HONG KONG (AP) — Asian stocks were trading higher tracking Wall Street gains and oil fell on Tuesday as expectations rose over a possible second round of talks between the U.S. and Iran on an end to the Iran war.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 was up 2.4% to 57,842.72. South Korea’s Kospi jumped 3.4% to 6,004.30.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.4% to 25,759.75, while the Shanghai Composite index climbed 0.6% to 4,010.45. China on Tuesday reported worse-than-expected export growth of 2.5% in March for the first month since the Iran war began.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.3%, and Taiwan’s Taiex rose 2.2%.
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Investors are still hopeful for a lasting de-escalation of the Iran war, which is in its seventh week, as the U.S. and Iran are said to be weighing a second round of talks before a temporary ceasefire agreement expires next week. The U.S. military on Monday began a blockade of Iranian ports as Washington steps up its pressure on Tehran, following ceasefire talks between the two sides over the weekend that ended without an agreement.
But U.S. President Donald Trump also suggested on Monday that the United States is still willing to engage with Tehran. “I can tell you that we’ve been called by the other side,” he said, without further elaborating details.
Oil prices continued to pull back on Tuesday from earlier gains. Brent crude, the international standard, was down 1.3% to $98.12 per barrel. It reached nearly $104 early Monday morning over Iran war worries on limited progress from the weekend ceasefire talks.
Benchmark U.S. crude fell 2.2% early Tuesday to $96.92 a barrel.
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The global energy shock stemming from maritime traffic disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, where roughly a fifth of the world’s oil is typically transported, has led to surging fuel prices and is threatening to push up inflation in many countries and impact economic growth.
Wall Street rose on Monday. The S&P 500 gained 1% to 6,886.24. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.6% to 48,218.25, and the Nasdaq composite added 1.2% to 23,183.74.
Shares of investment bank Goldman Sachs dropped 1.9% despite its announcement of better-than-expected quarterly profits.
In other dealings, gold and silver prices rose on Tuesday. Gold’s price was up 0.6% to $4,796.60 an ounce, while silver prices gained 1.8% to $77.05 per ounce.
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The U.S. dollar fell to 159.08 Japanese yen from 159.45 yen. The euro was trading at $1.1768, up from $1.1759.
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AP Business Writer Stan Choe contributed to this report.
Members of the Rooftops Not Countryside campaign group say it is “deeply concerning” that the majority of people living and working near the proposed 500MW Light Valley Solar Scheme are in the dark over the project.
Island Green Power UK Ltd has submitted a development consent order application for a network of seven solar farms on 1,020 hectares of land between the villages of Escrick, Monk Fryston, Hambleton, Chapel Haddlesey and South Milford, between York and Selby.
Louise Billingham, spokesperson for the campaign group, said the group met with community groups, residents and businesses in areas which would be directly affected by the scheme earlier this month.
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She added: “What we found was deeply concerning. The overwhelming majority of people we spoke to had no knowledge whatsoever of the proposals, even where their homes or livelihoods sit on the doorstep of the planned development.
“Among those we met were a family whose home borders site four, who have received no correspondence about the plans and whose house does not appear on the Light Valley Solar documents.
“They had no knowledge of the plans until we showed them.”
Members of the group say they have taken to going door-to-door to inform residents due to the lack of awareness.
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Mrs Billingham added: “Birkin Fisheries, a local business, had no idea the site extended to the boundary of their property.
“It is a well-known wildlife hotspot, and the owner was heartbroken thinking of the impact in the area.
“An allotment owner from South Milford, who had vaguely heard mention of the plans and assumed it was ‘just a field of panels’.
“When shown the plans, she thought it was a joke. The sheer size and scale left her speechless.”
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Members of the group say the lack of awareness has been “sad but not surprising”.
“Actual plans of the seven sites are not readily available,” said Mrs Billingham.
“You can search through over 200 documents on the Planning Inspectorate website to find them, but you won’t see any physical plans in the community where residents can actually look at them to see the true scale and size, and the areas impacted. The plans are effectively inaccessible to residents.
“This isn’t local democracy or working with the community; it is inflicting 2,500 acres of industrial infrastructure on a community largely unaware, and certainly not included.”
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Due to the size of the proposed development, the scheme has been declared a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project, meaning planning permission will be decided by the Planning Inspectorate, rather than North Yorkshire Council.
If granted approval, Light Valley would be larger than the biggest solar scheme currently operational — Cleave Hill in Kent.
The developer says the scheme would provide enough power for 115,000 homes a year.
Anyone wanting to comment on the plans has until April 30 to register with the Planning Inspectorate.
At around 8am this morning, Tuesday, April 14, officers from the Radcliffe Neighbourhood Policing Team attended an address on Bridgefield Street, following an investigation into drug supply within the local area.
Upon entering the property, officers found six rooms featuring cannabis plants at various stages of their growth cycle, in addition to lighting equipment, fans, pipes, and other drug-growing paraphernalia.
In total, 663 cannabis plants were seized by officers.
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The electricity was discovered to have been illegally bypassed, and work is ongoing to ensure it is safely disconnected.
Four men aged between 33 and 55 have been arrested on suspicion of producing a Class B drug and abstracting electricity, and they remain in custody for questioning.
The work comes as part of Greater Manchester Police’s (GMP) wider work in tackling drug supply, which sees everything from proactive patrols to preventative action.
Chief Inspector Michael Barton, from GMP’s Bury district, said: “This was a great result for the local neighbourhood team, who secured four arrests and seized hundreds of plants.
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“Drug dealing is not something that is a victimless crime. The violence between gangs and exploitation of vulnerable people is something that we unfortunately see across Greater Manchester – and is something we are constantly working to tackle.
“If you have any information about criminality within your area, please do get in touch with your local team, or contact the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously.”
The gang, originally from Albania, were linked to eight burglaires in Cheshire, two in Middlesbrough, nine in Derbyshire, two in Leicestershire, five in Nottinghamshire, seven in Staffordshire, two in Warwickshire and three in Birmingham, three in Worcestershire, two in Hereford and one in Shropshire.
“I will be sticking with Shark, fabulous vacuum, best I have used in 40 years.”
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
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If your home cleaning setup is in need of a serious upgrade, then it can be hard to go wrong with a Shark product. While the prestigious brand has a wide variety of vacuum cleaners available, many of their top models often run a premium price tag.
Despite this, customers can currently get their hands on a Shark Detect XL Pet Pro for a significantly reduced price, going from £349.99 to £219.99. This vacuum cleaner can be especially helpful for any household with pets who will no doubt love shedding their hair all over the floor and upholstery.
This is because the Shark Detect XL Pet Pro is specially designed to not only tackle everyday mess, but also debris and hair due to its included Anti Hair Wrap Plus technology. This includes engineered bristles in a chevron pattern and anti-wrap combs to help remove hair from even stubborn areas.
It also includes DuoClean Detect Technology that uses two brush-rolls and smart sensors that work together to automatically adjust for the best performance on all floor types. This is coupled by DirectionDetect and Reverse Clean Technology, which allows users to clean in both directions, with the vacuum sensing your movement and adapting for maximum efficiency.
Furthermore, the FloorDetect technology automatically adjusts the brush-roll speed based on the specific surface type to ensure a perfect clean on both carpets and hard floors The vacuum also promises to trap 99.9% of dust and allergens.
If you want something a little cheaper, though, you could instead opt for the Bosch Series 2 Cylinder Vacuum at a discounted price on Amazon, going from £99.99 to £74.99. This lightweight vacuum is suitable for both hard flooring and carpet and can also be easily lifted to reach higher up areas, such as upholstery.
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If you want to save even more, you could instead go for the Akitas V8, which is currently on offer at Amazon for a discounted price, going from £69.99 to £49.99. This vacuum cleaner has a 3-in-1 function and can be turned into a more handheld vacuum to target upholstery and more.
Many people who purchased the Shark Detect XL Pet Pro praised it for its abilities, with one customer writing: “Absolutely lovely [vaccuum] really light and amazing after using another well known brand for year
“The customer service is amazing and honestly I [vacuumed] the room before my old one broke and I filled the new waste basket and this has been constantly the case.”
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Another added: “Having been a Dyson user for many years I changed to Shark as I was latterly disappointed with Dyson suction. I am pleased to say the Shark suction excelled hugely over my Dyson. I will be sticking with Shark, fabulous vacuum, best I have used in 40 years.”
However, not all users were happy, with another writing: “The suction is amazing. Embarrassing what it picked up in the first clean of my living room. However the cable is very annoying. The hose attachment that should go in between the cable falls off constantly.
“Massive flaw in the design. After the 2nd use the light kept going red and stopping suction. Turning it on and off again is the only way to get a whole room clean. I have called customer service today and they are sending a replacement but I’ve lost faith I think!”
More than ever before, the winds seem to be shifting against the White House in which Vance serves as No. 2 at a time when his political star should be rising. Republicans are facing down a brutal midterm season, with a handful of Senate race ratings shifting in Democrats’ favor this week and the possibility of Republicans losing both chambers growing by the day.
His boss, Donald Trump, seems more erratic than ever as he tries to find a “mission accomplished” banner to drape over his war with Iran, although the U.S. is approaching the end of the second month of war without a means to forcibly secure its objectives, nor an agreement to achieve those means diplomatically.
Vance, the presumed successor to Trump, is already being eyed for his sturdiness as a presidential candidate. It’s a tough sell for a political consultant: Vance, a political novice, has still been in government for less than the duration of one U.S. Senate term, the office he was originally selected for before being plucked into the Trump campaign by the president and his son, Donald Trump Jr. Were it not for Trump, Vance’s political stardom may have never happened. The Hillbilly Elegy author was running in the relative minor leagues of the Ohio Republican Senate primary in 2022 before winning Trump’s endorsement that year.
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Now, as vice president, Vance remains in Trump’s shadow (albeit to a lesser degree than Kamala Harris during her own time as Joe Biden’s veep). He emerged this past weekend to tackle a tough challenge for the president: Trump, the dealmaker, sent Vance in his place to Islamabad, Pakistan, to meet face to face with Iranian negotiators and find an end to a two-month-long conflict that is now tearing the younger part of the MAGA coalition apart at the seams.
Vance returned from Pakistan without a deal to end the war in Iran on Sunday (AFP/Getty)
He failed. Vance, after a marathon negotiation session, could only point to the discussions themselves as a positive development as he slinked back to Washington without an agreement to either open the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial waterway, or deal with Iran’s nuclear program.
“The bad news is, we have not reached an agreement,” Vance told reporters. “They have chosen not to accept our terms. The simple fact is that we need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon and they will not seek the tools that would enable them to quickly achieve a nuclear weapon.”
Once again, in an administration that has repeatedly touted its peacemaking efforts, the White House has come up short of the biggest prize.
Vice President J.D. Vance and the now-outgoing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban at an election rally in Budapest last Tuesday (Getty)
That wasn’t the only body blow suffered by Vance’s presidential ambitions this weekend. On Sunday, the longtime White House ally Viktor Orban lost re-election in Hungary, dealing a casualty to the global far-right alliance envisioned by the likes of Steve Bannon and the MAGAworld culture-war obsessives who often find a champion in Vance, who is willing to genuinely espouse the Christian nationalist doctrine that Trump often finds hard to pass off as convincing rhetoric.
Orban’s defeat was particularly embarrassing for Vance, who traveled to Hungary late last week in a bid to save Orban’s campaign with some of that exact rhetoric: “Will you stand for sovereignty and democracy, for truth and for the God of our forefathers?”
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His appeal to heaven unsuccessful and his bid to follow in Trump’s faux peacemaker footsteps in Iran also coming up short, the vice president returned home to D.C. on Sunday to face a different kind of holy war.
The nation’s second Catholic vice president woke up (jet-lagged, no doubt) on Monday morning to see Trump fire off a fresh round of attacks at the Pope on Monday, following rare criticism of the White House from the first American head of the Catholic Church.
Donald Trump deleted this image depicting him as Jesus after posting it on his Truth Social account (AFP/Getty)
Vance’s only contribution to this discourse so far was to seemingly dismiss a report that the administration summoned a Vatican ambassador to the Pentagon for a tense meeting after Pope Leo issued criticism of the war in Iran. The nation’s highest-ranking Catholic in the federal government seemed briefly unaware of who the Holy See’s chief diplomat to the U.S. was.
With the Trump 2.0 era less than half over and the post-midterms world presenting a whole new canvass for Trump’s vice president to shine in the spotlight, it’s hardly time to write the obituary of JD’s future political ambitions. But this weekend did not help matters at all, and Vance may have missed his best opportunity to get his boss publicly out of a jam — while simultaneously earning the praise of Americans who by and large do not support the White House resuming its war.
Newly released video shows the moment a recovery crew opens the hatch of Artemis II’s Orion capsule to a joyful reunion with the four astronauts inside.
Cheers broke out as the crew – Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen – were all found to be safe and well after splashdown on Friday 10 April.
The historic mission saw the four astronauts travel further from Earth than any human has ever gone.
The JD Gym in Bury has closed this evening following the collision earlier today
The bosses of JD Gym in Bury have issued an urgent statement after a car ploughed through the wall of the building. Police have confirmed two people were injured in the crash, including a male gym-goer in his 60s and the driver of the car involved, a woman in her 40s.
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The gym has closed this evening following the collision at 4.45pm on Tuesday (April 14). JD has said the incident has caused ‘damage to part of the gym’.
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A statement by the gym posted on social media read: “Earlier today an incident occurred at JD Gyms involving a vehicle making contact with the exterior of the building, which resulted in damage to part of the gym.
“As a precaution and in the interest of everyone’s safety, the gym will remain closed until further notice.
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“Our team are on it straight away and building surveyors are due to attend in the morning. We will know more following their visit and will update here.
“If you are a member, you have automatically been granted multi-site access. Your JD Gyms app will now scan you in at a neighbouring JD Gyms location of your choice. We will be back open ASAP. Thank you for your patience!!”
Police have confirmed the driver was later arrested in connection with the incident.
A GMP spokesperson said: “Officers responded to an incident at 4.45pm today (14/04/2026) at JD Gym on George Street, Bury, with the assistance of NWAS and the Greater Manchester Fire Service.
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“It was reported that a car had driven through the wall of JD Gym, resulting in structural damage of the building.
“In the incident a man in his 60’s has been struck by the car whilst inside the gym and has sustained non-life changing injuries.
“Woman in her 40s has been arrested on suspicion of causing injury by dangerous driving, she remains in hospital at this time.
“If you have any information, please contact officers on 101 or LiveChat quoting log 2424 of 14/04/2026.”
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Chaotic videos from inside, shared widely on social media, showed dust and bricks falling into the busy gym as customers were using the facilities. It is not clear if anyone has been injured.
Multiple emergency services vehicles remain at the scene, which has closed Rochdale Road and George Street in the town centre. Bury Council has urged people to avoid the area.
This is a breaking news story. Follow live updates here.
Rebecca’s father said her death was the “hardest thing” he had “ever had to accept”
The partner of a woman killed by a crane told a court he is “not the person he once was” since the death of his “blue eyed beauty”. Rebecca Ableman, 30, was struck in the head by a crane, while walking her daughter along a road in Willingham on September 22, 2022.
He described Rebecca as a “strong” and “unique” woman, who loved “to travel and explore”. Recounting when he saw Rebecca in hospital after the incident, Mr Tuczemskyi said she was “unrecognisable” and that he will “never be the same” because of her death.
Speaking outside of the court, Mr Tuczemskyi he said the family wanted a prison sentence for Miller as it was “something that should have never happened”. He added: “As I mentioned during my statement, a £10 strap would have prevented this, and that’s heartbreaking and difficult to process.
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“We would have liked a longer sentence but we are glad it’s not a suspended sentence.” Mr Tuczemskyi said it “sends a strong message out” that “safety should always be paramount with this kind of thing.” He added: “We are relieved it’s all finally coming to an end.”
Other victim impact statements were read out in court on behalf of Rebecca’s parents Russell and Susan Ableman, sisters Christina and Natalie, and longtime friend Amy. Russell said he feels he had “failed” as a father, as he said a father’s job is to “protect your children”. He said it was the “hardest thing” he had “ever had to accept”.
He added that her “life was cut short” due to “someone else’s carelessness”. Susan said her daughter “excelled” at being a mother to Autumn, and she “grieved for the life she could have had”.
Susan added that she now feels “vulnerable” walking along pavements when lorries are travelling nearby, following the death of her daughter. In a joint statement, sisters Christine and Natalie said there is a “permanent and profound void in our lives”.
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They said Rebecca was the “light in our family and she was the friend that brought together everyone”. The sisters said losing Rebecca in “such a sudden and preventable way is a trauma” they couldn’t “fully put into words”. They also said her death was the “loss of a future”.
Longtime friend Amy said Rebecca was “so much more than a friend”, describing her as a “sister”. Amy said Rebecca “protected” her and that her life was now “lost and hollow” since her death. “Every happy moment now casts a dark shadow because she should be here,” Amy added.
The outbreak of a mysterious and deadly disease in finches in British gardens in 2005 set alarms bells ringing for conservationists. A decade later, the extent of that disease in greenfinches and chaffinches was reported. And now, bird scientists are beginning to understand how feeding birds in our gardens might be linked to their health and survival.
Feeding birds in gardens is helpful, especially during winter when birds might be facing food shortages. But summer feeding should be paused because this is a time when natural food sources such as caterpillars, bugs and flies are much more abundant. In summer, the benefits of feeding the birds are less obvious. Limiting summer bird feeding also limits the spread of disease, which happens more prominently when birds gather in numbers to share food and water.
Scientists now know that the disease detected in finches in the 2000s is trichomonosis, caused by a microscopic parasite called Trichomonas gallinae. It typically infects the bird’s throat and has been known for many years to affect pigeons and doves, along with birds of prey. Birds can act as carriers or succumb to the disease. Quite how this parasite spilled over into finches is uncertain, but probably happened through the sharing of food or water.
The disease causes lesions in the bird’s throat that interfere with its ability to swallow. This causes the bird to regurgitate food and water, and eventually die. It can spread between birds when they feed one another during courtship, when feeding chicks or through regurgitation at food or water sources in gardens. Poorly birds appear fluffed up and lethargic. Some may have messy or wet feathers around their beak and often shake their heads as they try to swallow. It’s a sad sight.
Trichomonsis has had devastating consequences in bird populations across the UK and into mainland Europe. Greenfinches and chaffinches have been hit hardest. Greenfinch numbers are down by 65% and chaffinch down by 36% since 1995.
Bullfinches also catch this disease and die, and a range of other birds may contract the disease – some of which are already declining in numbers.
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Without urgent action, the situation will probably get worse for these and other birds, especially when facing a myriad of other pressures. These include the loss of natural habitats, limited food availability, plus accelerating climate change.
The new guidance from the RSPB comes on the back of a detailed review of the effects of bird feeding that includes both bird survival from one year to the next and their breeding success. The review also considers the human benefits to bird feeding, and takes into account recent field studies of the disease and how to curb its spread. Most research has been conducted in natural settings such as woodlands, rather than residential, urban or suburban settings. But the key insights are clear.
The review found that feeding can boost bird populations. But there are two big concerns for conservation around garden bird feeding. First, increased disease transmission (as shown by trichomonosis and other diseases). Second, while many bird species have benefited from garden feeding, this may have come at the cost to others.
A 2009 study found that an estimated 12.6 million UK households (48%) provided supplementary food for birds of which 7.4 million used specially designed bird feeders. As demand increases, so too does the range of different bird food and feeders.
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This popularity has upsides and downsides for different birds, but probably has strong benefits for our own connection to nature, wellbeing and health.
Birds that use feeders, such as greater spotted woodpeckers, wood pigeons, collared doves, great tits and blue tits have all increased their numbers dramaticallyin the long term. Yet, as their numbers have grown there is an increasing nervousness from conservationists that they might outcompete or predate more vulnerable species. Blue and great tits often take over and evict the endangered willow tit from their nest holes, and willow tits are preyed upon by great spotted woodpeckers. Further research will shed light on these complex interactions.
During summer and autumn, there’s a higher risk of disease spreading. It’s also when there are more natural foods available to birds, so pause feeding any seeds or peanuts between 1 May and 31 October. You can continue to offer small amounts of mealworms, fat balls or suet, as they pose less risk of transmitting disease. Also consider bird-friendly planting to provide natural food sources, such as sunflowers, teasels and ivy.
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Between 1 November and 30 April, you can feed with a full range of bird foods, including seeds and peanuts, but feed in moderation so food doesn’t spoil and large flocks of birds are not attracted to one location. Little and often is good.
Other guidance encourages good hygiene to minimise the risk of disease. Ideally, clean bird feeders and water baths at least once a week. You can change the water in bird baths every day and move bird feeders to different spots every week. Instead of using bird feeders with flat surfaces, such as bird tables, window feeders and feeders with trays, opt for hanging bird feeders to reduce the risk of spreading infections.
Yaaqob Saleh, 20, was sentenced to 12 months after sexually assaulting a customer who entered his Liverpool city centre shop seeking help to charge her phone
Adam Everett Crown Court Reporter and Kirstie McCrum Deputy Head of News, Live News Network
18:42, 14 Apr 2026
A retail employee has been imprisoned following his sexual assault on a customer who had taken shelter in his shop after becoming stranded in Liverpool city centre on a night out.
Yaaqob Saleh’s victim was left weeping and “curled up into a ball because she was so upset” following his relentless and predatory behaviour. While he had previously denied any wrongdoing, he now acknowledges he “let himself down” during the disturbing incident.
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However, a judge informed him his “very, very late expression of remorse” carried “very marginal weight” as he was sent to prison for his failure to “take no for an answer”.
Liverpool Crown Court was told this afternoon (Tuesday) that the complainant had been enjoying an evening with friends in Liverpool city centre celebrating St Patrick’s Day last March before attempting to get a taxi home by herself. Yet, with her mobile having died, she entered Liverpool One Newsagents and Convenience Store on Whitechapel requesting help.
Helen Chenery, prosecuting, outlined how Saleh, of Wendell Street in Toxteth, was manning the counter and permitted her to charge her phone so she could arrange a taxi. The 20-year-old defendant asked her to sit close to a heater on steps next to the till and, following serving a customer, positioned himself beside her.
Saleh, who was 19 at the time, proceeded to place his hand on her thigh and requested a kiss, which she rejected. Despite her refusal, he managed to kiss her cheek and, after attending to another customer, returned to his seat and placed his hand beneath her skirt, touching her vagina through her clothing.
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After Saleh rose to assist another shopper, the victim drew herself into a foetal position and wept. Once her mobile had charged sufficiently, she was able to ring a friend and departed the premises, reports the Liverpool Echo.
In her victim impact statement, she described: “Since this incident, I’ve experienced a wide and overwhelming range of emotions. Anxiety, depression and anger have been the most persistent.
“In the weeks and months following the assault, I began to struggle deeply with sleep. I still suffer from regular nightmares, which cause me frequently to wake throughout the night. These episodes have created a fear of sleep and a constant feeling of emotional exhaustion.
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“One of the most significant effects has been the loss of my independence. Before the assault, I was confident and self assured.
“I felt safe travelling alone, making decisions for myself and simply existing in the world. That sense of security has been stripped away.
“I now rely on my parents to meet me or accompany me when going out. I constantly feel as though what happened once could happen again. This loss of independence brought with it an overwhelming sense of grief. I felt as though a vital part of my identity had been taken away without my consent.
“My self worth deteriorated. I began to feel as though my body was somehow wrong or repulsive, and I blamed myself. These thoughts have spiralled into regular suicidal ideation and a serious dependency on self harm as a coping mechanism.
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“I became emotionally detached from reality and deeply distrustful of others. Even the people trying to help me felt suspicious.
“I also felt deep anger. I was angry at the perpetrator, but also angry at the world. I kept asking myself, why me? I never found a satisfying answer. That question stayed with me every day.
“In an attempt to cope, I began drinking excessively. I used alcohol to temporarily silence the pain and hatred I felt, but this only deepened my feelings of isolation and damaged many of my close relationships. I felt tired and unwell most days.
“Where I used to have energy and drive, I began to struggle to complete basic tasks or get out of bed. This incident has impacted almost every part of my life. It has changed the way I view the world and the way I view myself.”
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Saleh has no prior criminal record.
Defence solicitor Katie Lord addressed the court, stating: “It is, of course, serious offending, an offence which has had a serious impact on the complainant. He has been advised of the fact that the court will be considering all options, including custody. He is realistic.
“It is a case where, I concede, that the custody threshold has been passed. I am going ask your honour to step away from imposing immediate custody. He presents, as the Probation Service helpfully outline, with identifiable rehabilitative needs.
“In my submission, they can be addressed in the community if he has the option to be under close supervision. His youth and immaturity are material features. It is clear that those are factors which have led to his offending.
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“There is real work to be done in respect of the causative factors that have caused the defendant to act in the way he has. He tells me it is out of character and not in his nature. There is work to be done in understanding the reasoning. He has got family to support him. He seeks employment.
“A community based sentence, in my submission, would allow these necessary interventions. It is unlikely that he would have access to that level of rehabilitative intervention in prison. In my submission, society is best served by this defendant being subject to intensive supervision in the community, as opposed to a relatively short spell in custody.”
Saleh, who required an interpreter throughout the proceedings, was convicted of one count of sexual assault after a trial at the magistrates’ court. He subsequently attempted to challenge his conviction at crown court but later withdrew his appeal.
Standing in the dock dressed in a black Under Armour tracksuit, Saleh received a 12-month sentence at a young offenders’ institution. He was also ordered to register as a sex offender for 10 years and given a four-year restraining order.
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During sentencing, Judge Dennis Watson KC stated: “She had been out celebrating St Patrick’s Day with friends, but, at the end of the evening, she came into a shop where you were working. She did that because her phone was dangerously short of charge and, indeed, ran out of charge.
“So it was that she came to you for assistance. She had been drinking and was on her own and vulnerable by reason of the circumstances in which she found herself. Very quickly, you decided to proposition her sexually.
“You tried to persuade her to come around the other side of the counter, where she would be warmer. You asked her for a kiss, touched her thigh. All the while, she was saying to you that she did not want to be kissed by you or touched by you.
“Even when a customer came in and you served the customer, you went back, because there is a real element of you not taking no for an answer. There is this other element of persistence by you. On this separate occasion, you touched her, as Ms Chenery put it, on her crotch, as the author of the pre-sentence report put it, on her vagina but over her clothing, which had the instant effect of causing her to curl up into a ball because she was so upset.
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“However young or immature you are, you would know that your behaviour, in doing what you did, was wrong. There was a trial at the magistrates’ court. You gave evidence and denied the offence. Very belatedly, you have written a letter saying you understand that your offending has consequences, that you have let yourself down and you have expressed remorse.
“This is a case, I regret, where the very, very late expression of remorse means that it has very marginal weight, particularly when you have given evidence and completely denied the offending at the magistrates’ court. I regret to inform you that I have concluded that the circumstances of this offence and everything I know about you means this that is an offence where only immediate imprisonment is the appropriate punishment.”
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