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'Afroworld' exhibition to celebrate black hair

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Innovation & Design   来源:Audio  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"I can't even sleep at night if I know there's not multiple security" guards, she said, noting her concern about copycat attacks, and that her Los Angeles house was robbed even before the family returned from the Paris trip.

"I can't even sleep at night if I know there's not multiple security" guards, she said, noting her concern about copycat attacks, and that her Los Angeles house was robbed even before the family returned from the Paris trip.

A water company has pleaded guilty to 13 counts relating to untreated sewage spills in Margate and Broadstairs.Southern Water admitted it failed to comply with an environmental permit on a number of occasions at a hearing at Medway Magistrates Court on Tuesday.

'Afroworld' exhibition to celebrate black hair

The prosecution, brought by the Environment Agency, covers a period from 2019 to 2021 - and includes incidents which closed several beaches in Thanet after unpermitted discharges from Margate and Broadstairs wastewater pumping stations.Southern Water has apologised and said it was making improvements.Further charges related to the company's failure to report the unpermitted discharges quickly enough to Thanet District Council and to the Environment Agency, the court heard.

'Afroworld' exhibition to celebrate black hair

There were five main incidents across 2019, 2020 and 2021.In June 2021, 11 of Thanet's beaches were closed for a week which the company said at the time was due to a power outage at the Margate Foreness Point pumping station treatment works, which was caused by a lightning strike.

'Afroworld' exhibition to celebrate black hair

Margate's former mayor, councillor Rob Yates, told BBC South East that the spill has had a long term effect on the town's residents.

He said: "Every time they want to go swimming, they feel nervous."Det Sgt Chris Acourt, who led the Cambridgeshire Police investigation, said there were “massive opportunities” that were missed to detect the slavery and alert authorities sooner.

“Ultimately, we could have been in a situation to end that exploitation much earlier had we been made aware,” he said.Like many of the victims, Pavel - who has waived his legal right to anonymity - was homeless in the Czech Republic when he was approached by the gang in 2016.

He says he was lured in with the false promise of a well-paid job in the UK, where he could at the time work legally.But the reality of what he experienced has left lasting scars, he said.

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