The ECHR was established in 1950 and sets out the rights and freedoms people are entitled to in the 46 signatory countries.
to follow the world's top tech stories and trends.A driver who dragged two police officers along a Highland road with her car after they had pulled her over has been jailed for 18 months.
Lauren Baird, 43, of Aberdeen, was being asked why her vehicle was not insured when she had a "moment of panic" and drove away.Inverness Sheriff Court heard that the male and female officers were lucky to escape serious injury in the incident, which was captured in dashcam footage.Baird, a mother-of-two, was jailed after earlier admitting to culpable and reckless conduct to the danger of the officers' lives.
She also admitted attempting to pervert the course of justice by giving police false details, and attempting to conceal the vehicle she was driving while having no licence or insurance.Sheriff Sara Matheson accused Baird of "appalling behaviour", and said it was down to luck the officers' injuries were not worse than they were.
The officers were treated at Inverness' Raigmore Hospital for grazing, bruises, an injured knee and a staved finger.
The female officer also needed crutches.But the organisation says, in reality, it "glorifies thinness and vilifies weight gain" and "promotes disordered eating behaviours."
The trend has caused particular alarm in France, where experts have warned of how social media can push vulnerable young people towards developing eating disorders."The patients are completely indoctrinated -- and my 45-minute weekly consultation is no match for spending hours every day on TikTok," the nutritionist Carole Copti told the AFP news agency.
The blocking of the hashtag has been, who wrote on social media that "skinnytok is over" thanks to lobbying by European politicians.