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"We come from different countries - there are wars in our countries - what do we do now?"A supermarket manager in Belfast said his business had been reduced to "ashes" after it was also targeted.
Bashir said police officers advised him to close the Donegall Road business on Saturday afternoon.At about midnight, he returned to the shop after a friend informed him it was on fire.He waited for more than three hours before entering the premises, which he said was "like a disaster".
"Not a single thing [could be saved], nothing," he said."[There was] water coming from the roof, all the groceries were gone, I mean everything.
"I was like: 'Should I cry or should I laugh?'"
This is the third time Sham Supermarket has been targeted. Bashir said “nothing” has been done to protect them.With the help of a solicitor, Leah eventually launched - and won - a disability discrimination case against her school to try to stop the restraints.
The tribunal judge said the school could not show that the restraint was a “proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim”.After the tribunal, Leah’s local council terminated her school placement and put an alternative support plan into place for her.
Meanwhile, the school says it accepts the tribunal’s ruling and has complied with its requirements and recommendations. These included a letter of apology to Leah and making staff undergo training “to avoid and reduce the use of restraint”.The council has told the BBC that it now monitors the use of restraint by care providers, and its impact on young people. It says it is awaiting further guidance on the subject from the Scottish government, who told us that independent special schools “play an important role” in providing additional support.