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Man who drank on Isle of Man ferry before driving jailed

Man who drank on Isle of Man ferry before driving jailed

BBC News21-02-2025

A man who drank alcohol on an overnight ferry to the Isle of Man before driving off the vessel has been jailed for 15 months.Arya Askari, 27, was traveling to the island on the Manxman on 11 February for a trip when he was reported to the authorities for being intoxicated.Douglas Courthouse heard he failed a roadside breath test after being stopped by port officers after he drove his Alfa Romeo off the vessel in Douglas at about 05:40 GMT.Jailing him for driving while under the influence of alcohol and disqualified, Deemster Graeme Cook said he had an "appalling" driving record.
The court heard he roadside breath test had recorded a result of 45 micrograms of alcohol per 100 micrograms, the legal limit is 35 micrograms.Police were called by port officers after Askari became "argumentative", and he was arrested.It was subsequently found out that the UK resident was disqualified from driving at the time.
'Blatant disregard'
The 27-year-old pleaded guilty to driving while over the legal alcohol limit and while disqualified.The court heard he had several previous convictions for similar driving offences in West Yorkshire.Deemster Cook said Askari had a "blatant disregard" for court orders and for other vehicles and while he had pleaded guilty straight away, he would only be given some credit for that due to the overwhelming evidence against him. The deemster noted that although the maximum sentence for driving while disqualified was six months in the UK sentencing guidelines, it was 12 on the Isle of Man.Jailing him, Deemster Cook said it was "one of the most appalling driving records I have ever seen".Askari was also banned from driving for five years, and banned from returning to the island for five years after being released.
Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.

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Rioters attack police and torch houses for a second night in Northern Ireland

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Sidhu Moose Wala: Gangster tells BBC why India's biggest hip-hop star was murdered

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Sidhu Moose Wala was born Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu in a Jat-Sikh family in rural Punjab, before moving in 2016 to Canada to study engineering - a journey familiar to hundreds of thousands in the Punjabi it was there, far from his village of Moosa - the inspiration for his rap name - that he reinvented himself as one of Punjabi music's most influential artists. In just five years, Moose Wala became the unmistakable voice of Punjabi his signature swagger, flashy style, and lyrical grit, Moose Wala sang openly about identity and politics, guns and revenge, pushing the boundaries of what Punjabi music had been willing to was fascinated by rapper Tupac Shakur, who had been murdered, aged 25, in 1996. "In terms of personality, I want to be like him," Moose Wala once told an interviewer. "The day he died, people cried for him. I want the same. 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World of Secrets The Killing Call: 3. The gangsters

Thousands from across India crowd the streets for Sidhu Moose Wala's funeral, to grieve one of Punjab's famous sons. Millions more watch. Flowers are thrown at the coffin, pulled by his favourite tractor. Amongst the grief are anger and unanswered questions– why was he not better protected? And we find out more about the world he was caught up in. Presented by broadcaster and DJ Bobby Friction and investigative journalist Ishleen Kaur. Season 8 of World of Secrets, The Killing Call, is a BBC Eye investigation for the BBC World Service. Archive audio credits: NDTV, India Today, Pun Yaab, Lovepreet Waraich, BritAsiaTV, CBC, CTV, WION

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