
Emma Little-Pengelly says it's important abuse is tackled
The Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly has said it is "incredibly important" that abuse against politicians is tackled after a man was prosecuted for threatening to kill her.Aaron Thomas Curragh, 34, of Whincroft Road in Belfast, last week pleaded guilty to a charge brought against him through the 2023 Online Safety Act.Curragh had previously been convicted of attacking the office of Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) assembly member Joanne Bunting.Last week a court hearing heard Curragh had sent a message to Little-Pengelly via the social media platform X "which conveyed a threat of death or harm".
The legislation the charge was brought through makes platforms including social media legally responsible for protecting people in the UK from illegal content and content that disproportionately affects women and girls.
'Important' matter
Speaking in the assembly on Monday, Little-Pengelly said she was pleased that there had been a prosecution and that Curragh would be sentenced shortly."It is incredibly important the courts take these matters seriously, it requires all of us to stand shoulder to shoulder to say it's wrong," she added."I don't want any woman or girl to face abuse online to the point they don't want to get into politics or rather step back."
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Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
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A quick swap and off they go.' At one house, work is underway to transform a home into a money-spinning nine-bed HMO after developers secured the property after the deaths of its elderly owners. Tenants' individual living and sleeping space, plus an en-suite, will all be based in single rooms of the house, with a shared kitchen. Each will likely pay in the region of £400 to £500 a month - generating a significant return for the landlord. A neighbour told how her life had become a 'nightmare' after enduring months of building work and spoke of concerns about the impact on her house price. She said: 'I've had the same neighbours for 40 years on both sides. Now I'll have nine people coming and going at all times of the day. 'Who's going to want to buy my house? I might end up with a house that I can't sell.' Another neighbour, who asked not to be named, described the HMOs as 'overcrowded rabbit hutches' that were destroying the fabric of the community. 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That's what it comes down to.' According to Darlington council, there are already 400 HMOs in the town. But locals believe the true figure is much higher because landlords do not need consent for less than six occupants. Grandfather Sandy Duncan, 86, said: 'I've lived here forty-three years. This whole side of the street used to be families - all of it. That side too. It's just not the same anymore. Now it's all multi-occupants. 'I worry about the rubbish and bins overflowing, and the drainage. Can the pipes cope with nine showers in a morning? I doubt it. 'If I wanted to sell my house now, would I get the price I would've got ten years ago? No. I wouldn't. 'There's no regulation. Up to six people, they don't even need to ask anyone. They can just do it. You just wonder where it ends. No one's really stopping it.' According to council documents, large HMOs are also planned in nearby streets. 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