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Police treat fatal Bowen backpackers' hostel fire as suspicious

Police treat fatal Bowen backpackers' hostel fire as suspicious

A French backpacker has described his escape from a fatal fire in a backpackers' hostel in north Queensland, as police confirm they are treating the blaze as suspicious.
Investigators are yet to formally identify remains found in the Bowen hostel hours after the blaze, which took hold the day new owners were due to take over the business.
Paul Hamache said he was asleep in one of Barnacle Backpackers two neighbouring buildings when his friend woke him in the early hours of Wednesday.
"I just came out from my room and the flame was just in front of me," Mr Hamache said.
"
The fire was really big. I have never seen something like this, so it was crazy for us because we didn't really know what's happened.
"
Paul Hamache says he faced big flames escaping the fire.
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ABC Tropical North: Bryn Wakefield
)
Firefighters called to the scene about 3:30am found the Queenslander-style building neighbouring where Mr Hamache was staying engulfed in flames.
"It was a bit scary … I could see flames. We moved our stuff quickly because we didn't want it burnt," Mr Hamache said.
It was not until late Wednesday afternoon that crews found the remains of a person in a room thought to have been vacant.
Firefighters dampen down the Bowen hostel.
(
ABC Tropical North: Bryn Wakefield
)
"Emergency services were able to respond quite quickly and evacuate the premises and all known persons from the premises were accounted for," Detective Acting Inspector Luke Jackson said.
"It's only after we've been able to conduct an examination of the scene once it was safe enough to do so that we've identified these unknown remains that weren't expected to be there."
The body is yet to be formally identified.
Specialist heavy lifting equipment was brought in to help fire scene investigators access the site to determine the cause.
Police have been at the scene of the Bowen hostel fire.
(
ABC Tropical North: Bryn Wakefield
)
"We treat this fire as suspicious, 100 per cent," Detective Acting Inspector Jackson said.
"Police are conducting a thorough investigation and they've interviewed a number of persons and are taking statements."
The couple set to take ownership of the backpackers' hostel said the business was due to change hands on Wednesday.
Detective Acting Inspector Jackson said he could not comment on whether the hostel had met fire safety standards.
A crime scene has been declared at the Bowen hostel.
(
ABC Tropical North: Bryn Wakefield
)
Mr Hamache had only recently returned to Bowen after working in the town two years ago.
He said the incident would not change his plans.
"It's just a bit weird," he said.
"[But] I know this place, I love this place. It's so beautiful."

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Historical weapons donated to RSL after raid on underworld figure's house

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Pelicot settles Paris Match privacy case over photos
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The Advertiser

time2 days ago

  • The Advertiser

Pelicot settles Paris Match privacy case over photos

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Her ex-husband was found guilty of repeatedly drugging and raping her for almost a decade, and inviting dozens of strangers to their home to rape her while unconscious. The other 50 co-defendants were also found guilty of rape, attempted rape or sexual assault. Her lawyer said the publication of the pictures shocked her greatly. Sophie Barre, a member of women's rights organisation NousToutes, told Reuters the pictures represented another act of violence after the abuse she had endured. "Her former husband filmed the rapes," she said. "With these pictures, her image is again captured without her consent." Gisele Pelicot, the French woman who became a symbol of courage and resilience during the trial of her ex-husband and 50 other men for repeatedly raping her, has settled with magazine Paris Match after it published photos of her without her consent. The magazine, owned by French luxury group LVMH, has agreed to make two 20,000-euro ($A35,000) payments to associations that support victims of sexual violence, her lawyer Stephane Babonneau said. Pelicot had taken Paris Match to court alleging invasion of privacy but withdrew her case ahead of a court hearing on Wednesday. Pelicot's case against Paris Match raised interesting questions about the right to privacy in France, which has strong laws to protect against intrusions. Pelicot waived her right to anonymity during the rape trial, becoming an internationally recognised figure. The court's ruling would have likely hinged on whether or not there was a public interest in her private life now the trial was over, experts said. "She became a public figure unwillingly," Babonneau told Reuters. "It didn't mean that because she waived her right to anonymity for the trial, she was giving up her right to privacy." 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Gisele Pelicot, the French woman who became a symbol of courage and resilience during the trial of her ex-husband and 50 other men for repeatedly raping her, has settled with magazine Paris Match after it published photos of her without her consent. The magazine, owned by French luxury group LVMH, has agreed to make two 20,000-euro ($A35,000) payments to associations that support victims of sexual violence, her lawyer Stephane Babonneau said. Pelicot had taken Paris Match to court alleging invasion of privacy but withdrew her case ahead of a court hearing on Wednesday. Pelicot's case against Paris Match raised interesting questions about the right to privacy in France, which has strong laws to protect against intrusions. Pelicot waived her right to anonymity during the rape trial, becoming an internationally recognised figure. The court's ruling would have likely hinged on whether or not there was a public interest in her private life now the trial was over, experts said. 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Pelicot settles Paris Match privacy case over photos
Pelicot settles Paris Match privacy case over photos

West Australian

time2 days ago

  • West Australian

Pelicot settles Paris Match privacy case over photos

Gisele Pelicot, the French woman who became a symbol of courage and resilience during the trial of her ex-husband and 50 other men for repeatedly raping her, has settled with magazine Paris Match after it published photos of her without her consent. The magazine, owned by French luxury group LVMH, has agreed to make two 20,000-euro ($A35,000) payments to associations that support victims of sexual violence, her lawyer Stephane Babonneau said. Pelicot had taken Paris Match to court alleging invasion of privacy but withdrew her case ahead of a court hearing on Wednesday. Pelicot's case against Paris Match raised interesting questions about the right to privacy in France, which has strong laws to protect against intrusions. Pelicot waived her right to anonymity during the rape trial, becoming an internationally recognised figure. The court's ruling would have likely hinged on whether or not there was a public interest in her private life now the trial was over, experts said. "She became a public figure unwillingly," Babonneau told Reuters. "It didn't mean that because she waived her right to anonymity for the trial, she was giving up her right to privacy." The pictures of Pelicot and her partner were taken on the Île de Ré, an island off western France where she now lives. "We had warned Paris Match not to publish these photos ten days before," Babonneau added. A lawyer for Paris Match did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Pelicot has said she "never regretted" going public during the trial, which ended last December. Her ex-husband was found guilty of repeatedly drugging and raping her for almost a decade, and inviting dozens of strangers to their home to rape her while unconscious. The other 50 co-defendants were also found guilty of rape, attempted rape or sexual assault. Her lawyer said the publication of the pictures shocked her greatly. Sophie Barre, a member of women's rights organisation NousToutes, told Reuters the pictures represented another act of violence after the abuse she had endured. "Her former husband filmed the rapes," she said. "With these pictures, her image is again captured without her consent."

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