have even been infiltrating the Sikh community In Germany where they have been convicted of infiltration and entrapment against the Sikh community. This isn’t anything new but seems to be an issue that neither side in the UK will back down from, we hope that our community will start being treated better by UK authorities, and that activists can continue to raise issues of concern that affect us.
  8. I think the two guest posts are most likely the reality of the situation. Doubt very much he was accepted as a 'Sikh' in that gang.
  9. Should have said, the quality was very high before, and still good now. But Bhai Jagraj Singh ji was a one-off
  10. Since Bhai Jagraj Singh ji ascended, objectively the quality has gone down unfortunately. He was the big attraction for many Sangat to BoS
  11. It's pretty much rock and hard place. Nowadays 'everyone' has to complete school and 'further education' to be considered seriously for any office or business jobs. It's in the interests of the stakeholders who profit from tuition fees etc as well as university staff who get paid by these fees. And they know they can get people like Panjabis as 'International students' paying even more.
  12. not watched the whole idea but I remember that this 'Nanak Naam' Bhai Sahib is not liked by all Sangat
  13. Did email them couple of months ago to suggest they post here again, but they didn't reply ! @BasicsofSikhi @sukhmani_81 @sukhmani_kaur
  14. Saw this on Sikh PA twitter. No surprise why 'journalists' are not trusted easily. never know what their motives could be
  15. This one looks 'Panjabi' to me https://www.lancs.live/news/uk-world-news/rapist-who-abused-vulnerable-teenage-23218520 @Lioness98 Wonder why it took so long for prison "In November 2017 officers executed a warrant at Saleem's address and uncovered a number of indecent images and videos of children, including images of the victim that he had taken" Rapist who abused vulnerable teenage girls 'in the worst ways' is jailed Mohammed Saleem abused one of his victims over a period of 17 years SHARE By Amy FentonSenior reporter 14:49, 25 FEB 2022 A man who groomed and abused two teenage girls after plying them with alcohol has been jailed for 33 years. Mohammed Saleem has today (February 25) been jailed at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court following a six week trial in which he was found guilty of 31 offences. READ MORE: Lytham music teacher groomed and sexually abused teenage girl The 47-year-old, of Cannon Street in Rochdale, was convicted of six counts of indecent assault against a 14-year-old female, rape of a 14-year-old female, three counts of rape of a 14/15-year-old female, indecent assault against a 15-year-old female, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, nine counts of rape of a female, assault by penetration, three counts of rape of a female under 16 years, two counts of voyeurism, sexual assault, securing unauthorised access to computer material and two counts of making indecent images of a child. The charges relate to the non-recent exploitation, rape, indecent assault and domestic abuse of two teenage girls in Rochdale, which continued for 17 years for one of the victims. The court heard how Saleem groomed the two teenage girls in the late 1990's and would regularly ply them with alcohol and cannabis before this progressed to having sex with both of them. Over the next 17 years Saleem, who was married and had children at the time, then repeatedly abused one of the girls both sexually, physically and mentally, in an attempt to control every aspect of her life. Across the years her mental health deteriorated significantly and she did manage to escape Saleem's grips and live independently but he would always manage to get back into her life and monitor and control her. In November 2017 officers executed a warrant at Saleem's address and uncovered a number of indecent images and videos of children, including images of the victim that he had taken. It was also revealed that Saleem had installed spying software on the victims computer without her knowledge in order to monitor her internet activity, personal data and emails. Detective Constable Sarah Hayfield of GMP's Rochdale district, said: "The victims in this case were abused in the worst ways possible. This man preyed on their vulnerabilities as young girls and exploited them for his own sickening pleasure. He then went onto control and abuse one of the victims for 17 years. "This was a horrific ordeal that has no doubt left a damaging and haunting impact on those lives affected. I want to extend my thanks and gratitude to these two brave women and their families for their support and strength throughout this investigation. Their resilience has been instrumental in ensuring we could secure this custodial sentence and, although I have no doubt this will stay with them for the rest of their lives, I hope today will help bring some form of closure. "I also extend my thanks to our partners at Rochdale Borough Council, particularly their adult care recovery and re-enablement team, who have both supported the investigation and been instrumental in providing the victims with the care and support they need whilst we investigated Saleem. "I hope this sentencing sends a clear message that child sexual exploitation and domestic abuse is abhorrent and will never be acceptable and through our joint working with the council on child sexual abuse we will ensure anyone who engages in this type of vile behaviour will be brought to justice, as we have seen today."
  16. Why is that you think ? I know families like that Do you think it was more common in the past when women were confined to the house more ?
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