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Body of Brit woman in her 20s found behind church during family holiday in tourist hotspot

Body of Brit woman in her 20s found behind church during family holiday in tourist hotspot

The Irish Suna day ago
A BRIT woman on a family holiday has tragically been found dead behind a church in France.
Cops investigating the case say the victim may have died after having a dispute with her partner on a night out.
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St-Nicolas church in the city of Barfleur; a woman was found dead behind the church
The woman was reportedly staying with her family in a rented cottage near the port of Barfleur.
Gendarmerie, French local police units, are now probing her death.
More to follow...
For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online
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My autistic brother is stranded in Tokyo jail hell after drugs gang ‘sneaked meth into his luggage' on dream holiday
My autistic brother is stranded in Tokyo jail hell after drugs gang ‘sneaked meth into his luggage' on dream holiday

The Irish Sun

time34 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

My autistic brother is stranded in Tokyo jail hell after drugs gang ‘sneaked meth into his luggage' on dream holiday

THE sister of an autistic teenager who is being detained in Japan on drug smuggling charges believes her brother was manipulated by gangs before he left the UK. Sean Stephenson, 18, from Charlton, London, was arrested at Tokyo airport last month with a suitcase containing more than 10kg of methamphetamine. 3 Sean Stephens, 18, is being held in Japan Credit: Ami Lee 3 The teenager has autism and had never been abroad alone before Credit: Ami Lee 3 His sister says he was adamant he wanted to go on the trip Credit: Ami Lee Ami Lee and her family believes Sean has been pressured and exploited by heartless underworld figures. He has multiple physical and mental health challenges and was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) aged five. Though legally an adult, Sean has a much younger mental age and is eager to make new friends - something his family say was taken advantage of. They claim he was groomed on UK soil before he was pressured into travelling, first to READ MORE NEWS Sean then travelled to Tokyo and he was arrested on June 21 after he was found with a locked suitcase containing the methamphetamine. Ami last saw her younger brother on June 14 at her daughter's birthday party. Since then, she has been fighting to find out what's happening to her brother nearly 6,000 miles away and has started a crowdfunding appeal for £14,000 to pay for his legal fees. "My mind is a total blur- I haven't slept now for coming up two weeks," she said. Most read in The Sun "My life is really hectic, I'm looking after three children and I've now got to worry about my brother - I'm on the phone to Tokyo throughout the night. "He's on no communication so I can't get any contact anymore - I'm beyond worried now." New CCTV of Brit 'mule' Bella May Culley 'smuggling £200k of cannabis' released as cops slam her claims she was coerced Having never travelled abroad before, let alone by himself, Sean's disappearance stunned the entire family. "He kept saying he's going to go to Canada but we didn't really think much of it," Lee said. "I think until you've got a child that's autistic, you don't actually understand where I'm coming from with that." Sean then suddenly vanished overseas on Father's Day morning. Lee said: "He had never travelled alone before, and it was clear from our contact with him that he was frightened and confused. "We pleaded with him to come home." Soon after, his family received news that he had been detained in Everything his family know about his movements is through the information provided by a solicitor in Lee says that Sean was picked up outside a Nisa shop one morning by a man who had befriended him and escorted him to Heathrow Airport. Sean's phone and bank cards were taken and he was given a Nokia so he couldn't contact his family and arrangements were made for Sean to meet another man in Toronto. According to the solicitor, Sean received threats to "break his legs and hurt his family" if he didn't go to Canada. From Toronto he was handed the suitcase of drugs to take to Tokyo where he was told it was money to be dropped to a "friend", she claims. Lee then received a message from the solicitor on July 15 who said that according to the case record, the amount of methamphetamine he was carrying wasn't one or two kilos - but more than 10kg. She added that Sean has now been moved to a juvenile centre and could be potentially looking at over 10 years in prison. Lee said: "He's extremely vulnerable - his mental age is 12 to 13 years old. "He comes to my house, he plays with my children like children play. "He's very funny, he's very unique, he's so helpful and kind - he's my Mum's carer. "His nan passed away in February and was on palliative care - he did not leave her bedside and used to go and get her medication everyday from the chemist. "It's not an excuse because he's autistic and we understand he's going to be punished - but he actually doesn't understand what's going on. "How do I know if my brother's even going to come home?" Lee also said Sean has a history of self-harm, suicide attempts, and other medical conditions. 'Police have been disgusting' Sean's family don't know who got him involved in alleged drug smuggling and his sister was hesitant to speculate over fear of repercussions given the amount of drugs involved. But they say they reported allegations of grooming and exploitation at Plumstead Police Station on Tuesday, July 1. Lee claims that officers told her it was a matter for the NCA who then redirected her back to the police. She said: "The police have been disgusting. "I get that my brother has been detained abroad but a crime was taking place very close to his home. "He was picked up from the Nisa between 8am and 9am that morning and the guy took him in his car to Heathrow airport. "I'm just asking for CCTV of my brother at Heathrow Airport and the local shops to see who picked him up." When asked whether she had been able to obtain the CCTV, Lee responded: "No - the police say it isn't a crime, so no." She added: "They're passing the buck telling me to contact NCA. "The NCA laughed at me and said 'well, what do you want us to do?' "So both have been kind of saying it's not our problem." When The Sun contacted the NCA for comment, they said the matter is for the Foreign Office and that a criminal investigation taking place abroad is a matter for law enforcement in that country. They added that anyone wishing to report someone being the victim of the a crime in the UK would need to contact the police and that the NCA is not a public crime reporting body. The NCA can facilitate UK police to international requests but it would have to be initiated by the law enforcement bodies concerned. An FCDO spokesperson said: 'We are supporting a British man who is detained in When the Metropolitan Police were contacted for comment they claim to have no record of contact with Sean's family. This is despite Ami claiming she had visited the police station twice and was provided with a Crime Reference Number. She claimed she was the victim of an online romance scam but prosecutors sought a ten-year sentence and $30,000 fine after she was caught with the drug concealed in the bottom of her suitcase. Autism campaigner, Emma Dalmayne, who has launched a petition to help raise awareness of Sean's plight, said: "Sean is autistic, learning disabled and has a heart condition, he is extremely vulnerable. "The unpredictability and worry over what will happen to him will be causing him extreme anxiety which will cause harm to him. "Autistic people are targeted for grooming and mate crimes, what had happened here is a global case of county lines." Do you know more? Email

Man who broke safety order by posting video of ex wife with ‘abusive' music online gets jail sentence suspended on appeal
Man who broke safety order by posting video of ex wife with ‘abusive' music online gets jail sentence suspended on appeal

Irish Independent

time35 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

Man who broke safety order by posting video of ex wife with ‘abusive' music online gets jail sentence suspended on appeal

The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, posted a video of four pictures on a loop, one of which showed his former wife in a swimsuit on a beach with her face distorted. He had pleaded guilty in the District Court to breaching a safety order contrary to section 33(1) of the Domestic Violence Act 2018 on June 13, 2024 but lodged an appeal against his sentence. Garda Noel McBrearty told the District Court Appeals Court that gardaí received a report from the injured party that her former husband had breached a safety order. He said that gardaí were made aware of a video posted to the man's Facebook page, which featured rap music playing over four images on a continuous loop. Garda McBrearty said that the first image was of the injured party wearing a swimsuit on a beach, the second image featured the woman's new partner, the third showed a vehicle the woman had previously owned and the fourth was another picture of the woman. He said the injured party told him that the rap music had lyrics which were 'abusive in nature'. Garda McBrearty said that all of the images had digitally distorted facial features but the injured party was able to identify herself in the pictures. Defence counsel for the man, Chloe Geraghty BL, said that her client recognised the 'stupidity' in posting the video on a public platform, although the woman was blocked from his page at the time. She said that the man had a very difficult time accepting the relationship was over but has now moved on. Judge Christopher Callan told the defendant that he breached the safety order less than a month after it was issued, adding that he was not sure the man understood what he was obliged to do under the order. ADVERTISEMENT The appellant told the judge that he now understands and apologised for his actions, adding that he will not do it again. Judge Callan told the man that he was 'running out of road rapidly' but decided to suspend the sentence of four months for the period of 12 months on the condition that he keeps the peace and abides with the directions of the safety order to not to contact the injured party by any means.

Photojournalist Gilles Caron's life and disappearance, bearing witness to conflict
Photojournalist Gilles Caron's life and disappearance, bearing witness to conflict

Irish Examiner

time16 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Photojournalist Gilles Caron's life and disappearance, bearing witness to conflict

France was already six years into its war with Algeria when journalist Gilles Caron was drafted into the French army. During his two years serving as a paratrooper in Algeria — from July 1960 to April 1962, two months of which he spent in a military prison for refusing to fight — he wrote daily to his mother Charlotte, whom he affectionately called Mame, often sending several letters in a day. In them, he recounted stories of what he was witnessing and his thoughts about a war to which he was opposed. One line from this cache of letters provides a valuable contextual insight into Caron's future motivations and actions. He writes: 'I can't understand how I'm not hidden away in a department in Algiers. Well yes, I know, I wanted to see…'. Bogside No Entry. Pic: Gilles Caron I wanted to see. Gilles Caron's desire to observe the world and bear witness to what he saw would ultimately define the trajectory of his life. Caron's lens went on to document many of the era-defining conflicts of the 20th century — the Six-Day War, Vietnam, Biafra, The Troubles — as well as the scenes and stars of 1960s Paris, creating a body of photojournalism that comprises a peerless document of social change and historic events. The 100,000 photographs Caron took during this time highlight his incredible talent as a storyteller, an artist and a fearless journalist. It's an extraordinary legacy for someone whose career was so brief. Bogside slingshot man. Pic: Gilles Caron Gilles Caron disappeared while on assignment in Cambodia on April 5, 1970, leaving behind his wife, Marianne, and their two daughters, seven-year-old Marjolaine, and two-year-old Clémentine. He was 30 years old. 'My mother learned about it on the radio. When she turned on the radio in the morning, she learned that Gilles Caron had disappeared,' says Marjolaine Caron when I ask what her memories are of that time. The now 62-year-old visual artist speaks in French; also on our Zoom is Frederique, who translates, and Anne-Laure Buffard, Gilles Caron's gallerist. Marjolaine's father had been staying at The Royal hotel in Phnom Penh, having reluctantly travelled to Cambodia to document the growing unrest in the wake of a March 18 coup deposing head of state Norodom Sihanouk. Soldats britanniques. Pic: Gilles Caron Writing to Marianne during his time in Phnom Penh he said: 'I am all about family life now, and [news agency] Gamma needs to find a replacement for me.' Caron had become increasing conflicted about the role of the photojournalist as bystander, wondering if it was it enough to just bear witness to the horrors of war. Bogside soldiers. Pic: Gilles Caron On Sunday, April 5, Caron, on the hunt for a story about the escalating conflict, was captured, along with three others, on National Road 1 in Cambodia's Parrot's Beak region, which was controlled by Vietnamese communist forces and the Khmer Rouge. 'It was quite a shock for her,' recalls Marjolaine of her mother's reaction to the radio report relaying the news that her husband was missing. 'She was like [she was] frozen.' Caron was one of almost 40 journalists who would disappear during the five years of the Cambodian civil war. His remains have never been found. Marjolaine Caron: 'When my father disappeared, my sister was two years old. She doesn't have those memories.' Marianne was left in limbo, not knowing if her husband was alive, dead, or being subjected to torture. 'My mother was constantly waiting for news,' Marjolaine says, explaining that she would regularly hear false reports Gilles might be on the next plane. 'So she was still waiting for his return. Without knowing if he was dead, if he was a prisoner, if he was going to come back, if he wasn't going to come back.' Some years ago, Marjolaine asked her mother if she recalled how she had reacted to the news of her father's disappearance. 'She told me that I had asked her two or three times, where was my father? When was he going to come back? And she told me that she didn't know.' Seven year-old Marjolaine had 'fits of despair. Two, three fits of despair, where I cried for a very long time, very loudly. And then, it was over. Afterwards, we didn't talk about it anymore… I wasn't going to ask her again when he was coming back, she wasn't going to tell me she didn't know.' Should there be news of her father, the child knew that her mother would tell her and so, she says, 'I didn't ask the question again'. For the family, there would be no funeral, no closure, and, says Marjolaine, very little support, either from Gamma or her father's colleagues, bar from fellow photojournalist Raymond Depardon. Caron was finally declared dead on September 22, 1978. Demonstration of catholics to defend their rights. Pic: Gilles Caron Despite only knowing her father for a few short years, Marjolaine has evocative memories of them together. She recalls accompanying him to a Parisian café near their home — 'I remember the ambience of that café, me in front of my father, the smoke, the atmosphere… it was a special moment, I think, for me' — as well as a trip to the cinema in his red Volkswagen 'which smelled of leather… of Gauloises' to see The Jungle Book, at which she asked her father 'why boys had long hair' (doubtless referencing Mowgli's French-style bob). She feels privileged to have these recollections of her papa. 'When my father disappeared, my sister was two years old. She doesn't have those memories.' Despite the torturous limbo into which the Carons were plunged, not knowing if Gilles was alive or dead, the three of them coped as best they could, with Marjolaine largely continuing to be the 'happy little girl' she'd always been, perhaps trying, she thinks now, to be joyful for her mother's sake. Bogside women group. Pic: Gilles Caron 'I was in symbiosis with my mother', she says, noting that she never saw Marianne 'really depressed or having anxiety attacks, of tears. I never witnessed that. I think she really held on in front of her children.' Marianne held no bitterness towards her husband for the legacy of his life choices, says Marjolaine. 'She adored my father. She wanted him to be able to do what he wanted to do. She especially didn't want to prevent him from doing what he wanted to do. So she never held it against him.' Marjolaine doesn't either. 'What I think is that he was very young when he left for Algeria, and then he started doing his job; he was 25… and everything happened very quickly. Between the trauma of the Algerian War that he experienced and then my birth [nine months] after [he returned from] the Algerian War…Things happened too quickly for him to have time to think and I can't say that I blame him. That doesn't mean I'm not angry [he disappeared]. But I don't blame him [for his choices].' Bogside molotovs. Pic: Gilles Caron Caron's images of war were powerful and influential. If his 1967 photographs of the bloody battle at Vietnam's Dak-To appear familiar, it's perhaps because there are echoes of their essence in Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket and Coppola's Apocalypse Now; both directors collected Caron's work. Similarly, Caron's images of an Orange march from his stint in Derry in August 1969 are said to have inspired the Droogs' attire in A Clockwork Orange. His iconic images of the Battle of the Bogside were given 10 pages in Paris-Match, with a young boy in a gas mask holding a Molotov cocktail making the cover. Bogside Belfast soldiers. Pic: Gilles Caron Afterwards, Gilles Caron said: 'It's quite simple. I was in Ireland before anyone else. The evening before the fighting broke out, I had arrived to cover a march… In Paris, they thought there was no point in sending someone. The demonstrators took the arrival of the British Army to be a victory for the Catholics. I thought it was all over and I was going to leave when things started up again in Belfast. I took a taxi from Derry to Belfast. I worked all day and all night then got on a plane to London and gave my photos to a passenger who was flying on to Paris. That meant that Gamma had the originals the following day before the slow coaches in the English papers. The guys from Paris Match arrived on the Saturday when I was leaving.' Bogside Bradley Sons. Pic: Gilles Caron 'I think he really wanted to be able to tell both sides,' Marjolaine says of those images. 'He was still very sensitive to the revolt and the energy.' Caron's photographs are incredibly dynamic, perfectly framed and, despite featuring events of almost half a century ago, seem somehow timeless. He gets extraordinarily close to his subjects and in doing so he tells their story, giving his images an authenticity and power that is arguably unparalleled in photojournalism. Manifestante republicaine Bogside. Pic: Gilles Caron Marjolaine travelled to Cambodia in 2012. In Phnom Penh, she unveiled a plaque honouring her father. She told The Cambodian Daily: 'When I arrived and the plane landed, I was feeling very oppressed. It was very hard for me. I was crying. I didn't think I could come to this country. Because I didn't think I could do anything to find him. I would like to find some bones or something. I would like it very much, because we have nothing.' Marjolaine, gallerist Anne-Laure points out, has carried 'this very heavy story and heritage' her entire life, while also searching for her own identity as an individual. Of her father's work, Marjolaine says, 'I feel like I've always known these photos. I don't know when I discovered them, but I feel like I've always lived with them, I've always known them somewhere… These photos are part of my life.' The Park Hotel Kenmare is showing a selection of photographic works from its own collection by renowned photojournalist Gilles Caron from July 24 until August 24, for more information, see Read More Discover Ireland's hidden gems with these memorable guided tours

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